This document summarizes and analyzes how three 9th century Islamic chroniclers - Al-Tabari, Al-Baladhuri, and Ibn Shabba - constructed their historical narratives regarding the controversial caliph Uthman bin Affan and the conflict that led to his death. It finds that while Al-Tabari presented a moralized view weighing unity vs. justice, Ibn Shabba defused tensions by shifting focus onto individuals. Comparing their treatments provides insights into how authors conveyed complex political and religious interpretations through strategic compilation of sources.
This document summarizes and analyzes how three 9th century Islamic chroniclers - Al-Tabari, Al-Baladhuri, and Ibn Shabba - constructed their historical narratives regarding the controversial caliph Uthman bin Affan and the conflict that led to his death. It finds that while Al-Tabari presented a moralized view weighing unity vs. justice, Ibn Shabba defused tensions by shifting focus onto individuals. Comparing their treatments provides insights into how authors conveyed complex political and religious interpretations through strategic compilation of sources.
This document summarizes and analyzes how three 9th century Islamic chroniclers - Al-Tabari, Al-Baladhuri, and Ibn Shabba - constructed their historical narratives regarding the controversial caliph Uthman bin Affan and the conflict that led to his death. It finds that while Al-Tabari presented a moralized view weighing unity vs. justice, Ibn Shabba defused tensions by shifting focus onto individuals. Comparing their treatments provides insights into how authors conveyed complex political and religious interpretations through strategic compilation of sources.
This document summarizes and analyzes how three 9th century Islamic chroniclers - Al-Tabari, Al-Baladhuri, and Ibn Shabba - constructed their historical narratives regarding the controversial caliph Uthman bin Affan and the conflict that led to his death. It finds that while Al-Tabari presented a moralized view weighing unity vs. justice, Ibn Shabba defused tensions by shifting focus onto individuals. Comparing their treatments provides insights into how authors conveyed complex political and religious interpretations through strategic compilation of sources.
Studia Islamica, nouvelle dition/new series, 1, 2011, pp. 37-65
Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles
Until relatively recently medieval Islamic chroniclers were viewed by modern historians in much the same way that Muslims view Muhammad as transmitter rather than author. While Muslims view the disjointed nature of the Quran as one of the proofs of its divine origin, scholars regarded a chronicles collection of disparate historical accounts from earlier authorities (khabar, pl., akhbr) as evidence that chroniclers were not writing their own narratives or imbuing their texts with contemporary concerns. Consider, for example, Franz Rosenthals assertion in his work on Islamic historiography: History was not used as a means for the propagation of ideas, or, more exactly, historians as a rule did not consciously intend, in writing their works, to reinterpret historical data so as to conform to the ideas they might have wished to propagate. 1
And although this perspective was at the time coming under attack by the work of Marshall Hodgson and Albrecht Noth, it would be several years, if not decades, before Islamic historiography fully embraced the idea of chroniclers as authors. 2
1. Franz Rosenthal, A History of Islamic Historiography, 2 nd ed. (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1968), 61. 2. Marshall Hodgson, Two Pre-Modern Muslim Historians: Pitfalls and Oppor- tunities in Presenting Them to Moderns, in Towards World Community, ed. John 38 Heather Keaney The very structure of Islamic chronicles that made them resistant to traditional historiographical analysis, made them particularly receptive to new approaches in literary criticism. 3 For example Hayden Whites work on form-as-message seems especially applicable to medieval Islamic chronicles. He observes, once we are enlivened to the extent to which the form of the text is the place where it does its ideologically signicant work, aspects of the text that a criticism unsensitized to the operations of a form-as-message will nd bewildering, surprising, inconsistent, or simply offensive themselves become meaningful as message. 4 Such insights have borne much fruit in Islamic historiography leading established scholars such as Fred Donner to marvel at what is revealed about a text and its author by focusing on strategies of compilation. 5 In particular Donner mentions the strategies of selection, placement, repetition and manipulation and concludes his article by asserting that coming to grips with these strategies must be at the top of our agenda when examining such compilations. 6
This article contributes to this important growing eld by analyzing and contextualizing the strategies of compilation of three ninth century chroniclers treatment of verbal and written confrontations between the Caliph Uthmn ibn Affn (d. 656/35) and his critics. Nef, World Academy of Arts and Sciences Publication, vol. 5 (The Hague: Dr. W. Junk N.V. Publishers, 1968), 53-69. Noths theories were rst published in 1973 and then further developed in collaboration with Lawrence Conrad and translated into English by Michael Bonner and published as The Early Arabic Historical Tradi- tion: A Source-Critical Study (Princeton: The Darwin Press, Inc., 1994). 3. An early and ground breaking application of these new methods to medieval Islamic historiography is Jacob Lassner, Islamic Revolution and Historical Memory: Abbasid Apologetics and the Art of Historical Writing (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986). 4. Hayden White, The Content of the Form: Narrative Discourse and Historical Rep- resentation (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987), 204. 5. Fred Donner, Uthman and the Rshidn Caliphs in Ibn Askirs Trkh madnat Dimashq: A Study in Strategies of Compilation, in Ibn Askir and Early Islamic History, Studies in Late Antiquity and Early Islam 20, (Princeton: The Darwin Press, 2001), 44-61. 6. Ibid., 61. 39 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles Through a close comparative reading of these confrontations we can see the relationship between how an author constructed his account and how he construed the causes and contemporary consequences of the conict. An authors interpretive and literary construction is most easily detected through focusing on particularly contentious events. The third Rshidn (rightly guided) caliph and successor to Muhammad, Uthmn b. Affn, is certainly one of the most controversial gures in early Islamic history. While a close companion of the Prophet Muhammad and an early convert to Islam, his caliphate ended with a revolt against his rule which culminated in Uthmn being besieged in his home and brutally murdered. Uthmns murder in turn sparked the rst tna, 7 or civil war, in Islam which led to a string of events that would forever divide the Islamic community into Sunnis and Shiis. R. Stephen Humphreys summarizes the signicance of Uthmns reign for later Muslim historians as follows: For those who contemplated the Islamic past, it was crucial to determine both the circumstances in which the betrayal of the Muhammadan covenant had occurred and the nature of that betrayal In particular the debate centered on whether the ultimate guilt for the catastrophe lay with Uthmn himself, with the rebels who had put him to death, or with other elements in the community. 8
