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Caliphs
Caliph was the person acting in
Muhammad's place after
his death, i.e. the
leader of Islam (sunni).
When Muhammad died in
632, the Muslim
community faced a problem on how their community should be governed, and how
leaders should be appointed. There were conflicting stories on what
Muhammad had said, and
the tensions that came already with the first appointment of a leader, a person
acting in the place of the Messenger, a khalifatu r-rasuul, few months after
Muhammad's
death. Khalifa can be
translated as "successor, vicegerent", but is a term that is seldom used for
anything else than the leader of the entire
Muslim community,
and when other forms of usage appears the use of "Caliph" (khalifa), is very
conscient regarding the main meaning of the term.
Through history, we have seen parallel Caliphs,
but none had as much symbolic power and influence as the one that followed the
line of Caliphs from Abu Bakr, which was the first. This line of Caliphs had a
steady residence in Damascus from 661 to 750, and Baghdad and Samarra up until
1258. After 1258, and until 1924 there have been several Caliphs, but all of
these have had only limited influence, they have represented no continuation of
the Caliphs of Baghdad, and in more than one case, these caliphhoods have been
motivated by political motives, and few or none religious. The
Muslim world have
never agreed upon uniting behind anyone of these.
The Caliph carried other titles, that were less
modest, as they were not relative to
Muhammad, but to the
Muslim community.
As amiiru l-mu'miniin he was responsible for the
Muslim armies. As
imam he was the
head of public worship, and gave khutbas (hutbe). The last Caliph was removed by
the Mongols when they conquered Bagdad. After this there has been several rulers
putting up their own Caliph, but the Caliphate never gained any of its former
power or importance.
There are four periods of the Caliphate of
Islam:
- The Rashiduns (632-661): Rashidun is the name
used for the first four Caliphs, from 632 to 661, and indicate that these were
the just and admirable leaders of the
Muslim community.
This period was marked by a long line of conquests by the Arabs, as well as
endeavors to turn the leaflets of the revelations that had been given to
Muhammad into a book,
the Holy Koran. Inside
the Muslim realms
peace prevailed until the death of Uthman in 656. As this was a murder, the
Muslim could not
agree upon quite who was responsible. This time, the caliphate of Ali, came
with the two schismas that has impregnated
Islam ever since, when
first there was a break between the majority and a group now known as Kharijis,
and later between the group now known as
Shi'is and the
Sunnis.
- The Ummawiyys (661-750): The Ummawiyyas got
their power through military actions, a fact that influenced their religious
legitimacy strongly through the 90 years they had the power. Most
Muslim regard the
Ummawiyyas as less admirable than both the Rashiduns and the later Abbasids.
Even if the Shi'is
did not accept the rule of the Ummawiyy Caliphs, this group was at the time to
weak to represent much of a threat to the ruling group.
- The Abbasids (750-1258): The Abbasids was to
a large extent Shi'is
(the division lines of today was not as clear in those early days), and the
defeating of the Ummawiyys was strongly motivated by Ali's claim on the
leading position in the
Muslim world. The
Abbasid Caliph involved himself strongly in the religious life of the
community. The distance between ruler and people became longer, the court of
the Caliph was one of increasing splendor.
The 9th century was the start of the decline of
the real influence of the Caliph on first politics, and soon also religious
matters. The symbolic importance was, however, increased. All effective power
was lost in 946. The Buyyids became the new ruling dynasty, but in
secular terms.
Some cases of outward importance of the Caliph was seen in some cases in the
following centuries, but this was mainly instances where the
secular ruler got
the blessings of the Caliph, but without giving the Caliph any form of
influence. The blessings, in the shape of a diploma of investiture and robes
of honor was given to strong leaders as Saladin.
In 928 Abdu r-Rahman III of Spain, a desendant
of the Ummawiyys, took the title caliph, a title his descendants also carried.
The Fatimids of Egypt had also taken this title, as far as back to 909, but
they put less emphasis on this than what the Ummawiyys of Spain did.
- The period after 1258: When al-Musta'sim was
killed in 1258 by the Mongols, he did not leave any heir. The uncle of al-Musta'sim
was however installed in the position as Caliph in 1261 in Cairo, but this
Caliph disappeared in the desert when bringing an army up north in order to
try to sack the Mongols. A new Caliph was installed in 1262, once again in
Cairo, this also a relative of al-Musta'sim. A mere symbol, without the
permission to move freely around, this new line of Caliphs stayed in their
position for about 250 years. Except from installing the
Sultan in great
ceremonies, this Caliph had no importance. The Abbasid Caliph of Cairo was
also ignored by the rest of the
Muslim world.
