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Encyclopedia > Mansur
This article is about the Abbasid Caliph Al Mansur of Baghdad. There is also an article on the Spanish Muslim general and statesman Al Mansur. They were both known as Almanzor in the West

Abu Jafar Abdullah ibn Muhammad Al Mansur (712 - 775) was the Abbasid Caliph who founded Baghdad in 762. He reigned from 754 until 775.


al-Mansur was concerned with the solidity of his regime after the death of his brother, al-'Abbas. In 755, he arranged the murder of Abu Muslim, the general who had lead the forces of al-'Abbas to victory over the Umayyads in the third civil war. He undertook to make certain that the 'Abbasid family was supreme in state affairs, and that its sovereignty over the Caliphate would go unquestioned.


He claimed, as earlier Umayyad caliphs had done, to hold religious and secular authority. This further alienated Shi'ite Muslims who had, during the reign of al-'Abbas, wanted the Shia Imam to be made Caliph.


During his reign, literature and scholarly work in the Islamic world began to emerge in full force, supported by new Abbasid tolerances for Persians and other groups suppressed by the Umayyads. Although the Umayyad caliph Hisham had adopted Persian court practices, it was not until al-Mansur's reign that Persian literature and scholarship came to true appreciation in the Islamic world. The emergence of Shu'ubiya among Persian scholars occurred during the reign of al-Mansur as a result of loosened censorship over Persian nationalism. Shu'ubiya was a literary movement among Persians expressing their belief that Persian art and culture was superior to that of the Arabs; the movement, served to catalyze the emergence of Arab-Persian dialogues in the eight century.


Perhaps more importantly than the emergence of Persian scholarship was the conversion of many non-Arabs to Islam. The Umayyads actively tried to discourage conversion in order to continue the collection of the jizya, or the tax on non-Muslims. The inclusiveness of the Abbasid regime, and that of al-Mansur, saw the expansion of Islam among its territory; in 750, roughly 8% of residents in the Caliphate were Muslims. This would double to 15% by the end of al-Mansur's reign.


al-Mansur died in 775 on his way to Mecca to make hajj. He was buried somewhere along the way in one of the hundreds of graves that had been dug in order to hide his body from Umayyads. He was succeeded by his son, al-Mahdi.

Preceded by:
as-Saffah
Abbasid Leader Succeeded by:
al-Mahdi
Caliph

  Results from FactBites:
 
Al-Mansur - definition of Al-Mansur in Encyclopedia (417 words)
This article is about the Abbasid Caliph Al Mansur of Baghdad.
There is also an article on the Spanish Muslim general and statesman Al Mansur.
Abu Jafar Abdullah ibn Muhammad Al Mansur (712 - 775) was the Abbasid Caliph who founded Baghdad in 762.
AllRefer.com - Hussein ibn Mansur al- Hallaj (Islam, Biography) - Encyclopedia (229 words)
AllRefer.com - Hussein ibn Mansur al- Hallaj (Islam, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Hussein ibn Mansur al- Hallaj[hOOsAn´ ibn mAnsoor´] Pronunciation Key, 857–922, Arabic-speaking Persian Muslim mystic and poet popularly known among Muslims as "the martyr of mystical love." Born a Sunni, he traveled in Persia, India, and Turkistan, and experimented with a number of religious philosophies, including Sufism, Manichaeism, and Buddhism.
More articles from AllRefer Reference on Hussein ibn Mansur al- Hallaj
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