The teenaged Harun, second son of Calph …
Years: 785 - 785
The teenaged Harun, second son of Calph al-Mahdi, had been nominal leader of expeditions against Constantinople in 780 and 782, although there is no doubt that the experienced generals accompanying him made the military decisions.
The expedition of 782 had reached the Bosporus, opposite Constantinople, and peace had been concluded on terms favorable to the Muslims.
For this success, Harun had received the honorific title of ar-Rashid, “the one following the right path”, and had been named second in succession to the throne and appointed governor of Tunisia, Egypt, Syria, Armenia, and Azerbaijan, with his tutor Yahya acting as actual administrator.
His mother is al-Khayzuran, a formerly enslaved Yemeni, and a woman of strong personality who greatly influences affairs of state in the reigns of her husband and will continue to do so in the reign of hers sons.
Al-Khayzuran an Yahya presumably the engineers behind these moves, are even said to have induced al-Mahdi to make Harun his immediate successor, but al-Mahdi, poisoned by one of his concubines, dies in August 785 without officially changing the succession.
Al-Hadi, the eldest son of Al-Mahdi and al-Khayzuran, becomes caliph and Harun acquiesces.
Al-Hadi is, like his father, very open to the people of his empire and allows citizens to visit him in the palace at Baghdad to address him.
As such, he is considered an "enlightened ruler", and continues the progressive moves of his Abbasid predecessors.
Locations
People
Groups
- Arab people
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
- Egypt in the Middle Ages
- Muslims, Sunni
- Muslims, Shi'a
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Isaurian dynasty
- Abbasid Caliphate (Baghdad)
