Part III: The Invasion of Iraq
(The
Clash with Persia)
"Say to the desert Arabs who lagged behind:
'You shall be summoned against a people given to vehement war: you shall fight
them, or they shall submit. Then if you show obedience, Allah will grant you a
goodly reward, but if you turn back as you did before, He will punish you with
a painful Punishment." [Quran 48:16]
The fort of Nujair, the last stronghold of apostasy, had fallen to the
Muslims in about the middle of February 633. Soon after, Abu Bakr wrote to
Khalid, who was still at Yamamah: "Proceed
to Iraq. Start operations in the region of Uballa. Fight the Persians and the people who inhabit their land. Your
objective is Hira." 1
It was a big order. Abu Bakr was taking on the mightiest empire of the
time, before which the world had trembled for more than a thousand years.
The Persian Empire was unique in many ways. It was the first truly great
empire of history, stretching, in the time of the early Achaemenians, from
Northern Greece in the west to the Punjab in the east. It was unique also in
the length of time over which it flourished-from the Sixth Century BC to the
Seventh Century AD, except for a gap caused by the Greek conquest. 2
No other empire in history had lasted so long in all its greatness as a force
of culture and civilisation and as a military power. It had known reverses, but
after each reverse it had risen again in its characteristic glory and
brilliance.
The last golden age of Persia had occurred in the Sixth Century AD when
Anushirwan the Just restored the empire to its earlier level of greatness.
Anushirwan reigned for 48 years and was a contemporary of Justinian. He wrested
Syria from the Romans, the Yemen from the Abyssinians, and much of Central Asia
from the Turks and other wild tribes of the steppes. This magnificent emperor
died in 579, nine years after the birth of Prophet Muhammad.
As often happens when a great ruler passes away, Anushirwan was followed
by a number of lesser mortals and the glory and prosperity of the empire began
to fade. Civil war and intrigue sapped the strength of the state. The decline
approached its climax in the time of Shiruya (Ciroes) a great-grandson of
Anushirwan, who first imprisoned and then killed his father, Chosroes Parwez.
Not content with this heinous crime, he turned to worse cruelties. So that none
may dispute his right to the throne or pose a challenge to his authority, he
had all the male members of his family killed with the exception of his son,
Ardshir. The estimate of those of the house of Anushirwan who lost their lives
to the maniacal fury of Shiruya, adult and child, varies from 15 to 18. And
Shiruya reigned for only seven months before he too was dead.
With his death the confusion became worse. And there is confusion also
in the accounts of the early historians about the order in which various
emperors followed Shiruya and the duration of their respective reigns. All that
is certain and unanimously accepted is the position of Yazdjurd bin Shahryar
bin Perwez, who somehow escaped the assassins of Shiruya and became the last
Persian Emperor of the line of Sasan. This ill-starred young man was to see the
final disintegration of the great empire of the Chosroes.
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, pp. 553-4.
2.
The
Parthians, who overthrew the Seleucid power, though not Persians, were
nevertheless Iranians. Thus the Greek interlude lasted less than two centuries
until its end at the hands of the Parthians in the middle of the Second Century
BC, The Persian Sasanids came to power in 220 AD.
Between Shiruya and Yazdjurd there were about eight rulers in a period
of four or five years, and these included two women-Buran and Azarmidukht, both
daughters of Chosroes Parwez. The first of these, Buran, proved a wise and
virtuous monarch but lacked the strong hand that was needed to arrest the
decline in imperial affairs. She was crowned during the lifetime of the Holy
Prophet, who, when he heard of her coronation, made his famous remark: "A
nation will never prosper that entrusts its affairs to a woman!"
1
We will not go into a description of all the countries which comprised
the geographical domain of the Persian Empire, but will confine ourselves to
Iraq. Iraq then was not a sovereign State; it was substantially less than that.
It was not merely a province; it was considerably more than that. Iraq was a
land-one of the lands of the Persian Empire; and in its western and southern
parts it was an Arab land.
The Arabs had been known in Iraq since the days of Bukht Nassar, 2
but did not then enjoy any power in the land. It was not until the early part
of the Christian era, when a fresh migration of Arab tribes came to Iraq from
the Yemen, that they began to command authority and influence. One of the great
chiefs of these migrating Arabs, a man by the name of Malik bin Fahm,
proclaimed himself king and began to rule over the western
part of Iraq. Two generations after him the throne passed to Amr bin
Adi, of the tribe of Lakhm, who started the Lakhmid Dynasty which was also at
times called the House of Munzir. The kings of this dynasty ruled for many
generations as vassals of the Persian Emperor.
The last of the House of Munzir was Numan bin Mundhir, who committed an
act of disloyalty against Chosroes Parwez for which he was sentenced to death.
The sentence was carried out in style-he was trampled to death by an elephant!
This led to a revolt by the Arabs of Iraq, which was soon crushed by the
Emperor, and with this abortive revolt ended the House of Munzir.
Chosroes then appointed a new king, Iyas bin Qubaisa of the tribe of
Tayy, to rule over Iraq. For some years the new king enjoyed a reasonable
degree of autonomy. Then most of his authority was taken away and Persian
generals and administrators took over the entire government of the land. Iyas
remained a titular king.
A land of culture, wealth and abundance, Iraq was the most prized
possession of the Persian Empire. To the Arabs from the barren wastes of Arabia
it was a green jewel, a land flowing with milk and honey. Its two mighty
rivers, the Euphrates and the Tigris, were the greatest known rivers of the
time-west of the Indus and north of the Nile. But these rivers did not then
flow as they flow now, nor were the cities of Iraq then its cities of today. Kufa
and Basra did not exist (they were founded in 17 Hijri). Baghdad was a small
though much-frequented market town on the west bank of the Tigris. The then
glorious cities of Ctesiphon and Hira are now turned to dust. Ctesiphon was the
capital-a mighty metropolis and the seat of glory of the Persian Empire.
Reportedly built by Ardsheer bin Babak (also, known as Ardsheer Babakan and
Artaxerxes, the founder of the Sasanid Dynasty) it sprawled on both sides of
the Tigris and was known to the Muslims as Madain, literally the Cities, for it
consisted of several cities in one. 3 Hira was the capital of the Arab Lakhmid
Dynasty. Situated on the west bank of the Euphrates, it was a glittering,
throbbing city with many citadels. 4 And there was Uballa, the main port of the
Persian Empire which was visited by ships from India and China and other
maritime countries of the East. Uballa was also the capital of the military
district of Dast Meisan. 5
1. Masudi: Tanbeeh,
p. 90; Ibn Qutaiba: p. 666.
2. Nebuchadnezzar, Seventh-Sixth Century BC.
3.
