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Encyclopedia > Muawiya I

Mu'awiyah I (602 - May 6, 680), early Muslim leader and founder of the great Umayyad Dynasty of caliphs. He is also considered one of the four brilliant arabs along with his generals Amr ibn Al-A's, Al-Moughierah ibn Shou'bah and Ziyad ibn Abeeh. He fought against the fourth caliph, 'Ali (Muhammad's son-in-law), seized Egypt, and assumed the caliphate after 'Ali's assassination in 661. He restored unity to the Muslim empire and made Damascus its capital. He reigned from 661 to 680. His given name was Mu'awiyah ibn Abu Sufyan.


It is ironic that a man who was to become the political-religious head of Islam was born (c. 602) into a clan (Banu Abd Shams) that rejected the Prophet Muhammad in his home city, Mecca, and continued to oppose him on the battlefield after he had emigrated to Medina. Mu'awiyah's father was Abu Sufiyan ibn Harb who was a bitter opponent of Muhammad.


Mu'awiyah did not become a Muslim until Muhammad had conquered Mecca and had reconciled his former enemies by gifts. Possibly as a part of Muhammad's policy of conciliation, Mu'awiyah was made a scribe in his service. But Mu'awiyah's contributions to Islamic history are wholly associated with his career in Syria, which began shortly after the death of the Prophet, when he, along with his brother Yazid, served in the tribal armies sent from Arabia against the Byzantine forces in Syria.


Upon the death of Yazid in 640, Mu'awiyah was appointed governor of Damascus by the caliph 'Umar and gradually gained mastery over other areas of Syria. By 647 Mu'awiyah had built a Syrian tribal army strong enough to repel a Byzantine attack and in subsequent years to take the offensive against the Byzantines in campaigns that resulted in the capture of Cyprus (649) and Rhodes (654) and a devastating defeat of the Byzantine navy off the coast of Lycia in Anatolia (655). At the same time, Mu'awiyah periodically dispatched land expeditions into Anatolia. All these campaigns, however, came to a halt with the accession of Ali ibn Abi Talib to the caliphate, when a new and decisive phase of Mu'awiyah's career began.


As a kinsman of the slain caliph 'Uthman, Mu'awiyah bore the duty of revenge. Because 'Ali neglected to apprehend and punish 'Uthman's murderers, Mu'awiyah regarded him as an accomplice to the murder and refused to acknowledge his caliphate. Thereupon 'Ali marched to the Euphrates border of Syria and engaged Mu'awiyah's troops at the famous Battle of Siffin (657). Mu'awiyah's guile turned near defeat into a truce. Resorting to a trick that played upon the religious sensibilities of 'Ali's forces, he persuaded the enemy to enter into negotiations that ultimately cast doubt on the legitimacy of 'Ali's caliphate and alienated a sizable number of his supporters. When these former supporters--the Kharijites--rose in rebellion against 'Ali, Mu'awiyah took advantage of 'Ali's difficulties in Iraq to send a force to seize control of Egypt. Thus, when 'Ali was assassinated in 661, Mu'awiyah held both Syria and Egypt and, as commander of the largest force in the Muslim Empire, had the strongest claim to the caliphate. 'Ali's son Hasan was persuaded to remove himself from public life in exchange for a subsidy, which Mu'awiyah provided.


After his accession to the position of Caliph, Mu'awiya governed the geogaphically and politically disparate Caliphate, which spread from Egypt in the West to Iran in the East. by strengthening the power of his allies in the newly conquered Arab territories. As a result, men like Ziyad Ibn Abihi emerged as governors. However, this system of government relied upon the allegiance that Mu'awiyah could personally generate. The essentially personal nature of his achievement, and his failure to develop an effective theory of government bolstered by state institutions, led to the second Fitna upon his death in 680.


Mu'awiyah died May 6, 680. He was succeeded by his son Yazid I.

Preceded by:
Umayyad Leader Succeeded by:
Yazid I
Ali ibn Abi Talib Caliph

External links

  • Biography of Mu'awiya (http://www.answering-ansar.org/answers/muawiya/en/index.php)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Muawiya (682 words)
Muawiya was the son of Abu Sufyan, the leader of the Abd Shams clan.
Muawiya is credited with the creation of specialized bureaus, known as diwans, to increase the centralization of the government; two such diwans created to improve communications are the diwan al-khatam, the chancellery, and the diwan al-barid, the postal service.
Muawiya's most lasting innovation was his designation of his son Yazid as his successor; this move established hereditary succession as the norm for the caliphate.
Muawiya ibn Abu Sufyan Biography | Encyclopedia of World Biography (884 words)
Muawiya ibn Abu Sufyan (died 680) was the founder of the Umayyad dynasty of caliphs.
Muawiya at this time was made secretary to the Prophet, but it was as a warrior in the army sent by the caliph Abu Bakr to conquer Syria that Muawiya first distinguished himself in the Moslem community.
Muawiya appeased the native Christian population of Syria by his tolerance, which included the employment of Christians at his court; and he cultivated the Syrian tribesmen of southern Arabian origin by a marriage alliance, when he took a woman of the Kalb tribe as wife.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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