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Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan
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===Consolidation in Iraq and the east=== Despite his victory, the control and governance of Iraq, a politically turbulent province from the time of the [[Muslim conquest of Persia|Muslim conquest in the 630s]], continued to pose a major challenge for Abd al-Malik.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=87}} He had withdrawn the Syrian army and entrusted to the Iraqis the defense of Basra from the Kharijite threat.{{sfn|Kennedy|2001|p=33}}{{sfn|Wellhausen|1927|p=227}} Most Iraqis had become "weary of the conflict" with the Kharijites, "which had brought them little but hardship and loss", according to Gibb.{{sfn|Gibb|1960|p=76}} Those from Kufa, in particular, had grown accustomed to the wealth and comfort of their lives at home and their reluctance to undertake lengthy campaigns far from their families was an issue that previous rulers of Iraq had consistently encountered.{{sfn|Hawting|2000|p=58}}{{sfn|Wellhausen|1927|p=229}} Initially, the caliph appointed his brother [[Bishr ibn Marwan|Bishr]] governor of Kufa and another kinsman, [[Khalid ibn Abdallah ibn Khalid ibn Asid|Khalid ibn Abdallah]], to Basra before the latter too was put under Bishr's jurisdiction.{{sfn|Wellhausen|1927|p=222}} Neither governor was up to the task, but the Iraqis eventually defeated the [[Najda ibn Amir al-Hanafi|Najdiyya]] Kharijites in the Yamama in 692/93.{{sfn|Wellhausen|1927|p=227}}{{sfn|Gibb|1960|p=77}} The [[Azariqa]] Kharijites in Persia were more difficult to rein in,{{sfn|Gibb|1960|p=77}} and following Bishr's death in 694, the Iraqi troops deserted the field against them at [[Ramhormoz]].{{sfn|Wellhausen|1927|pp=228–229}} Abd al-Malik's attempt at family rule in Iraq had proven unsuccessful, and he installed al-Hajjaj in the post instead in 694. Kufa and Basra were combined into a single province under al-Hajjaj, who, from the start of his rule, displayed a strong commitment to governing Iraq effectively. Against the Azariqa, al-Hajjaj backed [[al-Muhallab ibn Abi Sufra al-Azdi]], a Zubayrid holdover with long experience combating the Kharijite rebels. Al-Muhallab finally defeated the Azariqa in 697.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=87}} Concurrently, a Kharijite revolt led by [[Shabib ibn Yazid al-Shaybani]] flared up in the heart of Iraq, resulting in the rebel takeover of [[al-Mada'in]] and siege of Kufa.{{sfn|Gibb|1960|p=77}} Al-Hajjaj responded to the unwillingness or inability of the war-weary Iraqis to face the Kharijites by obtaining from Abd al-Malik Syrian reinforcements led by [[Sufyan ibn al-Abrad al-Kalbi]].{{sfn|Kennedy|2001|p=33}}{{sfn|Gibb|1960|p=77}} A more disciplined force, the Syrians repelled the rebel attack on Kufa and killed Shabib in early 697.{{sfn|Gibb|1960|p=77}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2001|pp=33–34}} By 698, the Kharijite revolts had been stamped out.{{sfn|Wellhausen|1927|p=231}} Abd al-Malik attached to Iraq [[Sistan]] and [[Greater Khorasan|Khurasan]], thus making al-Hajjaj responsible for a super-province encompassing the eastern half of the Caliphate.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=87}} Al-Hajjaj made al-Muhallab deputy governor of Khurasan, a post he held until his death in 702, after which it was bequeathed to his son [[Yazid ibn al-Muhallab|Yazid]].{{sfn|Wellhausen|1927|p=231}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=89}} During his term, al-Muhallab recommenced the [[Muslim conquest of Transoxiana|Muslim conquests in Central Asia]], though the campaign reaped few territorial gains during Abd al-Malik's reign.{{sfn|Gibb|1960|p=77}} Upon becoming governor, al-Hajjaj immediately threatened with death any Iraqi who refused to participate in the war efforts against the Kharijites.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=87}} In an effort to reduce expenditure, he had lowered the Iraqis' pay to less than that of their Syrian counterparts in the province.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=87}} By his measures, al-Hajjaj appeared "almost to have goaded the Iraqis into rebellion, as if looking for an excuse to break them", according to the historian [[Hugh N. Kennedy|Hugh Kennedy]].{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=87}} Indeed, conflict with the {{Transliteration|ar|muqātila}} (Arab tribal forces who formed Iraq's garrisons) came to a head beginning in 699 when al-Hajjaj ordered [[Abd al-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn al-Ash'ath|Ibn al-Ash'ath]] to lead an expedition against [[Zabulistan]].{{sfn|Wellhausen|1927|p=231}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}} Ibn al-Ash'ath and his commanders were wealthy and leading noblemen and bristled at al-Hajjaj's frequent rebukes and demands and the difficulties of the campaign.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}} In response, Ibn al-Ash'ath and his army revolted in Sistan, marched back and defeated al-Hajjaj's loyalists in [[Tustar]] in 701, and entered Kufa soon after.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}} Al-Hajjaj held out in Basra with his [[Banu Thaqif]] kinsmen and Syrian loyalists, who were numerically insufficient to counter the unified Iraqi front led by Ibn al-Ash'ath.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}} Alarmed at events, Abd al-Malik offered the Iraqis a pay raise equal to the Syrians and the replacement of al-Hajjaj with Ibn al-Ash'ath.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}} Due to his supporters' rejection of the terms, Ibn al-Ash'ath refused the offer, and al-Hajjaj took the initiative, routing Ibn al-Ash'ath's forces at the [[Battle of Dayr al-Jamajim]] in April.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2001|p=34}} Many of the Iraqis had defected after promises of amnesty if they disarmed, while Ibn al-Ash'ath and his core supporters fled to Zabulistan, where they were dispersed in 702.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}} The suppression of the revolt marked the end of the Iraqi {{Transliteration|ar|muqātila}} as a military force and the beginning of Syrian military domination of Iraq.{{sfn|Gibb|1960|p=77}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2001|p=34}} Iraqi internal divisions, and the utilization of disciplined Syrian forces by Abd al-Malik and al-Hajjaj, voided the Iraqis' attempt to reassert power in the province.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}} Determined to prevent further rebellions, al-Hajjaj founded a permanent Syrian garrison in [[Wasit]], situated between the long-established Iraqi garrisons of Kufa and Basra, and instituted a more rigorous administration in the province.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2001|p=34}} Power thereafter derived from the Syrian troops, who became Iraq's ruling class, while Iraq's Arab nobility, religious scholars and {{Transliteration|ar|mawālī}} were their virtual subjects.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=88}} Furthermore, the surplus taxes from the agriculturally rich [[Sawad]] lands were redirected from the {{Transliteration|ar|muqātila}} to Abd al-Malik's treasury in Damascus to pay the Syrian troops in the province.{{sfn|Kennedy|2001|p=34}}{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=85}} This reflected a wider campaign by the caliph to institute greater control over the Caliphate.{{sfn|Kennedy|2016|p=85}}
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