Chroniclers answered questions about whom or what was to blame for the tna by carefully constructing their narratives. Chroniclers could also deploy the symbolic power of Uthmns reign and regicide to address contemporary core moral problems, namely, as Tayeb El-Hibri has shown, whether it is legitimate 7. Ar. tna, pl., tan can also mean sedition, discord, chaos, and schism. 8. R.S. Humphreys, Quranic Myth and narrative structure in early Islamic Histo- riography, in Tradition and Innovation in Late Antiquity, ed. F.M. Clover and R.S. Humphreys (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989), 278. 40 Heather Keaney to use force to depose a reigning monarch, and how this political upheaval can bring a social and religious shakeup in the life and fate of the community. 9 Thus far efforts to recognize authorial intent in early Islamic historiography have focused primarily on al-Tabars (d. 923/310) Trkh al-rusul wal-mulk (History of Prophets and Kings). 10
Although there is no denying al-Tabars literary and historical achievement, comparing al-Tabar with two other less-studied ninth century chroniclers helps to place his historical interpretation and literary contribution within a broader context. A careful reading of al-Baldhurs (d. 892/279) Ansb al-ashrf (Book of the Honorable Companions) and Umar b. Shabbas (d. 876/262) Trkh al- madna al-munawwara (History of Medina) reveals these authors complex religio-political interpretations conveyed through equally complex literary constructions. 11 Indeed it is possible that Ibn Shabba, whom al-Tabar used as a source, provided al-Tabari not only with akhbr, but a framework for understanding the revolt against Uthmn the tension between unity and justice. In al-Tabars treatment of the reign of Uthmn b. Affn he presents a highly moralized universe, weighing appeals to unity and justice by juxtaposing accounts by Sayf b. Umar (d. ca. 796/180) 9. Tayeb El-Hibri, Reinterpreting Islamic Historiography: Hrn al-Rashd and the Narratives of the Abbsid Caliphate (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), 84. 10. Ab Jafar Muhammad b. Jarir al-Tabar, Trkh al-rusul wal-mulk, ed. M.J. de Goeje et al (Leiden, 1879-1901). Tayob Abdelkader, Tabar on the Compan- ions of the Prophet: Moral and Political Contours of Islamic Historical Writing, Journal of the American Oriental Society 119:2 (1999): 203-210; Marshal Hodg- son, Two Pre-Modern Muslim Historians; R. Stephen Humphreys, Quranic Myth. 11. Ahmad b. Yahy al-Baldhur, Ansb al-ashrf, ed. Dr. Ihsn Abbs, Biblioth- eca Islamica 28d vol. 4 part 1 (Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag GMBH, 1979) and Ab Zayd Umar b. Shabba, Trkh al-madna al-munawwara, ed. Al Mu- hammad Danzal and Yasn Sad al-dn, part 2 (Beirut: Dr al-Kutub al-Ilmiyya, 1996). 41 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles and Muhammad b. Umar al-Wqid (d. 823/207). 12 Sayf portrays an idealized caliphate and early community characterized by piety and unity; problems enter the community through disgruntled, marginal gures and heretics. In contrast al-Wqids account portrays glaring abuses and injustices on Uthmns part and clear divisions amongst the Companions. Thus al-Tabar frames the conict in a larger theoretical debate: remove Uthmn and restore justice or support Uthmn and maintain unity. Consequently, because all is at stake, all can be risked. Al-Tabar alone of the three authors considered here puts forward the legitimacy of armed struggle against the unjust ruler. Ibn Shabba also begins by presenting the conict as one between the ideals of justice and unity; however, rather than escalating the rhetoric and the conict, he defuses it by shifting focus away from principles and on to people. In fact Ibn Shabba structures his narrative of Uthmns caliphate in three concentric circles in which a verbal or written confrontation between Uthmn and his critics forms the interpretive center of each cycle. The rst cycle presents the growing conict in terms of the tension between the ideals of unity and justice, while the second focuses on divisions within the community attributed to the sha of Ali and the sha of Uthmn. In the climax of the revolt, the siege and murder of Uthmn, Ibn Shabbas third interpretive cycle focuses on human error on the part of Uthmn and his advisors. As a result Ibn Shabba permits and even encourages rebuking unjust caliphs, but he does not allow for resisting or removing them; indeed he moves from a highly charged clash of competing ideals to the 12. There is ongoing debate about the reliability of both sources. Marianne Engle Cameron, Sayf at First: The Transmission of Sayf ibn Umar in al-Tabar and Ibn Askir, in Ibn Askir and Early Islamic History; R.S. Humphreys, introduction to translation of The History of al-Tabar, vol XV, Crisis of the Early Caliphate (New York: SUNY Press, 1990); R.S. Humphreys, The Odd Couple: al-Tabar and Sayf b. Umar, in History and Historiography in Early Islamic Times, ed. Lawrence I. Conrad, forthcoming; Tarif Khalidi, Arabic Historical Thought in the Classical Period (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 47-48. 42 Heather Keaney more mundane and manageable problem of having good advisors. Moreover, this cyclical narrative is framed by prophetic hadth (pl., ahdth) that defend Uthmn and by Quranic references that prioritize obedience and unity. Ibn Shabba appears to support a position of non-violent and non-divisive resistance to injustice. In Ansb al-ashrf al-Baldhur portrays Uthmn as a corrupt ruler who is still owed absolute obedience. He provides the most thorough catalog of Uthmns abuses found in a ninth century source; however, he begins and ends each sub-section with accounts that defend the legitimacy of Uthmns caliphate and call for obedience to the ruler whether he is just or not. In the verbal and written confrontations al-Baldhur contrasts appeals to piety and the Quran with appeals to caliphal authority. In this way al-Baldhur projects onto Uthmns caliphate the ninth century relationship between the caliph and the ulam one in which the ruler should defer to the religious authorities for guidance and repent when he errs and in turn religious leaders should advise and support the ruler. Consequently, the confrontations recorded in al-Baldhur dissolve into recommendations of how to limit the abuses of caliphal authority. Unlike al-Tabar, al-Baldhur does not fear a permanent rupture in the community based on competing ideals. Nor does he present an idealized past community, instead he presents an idealized contemporary relationship between the caliph and the ulam. Based on these authors portrayals of Uthmn as corrupt at worst, weak at best, each has been accused in the past of having Shi sympathies. 13 There is no denying the highly negative 13. R.S. Humphreys exposes the imsiness of the pro-Alid label for al-Baldhur in Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry, revised edition (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991) pp. 98-103. E.L Petersen characterizes Ibn Shabba as pro Alid and with shiite inclinations in Al and Muawiya in early Arabic Tradition: Studies in the Genesis and Growth of Islamic Historical Writing until the end of the Ninth Century (Copenhagen: Scandinavian University Books, 1964), 12 n. 45 and 151. But Wilferd Madelung notes that the pro-Alid theory is no longer sustain- able since the publication of Trkh al-madna and points out that Ibn Shabba 43 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles portrayal of Uthmn in al-Baldhur and al-Wqid. Ibn Shabba also begins his narrative of Uthmn with the subheading akhbr Uthmn b. Affn rather than granting him the title of caliph; nor does he include a section on the shr (council) to elect Uthmn, and instead gives merely a brief account in which it is stated that Uthmn was given the oath of loyalty. 