Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
Abd al-Rahman thus established himself as an imperial ruler. Seeking a base from which to restore the fortunes of his family, he transformed Al-Andalus from a caliphal province into a hereditary Umayyad
emirate. Initially, the term
emir
referred to an Arab provincial governor
or general, but over time it became a title for an independent Muslim
90 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
ruler. To common Iberians, who had endured imperial rule since Roman
times, it must have seemed as though the Umayyad emirate was the
same empire under new management. Following precedent, Abd alRahman and the succeeding Umayyad emirs retained many of the
imperial institutions inherited from their predecessors. They relied
on Visigothic law and legal offi cials in the rural areas, and employed
non-Muslim magistrates, who most likely were holdovers from Roman
times, to adjudicate urban cases that did not fall under Islamic law. Little,
as far as the common Iberians were concerned, had changed.
The emirate’s direct reach never extended very far into the countryside, but Abd al-Rahman ended the chaos of the “governors’ era”
by creating a more centralized administration. Shifting his capital to
Córdoba, he established specialized departments for fi nance, justice,
foreign relations, frontier defense, and the supervision of
dhimmi
.
Viziers from loyal Umayyad client families ran these bureaus, but the
Umayyads also employed Jews and Christians in specialized administrative and technical positions. As in most all premodern empires,
their power base was largely urban. Abd al-Rahman and his heirs
appointed provincial governors, but ultimately Al-Andalus was a feudal state. As such, the emirate needed powerful local elites to wage
war, collect revenue, and extend its authority into the countryside.
These vassals were a heterogeneous group that included
baladiyyun
,
Syrians, Umayyad
mawali
, Berbers, and
muwallad
(Iberian converts). Abd al-Rahman I commanded their loyalty, but his weaker
heirs often lost control.
It took the emir roughly two decades to establish his authority
over the most productive southern regions of the peninsula. For a
time, he fantasized about using Al-Andalus as a base to recapture the
caliphate, but he eventually settled for dropping the Abbasid caliph’s
name from Friday prayers. The Abbasids, in turn, similarly schemed
to retake their wayward province and, most likely hoping for a general
uprising, sent a representative to reclaim the Iberian governorship.
Abd al-Rahman returned this underling’s head as a warning. AlAndalus was thus permanently shorn from the caliphate. Like Roman
Britain, it was originally one of the most remote territories of a wider
empire. Yet none of the Umayyad governors or emirs were able to
replicate Constantine’s feat in using a power base on the periphery to
claim, or in Abd al-Rahman’s case recapture, the imperial metropole.
Muslim
Spain 91
Instead, the slow pace of medieval travel and communication allowed
the Andalusi emirs to set themselves up as independent rulers, a feat
that eluded the Roman provincial governors.
Although Abd al-Rahman and his heirs never stopped hating the
Abbasids, the emerging Christian kingdoms of northern Spain were
a much more tangible threat. Neither the Romans nor the Visigoths
had been able to control the people of the peninsula’s northern mountainous regions fully. Christian chroniclers recorded that a minor
Visigothic noble named Pelayo exploited this tradition of resistance
by escaping north to found the Kingdom of Asturias. Pelayo is something of a mythical fi gure, but his successor and reputed son-in-law,
Alfonso I, made himself known to the Umayyad emirs by raiding
south into Muslim territory. Alfonso’s heirs intermarried with the
royal house of Pamplona/Navarre, thereby sowing the seeds of the
Kingdom of Castile, which would reconquer the peninsula for Christianity in the fi fteenth century.
From the hindsight of romantic nationalism and modern antiIslamic phobia, the early northern kingdoms might appear as Christian bastions that valiantly held out against the Muslim invaders. In
reality, Asturias and the other small northern kingdoms served a useful purpose by providing an opportunity to raid, loot, and establish
jihadist credentials. The emirs rarely tried to seize Christian territory.