According
to some sources, Ctesiphon existed before Ardsheer and was used by the
Parthians as a winter residence.
4.
The site
of Hira is 12 miles south-east of Nejef and half a mile south of the present
Abu Sukheir. Nothing remains of the ancient city except some traces of the
White Palace which stood at the northern end of Hira. According to Gibbon (Vol.
5, p. 299), Hira was founded in 190 AD.
5. Uballa stood where the part of modern Basra known
as Ashar stands today.
The Euphrates and the Tigris have been known to change their course more
than once since the time of Babylon. The maps in this book indicate the course
which these rivers followed in the early days of Islam. The main difference
from today is in the course of the Tigris. In pre-Islamic times it had flowed
in what is its present channel, which is known as Dijlat-ul-Aura (the One-Eyed
Tigris), but then it had abandoned this channel and adopted a new course from
Kut downwards, along the Dujaila (the Little Tigris) and
the Akhzar, to enter a region of
lakes and marshes comprising an area about 100 miles square, just north-west of
Uballa. The old bed of the river had then become a dry, sandy bed. The marshes
extended much farther north than they do today (the area shown as marshland in
Map 10 below is not exact); and the Tigris picked its way through these marshes
to rejoin the bed of the One-Eyed Tigris in the region of Mazar (the present
Azeir), whence it flowed south and south-east into the Persian Gulf. 1
But the Tigris changed its course again in the Sixteenth Century and returned
to its old bed, the one marked on all maps now as the Tigris. This, however, is
not the largest branch of the Tigris, for the Gharraf, taking off from Kut and
joining the Euphrates at Nasiriya, is larger. The Dujaila, which in the early
days of Islam was the main channel, is now a modest river-the third largest
branch of the Tigris, after the Gharraf and the One-Eyed Tigris.
The Euphrates followed a clear course down to the present Hindiya,
whence it split into two main channels as it does today-both sizable rivers:
the Hilla branch and the main Euphrates. The main branch (the western one)
again split up, flowing generally in one large and several subsidiary channels,
which over the centuries have changed course several times, though not as
drastically as the Tigris. The two main branches reunited at Samawa, whence the
Euphrates flowed towards the region of lakes and marshes. While some of the
water of the river lost itself in the marshes, one clear channel marked on
today's maps as the Euphrates retained its distinct identity as it flowed
eastwards to join the Tigris at Qurna. The marshes were drained by a large
river known as Maqil, which emptied into the Tigris a little north of Basra;
and from this junction all these waters flowed into the Persian Gulf as one
great river, known today as the Shatt-ul-Arab. (See Map 10 above).
Many changes have taken place in
the bends and twists of these rivers. I have not shown these details on the
maps as there is no way of knowing how they appeared then. Hence, only the main
branches of these rivers are shown on our maps, and without all the twists and
turns which must undoubtedly have existed.
This then was how Iraq stood politically and geographically, when the
Caliph launched Khalid on it. It was a land occupied by Persians and Arabs, and
ruled by the Persian court. The Empire had begun to decline politically, but it
would be wrong to imagine that it had declined militarily. The military
effectiveness of an empire may remain at a high level for decades after its
political disintegration has set in. And so it was with the Persians in the
year 633.
The Persian army, including its Arab auxiliaries, was the most
formidable and most efficient military machine of the time. Led by experienced
and dedicated veterans, it was a proud, sophisticated and well?tried force
which gloried in its past achievements and its present might. The Persian
soldier was the best-equipped warrior of his day. He wore a coat of mail or a
breast-plate; on his head rested a helmet of either chain mail or beaten metal;
his forearms were covered by metal sleeves, and his legs, were protected by
greaves (like leg-guards covering the front part of the leg). He carried a
spear, lance or javelin, a sword, and either an axe or an iron mace (the latter
was a favourite and much-feared Persian weapon). He also carried one or two
bows with 30 arrows and two spare bowstrings hanging from his helmet. 2
Thus, powerfully equipped and armed was the Persian soldier. But, and this was
inevitable, he lacked mobility. In the general, set-piece battle he
acknowledged no equals; and in this he was right, until Khalid's lightly armed
and fast-moving riders came along.
It all started with Muthanna bin Harithah. A tiger of a man who later
died of wounds suffered in battle with the Persians, Muthanna was a chief of
the tribe of Bani Bakr, which inhabited the north-eastern part of the Arabian
peninsula and southern Iraq. It is not certain that Muthanna had become a
Muslim during the time of the Prophet. He probably had, because a delegation
from the Bani Bakr had travelled to Madinah during the Year of Delegations and
had accepted Islam at the hands of the Prophet. But there is no actual record
of Muthanna's conversion.
1.
Ibn
Rusta: pp. 94-5. At Mazar (Azeir) today only a small river flows into the
Tigris from the west-certainly too small to form the bed of the old Tigris. The
old bed has probably silted up and ceased to be discernible.
2. Dinawari: p. 73.
Shortly after the Battle of Yamamah, Muthanna turned his attention
towards Iraq. Seeking adventure and spoils, and encouraged by the disarray
which was apparent in the political affairs of the Persian Empire, Muthanna
took a band of his followers and began to raid into Iraq. At first he stuck to
the periphery of the desert so that he could withdraw quickly into the safety
of the sandy wastes, but gradually his incursions became bolder. He varied his
objectives, striking now in the east, now in the west. Most of his raids,
however, were in the region of Uballa, and he returned from these raids with
spoils to dazzle the hungry Arab of the desert. The Persian garrisons were
helpless against Muthanna's ghostlike riders, who vanished as rapidly as they
struck.
Encouraged by his successes, Muthanna approached Abu Bakr. This was
early in February 633 (late Dhul Qad, 11 Hijri). He painted a glowing
picture-the vulnerable state of Iraq, the riches that waited to be plundered,
the prolonged political crisis which bedevilled the Persian court, the
inability of the Persian garrisons to fight mobile, fast-moving engagements. "Appoint me as commander of my
people", said Muthanna, "and
I shall raid the Persians. Thus I
shall also protect our region from them." 1
The Caliph agreed and gave him a letter of authority appointing him
commander over all the Muslims of the Bani Bakr. With this letter of authority
Muthanna returned to North-Eastern Arabia. Here he converted more tribesmen to
Islam, gathered a small army of 2,000 men and resumed his raids with even
greater enthusiasm and violence.
Muthanna was gone from Madinah, but his words continued to ring in the
ears of the Caliph. He had planted a seed in the mind of Abu Bakr which
germinated in a few days into a decision to take Iraq. He would not fight the
entire Persian Empire, for that would be too big an objective in present
circumstances. He would just take the Iraq of the Arabs, which meant the region
west of the Tigris. Thus he would enlarge the boundaries of Islam and spread
the new faith. At home there was peace, for with the defeat of the Kinda at
Fort Nujair, Islam had been re-established in the land of Arabia.