14 However, these narratives taken in the round indicate the still inchoate nature of Sunni and Shii religio-political identity and alliances in the late ninth century. And a close analysis of their narratives reveals tensions and solutions that t within a broad Sunni orthodoxy and expresses a range of views that reect the evolving nature of religious and political authority within the ninth century Islamic community. Context The ninth century was dominated by questions surrounding the legitimacy of the Abbasid caliphs and the relationship between religious and political authority. 15 Since the Abbasid Revolution (747-750/129-132) the Abbasids legitimacy was always vulnerable to the purer claims of the Alids. Thus the caliphs needed the ulam to bolster their legitimacy while the ulam looked to the caliphs as patrons, enforcers of shara, defenders of the Islamic community, quotes numerous Uthmanid traditions missing in other sources and, in contrast to al-Baldhur, avoids reports of Uthmans wrongdoing. Wilferd Madelung, The Succession to Muhammad: A Study of the Early Caliphate (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), n. 139 pg. 376. 14. Ibn Shabba, 97. 15. Humphreys, Tarkh, EI 2 . El-Hibri also considers the layers of interpreta- tion in the chronicles due to the parallels between the rst tna and the civil war between al-Amn and al-Mamun. He states, The analogy between the internal strife in both ages inspired narrators to draw a correlation between the actors, situ- ations, and contested ideas in the two eras. Tayeb El-Hibri, Reinterpreting Islamic Historiography, 105. See also Lassner, Islamic Revolution and M. Qasim Zaman, Religion and Politics under the Early Abbsids: the Emergence of the Proto-Sunni Elite (Leiden: Brill, 1997). 44 Heather Keaney and symbols of continuity. The desire for continuity and order encouraged an acceptance of the Abbasids and the order of the rst four Rshidn Caliphs. This growing consensus is evidenced in the authoritative hadth collections that emerged in the mid- ninth century that emphasize Uthmns personal piety, link him with the rst two caliphs, Ab Bakr and Umar, and attempt to explain the rst tna. 16
Al-Bukhrs (d. 870/256) chapter on tna in his authoritative hadth collection al-Sa 17 both condemns and condones the inter-Muslim violence that took place among the Companions. On the one hand Muhammad predicted sedition and stated that those who instigated it would be fellow believers. Several hadth describe those involved as reaching Paradise, but unable to reach Muhammad. 18 The majority of the ahdth, however, condemn to hell those who depart from the Community or raise their sword against a fellow Muslim. This applies regardless of the impiety or injustice of the ruler. One hadth states: If you dislike something the amir does, be patient. For whoever goes out from a ruler (sultn) by an inch will die like those in the jhiliyya (time of ignorance before Islam). 19 This is followed by a variant that says whoever dissents from the group an inch will die as in the jhiliyya. Muhammad said once they had given the oath of loyalty (baya), they must obey in prosperity and want unless it was a matter of agrant unbelief. 20 Although these ahdth clearly prioritize unity and obedience, they also leave open whether those who instigate violence can still be saved, whether a ruler can be the one who 16. Al-Bukhr, Al-Sahh vol. 9 (Cairo: Dr wa-matbat al-shab, n.d), 58-77; Sahh Muslim: Being Traditions of the sayings and doings of the Prophet Muham- mad as narrated by his companions and compiled under the title al-Jami-us-Sahh by Imam Muslim rendered into English by Abdul Hamd Siddq, vol. 4 (Beirut: Dr al-Arabiyya, 1971), 1281-2. 17. Al-Bukhr, 58-77. 18. Ibid., 58,59. 19. Ibid., 59. 20. Ibid., 59-60. Emphasis added. 45 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles dissents from the group, as well as what constitutes agrant unbelief. The ulam used historical precedent to help interpret and evaluate these ahdth and each one of these issues is debated in the revolt against Uthmn. Defending Uthmns personal piety and right to the caliphate is not the same as defending his actions during his caliphate. To evaluate Uthmns rule was to consider the foundations and limitations of caliphal authority. In the rst half of the ninth century such debates were overshadowed by the subsequent tna, or civil war, between al-Amn and al-Mamn (809-813-833/214- 218) and al-Mamns introduction of the mihna (inquisition) (832-851/ 217-237), and in the latter half of the century by the growing power of the Turkish military commanders. 21 But when these events exposed the Abbasid caliphs as very far removed from the idealized image of the Companions simultaneously being crystallized in the hadth collections, why did the ulam continue to support the Abbasid caliphs claims to absolute political authority? While unity of the community was of prime importance there were competing principles. Khaled Abou El Fadl and Michael Cook point to the efforts of Muslim scholars and jurists to balance the principles of obedience and justice, both of which are endorsed in the Quran and ahdth. 22
The Quran speaks of the importance of obeying those in authority, of keeping ones oath of loyalty, and of the blessing of unity. 23 Other verses emphasize the Islamic principle of commanding right and 21. Tayeb El-Hibri elucidates and illustrates the impact of tan, the mihna and regicide on Arab chronicles in Reinterpreting Islamic Historiography while Matthew Gordon discusses the growing power of the Turkish military in The Breaking of a Thousand Swords: A History of the Turkish Military of Samarra (A.H. 200-275/815- 889 C.E) (Albany: SUNY Press, 2001). 22. Khaled Abou El Fadl, Rebellion and Violence in Islamic Law (Cambridge: Cam- bridge University Press, 2001; reprint 2002) and Michael Cook, Commanding Right and Forbidding Wrong in Islamic Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000). 23. Q 4:51; Q 6:159. 46 Heather Keaney forbidding wrong. 24 Michael Cook notes that while the Quranic verses on the duty of forbidding wrong usually imply that it is the obligation of the community as a whole, there are Traditions which stress the responsibility of the individual as well. Consider the hadth, The nest form of holy war (jihd) is speaking out (kalimat haqq) in the presence of an unjust ruler (sultn jir), and getting killed for it (yuqtal alayh). 25 Although this clearly endorses confronting the unjust ruler, most scholars balanced this Tradition with others that warn against stirring up dissension and the more immediate evil of suicide. 26 The general consensus was that individual Muslims are called upon to forbid evil with their heart, their mouth, and their hands. If forbidding with the mouth or the hand would produce no good while causing other evils, such as ones own death or social chaos, than it is enough to forbid in ones heart. 27 Although this did not encourage rebellion, neither was it simply acquiescing in the face of injustice. Khaled Abou El Fadl argues this was done even more systematically through efforts to limit the wrongdoing of the state through drawing a legal distinction between ghting rebels (bught) and ghting brigands (muhribn). While those who had a grievance against the government based on a religious interpretation were seen as bught and deserving of more lenient treatment as expressed in Quran 49:9-10, the verse calling for the death of those who threatened disorder (Q 5:33-34) was limited to 24. Q 4:135; Q 3:104; 3:110; 3:114; 7:157; 9:71; 9:112; 22:41; 31:17. 