In several places Caliphs popped up, in
Maghreb, with the Seljuks,
the Timurids, the Turcomans, the Uzbeks and the
Ottomans. When the
Ottomans conquered
Egypt in 1517, the remaining Caliph was transported to
Istanbul, the
Ottoman Sultan Selim
called himself Caliph. Later sources claims that the Abbasid caliph
transferred his dignity to Selim. In the 18th century the importance of being
Caliph had grown stronger for the
Ottoman Sultan,
and started to call himself the protector of the
Muslim religion.
Some influence did the
Ottoman Caliph and
Sultan have.
With the fall of the
Ottoman Empire, the
Sultan held on
to his title of Caliph for two more years, until his office was
abolished in March
1924 by Atatürk.
A congress in Cairo in 1926, that tried to
reestablish the Caliphate, did not manage to succeed. Important
Muslim countries
did not participate, and the resolutions agreed upon did not result in real
actions, even if they expressed to be in favor of a Caliphate. Since
then nothing has been done, much due to
nationalism in the different countries. There are no more Caliphs around the
world today.
Caliphs
| Year AD |
Year Hijra |
Caliph's official name |
| The Rashiduns |
| 632-34 |
11-13 |
Abu Bakr |
| 634-44 |
13-23 |
Umar ibnu l-Khattab |
| 644-56 |
23-35 |
Uthman ibn Affan |
| 656-61 |
35-40 |
Ali ibn Abi Talib |
| The Ummawiyys |
| 661-80 |
41-60 |
Mu'awiyya ibn Abi Sufyan |
| 680-83 |
60-64 |
Yazid I |
| 683-84 |
64 |
Mu'awiyya II |
| 684-85 |
64-65 |
Marwan ibnu l-Hakam |
| 685-705 |
65-86 |
Abu l-Malik |
| 705-15 |
86-96 |
al-Walid |
| 715-17 |
96-99 |
Sulayman |
| 717-20 |
99-101 |
Umar II ibnu Abdi l-Aziz |
| 720-24 |
101-05 |
Yazid II |
| 724-43 |
105-24 |
Hisham |
| 743-44 |
125-26 |
al-Walid II |
| 744 |
126 |
Yazid III |
| 744 |
126-27 |
Ibrahim |
| 744-50 |
127-32 |
Marwan II al-Himar |
| The Abbasids |
| 749-54 |
132-36 |
as-Saffah |
| 754-75 |
136-58 |
al-Mansur |
| 775-85 |
158-69 |
al-Mahdi |
| 785-86 |
169-70 |
al-Hadi |
| 786-809 |
170-93 |
Harunu r-Rashid |
| 809-13 |
193-98 |
al-Amin ibn Harun |
| 813-33 |
198-218 |
al-Ma'mun ibn Harun |
| 833-42 |
218-27 |
al-Mu'tasim ibn Harun |
| 842-47 |
227-32 |
al-Wathiq |
| 847-61 |
232-47 |
al-Mutawakkil |
| 861-62 |
247-48 |
al-Muntasir |
| 862-66 |
248-52 |
al-Musta'in |
| 866-69 |
252-55 |
al-Mu'tazz |
| 869-70 |
255-56 |
al-Muhtadi |
| 870-92 |
256-79 |
al-Mu'tamid |
| 892-902 |
279-89 |
al-Mu'tadid |
| 902-08 |
289-95 |
al-Muktafi ibnu l-Mu'tadid |
| 908-32 |
295-320 |
Muqtadir bi'llahi bni l-Mu'tadid |
| 932-34 |
320-22 |
al-Qahir bi'llahi bni l-Mu'tadid |
| 934-40 |
322-29 |
al-Radi bi'llahi bni l-Muqtadir |
| 940-44 |
329-33 |
al-Mutaqqi li'llahi bni l-Muqtadir |
| 944-46 |
333-34 |
al-Mustakfi bi'llahi bni l-Muktafi |
| 946-74 |
334-63 |
al-Muti' ibni l-Muqtadir |
| 974-91 |
363-81 |
al-Tai'i' ibni l-Muti' |
| 991-1031 |
381-422 |
al-Qadir bi-amri'llah |
| 1031-75 |
422-67 |
al-Qa'im |
| 1075-94 |
467-87 |
al-Muqtadi |
| 1094-1118 |
487-512 |
al-Mustazhir |
| 1118-35 |
512-29 |
al-Mustarshid |
| 1135-36 |
529-30 |
ar-Rashid |
| 1136-60 |
530-55 |
al-Muqtafi |
| 1160-70 |
555-66 |
al-Mustanjid |
| 1170-80 |
566-75 |
al-Mustadi' |
| 1180-1225 |
575-622 |
an-Nasir li-Dini llah |
| 1225-26 |
622-23 |
az-Zahir |
| 1226-42 |
623-40 |
al-Mustansir |
| 1242-58 |
640-656 |
al-Musta'sim |
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