Islam is a religion of peace, but not the peace of the timid and the
submissive. It believes in peace, but the peace of the just and strong. "Fight in the way of Allah",
says the Quran, "against those who
fight you, but do not transgress." [Quran 2:190]… "And fight them until
mischief is no more and religion is all for Allah."[Quran 8:39]. And so it would be war with the
fire-worshipping Persians.
Abu Bakr had made up his mind to invade Iraq; but he would have to
proceed with great care, for the Arab feared the Persian-with a deep,
unreasoning fear which ran in the tribal consciousness as a racial complex and
was the result of centuries of Persian power and glory. In return the Persian
regarded the Arab with contempt. It was important not to suffer a defeat, for
that would confirm and strengthen this instinctive fear. To make certain of
victory, Abu Bakr decided on two measures: (a) the invading army would consist
entirely of volunteers; (b) Khalid would be the commander of the army.
With this in view, he sent orders to Khalid to invade Iraq and fight the
Persians. He further instructed Khalid to call to arms those who had fought the
apostates and remained steadfast in their faith after the death of the
Messenger of Allah, and to exclude from the expedition those who had
apostatised. Finally, he added (referring to the soldiers): "Whoever wishes to return to his home
may do so." 2
When Khalid announced to his troops that the Caliph had given them
permission to return home if they wished to do so, he was shocked by the
result: thousands of his army left the army and returned Madinah and other
places whence they had come. Whereas at the Battle of Yamamah he had commanded
an army of 13,000 men, he was now left with only 2,000 men. Khalid wrote in
haste to the Caliph, informing him of this alarming state of affairs and asking
for reinforcements. When the letter reached Abu Bakr, he was sitting among his
friends and advisers. He read the letter aloud so that all present might hear
what it said. Then he sent for a young stalwart by the name of Qaqa bin Amr.
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 552.
2. Ibid: Vol. 2,
p. 553.
The young man arrived in the presence of the Caliph, armed and equipped
for travel. The Caliph ordered him to proceed forthwith to Yamamah as a
reinforcement to the army of Khalid. The Companions stared in amazement at the
Caliph. "Are you reinforcing one
whose army has left him, with one
man?" they asked. 1
Abu Bakr looked for a moment at Qaqa. Then he said, "No army can be defeated if its ranks possess the likes of this man." 2 And Qaqa bin Amr rode away to reinforce the army of Khalid!
But this was not the only action that Abu Bakr took to build up Khalid's
forces. He also wrote to Muthanna and Mazhur bin Adi (an important chief in
North-Eastern Arabia), instructing them to muster their warriors and consider
themselves and their men under the command of Khalid for the invasion of Iraq.
Having issued these instructions, Abu Bakr sat back and relaxed. He had
given Khalid his mission to invade Iraq and fight the Persians; he had laid
down a starting-point for the campaign, the region of Uballa; he had given
Khalid his objective - Hira; and he had placed under Khalid's command whatever
force he could muster. There was nothing else that he could do. It was up to
Khalid to accomplish his mission. And Khalid, now in the forty-eighth year of his
life, set about the conquest of Iraq. 3
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, pp. 553-4.
2. Ibid.
3.
There are
two main versions of campaign of Iraq: the first of Ibn Ishaq and Waqidi, the
second of Saif bin Umar. Tabari favours the latter version, and this is the one
here used in the account of Khalid's invasion of Iraq. In this also there are
two versions of Abu Bakr's plan for the invasion. For an explanation, see Note
4 in Appendix B.
Chapter
19
(The
battle of Chains)
"We
did trample Hormuz with fury restrained..."
[
Al-Qa'qa' bin Amr, commander in Khalid's army]1
On receiving the orders of the Caliph, Khalid at once undertook
preparations to raise a new army. His riders galloped far and wide in the
region of Yamamah and in Central and Northern Arabia, calling brave men to arms
for the invasion of Iraq. And brave men assembled in thousands, many of them
his old comrades of the Campaign of the Apostasy who, having visited their
homes, decided to return to his standard for fresh adventure and glory.
Khalid's name was now a magnet that drew warriors to him. Fighting under Khalid
meant not only victory in the way of Allah, but also spoils and slaves ... in
fact the best of both worlds! Within a few weeks an army of 10,000 men was
ready to march with Khalid. 2
There were four important Muslim chiefs with large followings in
North-Eastern Arabia, Muthanna bin Harithah, Mazhur bin Adi, Harmala and Sulma.
The first two of these have already been mentioned in the preceding chapter.
The Caliph had written to them to
muster warriors and operate under the command of Khalid. Now Khalid
wrote to all four of them, informing them of his appointment as commander of
the Muslim army and of the mission which he had received from the Caliph. He
ordered them to report to him, along with their men, in the region of Uballa.
It is believed that Muthanna, who was at, Khaffan at the time (a place 20 miles
south of Hira) 3 was displeased with the arrangement. He had
hoped that the Caliph would give him a large independent command in Iraq, as he
certainly deserved; but he came as ordered, and placed himself and his men at
the disposal of Khalid. He was to prove the best of subordinate commanders.
Each of these four chiefs brought 2,000 men. Thus Khalid entered Iraq
with 18,000 warriors 4 -the largest Muslim army yet assembled for
battle.
In about the third week of March 633 (beginning of Muharram, 12 Hijri),
Khalid set out from Yamamah. But before doing so he wrote to Hormuz, the
Persian governor of the frontier district of Dast Meisan:
Submit to Islam and be safe. Or agree to the
payment of the Jizya, and you and your people will be under our protection,
else you will have only yourself to blame for the consequences, for I bring a
people who desire death as ardently as you desire life. 5
Hormuz read the letter with a mixture of anger and
contempt, and informed the Persian Emperor Ardsheer of Khalid's threat. He made
up his mind to teach these crude Arabs a lesson that they should never forget.
Khalid began his advance from Yamamah with his army divided into three
groups. He did this in order not to tire his men or waste time by having too
many troops in the same marching column. Each group set off a day apart. Thus
each group was a day's march from the next, far enough for ease of movement, and
yet close enough to be swiftly concentrated for battle if required. Khalid
himself moved with the third group on the third day-D plus 2. The whole army
would concentrate again near Hufair 5 ; and before leaving Yamamah he promised
his men a great battle with Hormuz.
1. Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidayah wan-Nihayah, Dar Abi Hayyan,
Cairo, 1st ed. 1416/1996, Vol.
