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the Abbassides

empire, caliph, bagdad, caliphate and caliphs

ABBAS'SIDES, THE (Ar. al-`Abbasiyall). Ca liphs of Bagdad, and the most celebrated :Moslem dynasty. although their rule never extended over the whole of Islam, as had that of the Ommiads (q.v.). It was never acknowledged in Spain and only nominally in Africa outside of Egypt. Theirs was. however, the true caliphate, notwith standing the rival claims of Cordova. The Abbassides claimed descent from Abbas, the uncle and adviser of Mohammed (566-652 A.n.). The rivalry between the family of Abbas and the Ommiads broke out into open war. In 747 Ibra him, the head of the Abhasside faction, was over thrown by the Caliph Merwan and put to death, but three years later his brother, Aim al-Abbas, who had 'proclaimed himself rightful Caliph, defeated Merwan in a great battle near the river Zab and established his line firmly on the throne. In Spain, however, Abd al-Rahman, one of the Onunia.ds, who had escaped from the genera] destruction of his house, succeeded in • establishing the great independent emirate, or kingdom (subsequently caliphate) of Cordova. It was long before the rulers of Spain assumed the title of Caliph. The successor of Abu al Abbas, Almansur. made Bagdad the capital of his empire. Under his followers the empire enjoyed comparative peace and attained to a splendid development. The caliphs became the patrons of literature, art, and learning, and their courts were the homes of the most extreme luxury. The caliphs Harlin al-Rashid (786-S09) and al-Mamun (813-8331 were fa mous throughout the world for their wealth, their splemb r. and their munificence. But the martial

vigor of the Arabs was sapped by the infinence of Persian luxury, and they gradually ceased to be relied upon for military service. In Africa and in the northeastern part of Persia, emirs seized the opportunity to declare themselves independent : in the west the Greek Empire showed a revival of energy: but the real danger came, as with the Roman Empire, from an alien soldiery. Mutasim (833-812) had formed a body-guard of Turks, and these in time seized upon the real powers of government. They assassinated 7)Intawakkil, the son of Mutasim, in 861, and in the following century forced the caliphs to delegate the chief powers of govern ment to their commander. Gradually the empire of the Abassides became contracted, until it was finally narrowed down to Bagdad and the sur rounding territory. In 1258 llulaku Khan, the Mongol ruler of Persia, burned Bagdad and put the ruling Caliph to death. Deprived of all polit ical power, the Abbassides found refuge with the Mameluke rulers of Egypt, who paid them respect as the spiritual heads of the Moham medan world. The last of the Abbassides, Mutawakkil III., died in 1538 at Cairo, where he was living under the protection of the Turkish Sultan. Consult: Muir, The Caliphate (London. 1891) : Syed Ameer Ali, .1 Short His to•y of the ,Saracens (New York, 1899) ; and the more elaborate work, Weil, Geschiehte der Chalifea (Mannheim and Stuttgart, 1846-62).