ABBASID

əbăˈsĭd, ăˈbəsĭd or Abbaside–sīd, –sĭd, Arab family descended from Abbas, the uncle of Muhammad. The Abbasids held the caliphate from 749 to 1258, but they were recognized neither in Spain nor (after 787) W of Egypt. Under the Umayyad caliphs the Abbasids lived quietly until they became involved in numerous disputes, beginning early in the 8th cent. The family then joined with the Shiite faction in opposing the Umayyads, and in 747 the gifted Abu Muslim united most of the empire in revolt against the Umayyads. The head of the Abbasid family became caliph as Abu al-Abbas as-Saffah late in 749. The last Umayyad caliph, Marwan II, was defeated and killed and the Umayyad family nearly exterminated; one surviving member fled to Spain, where the Umayyads came to rule. Under the second Abbasid caliph, called al-Mansur (see Mansur, al-, d. 775), the capital was moved from Damascus to Baghdad, and Persian influence grew strong in the empire. The early years of Abbasid rule were brilliant, rising to true splendor under Harun al-Rashid, the fifth caliph, and to intellectual brilliance under his son al-Mamun (see Mamun, al-), the seventh caliph. After less than a hundred years of rule, however, the slow decline of the Abbasids began. Long periods of disorder were marked by assassinations, depositions, control by Turkish soldiers, and other disturbances, and from the beginning of their reign there were rival caliphs (see caliphate). In 836 the capital was transferred to Samarra, remaining there until 892. Under the later Abbasids, the power of the caliphate became chiefly spiritual. Many independent kingdoms sprang up, and the empire split into autonomous units. The Seljuk Turks came to hold the real power at Baghdad. The conquests of Jenghiz Khan further lowered the prestige of the Abbasids, and in 1258 his grandson Hulagu Khan sacked Baghdad and overthrew the Abbasid caliphate. The 37th caliph died in the disaster, but a member of the family escaped to Cairo, where he was recognized as caliph (see Mamluks). The Cairo line of the Abbasid caliphate, completely subordinated to the Mamluks, survived until after the Ottoman conquest (1517) of Egypt.

See M. A. Shaban, The Abbāsid Revolution (1970); H. Kennedy, The Early Abbasid Caliphate (1981).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Abbasid  - 893 results

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...Historiography Harun al-Rashid and Narrative of Abbasid Caliphate The history of the early Abbasid caliphate in the eighth and ninth centuries...Historiography Harun al-Rashid and Narrative of Abbasid Caliphate TAYEB EL-HIBRI University...
...TOPPLED THE UMAYYADS Neither Arab nor Abbasid BY SALEH SAID AGHA BRILL LEIDEN...toppled the Umayyads : neither Arab nor Abbasid / I)y Salcli Saici Aglia. p. cm...Islamic Empire-History-750-125 3. 2. Abbasids. 1. Title. II. Series. DS38.6 .A35 2003...
...RULE Church Life and Scholarship in Abbasid Iraq EDITED BY DAVID THOMAS BRILL...rule : church life and scholarship in Abbasid Iraq / edited by David Thomas. p...Egyptian Artistic Contact in the Abbasid Period 93 Sidney Griffith The Philosophical...
...battleground in which the Umayyad and the Abbasid Caliphs fought for dominance of an empire...major publications include The Early Abbasid Caliphate 1980 , The Prophet and the...4 Early Abbasid warfare, 132-218/750-833 96...
...accession of the Arab dynasty of the Abbasids to power and the foundation of Baghdad...ideological factors operative in early Abbasid society that occasioned and sustained...Translation Movement in Baghdad and Early Abbasid Society 2nd-4th/8th-10th centuries...
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journal articles on: Abbasid  - 152 results

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...Harun al-Rashid and the Narrative of the Abbasid.sup.subset Caliphate by PAUL M...Harun al-Rashid and the Narrative of the Abbasid.sup.subset Caliphate. By TAYEB EL-HIBRI...sensible theoretical stance: "that the extant Abbasid.sup.subset historical narratives were...
...Laqab for a future caliph: the case of the Abbasid al-Mahdi. by Jere L. Bacharach...relationship between numismatic inscriptions and Abbasid imperial policies, although important...of governors and isolated letters, for Abbasid dirhams for the period 132 to 218.(3...
...persecution of the Zanadiqa in the early Abbasid Caliphate. by Mahmood Ibrahim...nearly a century of Umayyad rule, the Abbasids took over the state as the former were...realities of Islamic society. The first Abbasid century saw an even greater expansion...
Arabs, Persians, and the advent of the Abbasids reconsidered. by Elton L. Daniel The Abbasid revolution, as R. Stephen Humphreys has...involved in understanding the advent of the Abbasid era remain far from settled. Roberto Marin-Guzman...
...relationship between numismatic inscriptions and Abbasid imperial policies.(1) The case I will...referring to Musa, the young son of the Abbasid caliph al-Amin (A.H. 193-98). After an...importance of the issue of succession in early Abbasid history, this particular case will demonstrate...
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magazine articles on: Abbasid  - 61 results