6 P. 425.
2. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 554.
3.
Musil (p.
284) places Khafran 20 kilometres south-east of Qadissiyah. It was at or near
the present Qawam which is six miles west of Shinafiya.
4. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 554.
5. Ibid: Vol. 2,
p. 554.
6. Ibid: Vol. 2,
p. 555.
Hormuz was the military governor of Dast Meisan. An experienced veteran
and a trusted servant of the Empire. Hormuz was given this district to govern
and protect because of its vital importance, which was both political and
economic. It was a frontier district and lately had had a good deal of trouble
with the Arab raiders of Muthanna. It was also a wealthy district in natural
produce and commerce. Its chief city, Uballa, was the main port of the Persian
Empire and thus vital to its commercial prosperity. Uballa was also a junction
of many land routes-from Bahrain, from Arabia, from Western and Central Iraq,
from Persia proper, which gave it a decisive strategical importance. It was a
gateway, which it was the job of Hormuz to govern as an administrator and
defend as a general.
The Persian society of the time had an imperial and aristocratic
character. As is inevitable in such societies, it had an elaborate system of
ranks to indicate a man's social and official position at the court. The
outward symbol of rank was the cap; as a man rose in rank, his cap became more
costly. The highest rank below the Emperor carried a cap worth 100,000 dirhams,
which was studded with diamonds and pearls and other precious stones. Hormuz
was a 100,000 dirham-man! 1
A true
imperialist, he was of a proud and arrogant nature and held the local Arabs in
contempt, which he did nothing to conceal. He was harsh and highhanded in his
treatment of the Arabs, who in return hated and feared him. In fact his heavy
hand became the cause of a saying amongst the Arabs: More hateful than Hormuz. 2
Soon after receiving the letter of Khalid, which he knew came from
Yamamah, Hormuz informed the Emperor of the imminent invasion of Iraq by Khalid
and prepared to fight this insolent upstart! He gathered his army and set out
from Uballa, preceded by a cavalry screen.
The direct route from Yamamah to Uballa lay through Kazima (in modern
Kuwait) and thither went Hormuz, expecting Khalid to take this route. (See Map
11 below) On arrival at Kazima, he deployed his army facing south-west, with a
centre and two wings, and ordered that men should be linked together with
chains. So deployed, he awaited the arrival of Khalid. But of Khalid there was
no sign. And the following morning his scouts brought word that Khalid was not
moving towards Kazima; he was making for Hufair.
Khalid had, already before he left Yamamah, arrived at a broad
conception of how he would deal with the army of Hormuz. He had been given the
mission of fighting the
Persians, and a defeat of the Persian army was essential if the invasion
of Iraq was to proceed as intended by the Caliph. With the Persian army intact
at Uballa, Khalid could not get far. The direction given to him by the Caliph,
i.e. Uballa, was by itself certain to bring the Persians to battle, for no
Persian general could let Uballa fall.
Khalid knew the fine quality and the numerical strength of the Persian
army and the courage, skill and armament of the Persian soldier. Heavily armed
and equipped, he was the ideal man for the set-piece frontal clash. The only
weakness of the Persian soldier and army lay in their lack of mobility; the Persian
was not able to move fast, and any prolonged movement would tire him. On the
other hand, Khalid's troops were mobile, mounted on camels with horses at the
ready for cavalry attacks; and they were not only brave and skilful fighters,
but also adept at fast movement across any terrain, especially the desert.
Moreover, thousands of them were veterans of the Campaign of the Apostasy.
Khalid decided to use his own mobility to exploit its lack in the
Persian army. He would force the Persians to carry out march and counter-march
till he had worn them out. Then he would strike when the Persians were
exhausted. Geography would help him. There were two routes to Uballa, via
Kazima and Hufair, whose existence would facilitate his manoeuvre. (See Map 11)
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 556.
2. Ibid: Vol. 2,
p. 555.
3.
Kazima
was on the northern coast of the Kuwait Bay, as shown on Map 11, 5 miles from
the present Basra-Kuwait road. It was a fairly large city, over a mile in
diameter, of which nothing remains but some castle-like ruins on a tongue of
land jutting into the sea. These ruins may, however, be of a later period than
Khalid's. No trace remains of Hufair nor is there any local tradition regarding
its location. According to Ibn Rusta (p. 180) it was 18 miles from Basra on the
road to Madinah. Since the old Arab mile was a little longer than the current
mile, I place it at present-day Rumaila, which is 21 miles from old Basra.
(Some later writers have confused this Hufair with Hafar-ul-Batin, which is in
Arabia, 120 miles south-west of Kazima.)
Having written to Hormuz from Yamamah, Khalid knew that the Persian
would expect him to advance on the direct route from Yamamah to Uballa, via
Kazima, and would make his defensive plans accordingly. Khalid decided not to
move on that route, but to approach Uballa from the south-west so that he would
be free to manoeuvre on two axes-the Kazima axis and the Hufair axis-thus
creating a difficult problem for the less mobile Persians. With this design in
mind he marched to, Nibbaj, dividing his army into three groups as already
explained, and took under command the 2,000 warriors of Muthanna, who, along
with their intrepid chief, were awaiting Khalid at Nibbaj. 1 From Nibbaj he marched in
the direction of Hufair, picking up the other three chiefs on the way, and
approached Hufair with 18,000 men.
Khalid was not in the least worried about the presence of the Persian
Army at Kazima. Hormuz at Kazima posed no threat to Khalid, for the Persians
could not venture into the desert to disrupt his communications, apart from the
fact that a mobile force like Khalid's operating in the desert did not present
particularly vulnerable lines of communication. Khalid made no attempt to rush
through Hufair and make for Uballa, because with Hormuz's large army on his
flank his forward movement beyond Hufair might spell serious trouble. Hormuz
could fall upon his rear and cut his line of retreat. No Arab
would ever accept interference, or even a threat of interference, with
his route back into the friendly, safe desert where he alone was master. Hence
Khalid waited in front of Hufair, while light detachments of his cavalry kept
Hormuz under observation. He knew, that his presence near Hufair would cause
near-panic in the mind of Hormuz.
This is
just what happened. The moment Hormuz got word of Khalid's movement towards
Hufair, he realised the grave danger in which his army was placed. The Arab was
not so simple after all! As an experienced strategist, he knew that his base
was threatened. He immediately ordered a move to Hufair, 50 miles away, and his
army, weighed down with its heavy equipment, trudged along the track. The two
days' march was tiring, but the tough and disciplined Persian soldier accepted
his trials without complaint. On arrival at Hufair, however, Hormuz found no
trace of Khalid. Expecting the Muslims to arrive soon, he deployed for battle
as he had done at Kazima, chains and all; but hardly had his men taken up their
positions when his scouts came rushing to inform him that Khalid was moving
towards Kazima!