25. Cook, Commanding Right, 6. He notes that this tradition appears in many hadth collections; however, the last part about being killed does not appear in the most canonical collections. 26. Q 2:195. Cast not yourself by your own hands into destruction. Cook dis- cusses al-Ghazalis views on this verse. Cook, 433. 27. Though admittedly, Ibn Hazm and al-Ghazl, among others, encouraged a more activist interpretation. Cook, 427-468 and Khaled Abou El Fadl, The Islamic Law of Rebellion: The Rise and Development of the Juristic Discourses on Insurrection, Insurgency and Brigandage (Ph.D. diss., Princeton University, 1999), 243-251. 47 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles those classied as muhribn, i.e., robbers and bandits rather than rebels. In this way jurists removed the criticism of perpetrating disorder from those who criticize or rebel against the unjust actions of the government and opened room for interpretations that are distinctly unhelpful to the state. 28 Both Cooks and Abou El Fadls works show that legal writing was one way scholars could carry on nuanced debates about the tension between religio-political ideals and more sobering realities. They also point to a legalizing of culture; focusing on particulars may not have been sidestepping the issues at all, but a working out of them. Although there are technicalities of legal discourse, I believe the same could be said for historical discourse. How historians selected, edited, and arranged their sources enabled them to carry on debates with their peers, progenitors, and successors. Text Ibn Shabba is the earliest of the three chroniclers under consideration here. He was from Basra, resided in Samarra for some time where he refused to bow to the pressure of the mihna. Consequently some of his books were destroyed and he refused to lecture for a period. 29 His history Trkh al-madna al-munawwara is arranged in short akhbr that are clearly delineated giving the work the feel of a hadth collection rather than a history or chronicle. However, his writing is more in line with early trkh than hadth studies, as many of his chains of transmission (isnd pl., asnd) do not rely on common authorities and indeed many of them are 28. Abou El Fadl adapts this phrase from Crone and Hinds who maintain it was the rules of the Sunna that were unhelpful to the state. Abou El Fadl asserts, how- ever, the Sunna was a raw body of uninterpreted and undeveloped precedents. It is the legal interpretation of the Sunna, and not the Sunna itself, that was unhelpful to the state. Khaled Abou El Fadl, Rebellion and Violence, 99, fn. 178. 29. S. Leder, Umar b. Shabba, EI 2 . 48 Heather Keaney clearly weak and based on little known or anonymous sources. It is possible that some of the accounts presented in his history fall out of the literature not because of their content (matn), but because the development of hadth sciences disqualies their isnd. Nevertheless, the themes laid out by Ibn Shabba do endure. As mentioned earlier, his narrative of the confrontations between Uthmn and his critics focuses on three possible causes for the escalating conict: injustice, partisanship, and poor decisions. Before Umar b. Shabba is willing to discuss the tna, however, he makes a point of exonerating Uthmn in a subsection entitled: What has come down of Uthmn abstaining from ghting and that he was killed while sticking to the true path (anahu yuqtal al al-haqq). 30 In addition to emphasizing that Uthmn refused to ght to defend himself or bring bloodshed into the community, this section consists of a variety of ahdth in which Muhammad predicts there will be tna during the days of Uthmn. It is only after Ibn Shabba has established this important point that all that is to follow in his narrative was predicted by Muhammad, that he moves on to the complaints and uprisings against Uthmn. 31 In a section subtitled the movement in the matter of Uthmn and the rst attack against him Umar b. Shabba presents the tension between obedience to God and obedience to the ruler in a verbal confrontation between Uthmn and his detractors who have gathered in Medina. Uthmn preaches to the crowd from the minbar stating: O people, listen and obey. For indeed listening obediently, there is no excuse against it, and listening rebelliously, there is no excuse for it. 32 The account continues, however, by pointing out that some of them called out to him: Listening to you is what is rebellious. Although Ibn Shabba gives voice to the perspective that it is the ruler who can be the rebel, he follows this account with a string of accounts that end with 30. Ibn Shabba, 182. 31. Ibid., 186. 32. Ibid., 188. 49 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles hadth in which Muhammad warns against schism (sha). Like any good interlocutor, Ibn Shabba does not deny the alternative opinion, but rather refutes it through his strategy of placement and repetition. Whereas most sources focus on events in Kufa to explain the deteriorating circumstances in the community, Ibn Shabba, focuses on Egypt. It is through an exchange of letters that Ibn Shabba continues the debate between appeals to unity and justice. The letter from the Egyptians is addressed: From the community of Muslims to the aficted Caliph and then builds a case urging Uthmn to remember God and His divine ordinances (hudd). 33 The letter continues: So we remind you of God and we prohibit you from rebellion. For verily you called us to obedience and the Book of God and the Book of God notes: there is no obedience to one rebelling (against) God. Verily we were obedient to God by supporting and revering you, but then rejected that when we learned that you wanted to destroy us and destroy yourself. We must reject and disobey whoever keeps us from God. You are merely a mortal servant whereas God is the eternal creator. 34 This letter is remarkable for stating so clearly that obedience to Uthmn is conditional. If he is disobeying God then he has become the rebel. I have not seen it in other sources, although this is as likely due to its weak isnd, as its controversial matn. 35 Despite suggesting that Uthmn is a rebel, Ibn Shabba does not develop this point. The argument never moves beyond passive resistance. Instead, Ibn Shabba presents the counter-argument in the form of a response letter from Uthmn in which he lists Quranic verses 33. Ibid., 193. 34. Ibid. 35. One of the transmitters is referred to simply as a man from his tribe. Ibid. 50 Heather Keaney which link obedience to the ruler with obedience to God. 36 The verses cited remind the readers they made a covenant with God when they promised to hear and obey and those who break their oath will suffer a painful chastisement. The letter also includes the ideologically key Quranic verse: Obey God, and obey the Messenger and those in authority among you. 37 Uthmn concludes by warning them of the consequences of disobedience when he states, Verily you (pl) will not nd a community destroyed except from differences [among its members] and then it will not have a head unifying it. And when that happens you will not pray together and some of you will rule over the others and you will be divided into sects. 38 According to this argument, challenging the ruler leads to a divided Community in which some factions rule over others. The letter concludes with a verse urging them to avoid those who produce schisms and sects. 39
