Salih ibn Mirdas

Salih ibn Mirdas
Emir of Aleppo
Reign June 1025–May 1029
Predecessor Thu'ban ibn Muhammad
Successor Mu'izz al-Dawla Thimal
Shibl al-Dawla Nasr
Died May 1029
Al-Uqhuwanah, eastern shore of Lake Tiberias
Spouse Tarud
Issue Nasr
Thimal
Atiyya
Full name
Abū ʿAlī Ṣāliḥ ibn Mirdās
Regnal name
Asad al-Dawla
House Banu Kilab (tribe)
Dynasty Mirdasid
Father Mirdas ibn Idris
Mother Rabab al-Zawqaliyah
Religion Shia Islam

Abu Ali Salih ibn Mirdas,[note 1] also known by his laqab (honorific epithet) of Asad al-Dawla ("Lion of the State") (d. May 1029), was the first Mirdasid emir of Aleppo, ruling between 1025 until his death. At its peak his emirate (principality) encompassed much of western Upper Mesopotamia, northern Syria and several central Syrian towns. With occasional interruption, Salih's descendants would rule Aleppo for the next five decades.

Salih began his career in 1008/09 when he seized al-Rahba on the Euphrates River. In 1012, he was imprisoned and tortured by Mansur ibn Lu'lu, governor of Aleppo, but escaped two years later and briefly captured Mansur. This action cemented Salih as the paramount emir of his Banu Kilab tribe, many of whose chieftains died in Mansur's dungeons. With his Bedouin warriors, Salih captured a string of fortresses along the Euphrates by 1022. Two years later he formed an alliance with the Banu Kalb and Banu Tayy. He militarily supported their struggle against the Fatimids and annexed the central Syrian towns of Hims, Ba'albak and Sidon before conquering Fatimid-held Aleppo in 1025.

Salih established a well-organized administration over his Aleppo-based domains. Militarily, he relied on the Banu Kilab, while entrusting fiscal administration to his Christian vizier, policing to a local militia commander and judicial matters to a Shia Muslim qāḍī. His rule was officially tolerated by the Fatimids, to whom he paid formal allegiance. However, his alliance with the Banu Tayy drew him into conflict with the Fatimid general, Anushtakin al-Dizbari, whose forces killed Salih in battle near Lake Tiberias. Salih was succeeded by his sons Thimal and Nasr.

Early life and career

Family and tribe

Genealogy of Salih ibn Mirdas and the Mirdasid dynasty

The year of Salih ibn Mirdas's birth is not known.[2] Both of Salih's parents belonged to noble households of the Bedouin (nomadic Arab) tribe of Banu Kilab.[2] His father was a certain Mirdas ibn Idris who hailed from a princely clan of the Kilab,[3] specifically from the Rabi'ah ibn Ka'b line of the 'Abd Allah ibn Abu Bakr branch.[3][4] Nothing else is known about Mirdas.[5] Salih's mother, Rabab al-Zawqaliyah, came from the princely Kilabi clan of Zawqal, which inhabited the environs of Aleppo.[2] Salih had at least three brothers, only one of whom, Kamil, is named in sources and at least four sons, Nasr (d. 1038), Thimal (d. 1062), Atiyya (d. 1071/72) and the youngest whose name is not known (d. 1029).[6]

Salih's family inhabited and controlled the town of Qinnasrin (Chalcis), to the southwest of Aleppo.[2] Like most Muslims in Aleppo in the 10th–11th centuries, the Kilab followed the doctrines of Shia Islam.[7] It is not clear how strongly they identified with their faith, though Salih's kunya (paedonymic), "Abu Ali" (father of Ali), honored Ali ibn Abi Talib, a central figure in Shia tradition.[7]