And Khalid was indeed moving towards Kazima. He had waited near, Hufair
until he heard of the hurried approach of Hormuz. Then he had withdrawn a short
distance and begun a counter-march through the desert towards Kazima, not going
too far into the desert so as not to become invisible to Persian scouts. Khalid
was in no hurry. His men were well mounted, and he took his time. He had no
desire to get to Kazima first and occupy it, for then he would have to position
himself for battle and his opponent would be free to manoeuvre. Khalid
preferred to let the Persians position themselves while he himself remained
free to approach and attack as he liked, with the desert behind him.
The Persians again packed their bags and set off for Kazima, for Hormuz
could not leave the Kazima route to the Muslims. Hormuz could have fought a
defensive battle closer to Uballa; but having experienced the terrible havoc
wrought by Muthanna in his district, he was in no mood to let Khalid approach
close enough to let his raiders loose in the fertile region of Uballa. He was
determined to fight and destroy Khalid at a safe distance from the district
which it was his duty to protect, and he rejoiced at the prospect of a
set-piece battle against the desert Arabs. Moreover, armies act as magnets:
they attract each other. Sometimes an area which is not otherwise strategically
important becomes so through the presence of a hostile army. Now Hormuz was
drawn to Kazima not only by the strategical importance of the place but also by
the army of Khalid.
This time the forced march did not go down so well with the Persians and
there was grumbling, especially amongst the Arab auxiliaries serving under
Hormuz, who cursed the Persian for all the trouble that he was causing them.
The Persians arrived at Kazima in a state of exhaustion. Hormuz, the
professional regular soldier, wasted no time and at once deployed the army for
battle in the normal formation of a centre and wings. The generals commanding
his wings were Qubaz and Anushjan. The men again linked themselves with chains.
(For a graphic illustration of march and counter-march see Map 12 below.)
1.
The old
Nibbaj is the present Nabqiyya, 25 miles north-east of Buraida. (See Maps 7 and
8)
Chains were often used by the Persian army to link their men in battle.
They were normally of four lengths, to link three, five, seven or ten men, 1
and were supposed to act as a source of strength to the army. It would not be
correct to say, as some critics have suggested, that the chains were used by
the officers for fear that their men would run away. The chains were used as a
manifestation of suicidal courage, confirming the soldiers' willingness to die
on the battlefield rather than seek safety in flight. They also lessened the
danger of a breakthrough by enemy cavalry, as with the men linked together in
chains it was not easy for cavalry groups to knock down a few men and create a
gap for penetration. And since the Persian Army was organised and trained for
the set-piece battle, this tactic enabled it to stand like a rock in the face
of enemy assault. But the chains had one major drawback: in case of defeat the
men were incapable of withdrawal, for then the chains acted as fetters. Men
chained to fallen comrades, lost all power of movement and became helpless
victims of their assailants.
It was
the use of chains in this battle that gave it the name of the Battle of Chains.
The Arab auxiliaries, however, did not approve of these chains and never
resorted to their use. When on this occasion the Persians chained themselves,
the Arabs said, "You have bound yourselves for the enemy. Beware of
doing so!" To this the Persians retorted, "We can see that you wish to be free to run!" 2
Now Khalid came out of the desert and approached the Persians. He had
made up his mind to fight a battle here and now before the Persian army
recovered from its fatigue. But the Muslim army had no water, and this caused
some alarm among the men, who informed Khalid of their misgivings. "Dismount and unload the camels",
ordered Khalid. "By my faith, the
water will go to whichever army is more steadfast and more deserving." 3 Their confidence in
their leader unshaken, the Muslims prepared for battle. They had not been at this for long when it began to rain, and it
rained enough for the Muslims to drink their fill and replenish their
water-skins.
Hormuz had deployed his army just forward of the western edge of Kazima,
keeping the city covered by his dispositions. In front of the Persians
stretched a sandy, scrub-covered plain for a depth of about 3 miles. Beyond the
plain rose a complex of low, barren hills about 200 to 300 feet high. This
range was part of the desert, running all the way to Hufair, and it was over
this range that Khalid had marched to Kazima. Emerging from these hills, Khalid
now moved his army into the sandy plain; and keeping his back to the hills and
the desert, formed up for battle with the usual centre and wings. As commanders
of the wings, he appointed Asim bin Amr (brother of Qaqa bin Amr) and Adi bin
Hatim (the very tall chief of the Tayy, who has been mentioned earlier, in Part
II). Some time in the first week of April 633 (third week of Muharram, 12
Hijri) began the Battle of Chains.
The battle started in grand style with a duel between the two army
commanders. Hormuz was a mighty fighter, renowned in the Empire as a champion
whom few would dare to meet in single combat. (In those chivalrous days no one
could be a commanding general without at the same time being a brave and
skilful fighter.) He urged his horse forward and halted in the open space
between the two armies, though closer to his own front rank. Then he called, "Man to man! Where is Khalid?"
4
From the Muslim ranks Khalid rode out and stopped a few paces from Hormuz. The
two armies watched in silence as these redoubtable champions prepared to fight
it out.
Hormuz dismounted, motioning to Khalid to do the same. Khalid
dismounted. This was brave of Hormuz, for a dismounted duel left little chance
of escape; but on this occasion Hormuz was not being as chivalrous as one might
imagine. Before coming out of the Persian ranks Hormuz had picked a few of his
stalwarts and placed them in the front rank near the site which he had chosen
for the duel. He instructed them as follows: he would engage Khalid in single
combat; at the appropriate time he would call to the men; they would then dash
out, surround the combatants and kill Khalid while Hormuz held him. The chosen
warriors watched intently as the two generals dismounted. They felt certain
that Khalid would not get away.
1.
Tabari:
Vol. 3, p. 206. According to Abu Yusuf (p. 33) the chain lengths were: five,
seven, eight and 10 men.
2. Ibid: Vol. 2,
p. 555.
3. Ibid.
4. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 555.
The generals began to fight with sword and shield. Each struck several
times at his adversary, but none of the blows made any impression. Each was
surprised at the skill of the other. Hormuz now suggested that they drop their
swords and wrestle. Khalid, unaware of the plot, dropped his sword as Hormuz
dropped his. They began to wrestle.
Then, as they were locked in a
powerful embrace, Hormuz shouted to his men, who rushed forward. Before Khalid
realised what was happening he found himself and Hormuz surrounded by several fierce
looking Persians.
Now Khalid knew. He was without his sword and shield, and Hormuz would
not relax his iron grip. There seemed to be no way out of the predicament; but
then, being a stronger man than Hormuz, Khalid began to whirl his adversary
round and round, thus making it practically impossible for the Persians to
strike at him.