After the above exchange of letters, Ibn Shabba moves very quickly through the siege and murder of Uthmn; he does not develop the drama or pathos of this event in any way. Not only does he not dwell on Uthmns guilt or innocence in terms of whether his actions provoked the besiegers, but he also does not dwell on the controversy surrounding who exactly killed Uthmn. Rather he simply includes two brief accounts that state Uthmn was killed in his house, adding the key point that al-Husayn and al-Hasan were with him (defending him). 40 Ibn Shabba follows 36. This letter is almost identical to that recorded by al-Tabar at the very end of his treatment of Uthmns caliphate. Ibn Shabbas isnd is Al Uthmn b. Abd al-Rahmn al-Zuhr. 37. Q 4:59. Uthmn also notes as if any additional commentary were neces- sary therefore God desires for you to listen and obey and warns you against disobedience and divisiveness. Ibid., 194. 38. This version does not mention the more common corollary that they will not ght their enemies together. The concern with internal oppression seems greater than that of external threat. 39. Q 6:159 40. Ibn Shabba, 199. 51 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles this up with several accounts that focus on the support that Al and his sons gave to Uthmns caliphate. The rst has al-Hasan address the crowd and say that the killing of Uthmn is a rupture in the community. In the second, after Uthmns death a group came demanding Al as caliph and could not nd him. They asked al-Hasan, where is the commander of the faithful? To which he responded: in hash kawkab. The report concludes, meaning Uthmn b. Affn because that is where Uthmn was buried, thus making clear that neither Al or his sons were claiming Al was the rightful caliph. 41 The burial of Uthmn does not mark the end of Ibn Shabbas account, but rather the end of his rst interpretive layer. Ibn Shabbas second interpretive cycle begins with a rewinding of the clock and a return to the siege of Uthmn and the verbal confrontations that took place. The support which Al and his sons gave to Uthmn is now overshadowed by accusations that it was rivalry between the shia of Al and the shia of Uthmn that led to the deteriorating situation in the community. Like the previous cycle, this one centers on verbal and written exchanges. The letter in question is the controversial letter Uthmn supposedly wrote to his governor in Egypt ordering him to kill the Egyptian critics upon their return to Egypt. The letter was intercepted by the Egyptian band and they immediately returned to Medina and laid siege to Uthmn in his house. All sources on the rst tna regard this letter as the tipping point that shifted the conict from one of verbal criticism to rebellion and regicide. For Ibn Shabba, the conict shifts from competing ideals to competing factions. Ibn Shabbas sources focus on whose sha was responsible for the letter. The rst account simply says that the Egyptians found the letter and returned to Medina and wanted to kill Uthmn. The sha of Al said it [the letter] was the work of Uthmn and the 41. Ibid., 200. 52 Heather Keaney sha of Uthmn said it was the work of Al and his companions. 42
The next several accounts of the letter all frame it in terms of conict between Uthmn and Al or their supporters. The rst is based on Ab Mikhnaf s version of nding the letter. 43 The band brings the letter to Al and he takes it to Uthmn who denies any knowledge of it. The account ends very signicantly by stating the Banu Umayya blamed Al for manufacturing the story of the letter and turning the people against Uthmn; an accusation Al denies.
In another account Uthmn denies the letter and when asked who wrote it or how this happened, Uthmn says maybe his servant did it or maybe Al did it. When Al asks why he is accusing him, Uthmn says because he [Al] went out to the band the rst time and then they came back. 44 This is followed by another account in which Uthmn accuses Al of collaborating with Uthmns scribe in writing the letter. Although it is not uncommon in the sources to blame the Umayyads or Als supporters, I have not seen it expressed as their shia, nor the term used as frequently as it is in Ibn Shabba. Furthermore, while the verse about avoiding schisms is usually cited in the narrative of Uthmn, Ibn Shabba refers to it repeatedly. It would seem then, that for Ibn Shabba the lesson to be drawn is not in the danger of unjust caliphs or confronting them, but factionalism that leads to inter-Muslim violence and one group of Muslims oppressing another. 45
The third interpretive cycle moves beyond blaming factions, to blaming individuals, in particular Uthmn and his advisers. This theme is introduced by the longest single account so far, transmitted 42. Ibid., 209. 43.Ibid., 210. 44. Ibid., 212. 45. This emphasis can also be seen in Uthmns letter of defense based on Quranic verses mentioned earlier. Whereas Ibn Shabba focuses on the threat of internal op- pression, a similar letter found in al-Tabar includes the risk of external oppression, a point Ibn Shabba consistently fails to raise. 53 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles by al-Zuhr, in which the narrator asks Said b. al-Masayyab: Can you tell me how Uthmn was killed? And what was the situation with him and the people and why Muhammads Companions abandoned him? 46 And he replied: Uthmn was killed unjustly and those who killed him were unjust and those who abandoned him were justied. Then I said: How is that? He said: verily when Uthmn was appointed (wal) a group of the Companions of the Prophet hated his rule (wilyatahu) because Uthmn loved his own band. He ruled over the people twelve years, and there were many among those he appointed from the Banu Umayya, who were not with the Messenger of God and his company. And there came to pass from his governors things hateful to the Companions of the Messenger of God and they complained about them and he did not remove them. 47 The account continues to list grievances against Uthmns governors and then dwells for some time on the incident of the letter and how it was the fault of either Muhammad b. Ab Sarh, his former governor in Egypt, or Marwan b. al-Hakam, Uthmns cousin and advisor in Medina. Blame focuses on Marwan. Al and isha urge Uthmn to turn him over and the Companions insist they cannot forgive Uthmn for the treacherous letter ordering the murder of his critics unless Marwn is turned over to them. 48
Uthmn refuses and this is what prompts the Companions to abandon him in anger. 49 It is surely signicant that Ibn Shabba holds Uthmn responsible for his own demise. However, Ibn Shabba has moved his narrative from an unresolved debate about competing core principles to the more mundane need for trustworthy advisors. 46. Ibid., 213. 47. Ibid., 213-214. 48. Ibid., 214. 49. Ibid., 215. 54 Heather Keaney But this is not Ibn Shabbas last word on the subject, he reserves that for a letter from Uthmn to the people made up almost entirely of Quranic verses that exhorts his audience to hold on to obedience and unity and ends with a plea for forgiveness. 50 Al-Tabar ends his narrative of Uthmn with an almost identical letter; however, he also chooses to maintain the ideological tension between unity and justice until the very end. Al-Tabar As mentioned previously, al-Tabar debates the appeals to unity and justice by juxtaposing accounts by Sayf b. Umar and al-Wqid. A few representative confrontations between Uthmn and his detractors reveal the effectiveness of this strategy of compilation. In al-Tabars narrative difculties started to mount for Uthmn when the people of Kufa rejected their governor, Sad b. al-s and demanded that Uthmn appoint Ab Ms. In an account recorded by Sayf, a group has gathered in criticism of Uthmn, but Ab Ms stands up in the Mosque and states: O people, be still. For I heard the Messenger of God say, He who departs [from the Community] when there is an imam over the people and by God, he did not say a just imam in order to shatter their staff and to break up their community, kill him whoever he may be. 51