The Kilab were a major sub-tribe of the Banu 'Amir and first migrated to Syria from central Arabia during the 7th-century Muslim conquest.[8] They soon became a pillar of the Qaysi tribal faction and established their strongholds in Upper Mesopotamia and the steppes around Aleppo, which they thenceforth considered their diyār (tribal territory).[9] Through their military strength and consistent ambition to govern and keep order in the territories they inhabited, the Kilab persisted as a powerful force in northern Syria throughout the following centuries.[10] In 932–933, another mass wave of Kilabi tribesmen moved to the environs of Aleppo as soldiers of an invading Qarmatian army; according to historian Suhayl Zakkar, the new arrivals "paved the way to the rise and establishment of the Mirdasid dynasty".[11] By then, the Kilab established itself as the predominant tribal force in northern Syria and played a significant role in all the uprisings and internecine fighting involving the Hamdanid rulers of Aleppo, between 945 and 1002.[11]

Emir of al-Rahba

Salih is first mentioned in 1008 in relation to the power struggle over the Euphrates fortress town of al-Rahba,[10][12] which was strategically situated at the crossroads between Syria and Iraq and frequently contested by local and regional powers.[2] In 1008, Ibn Mihkan, a native of al-Rahba, expelled its Fatimid governor and sought Salih's military backing to uphold his rule.[13] Salih continued to dwell in his tribe's desert encampment and it is not known what he received in exchange for protecting Ibn Mihkan.[13] A dispute soon arose between Salih and Ibn Mihkan, leading the former to besiege al-Rahba.[13] The hostilities came to an end following an agreement that stipulated Salih's marriage to Ibn Mihkan's daughter and Ibn Mihkan's relocation to Anah, which he would rule in addition to al-Rahba.[13] When Anah's inhabitants revolted against Ibn Mihkan, Salih intervened to reassert his father-in-law's rule.[12] However, amid these developments Ibn Mihkan was assassinated; contemporary chroniclers presume Salih ordered his death.[14] Salih proceeded to capture al-Rahba and proclaim his allegiance to the Fatimid caliph, al-Hakim.[14] This marked "the first step in Salih's career and from which his ambition probably evolved", according to Zakkar.[14] Salih's capture of al-Rahba most likely boosted his prestige among the Kilab.[15]

Supreme emir of Banu Kilab

Between 1009 and 1012, the Kilab participated in the struggle between Mansur ibn Lu'lu', the ruler of the Aleppo, and the Hamdanids and their regional backers for control of Aleppo.[16] Twice the Kilab betrayed the Hamdanids and their allies, and in return, demanded from Mansur numerous pastures to breed their flocks and war horses.[16] Instead, Mansur, who viewed the Kilab as a hindrance to his rule,[17] strove to eliminate them by luring the tribesmen into a trap.[16] To that end, on 27 May 1012, he invited them to a feast and once the tribesmen entered his palace, the gates were locked and Mansur and his ghilmān (slave soldiers; sing. ghulām) attacked them.[18] Several were killed and the rest, including Salih, were imprisoned in the citadel of Aleppo.[16] Afterward, the Kilabi emir Muqallid ibn Za'ida, besieged the town of Kafartab to gain leverage with Mansur.[18] This prompted the latter to move the Kilabi prisoners to facilities with better conditions in case of future peace negotiations with Muqallid.[19] However, upon hearing of Muqallid's death and his failed siege, Mansur returned the prisoners to the citadel's dungeons, where many among them, including some chieftains, were executed or died of torture or poor conditions.[17]

Salih was among those tortured by Mansur. Moreover, Salih was forced to divorce his wife and cousin Tarud,[16] who was famed for her beauty,[17] so that Mansur could wed her.[16] Zakkar writes that it is not known whether this was meant to humiliate Salih, "an energetic and bold" emir, or to establish marital ties with other elements of the Kilab.[17] Mansur frequently threatened to execute Salih, who upon being informed of these threats, escaped the citadel.[20] According to the versions of medieval chroniclers, Salih managed to cut one of his shackles and make a hole in his cell wall.[20] Then, on the night of 3 July 1014, he jumped from the wall of the citadel with one shackle still attached to his leg and hid in a drain pipe for the remainder of the night until re-joining his tribesmen at their encampment in Marj Dabiq.[20] Zakkar questions the truth of this story, and asserts it was more likely that Salih escaped either through bribery or a friendly arrangement with a guard.[20]

