The Muslim world, accustomed to choosing leaders …

Years: 683 - 683
August

The Muslim world, accustomed to choosing leaders by consultation rather than heredity, had been thrown into turmoil at the death of Mu'awiya I, the founder of the Umayyad Caliphate, in 680.

Although Mu'awiya had named his son, Yazid I, as his heir, this choice had not been universally recognized, especially by the old Medinan elites, who challenge the Umayyads' claim to the succession.

Among a group of companions of Muhammed (Sahaba), the two chief candidates for the caliphate were the Alid Husayn ibn Ali (the grandson of Muhammad), and Abdallah ibn al-Zubayr.

To avoid being forced to recant, on Yazid's accession the two men had fled from Medina to Mecca.

Husayn had at first attempted an outright revolt against the Umayyads, but this had resulted in his death at the Battle of Karbala in October 680, leaving Ibn al-Zubayr as the leading contender and rival for the Umayyads.

Ibn al-Zubayr has launched an insurgency in the Hejaz, the Islamic heartland, denouncing Yazid’s rule from the sanctuary of Mecca but not openly claiming the Caliphate, instead calling himself "the fugitive at the sanctuary" (al-‘a’idh bi’l-bayt) and insisting that the Caliph should be chosen in the traditional manner, by a tribal assembly (shura) from among all the Quraysh, not just the Umayyads.

Yazid and his governors in Medina had at first tried to negotiate with Ibn al-Zubayr, as well as the other dissatisfied Ansar families.

The Medinan aristocracy, however, who had felt their position threatened by Mu'awiya's large-scale agricultural projects around their city, and regard Yazid as unfit for the office of Caliph due to his reputed dissolute lifestyle, had led a public denunciation of their allegiance to Yazid, and had expelled the Umayyad family members, some one thousand in number (including the future Caliph Marwan ibn al-Hakam), from their city.

As a result, Yazid sends an army to subdue the province, and chooses Muslim ibn 'Uqba al-Murri to lead it.

Muslim's army of twelve thousand Syrians indeed overcomes the Medinans' resistance at the Battle of al-Harrah on August 26, 683, and proceeds to sack Medina—one of the impious acts for which later Muslim tradition will denounce the Umayyads.

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