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...Abd al-Malik (r.685-705) or the second Abbasid caliph Mansur (r.754-75) in consolidating...is, however, one exception to this, the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid (r.786-809). A...in his domains. The vast empire the Abbasids ruled had been created by the Muslim conquests...
...of the many disturbances plaguing the Abbasid central authorities. The Zanj were a group...barbaric" Zanj in order to contextualize the Abbasid crisis. In addition, this essay complicates...start of the Zanj revolt in 868 AD, the Abbasid caliphate was mired in a period of financial...
...between Latin Christendom, Byzantium and the Abbasid caliphate (based in Baghdad) appear to...Charlemagne was sent a brass clock by the Abbasid caliph, Harun al-Rashid in Baghdad. According...Quite clearly, he must have known that the Abbasids were a source of silks and spices. Less...
...irrigation system "that was the basis of Abbasid civilization and hence its military capacity...Interpretation for its description of the late Abbasid empire, from A.D. 850 on: The government...swaths of land were given by the later Abbasids to absentee generals, further degrading...
...platters. But Baghdad in the age of the Abbasid caliphs was the greatest of all cities...translation and transformation. The second Abbasid caliph, al-Mansur, chose to create Baghdad...existence was a significant feature of the Abbasid regime. The old imperial capital, Damascus...
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newspaper articles on: Abbasid  - 7 results

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...Shafiite jurist, d. 1058) were prolific, respected scholars who lived during the so-called Islamic "Golden Age" of the Baghdadian-Abbasid Caliphate. They wrote the following, based on their interpretations of the Koran and Sunna (i.e., the recorded words and deeds...
...Medina and became imam at the age of six, was brought to Samarra in 848 and placed under house arrest by the Caliph of the Sunni Abbasid Empire which then controlled the entire Middle East. It is believed he was poisoned in 868 and was succeeded by al-Askari...
...the way for the most glorious period in Iraqi history, the Abbasid caliphate. Saddam, while universally feared, also has been...his position. For 700 years, since the brilliant culture of Abbasid Baghdad was annihilated in 1258 by the invading Mongols, who...
...calligraphy. He will, however, relate the story of his hero, the famous Arabic calligrapher Ibn Mukla, a vizier in Baghdad during the Abbasid dynasty, which ruled from A.D. 750 to 1258. "His influence was greater than the caliphs, because of his calligraphy," Mr...
...or not, have always been known for one thing: the development of cities with special characteristics. Both the Umayyad and Abbasid empires tried to outdo each other in this. Madinah, the city par excellence, gave the impetus for this and hence in history...
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encyclopedia articles on: Abbasid  - 42 results

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ABBASID ba sid, a b sid or Abbaside sid, sid, Arab family descended from Abbas , the uncle of Muhammad. The Abbasids held the caliphate from 749 to 1258, but they were recognized neither in Spain nor (after 787) W of Egypt. Under the Umayyad...
MANSUR, AL- , d. 775, 2d Abbasid caliph al-mansoor Arab.,=the victorious, d. 775, 2d Abbasid caliph (754 75) and founder of the city of Baghdad. His name was in full Abu Jafar abd-Allah al-Mansur. He was brother and successor of Abu...
...lim, c.728 755, Persian leader of the Abbasid revolution. By political and religious...raised (747) the black banners of the Abbasids against the ruling Umayyad family...Abu al-Abbas as-Saffah, the head of the Abbasid family, as caliph of Islam. Abu Muslim...
...religious family from Khorasan . They served as viziers to the Abbasid caliphs in the 8th cent. Khalid ibn Barmak, d. 782?, supported the revolution that brought about Abbasid rule. He was given certain ministerial powers, such as tax collecting...
MAMUN, AL- (Abu al-Abbas Abd Allah al-Mamun)mamoon , 786 833, 7th Abbasid caliph (813 33); son of Harun ar-Rashid . He succeeded his brother al-Amin after a bitter civil war, but was unable to enter...
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