Instead, they established a fortifi ed frontier stretching from the Ebro
River valley in the northeast to what is today northern Portugal in
the west. Popularly known as the Thughr, or “front teeth,” these borderlands consisted of small semi-independent fi efdoms ruled mostly
by Berbers and
muwallad
converts. Interestingly, the Banu Qasi clan
that controlled the Ebro Valley claimed descent from a Visigothic
noble, Count Cassius. Musa ibn Forton, a member of this family who
ruled from the city of Zaragoza in the late eighth century, married into
the Pamplona royal family while remaining a vassal of the Umayyad
emirs. Romantic nationalism aside, the lines between Christian and
Muslim Iberia blurred markedly in the early medieval era.
This trend became more pronounced as direct Umayyad infl uence
over Iberia declined after Abd al-Rahman I’s death in 788. Struggles
between his sons over succession brought a return to factionalism,
and the emirate’s military might waned as landed Arabs, the backbone of the Umayyad armed forces, gained the right to buy their way
92 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
out of their obligation for military service. Moreover, the political
unreliability of Syrian and Berber troops led the emirs to use slave
soldiers as bodyguards and household troops. These foreign but more
dependable forces were too expensive to be used in large numbers.
The emirs therefore lost control over much of Al-Andalus to their
own vassals. At its lowest point in the late ninth century the emirate had direct control over only Córdoba and its immediate suburbs,
and Emir Abd Allah had to acknowledge Muslim warlords throughout the peninsula as local kings. The extended occupation of fortifi ed
hilltop settlements in the south suggests widespread rural unrest and
implies that the emirate’s extractive reach was also slipping.
Financial problems born of the relatively loose boundaries of subjecthood were at the root of this instability. Conversion to Islam by
common Iberians reduced the emirate’s revenues from the
jizya
(poll
tax) and the
kharaj
(land tax). Muslims paid only the
zakat
, and perhaps the
kharaj
if they had acquired land from Christians. Although
Al-Andalus recovered from the Mediterranean-wide recession following the collapse of the Roman Empire, the emirs did not have the
power to tap the peninsula’s commercial and agrarian wealth directly.
Relying on irregular land taxes, military exemption payments, and
licensing fees on frivolities such as falconry, they lost the resources to
mint coins by the late ninth century.
The empty treasury forced the Umayyads to demand more taxes
from all Iberians regardless of their religious status. Not surprisingly, a broad cross section of Andalusi society including Berbers,
frontier warlords, Arab immigrants,
muwallad
converts, and, most
likely, common Christians bitterly resisted this push for economic
and administrative centralization. Iberian converts were an even bigger problem. Even though the
muwalladun
had embraced Islam, the
Andalusis regarded them as second-class Muslims, a subordinate distinction that did not exist in the wider Islamic world. The taint of the
muwalladun
’s non-Islamic origins lingered, as “pure” Arabs openly
derided them as inferior. Finding it easier to defend the boundaries of
ethnicity than religion, the Andalusi elite made a science of genealogy to emphasize the pedigree of their Arab lineage, thereby suggesting that
muwalladun
were untrustworthy. Unlike the
mawali
of the
larger caliphate, the Spanish
muwalladun
lacked patrons or sponsors
to ease their absorption into the community of Muslims.
Muslim
Spain 93
These tensions came to a head in the ninth century when systematic discrimination and the weakness of Umayyad regime inspired
muwallad
feudal elites to rebel. The
muwalladun
of Toledo, who were
most likely descended from the old Visigothic aristocracy, staged a
general uprising in 807 that Emir al-Hakam I crushed ruthlessly.
Rural
muwallad
warlords proved much harder to deal with. Living
on the rent and tribute of the rural peasantry, they were neither folk
heroes nor popular anti-imperial nationalists. Rather, they were local
power brokers from Iberian families that had converted to Islam to
preserve their infl uence. Recognizing the waning power of Córdoba,
they now calculated that they could safely defy the emirate.