Salih's escape boosted the Kilab's morale and they assembled to offer him their allegiance.[20] In the following days, the Kilab under Salih besieged Aleppo, but Mansur's forces were able to plunder Salih's camp and capture fifty of his tribesmen.[20] Buoyed by his victory, Mansur collected his army of ghilmān in Aleppo along with local toughs, Christians and Jews and confronted Salih's forces on the outskirts of Aleppo.[16][21] The Kilab routed their opponents, killing some 2,000 Aleppines in the process, and captured Mansur.[22] Negotiations between Salih and Mansur's representatives ensued, concluding with an agreement that freed Mansur in return for the release of Salih's brothers, a ransom of 50,000 gold dinars and 500 robes, and the allotment of half of the Emirate of Aleppo's revenues to the Kilab.[16][22] Salih was also able to remarry Tarud and was given Mansur's daughter to wed as well.[16] Furthermore, Mansur recognized Salih as the supreme emir of the Kilab, officially investing him with authority and control over his tribesmen.[22]

Establishment of Mirdasid emirate

Mesopotamian conquests and struggle for Aleppo

Ruins of Balis on the Euphrates River. Between 1009 and 1022, Salih laid the foundations of his emirate by capturing a string of fortress towns along the Euphrates, including Balis, al-Rahba, Manbij, al-Raqqah and al-Rafiqah

Using his newfound power, Salih captured the Euphrates towns of Manbij and Balis, located east and southeast of Aleppo, respectively.[22] With these conquests and his control of al-Rahba, Salih established what would become the Upper Mesopotamian portion of the Mirdasid emirate.[23] This crossroads region was agriculturally, commercially and strategically valuable, and put Salih in contact with the Byzantines, the Fatimids and the rulers of Iraq.[23]

Meanwhile, the agreement between Salih and Mansur fell through as the latter abandoned most of his promises to Salih, including giving his daughter's hand in marriage and according the Kilab their share of Aleppo's revenues.[16] Salih retaliated by besieging Aleppo,[23] while the Kilab and their Bedouin allies plundered the countryside.[16] Mansur appealed for Byzantine intervention and warned Emperor Basil II that if left unchecked, the Bedouin uprising could spread to his territory.[24] Basil dispatched 1,000 Armenian relief troops in response, but withdrew them after Salih informed him of Mansur's treachery and pledged his goodwill to the Byzantines.[24] Basil may have also acquiesced to Salih to avoid provoking Bedouin raids against his territory as the emirates of both the Kilab and their Numayri kinsmen bordered the Byzantines.[24][note 2] The withdrawal of Byzantine troops weakened Mansur's position further and strengthened Salih, who dispatched one of his sons to Constantinople to pay allegiance to Basil.[24]

In January 1016, Mansur fled Aleppo after the citadel commander, Fath al-Qal'i, revolted and recognized Salih's emirate and Caliph al-Hakim's suzerainty over Aleppo.[25] According to Aleppine chroniclers, the revolt was coordinated with Salih, who was restored his share of Aleppo's revenues and given custody of the mother, wives and daughters of Mansur; Salih immediately sent the women to join Mansur, but kept one of the latter's daughters, whom he married.[25] Mansur's ouster and the subsequent disorder in northern Syria drove Basil to halt all travel and trade with Syria and Egypt, but Salih persuaded him to exempt Aleppo and the Kilab from these sanctions.[16][26]

To secure his hold over Aleppo, Fath invited Fatimid troops from Afamiyah led by Ali al-Dayf.[26] Al-Hakim requested Salih to cooperate with al-Dayf and bestowed on him the title of asad al-dawla (lion of the state).[26] However, Salih opposed the Fatimid presence in Aleppo and proposed an arrangement to Fath giving the latter control of the citadel and the Kilab control of the city.[27] Fath responded favorably, but Aleppo's inhabitants protested the rumored deal, demanding the establishment of Fatimid rule; they enjoyed al-Hakim's tax exemptions and opposed Bedouin governance.[28] Fath was compelled to relocate to Tyre by al-Hakim, who also sent more troops to Aleppo.[28] Salih was thus prevented from seizing the city.[28] Nonetheless, Mansur's flight and the instability of Fatimid rule enabled Salih to strengthen his Upper Mesopotamian emirate.[29] He established his own administration and tribal court.[30] As early as 1019, the court was visited by the Arab poet Ibn Abi Hasina, who would become a prominent eulogist of the Mirdasid dynasty.[30]

