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==Death== | ==Death== | ||
Yazid was killed by his own horse after it lost control, his remains were never confirmed to have been found. Yazid died at the age of 38 after ruling for three years and was succeeded by his son ]. Yazid was buried in Damascus. Although it is thought that his grave no longer exists, few believe that it is located in a small street near ] without any mark or distinction, as is customary in Islamic tradition.<ref name=hitti/> | Yazid was killed by his own horse after it lost control, his remains were never confirmed to have been found. Yazid died at the age of 38 after ruling for three years and was succeeded by his son ]. Yazid was buried in Damascus. Although it is thought that his grave no longer exists, few believe that it is located in a small street near ] without any mark or distinction, as is customary in Islamic tradition.<ref name=hitti/> | ||
==Historical evaluation== | |||
Some scholars regard Yazid as a just, noble, religious and administratively efficient ruler and that his nomination by his father Muawiya as Caliph was proper.<ref>{{cite book|pages=111-112|title=Hazrat Muawiya and Historical Facts|first=Maulana Mufti Taqi|last= Usmani|publisher=Idara Al-Mu’arif|location= Karachi, Pakistan}}</ref> | |||
He participated in various wars against Roman in the time of his father. He was a brave man fond of hunting. | |||
In the chapter, Qital e Rome of Sahih Muslim, the Holy Prophet said that the first army who will attack Constantinople will enter in Paradise. The saying was known to muslim. Under the rule of his father Amir ]. Army was made ready to attack Constantinople under the command of Amir Yazid bin Muawiya. A numbers of companions presented their services for the army. Abu Ayub Ansari at his old age also participated despite his illness and age factor. He among many other notables such as Abdullah bin Omer, Hussain bin Numayr fought under the command of Amir Yazid. | |||
However, most Islamic scholars of the classical period (i.e. Abbasid Caliphate) regarded Caliph Yazid I as a tyrant who was directly responsible for three major historical atrocities in standard Islamic history: The Karbala massacre of the Hashimite caravan of Husayn ibn Ali, the pillage and plunder of the city of Madinah (by Yazid's general Ibn Uqbah al-Murri) in which over 10,000 Muslim citizens were slaughtered and Muslim women were indiscriminately raped, and the siege of Mecca in which Yazid's commander Ibn Numayr ordered his troops to catapult fireballs to the shrine of the Kaaba.<ref>Al-Tabari, Muhammad ibn Jarir. pp=372-379, ''Tarikh Al-Tabari Vol. 3''.</ref><ref>Al-Tabari, Muhammad ibn Jarir. pp=309-356, ''Tarikh Al-Tabari Vol. 4''.</ref><ref>Al-Tabari, Muhammad ibn Jarir. ''History of al-Tabari Vol. 19, The Caliphate of Yazid b. Mu'awiyah''.</ref><ref>Al-Athir, Ali ibn. pp=282-299, pp=310-313, ''Ibn al-Athir Vol. 3''.</ref><ref>Al-Dhahabi, Muhammad bin Ahmad. ''Tarikh Ul Islam''.</ref><ref>Ibn Kathir, Ismail bin Umar. pp=170-207, pp=219-221, pp=223, ''Al Bidayah Wal Nihayah Vol 8''.</ref><ref>Al-Suyuti, Jalaluddin. pp=165, ''Tarikh Ul Khulafa''.</ref><ref>Maududi, Sayyid Abul Ala. pp=181, ''Khilafat Wa Mulukiyyat''.</ref> | |||
The above classical scholarly consensus was summed up with the following evaluation of Caliph Yazid I: | |||
''He was strong, brave, deliberative, full of resolve, acumen, and eloquence. He composed good poetry. He was also a stern, harsh, and coarse Nasibi. He drank and was a reprobate. He inaugurated his Dawla with the killing of the martyr al-Husayn and closed it with the catastrophe of al-Harrah. Hence the people despised him, he was not blessed in his life, and many took up arms against him after al-Husayn such as the people of Madînah - they rose for the sake of Allâh -''<ref>Al-Dhahabi, Muhammad bin Ahmad. 4:37-38, ''Siyar A`lâm al-Nubalâ''.</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== |
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Yazid I | |||||
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Caliphs of the Umayyad Caliphate | |||||
Reign | 680 – 683 | ||||
Predecessor | Mu'awiya I | ||||
Successor | Mu'awiya II | ||||
Born | 23 July 645 | ||||
Died | 11 November 683 | ||||
| |||||
Dynasty | Umayyad | ||||
Father | Mu'awiya I | ||||
Mother | Maysun |
'Yazīd ibn Mu‘āwiya ibn Abī Sufyān, Template:Lang-ar (23 July 645 – 11 November 683), commonly known as Yazid I, was the second Caliph of the Umayyad Caliphate (and the first one by birthright). Yazid was the Caliph as appointed by his father Muawiyah I and ruled for three years from 680 CE until his death in 683 CE.
