Marwan's election provokes the reaction of the …
Years: 684 - 684
Marwan's election provokes the reaction of the Qays, who rally around the governor of Damascus, al-Dahhak ibn Qays al-Fihri.
After vacillating between the two candidates, al-Dahhak is persuaded to recognize Ibn al-Zubayr, and begins assembling his forces on the field of Marj al-Suffar near Damascus.
In response, the Umayyad coalition marches on Damascus, which is surrendered to the Umayyads by a member of the Ghassanid tribe.
The two armies first clash in mid-July 684 at the plain of Marj al-Suffar, and the Qays are pushed towards Marj Rahit.
Twenty days of skirmishing between the two camps follow, until the final battle takes place on August 18.
The numbers of the two opponents are uncertain: al-Tabari puts Marwan's forces at six thousand, another tradition at thirteen thousand and thirty thousand for Marwan and al-Dahhak respectively, while Ibn Khayyat inflates the numbers to thirty thousand and sixty thousand respectively.
The traditions agree, however, that the Umayyad forces are considerably outnumbered.
Marwan's commanders are Abbas ibn Ziyad, Amr ibn Sa'id al-As and Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad (another tradition has Ubayd Allah commanding the cavalry and Malik ibn Hubayra al-Skauni the infantry), while only one of al-Dahhak's commanders, Ziyad ibn Amr ibn Mu'awiya al-Uqayli, is known.
A plethora of anecdotes, individual accounts and poems on the battle survives, but the details of the battle itself are not clear, except that the day resulted in a crushing Umayyad victory: the main leaders of the Qays, including al-Dahhak, fell in the field.
N. Elisséeff explains the Umayyad success by the possible defection of Qays-aligned tribes during the preceding weeks, eager to uphold the Syrian hegemony over the Caliphate.
In addition, Elisséeff points out that the Umayyads still controlled the state treasury in Damascus, allowing them to bribe tribes to join them.
The remnants of the Qays army flee to Qarqisiya under Zufar ibn Harith al-Kilabi, and Marwan is officially proclaimed as Caliph at Damascus.
The victory at Marj Rahit secures the Umayyads' position in Syria, and allows them to go into the offensive against Ibn al-Zubayr's supporters.
Egypt is recovered later in the year.
Locations
People
Groups
- Arab people
- Banū Kalb (Arabic tribe)
- Qais (Arabian tribe)
- Islam
- Egypt in the Middle Ages
- Umayyad Caliphate (Damascus)