Meanwhile, al-Hakim appointed Aziz al-Dawla, an Armenian ghulām, governor of Aleppo in 1017.[16][28] Aziz al-Dawla established friendly relations with Salih and had the latter's mother live in Aleppo to strengthen ties.[31] There is no mention of Salih's activities during Aziz al-Dawla's five-year reign;[31] according to Zakkar, this indicated that Salih "was satisfied and remained contented" throughout this period.[31] Though Salih was not strong enough to challenge the Fatimids, the Kilab were nonetheless given control of the plains around Aleppo by Aziz al-Dawla.[16] By 1022, Salih had extended his rule to the Euphrates twin towns of al-Raqqah and al-Rafiqah.[16] In July of that year, Aziz al-Dawla was assassinated and briefly replaced by Abu'l-Najm Badr, his Turkish ghulām.[32] This was followed by a succession of governors with short terms, the last being Thu'ban ibn Muhammad and Mawsuf al-Saqlabi as governors of the city and citadel, respectively.[33]

Formation of Bedouin alliance

Aziz al-Dawla's replacements were challenged by Salih and chaos prevailed in Aleppo.[30] In 1023, Salih entered the Kilab into a military pact with the Banu Tayy of Transjordan and the Banu Kalb of central Syria, both of which opposed direct Fatimid rule.[16] Medieval historian Yahya al-Antaki relates that the alliance was a renewal of a previous pact made by the same parties in circa 1021, during which they rebelled and ultimately reconciled with the new Fatimid caliph, az-Zahir (r. 1021–1036), who took power in the aftermath of Caliph al-Hakim's disappearance in 1021.[34] However, the reconciliation unraveled by 1023 due to the Tayy's conflict with Palestine's Fatimid governor, Anushtakin al-Dizbari, which prompted the respective chieftains of Tayy and Kalb, Hassan ibn Mufarrij and Sinan ibn Ulayyan, to meet with Salih at the outskirts of Aleppo and renew the alliance.[35]

According to the terms of the pact, Syria would be split into three Bedouin-run states, with the Kilab under Salih governing Aleppo and northern Syria, the Tayy under its princely Jarrahid household ruling Palestine from al-Ramla, and the Kalb ruling central Syria from Damascus.[34] The combined strength of the three largest tribes in Syria made them a formidable challenge to the Fatimids.[36] A Bedouin alliance of this magnitude and nature had not occurred since the 7th century and was made without consideration to the traditional Qays–Yaman rivalry between the tribes; the Tayy and Kalb were both Yamani while the Kilab were Qaysi.[34] Moreover, its formation surprised Syria's population at the time, who were unaccustomed to the spectacle of Bedouin chiefs seeking kingship in the cities rather than nomadic life in the desert fringe.[36] According to Zakkar, "Salih was the outstanding figure among the allies, particularly from a military standpoint", though Hassan ibn Mufarrij apparently managed the allies' communications with the Fatimids.[36]

The Tayy and Kalb's revolts in Palestine and Jund Dimashq (Damascus Province), respectively, "supplied the impetus", according to Zakkar, for Salih to move on Aleppo, particularly as the Fatimids' grip on that city was unstable.[30] Before that, however, in 1023, Salih and his Kilabi forces headed south and helped the Tayy evict Anushtakin's Fatimid troops from the interior regions of Palestine.[37] Afterward, Salih assisted the Kalbi siege of Damascus.[37] While Salih was fighting alongside his allies in the south, his kātib (secretary), Sulayman ibn Tawq, captured Maarrat Misrin, in Aleppo's southern countryside, from its Fatimid governor.[38] In November 1023, Salih returned to Aleppo in the belief that its defenders would immediately surrender to him, but this did not occur.[37] Salih then withdrew and mobilized his tribal warriors and other local Bedouin.[37]

