Abd al-Malik ibn Rifa'a al-Fahmi عبد الملك بن رفاعة | |
Office1: | Governor of Egypt |
Term Start1: | 715 |
Term End1: | 717 |
Monarch1: | Sulayman |
Predecessor1: | Qurra ibn Sharik al-Absi |
Successor1: | Ayyub ibn Sharhabil |
Term Start2: | 727 |
Term End2: | 727 (few weeks) |
Monarch2: | Hisham |
Predecessor2: | Hafs ibn al-Walid ibn Yusuf al-Hadrami |
Successor2: | Al-Walid ibn Rifa'ah al-Fahmi |
Office3: | Sahib al-shurta of Egypt |
Term Start3: | 709 |
Term End3: | 715 (under governor Qurra ibn Sharik al-Absi) |
Monarch3: | Al-Walid I |
Death Date: | 727 |
Father: | Rifa'a |
Abd al-Malik ibn Rifa'a al-Fahmi was the governor of Egypt for the Umayyad Caliphate in 715–717 and 727.
Abd al-Malik was a member of the Arab settler community in Egypt. In 710, he succeeded his uncle at the post of head of security (sahib al-shurta) for the governor Qurra ibn Sharik al-Absi. When Qurra died in office in 715, he was promoted in his stead, the first governor chosen from the local Arabs after several decades where the post had been filled by various grandees of the Umayyad family and their court. His period of office was a continuation of Qurra's, and according to the Coptic sources was marked by increasing fiscal oppression, combined with the efforts of the government to clamp down on avoidance of taxation and corvée labour. This included such measures as restricting their ability to travel through the issue of passports, which greatly impeded trade in the province.
In 727 Abd al-Malik was again made governor of Egypt, but he died of an illness after only a few weeks in office and was succeeded by his brother al-Walid ibn Rifa'a al-Fahmi instead.[1]