Qarmatians Explained

Native Name:قرامطة
Conventional Long Name:Qarmatians
Common Name:Qarmatians
Iso3166code:omit
Era:Islamic Golden Age
(4th Islamic century)
Government Type:Theocracy
Event Start:Established
Year Start:899
Event End:Disestablished
Year End:1077
Event1:Sack of Mecca
Date Event1:930
Event2:al-Isfahani proclaimed to be the Mahdi
Date Event2:931
Event3:Black Stone returned
Date Event3:952
Event4:Defeated by the Abbasids
Date Event4:976
Event Pre:Ismāʿīlī schism
Date Pre:765
P1:Abbasid Caliphate
Flag P1:Abbasid_banner.svg
S1:Uyunid Emirate
Image Map Caption:Qarmatians under Abu Tahir al-Jannabi
Capital:al-Hasa
Religion:Isma'ilism
Demonym:Qarmatian
Leader1:Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi
Leader2:Abu Tahir al-Jannabi
Leader3:Ahmad Abu Tahir
Leader4:Al-Hasan al-A'sam
Leader5:Abul Kassim Sa'id
Leader6:Abu Yaqub Yousuf
Year Leader1:894–914
Year Leader2:914–944
Year Leader3:944–970
Year Leader4:968–977
Year Leader5:970–972
Year Leader6:972–977
Title Leader:Ruler
Qarmatians
Native Name:قرامطة
Native Name Lang:ar
Founder:Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi
Dates:899–1077
Area:Bahrayn, Mesopotamia, Najd, Hejaz, Levant, Egypt
Ideology:Isma'ilism
Extremism
Socialism[1]
Islamic Socialism
Utopian Socialism
Terrorism[2] [3] [4]
Opponents:Abbasid Caliphate
Fatimid Caliphate
Uyunid Emirate
Seljuk Empire
Battles:Capture of Bahrayn (899)
Battle of Hama (903)
Sack of Basra (923)
Hajj caravan raid (924)
Invasion of Iraq (928)
Sack of Mecca (930)
Invasions of Egypt (971)
Overthrow of the Qarmatians (1058–1077)

The Qarmatians (Arabic: قرامطة|Qarāmiṭa;) were a militant[5] [6] Isma'ili Shia movement centred in al-Hasa in Eastern Arabia, where they established a religious—and, as some scholars have claimed, proto-socialist or utopian socialist[7] [8] [9] —state in 899 CE. Its members were part of a movement that adhered to a syncretic branch of Sevener Ismaili Shia Islam, and were ruled by a dynasty founded by Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi, a Persian from Jannaba in coastal Fars. They rejected the claim of Fatimid Caliph Abdallah al-Mahdi Billah to imamate and clung to their belief in the coming of the Mahdi, and they revolted against the Fatimid and Abbasid Caliphates.[10]

Mecca was sacked by a Qarmatian leader, Abu Tahir al-Jannabi,[11] outraging the Muslim world, particularly with their theft of the Black Stone and desecration of the Zamzam Well with corpses during the Hajj season of 930 CE.

Name

The origin of the name "Qarmatian" is uncertain.[12] According to some sources, the name derives from the surname of the sect's founder, Hamdan Qarmat.[13] The name qarmat probably comes from the Aramaic for "short-legged", "red-eyed" or "secret teacher".[14] [15] Other sources, however, say that the name comes from the Arabic verb Arabic: قرمط (qarmaṭ), which means "to make the lines close together in writing" or "to walk with short steps".[16] [17] The word "Qarmatian" can also refer to a type of Arabic script.[18]

The Qarāmiṭah in Sawad (southern Iraq) were also known as "the Greengrocers" (al-Baqliyyah) because they followed the teachings of Abū Hātim al-Zutti, who in 908 forbade animal slaughter. He also forbade radishes and alliums such as garlic, onions, and leeks. By 928, it is uncertain whether the people still held on to those teachings.

History

Early developments

Under the Abbasid Caliphate (750–1258 CE), various Shiite groups organised in secret opposition to their rule. Among them were the supporters of the proto-Ismā‘īlī community, of whom the most prominent group were called the Mubārakiyyah.[19]

According to the Ismaili school of thought, Imām Ja'far al-Sadiq (702–765) designated his second son, Isma'il ibn Ja'far (ca. 721–755), as heir to the Imamate. However, Ismā‘īl predeceased his father. Some claimed he had gone into hiding, but the proto-Ismā‘īlī group accepted his death and therefore accordingly recognized Ismā‘īl's eldest son, Muhammad ibn Isma'il (746–809), as Imām. He remained in contact with the Mubārakiyyah group, most of whom resided in Kufa.