Conquest of Aleppo

Salih's forces captured the Citadel of Aleppo (pictured) from its Fatimid garrison on 30 June 1025 after a roughly five-month siege

In October 1024, Salih's forces, led by Ibn Tawq, advanced against Aleppo and fought in sporadic engagements with the Fatimid troops of governors Thu'ban and Mawsuf.[38] Salih himself arrived at Aleppo—after having sacked several coastal districts—with large numbers of Bedouin warriors on 22 November.[38][39] He besieged the city, first camping outside of Bab al-Jinan, where his demand that Ibn Abi Usama, the city's qāḍī (head Islamic judge), and other notables surrender was refused.[40] Salih then gathered more troops and engaged Aleppo's defenders for over fifty days, resulting in heavy casualties on both sides.[39][40] On 18 January 1025, the Bab Qinnasrin gate was opened to Salih by Salim ibn al-Mustafad, head of the city's surviving Hamdanid ghilmān;[39][40] Ibn Mustafad had defected from the Fatimids after a quarrel with Mawsuf, and together with numerous townsmen and other former ghilmān, he welcomed Salih, who granted the inhabitants safe conduct.[39][40] Afterward, Salih had the city's wall towers demolished, according to the Egyptian contemporary chronicler, al-Musabbihi, leading the local populace to believe Salih was preparing to hand over Aleppo to the Byzantines;[35][40] fearing this, they fought alongside Fatimid troops and temporarily ousted Salih's forces, killing some 250 Kilabi warriors.[40] Zakkar views Salih's destruction of Aleppo's walls as a tactical move to enable an easier reconquest of the city should his troops have been ousted.[35]

Salih besieged the citadel, where Mawsuf and his troops were held up, on 23 January, while Thu'ban and his garrison barricaded themselves in the governor's palace at the foot of the citadel.[40] By 13 March, Salih managed to enter the palace and allowed the townspeople to loot it.[40] Salih's Bedouin troops were not accustomed to siege warfare and Salih requested skilled forces from the Byzantine governor of Antioch, Constantine Dalassenos, who dispatched three hundred bowmen to Aleppo; however, the Byzantine troops were quickly withdrawn on the orders of Emperor Basil II, who did not support Salih's rebellion.[35][40] On 5 May, Salih appointed Ibn Mustafad muqaddam al-aḥdāth (commander of the local militia) and governor of Aleppo and entrusted him and Ibn Tawq with continuing the siege, while Salih left for Palestine to help the Tayy combat a renewed expedition by Anushtakin.[40] The Fatimid garrison's appeal for a truce on 6 June was ignored, prompting their desperate calls for Byzantine assistance; the troops went so far as to hang Christian crosses on the citadel walls and loudly praise Basil II while cursing Caliph az-Zahir.[40] Muslim townsmen reacted to the pro-Byzantine pleas by joining the siege.[40] By 30 June, the citadel was breached and Mawsuf and Thu'ban were arrested.[41]

Meanwhile, Salih and the Tayy fended off Fatimid troops in Palestine.[39] On his way back to Aleppo, Salih captured a string of towns and fortresses, namely Ba'albak west of Damascus, Hims and Rafaniyya in central Syria, Sidon on the Mediterranean coast and Hisn Ibn Akkar in the hinterland of Tripoli.[39][42] These strategically valuable towns gave Salih's emirate an outlet to the sea and control of part of the caravan route between Aleppo and Damascus.[43] The fall of Sidon particularly alarmed the Fatimids, who largely prioritized control of Syria's port cities over the inland towns and who feared that other ports would recognize Bedouin rule.[44]

In September, Salih entered Aleppo's citadel victoriously.[42] Afterward, he had Mawsuf and the qāḍī Ibn Abi Usama executed.[42] However, Salih released Thu'ban in return for financial compensation and allowed the city's dāʿī (chief Isma'ili propagandist) to depart safely.[42][45] Salih also confiscated the estates of numerous upper class Aleppines.[41]

Emir of Aleppo

General view of old Aleppo (foreground) and its citadel (background), 2008. Aleppo was the capital of Salih's Mirdasid emirate.

