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Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan
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====Byzantine attacks and the treaty of 689==== Along [[Al-'Awasim|Syria's northern frontier]], the Byzantines had been on the offensive since the failure of the [[First Arab Siege of Constantinople]] in 678.{{sfn|Blankinship|1994|p=28}} In 679, a thirty-year peace treaty was concluded, obliging the Umayyads to pay an annual tribute of 3,000 gold coins, 50 horses and 50 slaves, and withdraw their troops from the forward bases they had occupied on the Byzantine coast.{{sfn|Lilie|1976|pp=81–82}} The outbreak of the Muslim civil war allowed the Byzantine emperor [[Constantine IV]] ({{reign|668|685}}) to extort territorial concessions and enormous tribute from the Umayyads. In 685, the emperor led his army to [[Mopsuestia]] in [[Cilicia]], and prepared to cross the border into Syria, where the [[Mardaites]], an indigenous Christian group,{{efn|The home of the [[Mardaites]], a Christian people of unclear ethnic origins, known in Arabic as the "Jarājima", was the mountainous spine along the [[Syria (region)|Syrian]] coast, namely the [[Nur Mountains|Amanus]], [[Mount Lebanon|Lebanon]] and [[Anti-Lebanon Mountains|Anti-Lebanon]] ranges. There, they held a significant degree of autonomy and shifted their nominal allegiance between the Byzantine Empire and the Caliphate, depending on political circumstances along the [[Al-Thughur|Arab–Byzantine front]].{{sfn|Eger|2015|pp=295–296}}}} were already causing considerable trouble. With his own position insecure, Abd al-Malik concluded a treaty whereby he would pay a tribute of 1,000 gold coins, a horse and a slave for every day of the year.{{sfn|Lilie|1976|pp=101–102}} [[File:Arab-Byzantine frontier zone.svg|thumb|upright=1.25|left|alt=A topographic map of central Asia Minor and northern Syria and Upper Mesopotamia with administrative regions labeled and black fort-shaped markers indicating fortress locations|Map of the [[Al-Awasim|Arab–Byzantine frontier zone]] during the 7th–10th centuries, with major fortresses indicated]] Under [[Justinian II]] ({{reign|685|695|705|711}}), the Byzantines became more aggressive, though it is unclear whether they intervened directly as reported by the 9th-century Muslim historian [[al-Baladhuri]] or used the Mardaites to mount pressure on the Muslims:{{sfn|Lilie|1976|p=102}} Mardaite depredations extended throughout Syria, as far south as [[Mount Lebanon]] and the [[Galilee]] uplands.{{sfn|Eger|2015|p=296}} These raids culminated with the short-lived Byzantine recapture of [[Antioch]] in 688.{{sfn|Lilie|1976|pp=102–103}} The setbacks in Iraq had weakened the Umayyads, and when a new treaty was concluded in 689, it greatly favored the Byzantines: according to the 9th-century Byzantine chronicler [[Theophanes the Confessor]], the treaty repeated the tribute obligations of 685, but now Byzantium and the Umayyads established a [[Condominium (international law)|condominium]] over [[Cyprus]], [[Arminiya|Armenia]] and [[Principality of Iberia|Caucasian Iberia]] (modern [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]), the revenue from which was to be shared between the two states. In exchange, Byzantium undertook to resettle the Mardaites in its own territory. The 12th-century [[Syriac language|Syriac]] chronicler [[Michael the Syrian]], however, mentions that Armenia and [[Adharbayjan]] were to come under full Byzantine control. In reality, as the latter regions were not held by the Umayyads at this point, the agreement probably indicates a ''[[Blank cheque|carte blanche]]'' by Abd al-Malik to the Byzantines to proceed against Zubayrid forces there. This arrangement suited both sides: Abd al-Malik weakened his opponent's forces and secured his northern frontier, and the Byzantines gained territory and reduced the power of the side that was apparently winning the Muslim civil war.{{sfn|Lilie|1976|pp=103–106, 109}} About 12,000 Mardaites were indeed resettled in Byzantium, but many remained behind, only submitting to the Umayyads in the reign of [[al-Walid I]] ({{reign|705|715}}). Their presence disrupted Umayyad supply lines and obliged them to permanently keep troops on standby to guard against their raids.{{sfn|Lilie|1976|pp=106–107, note 13}} The Byzantine counteroffensive represented the first challenge against a Muslim power by a people defeated in the [[early Muslim conquests]].{{sfn|Blankinship|1994|p=28}} Moreover, the Mardaite raids demonstrated to Abd al-Malik and his successors that the state could no longer depend on the quiescence of Syria's Christian majority, which until then had largely refrained from rebellion.{{sfn|Blankinship|1994|p=28}} The modern historian [[Khalid Yahya Blankinship]] described the treaty of 689 as "an onerous and completely humiliating pact" and surmised that Abd al-Malik's ability to pay the annual tribute in addition to financing his own wartime army relied on treasury funds accrued during the campaigns of his Sufyanid predecessors and revenues from Egypt.{{sfn|Blankinship|1994|pp=27–28}}
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