Abbadides
ABBADIDES, a Mohammedan dynasty which arose in Spain on the downfall
of the western caliphate. It lasted from about 1023 till 1091, but
during the short period of its existence was singularly active and
typical of its time. The founder of the house was Abd-ul-Qasim
Mohammed, the cadi of Seville in 1023. He was the chief of an Arab
family settled in the city from the first days of the conquest. The
Beni-abbad were not of ancient descent, though the poets, whom they paid
largely, made an illustrious pedigree for them when they had become
powerful. They were, however, very rich. Abd-ul-Qasim gained the
confidence of the townsmen by organizing a successful resistance to the
Berber soldiers of fortune who were grasping at the fragments of the
caliphate. At first he professed to rule only with the advice of a
council formed of the nobles, but when his power became established he
dispensed with this show of republican government, and then gave himself
the appearance of a legitimate title by protecting an impostor who
professed to be the caliph Hisham II.
When Abd-ul-Qasim died in 1042 he had created a state which, though
weak in itself, was strong as compared to the little powers about it.
He had made his family the recognized leaders of the Mohammedans of Arab
and native Spanish descent against the Berber element, whose chief was
the king of Granada. Abbad, surnamed El Motaddid, his son and
successor, is one of the most remarkable figures in Spanish Mohammedan
history. He had a striking resemblance to the Italian princes of the
later middle ages and the early renaissance, of the stamp of Fiiipo
Maria Visconti. El Motaddid was a poet and a lover of letters, who was
also a poisoner, a drinker of wine, a skeptic and treacherous to the
utmost degree. Though he waged war all through his reign he very rarely
appeared in the field, but directed the generals, whom he never trusted,
from his “lair” in the fortified palace, the Alcazar of Seville. He
killed with his own hand one of his sons who had rebelled against him.
On one occasion he trapped a number of his enemies, the Berber chiefs of
the Ronda, into visiting him, and got rid of them by smothering them in
the hot room of a bath. It was his taste to preserve the skulls of the
enemies he had killed—those of the meaner men to be used as flower-pots,
while those of the princes were kept in special chests. His reign until
his death on the 28th of February 1069 was mainly spent in
extending his power at the expense of his smaller neighbors, and in
conflicts with his chief rival the king of Granada.
These incessant wars weakened the Mohammedans, to the great advantage
of the rising power of the Christian kings of Leon and Castile, but they
gave the kingdom of Seville a certain superiority over the other little
states. After 1063 he was assailed by Fernando El Magno of Castile and
Leon, who marched to the gates of Seville, and forced him to pay
tribute. His son, Mohammed Abd-ul-Qasim Abenebet---who reigned by the
title of El Motamid—was the third and last of the Abbadides, He was a no
less remarkable person than his father and much more amiable. Like him
he was a poet, and a favorer of poets. El Motamid went, however,
considerably further in patronage of literature than his father, for he
chose as his favorite and prime minister the poet Ibn Ammar. In the end
the vanity and featherheadedness of Ibn Ammar drove his master to kill
him. El Motamid was even more influenced by his favorite wife, Romaica,
than by his vizir. He had met her paddling in the Guadalquivir,
purchased her from her master, and made her his wife. The caprices of
Romaica, and the lavish extravagance of Motamid in his efforts to please
her, form the subject of many stories. In politics he carried on the
feuds of his family with the Berbers, and in his efforts to extend his
dominions could be as faithless as his father. His wars and his
extravagance exhausted his treasury, and he oppressed his subjects by
taxes. In 1080 he brought down upon himself the vengeance of Alphonso
VI. of Castile by a typical piece of flighty oriental barbarity. He had
endeavored to pay part of his tribute to the Christian king with false
money. The fraud was detected by a Jew, who was one of the envoys of
Alphonso. El Motamid, in a moment of folly and rage, crucified the Jew
and imprisoned the Christian members of the mission. Alphonso
retaliated by a destructive raid. When Alphonso took Toledo in 1085, El
Motamid called in Yusef ibn Tashfin, the Almoravide (see SPAIN, History,
and ALMORAVIDES).
During the six years which preceded his deposition in 1091, El
Motamid behaved with valor on the field, but with much meanness and
political folly. He endeavored to curry favor with Yusef by betraying
the other Mohammedan princes to him, and intrigued to secure the
alliance of Alphonso against the Almoravide. It was probably during
this period that he surrendered his beautiful daughter Zaida to the
Christian king, who made her his concubine, and is said by some
authorities to have married her after she bore him a son, Sancho. The
vacillations and submissions of El Motamid did not save him from the
fate which overtook his fellow-princes. Their skepticism and extortion
had tired their subjects, and the mullahs gave Yusef a “fetva”
authorizing him to remove them in the interest of religion. In 1091 the
Almoravides stormed Seville. El Motamid, who had fought bravely, was
weak enough to order his sons to surrender the fortresses they still
held, in order to save his own life. He died in prison in Africa in
1095.
AUTHORITIES.—Dozy, Histoire des Musulmans d’Espagne, Leiden, 1861;
and Historia Abbadidarum (Scriptorum Arabum loci de Abbadidio), Leiden,
1846. (D. II.)
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