Despite his rebellion, Salih paid formal allegiance to the Fatimid Caliphate after conquering Aleppo, and dispatched Ibn Tawq to meet az-Zahir in Cairo; in turn, az-Zahir officially recognized Salih's Mirdasid emirate and sent him numerous honorary robes and presents.[46] There is no information about the Byzantines' relationship with Salih following the conquest of Aleppo,[47] though Emperor Basil II refused to back Salih's rebellion when he appealed for Byzantine support.[48]

Administration

According to the 13th-century historian Ibn al-'Amid, "Salih put in order all [the state] matters and adopted the way of justice".[47] Salih organized his emirate along the lines of a medieval Islamic state.[42] To that end, he maintained the fiscal administration, appointed a wazīr (vizier) to administer civilian and military affairs, and a Shia qāḍī to oversee judicial matters.[42] He also appointed deputies to govern Sidon, Ba'albak, Hims, Rafaniyya and Hisn Ibn Akkar.[43]

Salih's wazīr was a Christian named Tadrus ibn al-Hasan,[42] who wielded significant influence over him, according to Ibn al-'Adim, and accompanied Salih on all of his military campaigns.[49] Aleppine Christians would largely monopolize the post of wazīr under later Mirdasid rulers,[50] and members of the community managed significant parts of the emirate's economy.[49] Their major role in the emirate indicated Salih's reliance on local Christian support, the existence of a large Christian minority in Aleppo and an effort to establish friendly ties with the Byzantines.[50]

Information is largely absent regarding any major administrative changes Salih made to the Emirate of Aleppo. The only known institutional innovation Salih established in the government of Aleppo was the post of shaykh al-dawla (chieftain of the state) or raʾīs al-balad (municipal chief), who served as Salih's trusted confidant and permanent representative with the people of Aleppo.[51][52] The post emulated that of the shaykh, who played a secondary role to an amīr in a princely Kilabi clan.[52] The shaykh al-dawla played an important political role in the city and came from a prominent leading family.[51] Salih assigned Ibn Mustafad to the post and utilized the aḥdāth, which consisted of young armed men from the city's lower and middle classes, as a police force.[53] Although they cooperated with Salih, the aḥdāth were still an independent force.[51] Sometime during his reign, Salih also acquired a number of Turkish ghilmān, though details about them are lacking in the sources.[54][55]

Influence over Bedouin

According to historian Thierry Bianquis, Salih had "brought to success the plan which guided his [Kilab] forebears for a century", and that he ruled with "concern for order and respectability".[42] At its core, Salih's emirate was held together by Kilabi tribal solidarity,[56] and indeed the Kilab provided the backbone of the Mirdasid army.[51] Though Salih previously established his paramountcy over the Kilabi chieftains,[51][57] the Mirdasids were not the only princely clan of the Kilab and several emirs from other clans demanded a stake in the emirate.[57] Salih granted each of these emirs an iqtāʿ (fief; pl. iqtāʿat), though details about the size or specific holders of the iqtāʿat are absent in contemporary sources.[58]

Bedouin customs were a conspicuous part of Salih's rule and he always appeared publicly in the garb of a Bedouin chieftain rather than that of an urban leader.[59] Moreover, Salih preferred to live in his tribal camp in the outskirts of Aleppo rather than the city itself.[60] After his establishment in Aleppo, Salih's status increased among the Bedouin of Syria and Mesopotamia.[47] He was sometimes referred to by Arabic chroniclers as amīr ʿarab al-Shām (commander of the Bedouin of Syria); the value of this title during Salih's time is not clear, but it "at least indicate[d] the high position of its holder", according to Zakkar.[61]