Umar ibn Hafsun, who claimed descent from a Visigothic count,
mounted the most serious challenge to Umayyad sovereignty. Operating from his fortifi ed base at Bobastro in the Málaga Mountains,
the
muwallad
warlord held sway over most of southern Iberia from
878 until his death from natural causes in 917. His forces failed to
capture Córdoba, but the Umayyad military was equally incapable
of dislodging him from his mountain stronghold. Putting military
methods aside, Abd al-Rahman III fi nally captured Umar’s fortress by
exploiting divisions among his sons. His propagandists then sought
to discredit the
muwallad
leader by claiming to have discovered that
he had been buried as a Christian when they dug up his body to crucify him posthumously. There is no denying that the Hafsunid family
had Christian support, but in actuality the great
fi tna
(rebellion) by
Umar and his fellow warlords was an attempt by rural elites to regain
the autonomy they lost at the time of the Muslim conquest.
It fell to Abd al-Rahman III to revive the fortunes of the Umayyad
line. The grandson of a princess of Navarre and the son of a Christian
slave concubine, Abd al-Rahman was technically 75 percent Iberian.
He reportedly had blue eyes, light skin, and reddish hair that he dyed
black to appear more Arab. His grandfather, Emir Abdullah, chose him
as his heir over a host of uncles and nephews with equally valid claims
to power. Concerned with political challenges from his own offspring,
the emir apparently concluded that he could trust the young man to
wait to come into his political inheritance by natural means.
Taking power in 912 at the age of twenty-one, Abd al-Rahman
III reorganized the emirate in a bid to reassert his authority over all
of Al-Andalus. He expanded and reorganized its central bureaucracy
94 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
and provincial administration, which enabled him to collect fi ve and a
half million silver dirhams per year. This was roughly eighteen times
the annual income of his forebearer Abd al-Rahman I, and it provided
the resources for an Umayyad military revival.15 Warlords and petty
kings who submitted retained a measure of authority, but those who
resisted faced retribution at the hands of a new force consisting of
Arab allies, Berbers, northern Christian mercenaries, and slave soldiers from North Africa, Europe, and sub-Saharan Africa.
Abd al-Rahman III explicitly used jihadist language to legitimize his campaigns against rebellious
muwallad
nobles, whom he
accused of abandoning Islam to return to Christianity. Confi dent in
his hold on power, in 929 he declared himself caliph of the entire
Muslim world, in direct opposition to the Abbasids. His forebearers
never made such a claim, but his was a less audacious move in an era
when the Abbasids were mere fi gureheads in Baghdad and a rival
Shi’a Fatimid caliphate already existed in North Africa. The declaration of an Umayyad caliphate in Al-Andalus meant very little in
the wider world of Muslim politics, but it bolstered Abd al-Rahman’s
legitimacy at home.
The Iberian Christian kingdoms also gave the new regime a useful
foil. Styling himself a champion of Islam, Abd al-Rahman resumed
the raids on the north for slaves and booty. These continued until 939,
when the caliph almost lost his life in an ambush. Apparently shaken
by his brush with death, Abd al-Rahman shifted to extracting tribute
and concessions from Christian rulers. He forced León and Navarre
to acknowledge his suzerainty and restored his client Sancho the Fat
to the Navarese throne.
As the greatest power in Iberia since Roman times, Abd al-Rahman III’s caliphate presided over an impressive economic renewal.
Rejoining the Mediterranean commercial world, Al-Andalus gained
access to a broad array of useful crops, including rice, hard wheat,
cotton, citrus fruits, bananas, spinach, and sugar cane, that Arab
agronomists introduced into the Islamic heartland from Asia. Most
of these plants required extensive irrigation for commercial production. Andalusi experts solved the problem by combining imported
techniques with local Iberian irrigation practices dating from Roman
times. The resulting agricultural boom raised living standards, fed the