Oath of Allegiance of Yazid
Upon succession, Yazid asked Governors of all provinces to take an oath of allegiance to him. The necessary oath was secured from all parts of the country. Husayn ibn Ali and Abdullah ibn Zubayr refused to declare allegiance. Yazid sent Marwan, a soldier in his army, to assist in this task.
Husayn ibn Ali and Ibn az-Zubair
Main article: Battle of Karbala Main article: Ibn al-Zubair's revoltHusayn ibn Ali, along with many other prominent Muslims, not only disapproved of Yazid's nomination for caliph but declared it against the spirit of Islam. While the nomination issue was deliberated upon in Medina, Abdullah ibn Zubair went with Husayn to Mecca because some prominent Muslims thought that Mecca would be the best base for launching a campaign to build up public opinion against Yazid's nomination. However, before any significant work could be done in this regard, Muawiyah died and Yazid took over the reins of government.
Kufa, a garrison town in what is now Iraq, had been Caliph Alī's capital and many of his supporters lived there. Husayn ibn Ali received letters from Kufa expressing its offer of support if he claimed the caliphate. As he prepared for the journey to Kufa, Abdullah ibn Umar and Abdullah ibn Abbas argued against his plan and, if he was determined to proceed to Kufa, asked him to leave women and children in Mecca, but Husayn ignored their suggestions. On the way to Kufa, Husayn received the report of Muslim ibn Aqeel's death at the hands of Yazid's men and that the Kufans had changed their loyalties to Yazid, pledging support to him against Husayn and his followers.
Ubayd-Allah ibn Ziyad, governor of Basrah, executed one of Husayn's messengers and warned the citizens to avoid the insurgency. He sent a message to Husayn, at instruction of Yazid, stating "You can neither go to Kufa nor return to Mecca, but you can go anywhere else you want." Despite this warning, Husayn continued towards Kufa and during the trip, he and many members of his family were killed or captured at the Battle of Karbala.
Many Sahaba, the most prominent being Abdullah ibn Zubayr, refused to give their oath of allegiance to Yazid as they saw it as usurpation of power and not the proper way of choosing a Caliph by the Shura.{cn|July 2012}}
Abdullah launched an insurgency in the Hejaz. Yazid sent armies against him in 683. After the Battle of al-Harrah, Medina was recaptured and Mecca was besieged. During the siege, the Ka‘bah was damaged. The siege ended when Yazid died suddenly in 683 CE.
Setbacks
During the caliphate of Yazid, Muslims suffered several military setbacks. In 682 AD Yazid restored Uqba ibn Nafi as the governor of North Africa and Uqba won battles against the Berbers and Byzantines. Uqba then marched westward towards Tangier and then marched eastwards the Atlas Mountains. With cavalry numbering about 300, he proceeded towards Biskra where he was ambushed by a Berber force . Uqba and all his men died fighting and the Berbers launched a counter-attack and drove Muslims from North Africa. This was a major setback for the Muslims as lost supremacy at sea and had to abandon the islands of Rhodes and Crete.
Death
Yazid was killed by his own horse after it lost control, his remains were never confirmed to have been found. Yazid died at the age of 38 after ruling for three years and was succeeded by his son Muawiyah II. Yazid was buried in Damascus. Although it is thought that his grave no longer exists, few believe that it is located in a small street near Umayyad Mosque without any mark or distinction, as is customary in Islamic tradition.
See also
References
- ^ Hitti, Philip K. (1943). The Arabs: A short history. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780895267061.
- ^ Hasan, Masudul (1998). History of Islam. North Haledon, NJ: Islamic Publications International.
- Glubb, John Bagot (1965). The Empire of the Arabs. Prentis-Hall.
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}
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Yazid I Banu Umayya | ||
Regnal titles | ||
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Preceded byMuawiyah I | Umayyad Caliph 680 – 683 |
Succeeded byMuawiyah II |
Umayyad dynasty | ||
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Caliphs of Damascus (661–750) | ||
Emirs of Córdoba (756–929) | ||
Caliphs of Córdoba (929–1031) | ||
indicates Hammudid usurpers |