Besides his leadership of the Kilab and influence over the Tayy and Kalb in Syria, Salih's influence also extended to tribes in Upper Mesopotamia, including the Numayr.[47] When two Numayri emirs lost Edessa to Nasr al-Dawla, the Marwanid emir of Mayyafariqin, they appealed for Salih's intervention; accordingly, Salih persuaded Nasr al-Dawla to restore Edessa to the Numayr.[47] Furthermore, the Banu Munqidh first emerged as a political force in the Orontes valley under Salih's patronage in 1024/25.[62] At that time, Salih awarded the Munqhidi chieftain Muqallad ibn Nasr ibn Munqidh the feudal lands around Shayzar as an iqtāʿ for backing Salih's conquest of Aleppo; the town of Shayzar itself was controlled by the Byzantines, however.[62]

Death and aftermath

Salih was killed in battle near the eastern shore of Lake Tiberias (pictured in 2014).

Between 1025 and 1028, the Fatimids reached an agreement with Salih's Jarrahid/Tayyi allies, allowing them to maintain their foothold in interior Palestine, while Anushtakin was recalled to Cairo.[42] In contrast to the Mirdasids, the Tayy consistently plundered their territory and its inhabitants.[42] Moreover, the Fatimids would not tolerate independent rule in Palestine, which they viewed as a threat to the Caliphate's survival.[46]

Meanwhile, as the Fatimids regrouped, the Kalb had been repelled from Damascus,[42] and in 1028, their emir died.[63] He was replaced by his nephew, Rafi ibn Abi'l Layl, who defected to the Fatimids, thus weakening the tripartite Bedouin alliance.[63] In November 1028, Anushtakin returned to Palestine with a large Fatimid army and additional horsemen from the Kalb and Banu Fazara to drive out the Tayy, and also to evict the Mirdasids from central Syria.[42]

With the Fatimids and Kalb poised against him, Hassan appealed for Salih's help to maintain their tribes' virtual autonomy throughout Syria against Fatimid encroachment.[42] Accordingly, Salih mobilized his Kilabi forces to reinforce the Tayy in Palestine.[63] Salih and Hassan first encountered the Fatimid–Kalb army in the vicinity of Gaza, but, unable to halt their advance, they withdrew to the north.[63] On 12 May or 25 May 1029, the two sides fought at al-Uqhuwanah,[63] on the eastern shores of Lake Tiberias.[42] For unknown reasons, Hassan and his forces fled in the heat of battle, leaving Salih and his men to face off Anushtakin's army alone.[63] The Kilab were decisively defeated and Salih, his youngest son and his vizier were slain.[63]

After the battle, Salih's head was sent to Cairo and put on display,[63] while Salih's body was nailed to the gateway of Sidon, a town he had enjoyed residing in.[42] The Fatimids went on to conquer Sidon, Ba'albak, Hims, Rafaniyya and Hisn Ibn Akkar from Salih's deputy governors, who all fled.[43] Salih had designated his second eldest son, Thimal, as his successor and left him in charge of Aleppo.[64] However, his eldest son, Nasr, who fought at al-Uqhuwanah, escaped the battle to wrest control of Aleppo.[64] For a brief period, the two sons ruled Aleppo jointly with Nasr controlling the city and Thimal the citadel, until sometime in 1030 when Nasr compelled Thimal to relocate to al-Rahba.[65] In 1038, Anushtakin killed Nasr and seized Aleppo.[66] Thimal later restored Mirdasid rule in the city,[66] which continued, with occasional interruption, until 1080.[67]

Notes

  1. Full name and genealogy: Abū ʿAlī Ṣāliḥ ibn Mirdās ibn Idrīs ibn Nāṣir ibn Ḥumayd ibn Mudrik ibn Shaddād ibn ʿUbayd ibn Qays ibn Rabīʿa ibn Kaʿb ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn Abū Bakr ibn Kilāb ibn Rabīʿa ibn ʿĀmir ibn Ṣaʿṣaʿ ibn Muʿāwiyah ibn Bakr ibn Hawāzin ibn Manṣūr ibn ʿIkrima ibn Khaṣafa ibn Qays ʿAylān.[1] This genealogy is cited by the medieval Syria-based historians Ibn al-Adim (d. 1262) and Ibn Khallikan (d. 1282).[2]
  2. The Banu Kilab and the Banu Numayr were major branches of the Banu 'Amir.

