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Qays ibn al-Haytham al-Sulami

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Qays ibn al-Haytham ibn Asmāʾ ibn al-Ṣalt al-Sulamī (fl. 649 – c. 690) was an Arab commander and administrator in the service of the Rashidun, Umayyad and Zubayrid caliphates.

Life

Qays was the son of a certain al-Haytham ibn Asma ibn al-Salt of the Banu Sulaym tribe of the Hejaz (western Arabia). He was directly appointed by Caliph Uthman (r. 644–656) over the Nishapur district of Khurasan in 649/50.[1] Before his assassination in 656, Uthman expanded Qays' governorship to the entire province of Khurasan.[1] Qays appointed his paternal cousin, Abd Allah ibn Khazim al-Sulami, as his deputy governor and left the province for Basra to assess the political situation in the wake of Uthman's death; however, Ibn Khazim, using a diploma he previously obtained from the governor of Basra, Abd Allah ibn Amir, declared himself governor and remained in the post until his dismissal by Caliph Ali (r. 656–661).[2] Qays was angered by his cousin's ruse and reportedly stated: "I had a better right than Abd Allah to be the son of [Abd Allah's mother] Ajla."[1] When Mu'awiya I acceded to the caliphate in 661, Qays was reappointed governor of Khurasan by the order of Ibn Amir or the caliph himself.[3] He remained in the post for two years.[3] He was again replaced by his cousin Abd Allah after failing to quell a revolt at Qarin and briefly imprisoned in Basra until his mother intervened on his behalf.[4] He was later made the deputy governor of Basra by Ibn Amir when the latter visited Mu'awiya's court in Syria in 664.[5]

After Ziyad ibn Abihi was appointed governor of Basra in 665, he appointed Qays as governor of Marw al-Rudh in Khurasan.[6] In 678/79, Ziyad's son Abd al-Rahman was made governor of Khurasan by Mu'awiya.[7] By then, Qays had become the leader of the Banu Sulaym faction of Basra, one of five tribal divisions of the city's garrison.[8] Abd al-Rahman appointed Qays his deputy and had him enter the province ahead of him. Afterward, Qays arrested the powerful tribal chief Aslam ibn Zur'a al-Kilabi.[7] During the reign of Caliph Yazid I (r. 680–683), in 680/81, the caliph's new appointee over Khurasan, Abd al-Rahman's brother Salm, dispatched his lieutenant al-Harith ibn Mu'awiya al-Harithi to settle matters for him in the province before his arrival. Al-Harith arrested and imprisoned Qays and put his son Shabib in shackles.[9] Qays later returned to Basra where he continued as a nobleman of the Sulaym and the wider Mudar confederation (which was opposed to the AzdRabi'a confederation).[10] Together with a Basran tribal noble from the Azd–Rabi'a faction, al-Nu'man ibn Suhban al-Rasibi, Qays was an arbitrator for selecting the successor of Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad as governor of Basra following Ubayd Allah's expulsion in the aftermath of Yazid's death in 683.[11]

Basra and most of the Caliphate recognized the Mecca-based, anti-Umayyad Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr as caliph. Qays was dispatched with the Basran security forces to stamp out an attempt by supporters of al-Mukhtar al-Thaqafi, the pro-Alid ruler of Kufa, to gain control of Basra.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b c Humphreys 1990, pp. 36–37.
  2. ^ Humphreys 1990, pp. 36–37, 108–109.
  3. ^ a b Hawting 1987, p. 21.
  4. ^ Hawting 1996, pp. 68–69.
  5. ^ Hawting 1996, p. 73.
  6. ^ Hawting 1996, p. 85.
  7. ^ a b Hawting 1996, p. 200.
  8. ^ Howard 1990, p. 32, note 148.
  9. ^ Howard 1990, p. 185, note 600.
  10. ^ Hawting 1989, p. 6.
  11. ^ Hawting 1989, pp. 20–23.
  12. ^ Fishbein 1990, pp. 45–48.

Bibliography