THE GENERAL PHENOMENA OF THE FIRST PERIOD OF THE DECLINE OF THE CALIPHATE (A.D. 847-1000), FROM THE ACCESSION OF AL-MUTAWAKKIL TO THE ACCESSION OF MAḤMÚD OF GHAZNA.
THE period which we have now to consider is one which,
though politically far less brilliant than the last, is in many
General
characteristics.
respects quite as interesting. The sudden reversion
from the broad and tolerant spirit of al-Ma'mún
and his successors to a narrow and bigoted orthodoxy
seems to have encouraged rather than repressed the
development of several most remarkable religious and philosophical
movements, notably amongst the former the Car-
From our special point of view, moreover, this period is
of particular interest, since it gave birth to what we ordinarily
Rise of Persian
literature during
this period.
understand by Persian literature, that is the post-
To this subject we shall return in another chapter, but it will be well first of all to treat more broadly of the general history of this period of the Caliphate, alike in its political, its religious, and its literary aspects. We shall therefore divide this Book, like the preceding ones, into three chapters, in the first of which we shall endeavour to present the reader with a conspectus of the whole period with which we are now dealing, while in the second we shall discuss more fully certain aspects of the religious and philosophical movements of the time, reserving for the last an account of the earliest period of Persian literature. And should the reader be tempted to complain of so much space being still devoted to phenomena which centre round Baghdad and appear more closely connected with Arabic than with Persian literature, he must remember that this is an essential part of the scheme on which this history is constructed, it being the author's profound conviction that the study of Persian, to prove fruitful, cannot be divorced from that of Arabic, even in its purely literary aspects, still less in the domains of religion and philosophy into which anything beyond the most superficial reading of the belles lettres of Persia must inevitably lead us. To those whose horizon of Persian literature is bounded by the Gulistán, the Bustán, the Anwár-i-Suhaylí, the Díwán of Ḥáfidh, and the Quatrains of 'Umar Khayyám, this book is not addressed.
Our period opens with the comparatively long and wholly deplorable reign of the Caliph al-Mutawakkil (A.D. 847-861), which is characterised politically by the ascendancy of the Turkish party and the repression of the Arabs, and, to a less extent, of the Persians; and intellectually by the reaction against Caliphate of al-Mutawakkil. the liberal Mu'tazilite doctrines and philosophical tendencies of the previous Caliphs, and a fanatical hatred of 'Alí and his Shí'a or faction. The place of the Barmecides and other noble Persians is taken by Turkish soldiers of fortune (originally, as a rule, slaves captured in the religious wars waged on the frontiers of Khurásán against heathen Turkish tribes), whose barbarous names well accord with their savage acts. The pages of the chronicles are filled with such: Boghá (“the Bull”), an older and a younger; Bághir, Utámish (who became Prime Minister two or three years after al-Mutawakkil's murder), Báyabák, Kalbatakín, and the like. The names of these Turkish mercenaries, even when they are in Arabic, denote their origin; Waṣíf, for instance, one of the chief regicides who compassed al-Mutawakkil's death, stands revealed by his name as originally a slave.* It was an evil day for the Caliphs when, ceasing to trust or sympathise with their own people, they surrounded themselves with these savage and self-seeking men of violence, and transferred their residence from Baghdad to Surra-man-ra'a (or Sámarra), which, being interpreted, means “gladdened is he who hath beheld it,” “from the beauty of its site,” as Muir observes,* “or, as was wittily said, ‘Whoever saw it with the Turks settled there, rejoiced at Baghdad being well rid of them.’” And though this had happened already in the reign of al-Mu'taṣim, the bitter fruits thereof first matured in the days of al-Mutawakkil.
The latter, it is true, had thought in the latter part of his
Bigotry of alMutawakkil.
reign (A.D. 858) of moving his capital, but it is
characteristic of his admiration for the Umayyads
and his anti-Shí'ite prejudices that it was
Damascus, not Baghdad, which he had in mind. His religious
bigotry, which was especially directed against the Shí'a, but
which also found its expression in vexatious enactments directed
against the Jews and Christians, was, indeed, in complete keeping
with his Turkish proclivities, and makes us liken him rather to
a gloomy and fanatical Ottoman sultan than to the heir of
al-Manṣúr and al-Ma'mún. As regards his attitude towards the
Shí'a, it was not enough that he should on occasions shed their
blood, as he did in the case of the tutor of his sons, Ibnu's-