Unity appears more important than justice, and can even authorize more injustice through the murder of the rebels. Sayf does not present Uthmn as an unjust imam; rather the Sayf account continues with the transcript of Uthmns letter written in response to the Kufans demands. He writes: 50. Q 3:102; Q 3:105; Q 5:1; Q 5:7; Q 8:49; Q 10:48; Q 6:159; Q 11:89-90. 51.The translation is from Ehsan Yar-Shater, ed., The History of al-Tabari (Trkh al-rusul wal-muluk), vol. 15, The Crisis of the Early Caliphate, trans. R. Stephen Humphreys (New York: State University of New York Press, 1987), 140. 55 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles In the name of the Merciful, the Compassionate, I have named as your governor the one whom you have chosen, and I have relieved you of Said. By God, I will surely expose my honor to your abuse, and wear out my patience, and use every effort to seek reconciliation with you. So do not fail to ask for whatever you desire, so long as it does not involve rebellion against God. Nor should you fail to demand relief in what you hate, so long as it does not involve rebellion against God. Thus, I will comply with whatever you desire until you have no argument [hujjah] against me. 52 In this response al-Tabar, via Sayf, presents Uthmn as a pious ruler responding patiently to the demands of the people. Moreover, the reader is left to conclude that rebellion against authority leads to rebellion against God. Sayf makes this connection explicit during the later siege when Uthmn repeatedly defends his authority on the basis that he cannot remove the cloak [of authority] that God has bestowed upon him. Immediately after this Sayf account, however, al-Tabar places one by al-Wqid in which Al b. Ab Tlib confronts Uthmn for various abuses. Al warns: Know, Uthmn, that the best of Gods servants in His eyes is a just imam, one who has been guided aright and who himself gives right guidance The worst of men in Gods sight is a tyrannical imam, one who has gone astray himself and by whom others are led astray Verily, I heard the Messenger of God say, The Day of Resurrection will be brought by the tyrannical imam; he will have no helper and no advocate, so that he will be cast into Hell Al continues, I tell you beware of God and His sudden assault and His vengeance, for His punishment 52. Ibid. 56 Heather Keaney is harsh and painful indeed. I tell you beware lest you be the murdered imam of this Community. 53
In this account not only are Uthmns actions dened as tyrannical, but his murder is an act of judgment by God rather than the rebels. This is the nal account recorded under year 34; Uthmn was killed the following year. Another account by Sayf echoes the earlier confrontation. Thus it is not altogether surprising when al-Tabar records Uthmns supporters urging him to kill the dissidents. Uthmns supporters point out Muhammad said, Gods curse is on any man who has summoned [others] to join him or anyone else while there is an imam over the people, so put him to death. 54 What is noteworthy in al- Tabar is the willingness to use extreme violence on both sides in defense of foundational principles, but also the willingness to refrain from violence. Sayf s account of the siege and murder emphasizes the attackers aggression and greed in contrast to Uthmns piety and passivity. He refuses to ght or to bring bloodshed into the community. Al-Tabar relies on Sayf s account for much of the siege and murder in which Uthmn is portrayed as a martyr gure who accepts his fate and refuses to resist his accusers with violence. Thus the narrative reinforces the view that the imam is in the right while his attackers are cursed; piety and unity go hand in hand while disobedience leads to inter-Muslim ghting and division. It is signicant, however, that he places the al-Wqid account of the confrontations between Uthmn and his besiegers after the murder narrative so that it is al-Wqids dialogue that provides the concluding conceptual framework for the siege and murder. Uthmn reminds them of his appointment based on consultation (shr) to succeed Umar and that this was done with their blessing and before God. He concludes his defense by stating: 53.Ibid., 142. 54. Ibid., 155. 57 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles No, do not kill me, for a man may be put to death only in three cases: when he commits adultery, when he disbelieves after accepting Islam, or when he takes anothers life except in legitimate retaliation. Verily, if you kill me, you will place the sword upon your own necks, and Almighty God will not lift it from you until the Day of Resurrection. Do not kill me, for if you do, you will never pray together again, nor will you ever join together in sharing out booty (fay), nor will God ever remove dissension from among you. 55
Uthmns appeal that it is only permissible to kill a Muslim for these three reasons, and that his murder will lead to the permanent division of the Community, becomes a key part of the canon in Uthmns defense. Much less common, however, is the rebuttal of the besiegers recorded in al-Tabar. The besiegers point out it is also lawful to kill someone who spreads corruption or tyranny. They reply by agreeing that Uthmn was appointed by God and that God knows all things, but assert that Uthmn is a test from God. They add that Uthmn was once worthy of authority, but has since brought innovations. They conclude by stating: You mention the trials that will afict us if we kill you. But it is not right to fail to uphold the truth against you out of fear of discord (tnah) sometime in the future. You say that it is lawful to kill a man only in three cases. But in the Book of God, we nd that other men are put to death besides the three named by you. [We nd that] the man who spreads corruption in the land is put to death, and likewise the oppressor who ghts to continue his oppression and the man who prevents justice (al-haqq). 56 55. Ibid., 221-2. 56. Ibid., 222-3. 58 Heather Keaney In this response, the besiegers argue that it is necessary to risk discord and disunity in the name of justice. And violence against anyone who resists or hinders justice is likewise justied. Al- Tabar maintains his emphasis on the religious ramications and eternal consequences of disobedience and disunity throughout his narrative. Al-Tabar, like Ibn Shabba, concludes his narrative of the revolt with a letter of Quranic defense written by Uthmn. This version of the letter includes some additional verses not mentioned in Ibn Shabbas letter that state a unied Community is one of Gods blessings and a sign of salvation. Furthermore, whereas Ibn Shabbas version of the letter warns that without a unied head the community will not pray together and some will rule over others, al-Tabars version says it will lead to disagreements about what is lawful and forbidden and no true religion will remain before God. 57