The split among the Mubārakiyyah came with the death of Muḥammad ibn Ismā‘īl (ca. 813 CE). The majority of the group denied his death; they recognized him as the Mahdi. The minority believed in his death and would eventually emerge in later times as the Isma'ili Fatimid Caliphate, the precursors to all modern groups.[20]

The majority Ismā‘īlī missionary movement settled in Salamiyah (now in Syria) and had great success in Khuzestan (southwestern Iran), where the Ismā‘īlī leader al-Husayn al-Ahwāzī converted the Kūfan man Ḥamdān in 874 CE, who took the name Qarmaṭ after his new faith. Qarmaṭ and his theologian brother-in-law ‘Abdān prepared southern Iraq for the coming of the Mahdi by creating a military and religious stronghold. Other such locations grew up in Yemen, in Eastern Arabia (Arabic Bahrayn) in 899, and in North Africa. They attracted many new Shi'i followers because of their activist and messianic teachings. The new proto-Qarmaṭī movement continued to spread into Greater Iran and then into Transoxiana.[21]

Qarmatian Revolution

A change in leadership in Salamiyah in 899 led to a split in the movement. The minority Ismā‘īlīs, whose leader had taken control of the Salamiyah centre, began to proclaim their teachings that Imām Muḥammad had died and that the new leader in Salamiyah (Abdallah al-Mahdi Billah) was in fact his descendant come out of hiding and was the Mahdi (a Messianic figure who will appear on Earth before the Day of Judgment and rid the world of wrongdoing, injustice and tyranny). Qarmaṭ and his brother-in-law opposed this and openly broke with the Salamiyids; when ‘Abdān was assassinated, he went into hiding and subsequently repented. Qarmaṭ became a missionary of the new Imām, Abdallah al-Mahdi Billah (873–934), who founded the Fatimid Caliphate in North Africa in 909.

Nonetheless, the dissident group retained the name Qarmaṭī. Its greatest stronghold remained in Bahrain, which then included much of eastern Arabia as well as the islands that comprise the present state. It was under Abbasid control at the end of the ninth century, but the Zanj Rebellion in Basra disrupted the power of Baghdad. The Qarmaṭians seized their opportunity under their leader, Abu Sa'id al-Jannabi, a Persian who hailed from Jannaba in coastal Fars. Eventually, from Qatar, he captured Bahrain's capital Hajr and al-Hasa in 899, which he made the capital of his state and once in control of the state he sought to set up a utopian society.

The Qarmaṭians instigated what one scholar termed a "century of terror" in Kufa. They considered the pilgrimage to Mecca a superstition, and once in control of the Bahrayni state, they launched raids along the pilgrim routes crossing the Arabian Peninsula. In 906, they ambushed the pilgrim caravan returning from Mecca and massacred 20,000 pilgrims.[22]

Under al-Jannabi (ruled 923–944), the Qarmaṭians came close to capturing Baghdad in 927, and sacked Mecca in 930. In their attack on Islam's holiest sites, the Qarmatians desecrated the Zamzam Well with corpses of Hajj pilgrims and took the Black Stone from Mecca to Ain Al Kuayba[23] in Qatif.[24] [25] Holding the Black Stone to ransom, they forced the Abbasids to pay a huge sum for its return in 952.[26]

The revolution and desecration shocked the Muslim world and humiliated the Abbasids, but little could be done. For much of the tenth century the Qarmatians were the most powerful force in the Persian Gulf and Middle East and controlled the coast of Oman and collecting tribute from the caliph in Baghdad as well as from a rival Isma'ili imam in Cairo, the head of the Fatimid Caliphate, whose power they did not recognize.[27]

Qarmatian society

The land over which they ruled was extremely wealthy with a huge slave-based economy according to academic Yitzhak Nakash:

Collapse

See main article: Overthrowing of the Qarmatians. According to Farhad Daftary, the catalyst of the collapse of Qarmatian movement as a whole happened in the year 931, when Abu Tahir al-Janabi, the Qarmatian leader in Bahrain, handed over the reins of the state in Bahrain to Abu'l-Fadl al-Isfahani, a young Persian man who had been believed by the Qarmatians to be the Mahdi. However, Abu Tahir soon realized al-Isfahani's appointment was a disastrous mistake, after the "Mahdi" executed some nobles and insulted Muhammad and the other prophets. The incident shocked the Qarmatians and the Islamic community as a whole, and Abu Tahir ordered the youth's execution.