A storm of sound arose over the battlefield as the two armies
shouted-one with delight, the other with dismay. In this noise, their attention
riveted on the wrestlers, the Persian killers did not hear the galloping hooves
that approached them. They did not know what hit them. Two or three of them
sprawled on the ground as headless trunks, before the others realised that the
number of combatants in this melee had increased by just one more. The extra
man was Qaqa bin Amr-the one-man reinforcement sent by Abu Bakr.
Qaqa had
seen the Persian killers rush towards the two generals, and in a flash
understood the perfidy of the enemy general and the peril which faced Khalid.
There was no time to tell this to anyone; no time to explain or gather comrades
to support him. He had spurred his horse into a mad gallop, and arriving in the
nick of time, had set upon the Persians with his sword. Qaqa killed all of
them! 1
Khalid, freed of the menace of the Persian killers, turned his entire
attention to Hormuz. After a minute or two Hormuz lay motionless on the ground,
and Khalid rose from his chest with a dripping dagger in his hand.
Khalid now ordered a general attack, and the Muslims, incensed by the
treacherous plot of the enemy commander, went into battle with a vengeance. The
centre and the wings swept across the plain to assault the Persian army. The
Persians had suffered a moral setback with the death of their commanding
general; but they were more numerous than the Muslims and, their iron
discipline held them together. They fought hard. For some time the battle hung
in the balance with the fast-moving Muslims assailing the front and the steady,
chain-linked Persian infantry repulsing all assaults. But soon the superior
skill and courage of the Muslims and the fatigue of the Persians began to tell,
and after several attempts the Muslims succeeded in breaking the Persian front
in a number of places.
Sensing defeat, the Persian generals commanding the wings-Qubaz and
Anushjan-ordered a withdrawal and began to pull their men back. This led to a
general retreat, and as the Muslims struck still more fiercely, the retreat
turned into a rout. Most of the Persians who were not chained managed to
escape, but those who were chain-linked found their chains a death trap. Unable
to move fast, they fell an easy prey to the victorious Muslims and were slain
in thousands before darkness set in to put an end to the slaughter. Qubaz and
Anushjan managed to escape and succeeded in extricating a large portion of the
army from the battlefield.
The first battle with the power of Persia was over. It had ended in an
overwhelming victory for the Muslims.
The following day was spent in attending to the wounded and collecting
the spoils-weapons, armour, stores, costly garments, horses, captives-of which
Khalid distributed four-fifths among his men. The share of each cavalryman came
to a thousand dirhams, while the infantryman's share was a third of that. This
ratio was a tradition of the Prophet.
The cavalryman was given three shares because he had to maintain his
horse as well and was more valuable for the mobile, fast-moving operations
which the Arabs loved.
One-fifth of the spoils was sent to the Caliph as the share of the
state, and this included the 100,000 dirham cap of Hormuz. By right it belonged
to Khalid, for in a duel all the belongings of the vanquished were taken by the
victor; and for this reason Abu Bakr returned the cap to Khalid, who, preferring
cash, sold it!
1.
There is
no record of the actual number of Persians who took part in this plot and were
killed by Qaqa.
6
The Muslims appear also to have captured an elephant in the Battle of
Chains, and this animal was sent to Madinah along with other spoils. The city
of the Prophet had never before seen an elephant and there was tremendous
excitement in the capital when the behemoth arrived. The people marvelled at
this greatest of land animals; but Abu Bakr could not think of any use for the
unfamiliar beast and returned it to Khalid. What happened to it thereafter we
do not know.
While the families of the Persians and those of the Iraqi Arabs who had
supported them were taken captive, the rest of the population of the district
was left unmolested. This population consisted mainly of small farmers,
peasants and shepherds, and they all agreed to pay the Jizya and come under
Muslim protection.
For a few days Khalid remained busy with organisational matters. Then he
set his army in motion towards the north. Ahead of the main body of the army he
sent Muthanna and his 2,000 riders to reconnoitre the country and kill any
stragglers behind by the retreating Persians.
Muthanna reached a small river just north of where Zubair stands today,
on the bank of which stood a fort known as Hisnul-Mar'at, i.e., the Fort of the
Lady, so called because a lady ruled over it. 1 Muthanna laid siege to the
fort; but in order to avoid delay in his advance, he left his brother, Mu'anna,
in charge of the siege operations with a few hundred men and himself proceeded
north with the rest of his column.
Two or three days of siege operations were enough to convince the lady
of the fort of the futility of resistance. The Persian army of Uballa had been
defeated and she could expect no help from any quarter. Mu'anna offered to
accept a peaceful surrender without bloodshed, without plunder, without
enslavement. The lady agreed; the defenders surrendered. Mu'anna and the lady
of the fort appear to have found much pleasure in their meeting with each
other. First the lady became a Muslim, and then, without any further delay,
Mu'anna married her!
Meanwhile Khalid was advancing northwards from Kazima with the main body
of the army.
1.
The river
is still there and is known as the River of the Lady, but there is no trace of
the fort.
(The
Battle of the River)
1
"...We crushed the two horns of Qarin at
Thaniyy, with violence unleashed." [
Al-Qa'qa' bin Amr, commander in Khalid's army]1
When the Persian Emperor received the message of Hormuz regarding the
Muslim advance from Yamamah, he organised a fresh army at Ctesiphon and placed
it under the command of a top-ranking general by the name of Qarin bin Qaryana.
Qarin too was a 100,000 dirham-man. The Emperor ordered him to proceed to
Uballa with the new army to reinforce Hormuz, and with this mission Qarin set
off from Ctesiphon.
Marching along the left bank of the Tigris, Qarin reached Mazar, crossed
the Tigris and moved south along the right bank until he reached the Maqil
River. He crossed this river and then another largish river a little south of
the Maqil. He had hardly done so when he received reports of the disaster of
Kazima. These reports were followed by the remnants of the Persian army which
had survived the Battle of Kazima and now came streaming into Qarin's camp
under the two generals, Qubaz and Anushjan. The survivors included thousands of
Arab auxiliaries; and as is usual in such cases, the two partners-Persian and
Arab-began to blame each other for the defeat. Their spirits were not as high
as at Kazima; but they were brave, men and reacted more with anger than fear at
the reverse they had suffered.
Qubaz and Anushjan were eager for battle again. They and Qarin found it
difficult to believe that a regular imperial army could be defeated in battle
by a force of uncultured and unsophisticated Arabs from the desert. They did
not realise that the Battle of Kazima had been fought with not an uncivilised
Arab force but a fine Muslim army, purified and strengthened by the new faith.