More than Ibn Shabba, al-Tabar places the tragedy of Uthmns reign in cosmic proportions, and disunity is a threat not only to the survival of the community, but the religion itself. It is not clear to what extent this apocalyptic vision reects al-Tabars temperament or the deteriorating state of the Abbasid dynasty by the late ninth century. In either case, the centrality of the unity-justice paradigm presented by Ibn Shabba and intensied by al-Tabar is highlighted by comparison with al-Baldhurs far more critical view of Uthmn and more pragmatic view of government. 57. Ibid., 242. 59 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles Al-Baladhur While al-Tabar pits competing ideals against each other, al- Baladhuri presents a process of reconciliation not between unity and justice, but between political and religious authority. Al-Baladhur defends Uthmns caliphate despite the fact that he portrays Uthmn as a capricious ruler who abuses his power and tortures any who dare to criticize him. He introduces the confrontations with an appeal by religious leaders to the authority of the Quran and sunna. In response Uthmn occasionally restrains his anger, but more often than not, he orders his critics to be tortured or exiled. But the narratives usually conclude with Uthmn either repenting and being forgiven, or the same pious individuals recommending obedience even when he is intransigent. It is within this context that the confrontations are sprinkled with recommendations to the caliph to show mercy, to listen to counsel, and to make sure he does not alienate too many segments of the population at once. In this way, al-Baldhurs narrative is reminiscent of the more pragmatic aspects of the mirrors for princes literature of later centuries and a far cry from al-Tabars idealism and despair. 58
In accounts of confrontations with Uthmn al-Baldhur repeatedly shapes his narrative to defend the rights of the caliphs 58. In Quranic Myth Humphreys presents al-Tabar as optimistic and the apogee of historiographic dynamism based on the Quranic myth of Covenant, Betrayal, and Redemption. Although he still nds this a helpful framework for analyzing ninth century Islamic historiography, he now emphasizes the pessimism in al-Tabars history, a pessimism Humphreys attributes to al-Tabars understand- ing of Time and belief that the Final Judgment was drawing near. See Divine and Human Meanings of Time in Early Islamic Historiography: The Case of Ab Jafar al-Tabar, in Proceedings: reports, abstracts and round table introductions, 19 th
International Congress of Historical Sciences held in Oslo 6-13 August, 2000 (Oslo: University of Oslo, 2000), 66; and Turning Points in Islamic Historical Practice, in Turning Points in Historiography: A Cross-Cultural Perspective, ed. Q. Edward Wang and Georg G. Iggers, Rochester Studies in Historiography (Rochester, NY: The University of Rochester Press, 2002), 99, fn. 2. 60 Heather Keaney (past and present) against those basing their authority on the Quran and personal piety. The growing problems in Kufa are emblematic of Uthmns reign and al-Baldhurs narrative strategy. Uthmns governor, al-Wald, was accused of a wide range of abuses so that Uthmn was forced to remove him and replace him with Sad b. al-s, but problems continued in Kufa. Sad used to sit in the company of its [Quran] reciters and its distinguished citizens and chat with them. 59 When disagreements broke out in this assembly, Sad wrote toUthmn: I cannot keep control over Kufa while al-Ashtar and his friends, who claim to be reciters but are [in fact] foolish, [are in it]. 60 Al-Baldhur then gives the transcript of several letters produced by the conict in Kufa. 61 In this exchange of letters, al-Baldhur grants men of religion the right to warn the caliph, but at their own risk, and with no recourse to outright rebellion. Moreover, although there is general appeal to the Quran, al-Baldhur does not actually quote any verses from the Quran or hadth that would condemn Uthmn or any other ruler for that matter. 62
The rst letter in al-Baldhur is from the Quran reciters of Kufa who wrote to Uthmn to complain about Sads treatment of them. They claimed Sad was antagonistic towards some of 59. Al-Baldhur, 528. There is ambiguity over whether the term qurra means Quran reciters or ahl al-qurra (men of the towns). See T. Nagel qur EI 2 for a summary (without resolution) of the literature. The issue is also discussed by R.S. Humphreys in his translation of al-Tabar, Crisis, 112, fn. 194. Based on context, Humphreys chooses to use the traditional interpretation of Quran reciters and I believe the same holds true for al-Baldhur as well. 60. Al-Baldhur, 529. 61. Ella Landau-Tasseron has pointed out how speeches and letters often migrate through narratives. Thus the focus should be on their content more than their context; they form discrete rhetorical units. Landau-Tasseron, New Data on an old Manuscript: An Andalusian Version of the works entitled Futh al-Shm, Al- Qantara 11:2 (2000): 370-72. 62. Al-Baldhur also summarizes in a few sentences Uthmns letters of self de- fense which consist primarily of Quranic verses. That al-Tabar, Ibn Shabba, and Ibn Atham all include full transcripts of these letters further highlights al-Bald- hurs choice to limit the Quranic material in his narrative. 61 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles the people of piety, virtue and uprightness. He caused you to treat them in a way which is not justied in religion or tting to hear about. 63 Uthmn wanted to punish them and indeed did have Kab b. Abda, who had written a similar letter, whipped. Kab had written to Uthmn warning him: The imra of the believers only came to you by virtue of the shr when you made a pledge to God to follow the sra of His Prophet and not to fall short of it. If they were to consult us about you a second time, we would transfer it [the imra] from you. O Uthmn, the Book of God is for whomever it has reached and [whoever] has recited it; we have recited it just as you have. If the reciter [of the Quran] does not follow what is in it, it becomes an argument against him. 64 In this letter the caliphate is bestowed by and to those who follow the Quran. Ab Mikhnaf gives two similar versions of these confrontations and the subsequent whipping of Kab b. Abda. 65
Both end however, when Uthmn repented, asked Kab to whip him, Kab refused, and instead forgave Uthmn. Through a strategy of repetition, al-Baldhur presents a model of the relationship between the caliph and those claiming authority based on the Quran and their personal piety. The caliph may abuse his authority, and others may confront him with right religion, but there is no further action from the caliphs accusers. 66 Moreover, although Uthmn 63. Al-Baldhur, 530. The letter concludes, We bear witness against you before God and God is a sufcient witness. You are our amr as long as you obey God and act uprightly. You will not nd, other than God, any refuge or savior. 64. Ibid., 531. 65. This account has the added twist that Marwn was the one who encouraged Uthmn to beat the messenger and that it was his leniency that encouraged people to talk to him that way, thereby preparing the way for Marwns role later during the siege. 66. Al-Baldhur was a member of Mutawakkils court one wonders about the contemporaneous relationship between the caliph and the ulam. Apparently, al- 62 Heather Keaney punished them, apparently unfairly, he was redeemed in the end; when confronted the ruler should admit his mistakes, repent, and rectify the situation. The narrative continues to record the problems between Uthmn and Kufa in the form of exchanged letters. Uthmn had brought his governors, including Sad, to Medina for consultation and upon Sads return he was barred from entering the city by al-Ashtar. 67
