In a speech addressed to them, he emphasized his connection to Basra and promised to maintain the wealth of the city's inhabitants | When Ubayd Allah arrived in Syria, he found it in political disarray; Caliph Mu'awiya II had died weeks into his rule and a power vacuum ensued with many Syrian noblemen, particularly from the tribes, switching allegiance to the rival, Mecca-based caliphate of |
---|---|
After Mas'ud's death, Ubayd Allah fled the city practically alone in March 684, taking the Syrian desert route to or | With Ubayd Allah's death, Caliph Abd al-Malik halted further advances against Iraq until 691 |
The latter fended off the first wave of al-Mukhtar's troops, and proceeded to face off Ibn al-Ashtar at the.
23He placed of as his second-in-command, and Shurahbil ibn Dhi'l-Kila' of , Adham ibn Muhriz of , al-Rabi'a ibn Mukhariq of and Jabala ibn Abd Allah of as deputy commanders | |
---|---|
He made it to Syria where he persuaded to seek the caliphate and helped galvanize support for the flailing Umayyads | They were based on coinage and written in |
Mu'awiya's designation of his son was an unprecedented act and shocked many in the Muslim community, particularly the Arab nobility of Kufa.
Ubayd Allah was prepared for Husayn's arrival and sent troops to intercept him | By 686, Ubayd Allah's army numbered some 60,000 troops |
---|---|
Ubayd Allah is primarily remembered for his role in the killings of members of 's family including , and he has become infamous in tradition | Governor of Iraq and Khurasan [ ] coin imitating ruler |
Ubayd Allah was holed up in his palace, but thirty men from his security forces fended off Ibn Aqil's partisans, while he persuaded many Kufan noblemen to back him against Ibn Aqil, who was abandoned by his supporters and slain on 10 September 680.
24