However, Qarin was prudent enough not to advance beyond the south bank. Here he
could fight with his back to the river and thus ensure the safety of his rear.
By limiting the possibilities of manoeuvre, he would fight the frontal set-piece
battle which the Persians loved and for which their training and discipline
were ideally suited.
The
remnants of the Persian army of Uballa were followed by the light cavalry
detachments of Muthanna; and once contact was established with the Persians, the
Muslim horsemen scoured the countryside for supplies while Muthanna kept the
Persians occupied and carried out reconnaissances. The Persians made no attempt
to sally out of their camp. Muthanna sent a messenger to Khalid to inform him
that he had made contact with a powerful enemy force at Sinyy.2
The word sinyy
was used by the Arabs to denote a river. Muthanna had contacted the Persians on
the south bank of a river, and for this reason the battle which will now be
described is called the Battle of the River.
On
leaving Kazima, Khalid marched north until he reached some ruins in the
vicinity of the present Zubair, about 10 miles south-west of Uballa. He had
already decided not to turn towards Uballa, where there was no enemy left to
fight, when Muthanna's messenger brought the news about the concentration of
Qarin's army and the survivors of Kazima. Khalid was anxious to contact and
destroy the new Persian army while the impact of
Kazima was still fresh in the Persian mind. Consequently, while he sent
Maqal bin Muqarrin with a detachment to enter Uballa and gather spoils (which
Maqal did), Khalid marched towards the River with the main body of the army. He
caught up with Muthanna in the third week of April 633 (beginning of Safar, 12
Hijri).
Khalid then carried out a personal reconnaissance of the Persian
position. Since the Persians had their backs to the river there was no
possibility of outflanking them; and Khalid could think of no way of
manoeuvring the Persians away from their position as he had done with Hormuz.
Khalid accordingly decided to fight a general set-piece battle, in the imperial
Persian style. This was unavoidable, because with Qarin poised for action as he
was, Khalid could neither cross the river to enter deep into Iraq nor proceed west-wards
towards Hira.
1. Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidayah wan-Nihayah, Dar Abi Hayyan,
Cairo, 1st ed. 1416/1996, Vol.
6 P. 425.
2.
It is
difficult to express this word in English. In Arabic it is written as (Yaqut:
Vol. 1, p. 937) or as Tabari puts it (Vol. 2, p. 557 )
2
The two armies formed up for battle. Qubaz and Anushjan commanded the
wings of the Persian army while Qarin kept the centre under his direct control
and stood in front of it. Detachments of Arab auxiliaries were deployed in
various parts of the army. Qarin was a brave but wise general. He deployed with
the river close behind him, and saw to it that a fleet of boats was kept ready
at the near bank ... just in case! Khalid also deployed with a centre and
wings, again appointing Asim bin Amr and Adi bin Hatim as the commanders of the
wings.
The battle began with three duels. The first to step forward and call
out a challenge was Qarin. As Khalid urged his horse forward, another Muslim,
one by the name of Maqal bin Al Ashi, rode out of the Muslim front rank and
made for Qarin. Maqal reached Qarin before Khalid, and since he was an
accomplished swordsman and quite able to fight in the top class of champions,
Khalid did not call him back. They fought, and Maqal killed his man. Qarin was
the last of the 100,000 dirham men to face Khalid in battle.
As the Persian commander went down before the sword of Maqal, the other
two Persian generals, Qubaz and Anushjan, came forward and gave the challenge
for single combat. The challenge was accepted by the commanders of the Muslim
wings, Asim and Adi.
Asim killed Anushjan. Adi killed Qubaz. As these Persian generals fell,
Khalid gave the order for a general attack, and the Muslims rushed forward to
assault the massed Persian army.
In those days the personal performance of the commander was a
particularly important factor in battle. His visible success in combat inspired
his men, while his death or flight led to demoralisation and disorganisation.
The Persian army here had now lost its three top generals; yet the men fought
bravely and were able to hold the Muslim attacks for a while. But because of
the absence of able generals, disorder and confusion soon became apparent in
the Persian ranks. Eventually, under the violence of continued Muslim attacks,
the Persian army lost all cohesion, turned about and made for the river bank.
This disorganised retreat led to disaster. The lightly armed Muslims
moved faster than the heavily equipped Persians and caught up with their
fleeing adversaries. On the river bank
confusion became total as the Persians scrambled into the boats in a
blind urge to get away from the horror that pursued them. Thousands of them
were slain as other thousands rowed away to safety. Those who survived owed
their lives to the caution of Qarin, who had wisely kept the boats ready by the
river bank. But for these boats not a single Persian would have got away. The
Muslims having no means of crossing the river, were unable to pursue the
fugitives.
According to Tabari, 30,000 Persians were killed in this battle. 1
The spoils of the battle exceeded the booty taken at Kazima, and four-fifths of
the spoils were again promptly distributed among the men while one-fifth was
sent to Madinah.
Khalid now turned more seriously to the administration of the districts
conquered by the Muslims and placed this administration on a more permanent
footing. Submitting to Khalid, all the local inhabitants agreed to pay the
Jizya and come under Muslim protection. They were left unmolested. Khalid
organised a team of officials to collect taxes and placed Suwaid bin Muqarrin
in command of this team with his headquarters at Hufair.
But while these administrative matters were engaging Khalid's attention,
his agents had slipped across the Euphrates to pick up the trial of the vanquished
army of Qarin. Yet other agents were moving along the Euphrates towards Hira to
discover further movements and concentrations of the imperial army of the
Chosroes. 2
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 558.
2.
Tabari
also calls this battle the Battle of Mazar, which I feel is incorrect. For an
explanation see Note 5 in Appendix B.
Chapter 21
(The Hell
of Walaja)
1
The people would say in those days,
"In the month of Safar,
Is killed every tyrant ruler,
At the junction of the river."1
The news of the debacle at the River inflamed Ctesiphon. A second
Persian army had been cut to pieces by this new and unexpected force emerging
out of the barren wastes of Arabia. Each of the two Persian army commanders had
been an illustrious imperial figure, a 100,000 dirham-man. And not only these
two, but two other first-rate generals had been slain by the enemy. It was
unbelievable! Considering that this new enemy had never been known for any
advanced military organisation, these two defeats seemed like
nightmares-frightening but unreal.
Emperor Ardsheer decided to take no chances. He ordered the
concentration of another two armies; and he gave this order on the very day on
which the Battle of the River was fought. This may surprise the reader, for the
battlefield was 300 miles from Ctesiphon by road. But the Persians had a
remarkable system of military communication. Before battle they would station a
line of men, picked for their powerful voices, at shouting distance one from
another, all the way from the battlefield to the capital. Hundreds of men would
be used to form this line. Each
event on the battlefield would be shouted by A to B; by B to C; by C to D; and
so on. 2
Thus every action on the battlefield would be known to the Emperor in a few
hours.