Uthmn wrote them a letter stating they were the rst to start divisions in Islam and ordering them to fear God and return to the truth and the Book. 68 Al-Ashtar wrote a response letter to Uthmn addressed to the aficted and erring caliph who has diverged from the sunna of his prophet and has cast behind his back the rule of the Quran. 69 Al-Ashtar stated: forbid yourself and your governors injustice, aggression, and the exiling of the righteous, then we shall grant you obedience As to our affection [you can have it] if you retract, repent, ask God to forgive your injustice to the best among us, your exiling of our righteous ones, ousting us from our homes, and appointing youths over us. 70 Uthmn had the person who Mutawakkil, unlike al-Mamn, was not interested in asserting any religious role for himself. He was too busy building palaces and going on the hunt. Consequent- ly, El-Hibri concludes, In the post-mihna era the ulam had resolved on running religious affairs in isolation from the caliphate, whose role was reduced to provid- ing a stamp of approval. Reinterpreting, 122. Al-Baldhurs conceptualization of the struggle between religious and political authority might also be reecting back on the conicts during the reign of al-Mamn. Ira Lapidus points out how Sahl ibn Salama al-Ansar posed a threat to caliphal authority; he wore a copy of the Quran around his neck and preached that allegiance to the Quran and sunna superseded obedience to authorities who were compromised by failure to uphold Islam. Ira Lapidus, The Separation of State and Religion in the Development of Early Islamic Society, International Journal of Middle East Studies 6 (1975), 372. 67. Al-Baldhur, 534. 68. Signicantly, al-Baldhur does not include any of the actual details or Quranic verses that ll this letter in al-Tabar and Ibn Shabbas narratives. 69. Al-Baldhur, 535. This is slightly different in content and context from simi- lar letters found in Ibn Shabbas narrative. Ibn Shabbas letter is from the Egyptians and is addressed simply to the erring caliph. Ibn Shabba, 193. 70. Ibid., 535. The letter in Ibn Shabba is similar, but rather than listing specic abuses, accuses Uthmn of rebellion (masiyyah). Rather than referring to those 63 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles delivered the letters and his governor in Kufa whipped. But the narrative ends with Uthmn exclaiming: By God I am repentant and appointing a new governor of the peoples choosing. 71 Al- Baldhur presents a political paradigm in which the ruler makes mistakes, is confronted, and repents. Al-Baldhur tells of another confrontation with one of these righteous ones, Ab Dharr, who was sent into exile. The rst account shows Ab Dharr basing his criticisms on the Quran, and stating he has the right to recite the Quran. The narrative continues with a variety of accounts some showing Uthmn frustrated, but refraining from punishing Ab Dharr to others in which Uthmn sends Ab Dharr into exile and is reprimanded for punishing anyone who criticizes him. Al-Baldhur concludes the narrative with an account I have not seen elsewhere in which a group asks Ab Dharr if he is going to raise a banner to rally men against Uthmn. Ab Dharr responds: Even if Uthmn crucied me on the tallest trunk, I would listen, obey, accept, and be patient, for whoever humiliates the ruler there is no repentance for him. 72 The account concludes by stating: they were dissuaded. Repeatedly, al-Baldhur frames the different contentious aspects of the revolt in this way with an appeal to the Quran (rather than justice) against Uthmns abuses and errors, but concludes with an appeal to the prestige of the ruler rather than the unity of the community. 73
who recite and follow the Quran, it quotes the Quran: There is no obedience to one who rebels [against] God. The letter concludes: Verily we were obedient to God by supporting and revering you, but then rejected that when we had learned you wanted to destroy us and destroy yourself. We must reject and disobey whoever keeps us from God. You are merely a mortal servant whereas God is the eternal Cre- ator. Ibn Shabba, 193. Ibn Shabba raises the stakes from conict with pious men to rebellion against God and from withheld obedience to active disobedience and rejection. Lapidus notes that in the struggle for authority in the early ninth century, Sahl ibn Salama al-Ansar adopted the slogan: No obedience to the creature in disobedience of the Creator. The Separation of State and Religion, 373. 71. Ibid., 535. 72. Ibid., 546 73. Consider the contrast with al-Tabar who relies on Sayf s version which pres- 64 Heather Keaney Although there is general appeal to the Quran, al-Baldhur does not actually quote any verses from the Quran that would condemn Uthmn. Al-Baldhur defends the authority of the caliph despite clear evidence of injustice; he grants pious individuals the right to correct the ruler verbally, but no more and at their own risk. Nor does Uthmns injustice have any larger religious ramications. In his version of the confrontation between Uthmn and Al, for example, there is no reference to a murdered unjust imam. Rather Al warns Uthmn to keep a rmer hand on his governor, Muwiya, in Syria. Nor does al-Baldhur develop the consequences of disunity. Rather he appears to defend the continuity of the caliphate despite religious divisions. While al-Baldhur includes accounts stating it is only legitimate to kill a Muslim for one of three reasons, he does not include the corollary argument that if they kill Uthmn the community will be permanently divided. There is no reference to the sword of God upon the necks of the Community or warning that they will never pray together again, or be permanently divided. What happened to Uthmn did not permanently tarnish the Community or the Caliphate. Al-Baldhurs concern is with the practicalities of governing the Community rather than idealized communities past or present. Conclusion Based on this brief analysis we can see how these authors used literary techniques to point to moral and political lessons. For Ibn Shabba obedience to God is rst and foremost. This may mean confronting and disobeying an unjust ruler, but to use force against a ruler, separate from the community, or to oppress certain segments of the community were equally sinful. Ibn Shabbas concerns are reected in his own life in which he refused to bow to the pressure ents an idealized image of Uthmn honoring and respecting Ab Dharr rather than sending him into exile. 65 Confronting the Caliph: Uthmn b. Affn in Three Abbasid Chronicles of the mihna and consequently had some of his works destroyed. Although al-Tabar may have been inuenced by Ibn Shabba, he takes a more absolutist position. The two ideals of unity and justice legitimize the use of violence in their defense. Perhaps it was easier for him to remain a purist and an idealist because he consistently distanced himself from court politics. In contrast, al-Baldhur was a part of the inner court in Baghdad, and a boon companion of the caliph al-Mutawakkil. Thus it is not too surprising that he does not defend an ideal caliph or abstract religious or political ideals. Rather the ruler must be obeyed, but he should also listen to religious advisors and restrain himself. Thus we can see in these confrontations with the caliph, that in the end, the ultimate goal of the narrators was not to prove or disprove the charges against Uthmn, but to lay out a particular scheme of a political drama centered as much on the confrontations of the past as the challenges of the present. 74 Heather Keaney (American University of Cairo) 74. This is paraphrase of El-Hibris assessment of narrators treatment of the Ab- basid Caliph al-Mamn (d. 833) in Reinterpreting Islamic Historiography, 94.
Tayeb El-Hibri Reinterpreting Islamic Historiography - Harun Al-Rashid and The Narrative of The Abbasid Caliphate (Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization) 1999
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