References

  1. Ibn Khallikan (1842). De Slane, Mac Guckin, ed. Ibn Khallikan's Biographical Dictionary, Volume 1. Paris: Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland. p. 631.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Zakkar 1971, p. 87.
  3. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 86.
  4. Zakkar 1971, pp. 74–75.
  5. Sobernheim, M. (1936). "Mirdasids". In Houtsma, M. Th.; et al. The Encyclopædia of Islam: A Dictionary of the Geography, Ethnography and Biography of the Muhammadan Peoples, Vol.3. L-R. E. J. Brill. p. 515.
  6. Bianquis 1993, p. 119.
  7. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 84.
  8. Zakkar 1971, p. 67.
  9. Zakkar 1971, p. 68.
  10. 1 2 Bianquis 1993, p. 115.
  11. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 69.
  12. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, pp. 88–89.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Zakkar 1971, p. 88.
  14. 1 2 3 Zakkar 1971, p. 89.
  15. Zakkar 1971, p. 90.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Bianquis 1993, p. 116.
  17. 1 2 3 4 Zakkar 1971, p. 51.
  18. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 50.
  19. Zakkar 1971, pp. 50–51.
  20. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Zakkar 1971, p. 52.
  21. Zakkar 1971, pp. 52–53.
  22. 1 2 3 4 Zakkar 1971, p. 53.
  23. 1 2 3 Zakkar 1971, p. 54.
  24. 1 2 3 4 Zakkar 1971, p. 55.
  25. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 56.
  26. 1 2 3 Zakkar 1971, p. 57.
  27. Zakkar 1971, pp. 58–59.
  28. 1 2 3 4 Zakkar 1971, p. 59.
  29. Zakkar 1971, pp. 90–91.
  30. 1 2 3 4 Zakkar 1971, p. 91.
  31. 1 2 3 Zakkar 1971, p. 60.
  32. Zakkar 1971, pp. 61–63.
  33. Zakkar 1971, pp. 64–65.
  34. 1 2 3 Zakkar 1971, pp. 91–92.
  35. 1 2 3 4 Zakkar 1971, p. 93.
  36. 1 2 3 Zakkar 1971, p. 95.
  37. 1 2 3 4 Zakkar 1971, p. 96.
  38. 1 2 3 Amabe 2016, p. 61.
  39. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Zakkar 1971, p. 97.
  40. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Amabe 2016, p. 62.
  41. 1 2 Amabe 2016, p. 63.
  42. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Bianquis 1993, p. 117.
  43. 1 2 3 Zakkar 1971, p. 101.
  44. Lev 2003, p. 51.
  45. Zakkar 1971, pp. 97–98.
  46. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 99.
  47. 1 2 3 4 5 Zakkar 1971, p. 103.
  48. Zakkar 1971, pp. 92–93.
  49. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 102.
  50. 1 2 Amabe 2016, p. 64.
  51. 1 2 3 4 5 Kennedy 2004, p. 259.
  52. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 83.
  53. Amabe 2016, p. 66.
  54. Lev 2003, p. 52.
  55. Lev 2003, p. 58.
  56. Amabe 2016, p. 68.
  57. 1 2 Zakkar 1971, p. 81.
  58. Zakkar 1971, pp. 83–84.
  59. Zakkar 1971, p. 82.
  60. Zakkar 1971, p. 105.
  61. Zakkar 1971, p. 104.
  62. 1 2 Mouton, J. M. (1997). "Shayzar". The Encyclopedia of Islam, New Edition, Volume IX: San–Sze. Leiden and New York: BRILL. p. 411. ISBN 90-04-10422-4.
  63. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Zakkar 1971, p. 100.
  64. 1 2 Crawford 1953, p. 92.
  65. Crawford 1953, pp. 93–94.
  66. 1 2 Bianquis 1993, p. 118.
  67. Bianquis 1993, p. 122.

Bibliography

Preceded by
Thu'ban ibn Muhammad
Emir of Aleppo
January 1024May 1029
Succeeded by
Shibl al-Dawla Nasr
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