As regards the Jews and Christians, many of whom, as we have seen, stood high in honour with his predecessors, his first Enactments against the Jews and Christians. enactment against them was issued early in his reign (A.D. 850), and the second three or four years later. They were thereby compelled to wear “honey-coloured gowns (ṭaylasán),* parti-coloured badges, and caps and girdles of certain ignoble patterns; to ride only on mules and asses, with wooden stirrups and saddles of strange construction; and to have placed over the doors of their houses effigies of devils. Such of their churches and temples as were of recent construction were destroyed, or converted into mosques; their tombs were to be level with the ground; and they were forbidden to gather in the streets or to exhibit the sign of the cross, while their children might not learn to write Arabic or receive instruction from a Muhammadan tutor.
* Aḥmad b. Ḥanbal († A.D. 855), the founder of the narrowest
and least spiritual of the four orthodox schools of Sunní
Thinkers and
writers of this
period.
doctrine, was now the dominating religious
influence, and was able to pay back with interest
the harsh treatment which he had suffered at the
hands of the Mu'tazilites. These, needless to say, fared but
ill under the new régime, which was, indeed, generally unfavourable
to men of science and philosophers. Thus the
physician Bôkht-Yishú',*
the grandson of him who was
Director of the Hospital and Medical School at Jundê-Shâpûr
in the Caliphate of al-Manṣúr, was deprived of all his
possessions and banished to Baḥrayn (A.D. 858) for some
trifling cause, and it is not surprising to find how comparatively
small is the number of writers and scholars of eminence who
flourished in al-Mutawakkil's time. Ibn Khurdádhbih wrote
the first edition of his “Book of Itineraries” (Kitábu'l-
At the end of the year A.D. 861 al-Mutawakkil, while
overcome with drink, was murdered by his Turkish guards,
Al-Mutawakkil's
four successors.
who were instigated thereto by his son al-Mun-
It was during this turbulent epoch that Persian independence may be said to have been revived by the remarkable Beginnings of Persian independence. achievements of Ya'qúb the son of Layth “the Coppersmith” (aṣ-Ṣaffár), who, notwithstanding his humble origin, succeeded in founding a dynasty which, though short-lived, made its power felt not merely in Sístán, the place of its origin, but throughout the greater part of Persia and almost to the walls of Baghdad. The Ṭáhirids are, it is true, generally reckoned an earlier Persian dynasty, and in a certain sense they were so. Their ancestor, Ṭáhir “the Ambidexter” (Dhu'l-Yamínayn), was rewarded by al-Ma'mún for his signal services in the field with the government of Khurásán (A.D. 820), and the continuance of this dignity to his heirs unto the third generation gave to the family a local authority and position which previous governors, appointed only for a term of years and removable at the Caliph's pleasure, had never enjoyed. It is a matter of common observation that settlers in a country, often after a comparatively brief residence, outdo those native to the soil in patriotic feeling, a fact of which the history of Ireland in particular affords plentiful examples; for what proportion of the foremost leaders of Irish struggles against English authority —the Fitzgeralds, Emmetts, Wolfe Tones, and Napper Tandys of the '98—could claim to be of purely Irish extraction? And so it would not be a surprising phenomenon if the Ṭáhirids, notwithstanding their Arab extraction, had become wholly Persianised. But though the earliest Persian poet, whose verses have been preserved to us—Ḥandhala of Bádghís—appears to have lived more or less under their patronage, it is doubtful whether they really sought, as did their successors, the Ṣaffárids and Sámánids, to foster the renaissance of the Persian language and literature. Dawlatsháh,* discussing the origins of Persian poetry, relates that on one occasion a man came to the Court of 'Abdu'lláh b. Ṭáhir (A.D. 828-844) at Níshápúr and offered him an ancient Persian book. To his inquiry as to its nature the man replied, “It is the Romance of Wámiq and 'Adhrá, a pleasing tale which was compiled by wise men and dedicated to King Núshírwán.” The Amír replied, “We are men who read the Qur'án, and need not such books, but only the Scripture and Tradition. This book, moreover, was composed by Magians, and is accursed in our eyes.” He then ordered the volume to be cast into the water, and issued instructions that wherever in his territories any Persian book of Magian authorship might be discovered it should be destroyed. Without attaching too much historical importance to this story, we may yet take it as representing more or less correctly the attitude of the Ṭáhirids to things Persian; and an anecdote related by Dawlatsháh immediately after this, in which the little son of Ya'qúb the Coppersmith is represented as spontaneously producing, in an access of childish glee, the first rude Persian verse of Muhammadan times, may at least be taken as indicating a general conviction that to the Ṣaffárids Persia owed in no small measure the recovery of her national life.
It was in the very year of al-Mutawakkil's death that this Ya'qúb first appears on the scene, emerging from his native Sístán and advancing on Herát.* Some eight years later (A.D. 869) we find him in possession of Kirmán, and sending gifts to the Caliph al-Mu'tazz. From this time onwards until his death (A.D. 876) we find him steadily enlarging his domains, to which Balkh, Ṭukháristán, Sind, Níshápúr, part of Ṭabaristán, Párs, Rám-Hurmuz, and Ahwáz were successively added. A full account of his career, based on the best authorities, has been given by Professor Nöldeke of Strassburg in his admirable Sketches from Eastern History (J. Sutherland Black's translation, pp. 176-206), to which the reader is referred for fuller particulars. The dynasty founded by Ya'qúb practically ceased with the defeat of his brother and successor 'Amr at Balkh by Ismá'íl b. Aḥmad the Sámánid in A.D. 900, but it had at least succeeded in reviving the national life of Persia, and in detaching its history definitely from that of the 'Abbásid metropolis.
About the same time (A.D. 865) another province of
Persia, Ṭabaristán, the strip of fen and forest land lying
The 'Alid dynasty
of Ṭabaristán.
between the Elburz Mountains and the southern
shore of the Caspian Sea, gained a precarious
independence under a scion of the House of 'Alí
named Ḥasan b. Zayd, called “the Stone-lifter” (Jálibu'l-