Al-Isfahani lasted as leader only 80 days before his execution but greatly weakened the credibility of Qarmatians within the Muslim community in general and heralded the beginning of the end of their revolutionary movements.

After their defeat by the Abbasids in 976, the Qarmatians began to look inwards and their status was reduced to that of a local power. This had severe consequences for the Qarmatians' ability to extract tribute from the region; according to Arabist historian Curtis Larsen:

In Bahrain and eastern Arabia, the Qarmatian state was replaced by the Uyunid dynasty, and it is believed that by the mid-11th century, Qarmatian communities in Iraq, Iran, and Transoxiana had either been integrated by Fatimid proselytism or disintegrated.[28]

By the mid-10th century, persecution forced the Qarmatians to leave what is now Egypt and Iraq and move to the city of Multan, now in Pakistan.[29] However, prejudice against the Qarmatians did not dwindle, as Mahmud of Ghazni led an expedition against Multan's Qarmatian ruler Abdul Fateh Daud in 1005. The city was surrendered, and Fateh Daud was permitted to retain control over the city with the condition that he adhere to Sunnism.[30]

According to the maritime historian Dionisius A. Agius, the Qarmatians finally disappeared in 1067, after they lost their fleet at Bahrain Island and were expelled from Hasa near the Arabian coast by the chief of Banu, Murra ibn Amir.

Imamate of Seven Imams

According to Qarmatians, the number of imams was fixed, with Seven Imāms preordained by God. These groups considers Muhammad ibn Isma'il to be the messenger – prophet (Rasūl), Imām al-Qā'im and Mahdi to be preserved in hiding, which is referred to as Occultation.

Imām Personage Period
1 Ali ibn Abi Talib(632–661)
2 (661–669)
3 (669–680)
4 (680–713)
5 (713–733)
6 (733–765)
7 Muhammad ibn Isma'il

[31]
Imām al-Qā'im al-Mahdi also
a messenger - prophet (Rasūl)

(775–813)

Ismaili imams not accepted as legitimate by Qarmatians

In addition, the following Ismaili imams after Muhammad ibn Isma'il had been considered heretics of dubious origins by certain Qarmatian groups,[32] who refused to acknowledge the imamate of the Fatimids and clung to their belief in the coming of the Mahdi.

Qarmatian rulers in Eastern Arabia

Substitution after Abu Tahir al-Jannabi

Farhad Daftary writes about the fate of the successors of Abu Tahir al-Jannabi:

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fahes, Fadi . ASocial utopia in tenth century Islam the Qarmatian experiment . 2018 . California State University, Dominguez Hills . 68 . en.
  2. Book: Goitein, S. D. . A Mediterranean Society: The Jewish Communities of the Arab World as Portrayed in the Documents of the Cairo Geniza, Vol. V: The Individual . 1967 . University of California Press . 978-0-520-22162-8 . 403 . en.
  3. Book: Nadvi, Syed Habibul Haq . The Dynamics of Islam: An Analysis of Islamic Dynamism which Has Been Operating in the Structure of Islamic Belief, Its Religio-political, Socio-economic Framework and Cultural Legacies . 1982 . Acad.: The Centre for Islamic, Near and Middle Eastern Studies, Planning and Publ. . 978-0-620-05712-7 . 2 . en.
  4. Book: Rahman, Fazlur . Islam . University of Chicago Press . 2020 . 9780226773377 . 176.
  5. Book: Mumayiz, Ibrahim A. . Arabesques: Selections of Biography and Poetry from Classical Arabic Literature . 2006 . Coronet Books Incorporated . 978-90-441-1888-9 . 39 . en.
  6. Book: Jr, Everett Jenkins . The Muslim Diaspora (Volume 1, 570-1500): A Comprehensive Chronology of the Spread of Islam in Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas . 2010-11-11 . McFarland . 978-0-7864-4713-8 . 98 . en.
  7. Book: Clark, Malcolm . Islam For Dummies . 2019-08-09 . John Wiley & Sons . 978-1-119-64304-3 . en.
  8. Book: Thompson, Andrew David . Christianity in Oman: Ibadism, Religious Freedom, and the Church . 2019-10-31 . Springer Nature . 978-3-030-30398-3 . 47 . en.
  9. Book: Corm, Georges . Arab Political Thought: Past and Present . 2020 . Oxford University Press . 978-1-84904-816-3 . 96 . en.
  10. de Blois. François. 1986. THE 'ABU SAʿIDIS OR SO-CALLED "QARMATIANS" OF BAHRAYN . Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies. 16. 13–21. 41223231. 0308-8421.
  11. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/371782/Mecca/37835/History#ref887188 Mecca's History
  12. Akbar, Faiza. "The secular roots of religious dissidence in early Islam: the case of the Qaramita of Sawad Al‐Kūfa", Journal Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs, 12.2 (1991): 376–390.
  13. Web site: Madelung. Wilferd. Ḥamdān Qarmat . Encyclopædia Iranica. 24 April 2016.
  14. Book: Dadoyan, Seta B.. Seta Dadoyan. The Armenians in the Medieval Islamic World, Volume Three: Medieval Cosmopolitanism and Images of Islam. 2013. Transaction Publishers. 978-1-4128-5189-3. 36.
  15. Book: Heinz Halm. Der Nahe und Mittlere Osten. 1996. Brill. 978-90-04-10056-5. 27.
  16. Glassé, Cyril. 2008. The New Encyclopedia of Islam. Walnut Creek CA: AltaMira Press p. 369
  17. Book: Edward William Lane. Arabic-English Lexicon. 2519. Edward William Lane.
  18. Book: Josef W. Meri. Medieval Islamic Civilization: An Encyclopedia. 2005. Routledge. 978-1-135-45596-5. 134.
  19. Web site: Sheikh Ihsan . Ilahi Zahir . 2023 . History and Evolution of Shi'ism .
  20. Gulamadov . Shaftolu . 2018 . The Hagiography of Nāṣir-i Khusraw and the Ismāʿīlīs of Badakhshān . . 486.
  21. Web site: Farhad . Daftary . 1998 . Origins and Early History: Shī῾īs, Ismailis and Qarmaṭīs . 2024-02-06 . academic.oup.com.
  22. [John Joseph Saunders]
  23. Web site: mod1111222@. محمد العبدالله (القطيف). 2019-06-23. القطيف: إعادة رونق عين "الكعيبة" الأثري . 2021-08-04. Okaz. Arabic.
  24. Houari Touati, Islam and Travel in the Middle Ages, transl. Lydia G. Cochrane, (University of Chicago Press, 2010), p. 60.
  25. http://ismaili.net/histoire/history05/history510.html The Qarmatians in Bahrain
  26. Web site: Qarmatiyyah. St. Martin's College . Overview of World Religions. 2007-05-04. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20070428055134/http://philtar.ucsm.ac.uk/encyclopedia/islam/shia/qarma.html. 28 April 2007. dmy-all.
  27. Web site: Image 56 of Persian Gulf states : country studies . 2024-02-06 . Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA.
  28. Farhad Daftary, The Assassin Legends: Myths of the Isma'ilis, IB Tauris, 1994, p. 20
  29. Book: Glassé, Cyril. The New Encyclopedia of Islam. 6 May 2001. Rowman Altamira. 978-0-7591-0190-6 . Google Books.
  30. Book: Mehta. Jaswant Lal. Advanced Study in the History of Medieval India, Volume 1. 1980. Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd. 9788120706170.
  31. Web site: Muhammad bin Ismail (158–197/775–813). www.ismaili.net.
  32. Web site: Encyclopedia Iranica, "ʿABDALLĀH B. MAYMŪN AL-QADDĀḤ" . 2014-07-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180516235417/http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/abdallah-b-maymun-al-qaddah-legendary-founder-of-the-qarmatian-ismaili-doctrine . 2018-05-16 . dead .
  33. Web site: The Qarmatians in Bahrain. ismaili.net. 2020-05-07.