Following the orders of the Emperor, Persian warriors began to
concentrate at the imperial capital. They came from all towns and garrisons
except those manning the western frontier with the Eastern Roman Empire. In a
few days the first army was ready.
The Persian court expected the Muslims to proceed along the Euphrates to
North-Western Iraq. The Persians understood the Arab mind well enough to know
that no Arab force would move far from the desert so long as there were
opposing forces within striking distance of its rear and its route to the
desert. Expecting the Muslims army to move west, Ardsheer picked on Walaja as
the place at which to stop Khalid and destroy his army. (See Map 10.) 3
The first of the new Persian armies raised at Ctesiphon was placed under
the command of Andarzaghar, who until recently had been military governor of
the frontier province of Khurasan and was held in high esteem by Persian and
Arab alike. He was a Persian born among the Arabs of Iraq. He had grown up
among the Arabs and, unlike most Persians of his class, was genuinely fond of
them.
Andarzaghar was ordered to move his army to Walaja, where he would soon
be joined by the second army. He set off from Ctesiphon, moved along the east
bank of the Tigris, crossed the Tigris at Kaskar, 4 moved south-west to the
Euphrates, near Walaja, crossed the Euphrates and established his camp at
Walaja. Before setting out from the capital he had sent couriers to many Arab
tribes which he knew; and on his way to, Walaja he picked up thousands of Arabs
who were willing to fight under his standard. He had also met and taken command
of the remnants of the army of Qarin. When he arrived at Walaja he was
delighted with the strength of his army. Patiently he waited for Bahman who was
to join him in a few days.
Bahman was the commander of the second army. One of
the top personalities of the Persian military hierarchy, he too was a 100,000
dirham-man. He was ordered by the Emperor to take the second army, when ready,
to Walaja where Andarzaghar would await him. Bahman would be in over-all
command of both the armies, and with this enormous might would fight and
destroy the Muslim army in one great battle.
1. Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidayah wan-Nihayah, Dar Abi Hayyan,
Cairo, 1st ed. 1416/1996, Vol.
6 P. 421.
2. Tabari: Vol. 3, p. 43.
3.
No trace
remains of Walaja. According to Yaqut (Vol. 4, p. 939), it was east of the
Kufa-Makkah road, and a well-watered region stretched between it and Hira.
Musil (p. 293) places it near Ain Zahik, which, though still known by that name
to the local inhabitants of the region, is marked on maps as Ain-ul-Muhari and
is 5 miles south-south-west of Shinafiya. The area of Walaja, now completely
barren, was then very fertile.
4.
This was
the place where Wasit was founded in 83 Hijri. In fact Kaskar became the eastern
part of Wasit.
2
Bahman moved on a separate route to Andarzaghar's. From Ctesiphon he
marched south, between the two rivers, making directly for Walaja. But he left
Ctesiphon several days after the first army, and his movement was slower.
The Battle of the River had been a glorious victory. With few casualties to themselves, the Muslims had shattered a large
Persian army and acquired a vast amount of booty. But the battle left Khalid in
a more thoughtful mood; and only now did he begin to appreciate the immensity
of the resources of the Persian Empire. He had fought two bloody battles with
two separate Persian armies and driven them mercilessly from the battlefield,
but he was still only on the fringes of the Empire. The Persians could field many
armies like the ones he had fought at Kazima and the River.
It was a
sobering thought. And Khalid was on his own. He was the first Muslim commander
to set out to conquer alien lands. He was not only the military commander but
also the political head, and as such had to govern, on behalf of the Caliph in
Madinah, all the territories conquered for Islam. There was no superior to whom
he could turn for guidance in matters of politics and administration. Moreover,
his men were not as fresh as on the eve of Kazima. They had marched long and
fast and fought hard, and were now feeling more than a little tired. Khalid
rested his army for a few days.
By now
Khalid had organised an efficient network of intelligence agents. The agents
were local Arabs who were completely won over by the generous treatment of the
local population by Khalid, which contrasted strikingly with the harshness and
arrogance of the imperial Persians. Consequently they had thrown in their lot
with the Muslims and kept Khalid apprised of the affairs of Persia and the
movements of Persian forces. These agents now informed him of the march of
Andarzaghar from Ctesiphon; of the large Arab contingents which joined him; of
his picking up the survivors of Qarin's army; of his movement towards Walaja. They
also brought word of the movement towards Walaja. They also brought word of the
march of the second army under Bahman from Ctesiphon and its movement in a
southerly direction. As more intelligence arrived, Khalid realised that the two
Persian armies would shortly meet and then either bar his way south of the
Euphrates or advance to fight him in the region of Uballa. The Persians would
be in such overwhelming strength that there could be no possibility of his
engaging in a successful battle. Khalid had to get to Hira, and Walaja was
smack on his route.
Another point that worried Khalid was that too many Persians were
escaping from one battle to fight another day. The survivors of Kazima had
joined Qarin and fought at the River. The survivors of the River had joined Andarzaghar and were now moving towards
Walaja. If he was to have a sporting chance of defeating all the armies that
faced him, he would have to make sure that none got away from one battle to
join the army preparing for the next.
These then were the two problems that faced Khalid. The first was
strategical: two Persian armies were about to combine to oppose him. To this
problem he found a masterly strategical solution, i.e. to advance rapidly and fight and eliminate one army
(Andarzaghar's) before the other army (Bahman's) arrived on the scene. The
second problem was tactical: how to prevent enemy warriors escaping from one
battle to fight another. To this he found a tactical solution which only a
genius could conceive and only a master could implement-but more of this later.
Khalid gave instructions to Suwaid bin Muqarrin to see to the
administration of the conquered districts with his team of officials, and
posted a few detachments to guard the
lower Tigris against possible enemy crossings from the north and east
and to give warning of any fresh enemy forces coming from those directions.
With the rest of the army-about 15,000 men-he set off in the direction of Hira,
moving at a fast pace along the south edge of the great marsh.
If Andarzaghar had been given the choice, he would undoubtedly have
preferred to wait for the arrival of Bahman before fighting a decisive battle
with the Muslims. But Andarzaghar was not given the choice. A few days before
Bahman was expected, the Muslim army appeared over the eastern horizon and
camped a short distance from Walaja. However, Andarzaghar was not worried. He
had a large army of Persians and Arabs and felt confident of victory. He did
not even bother to withdraw to the river bank, a mile away, so that he could
use the river to guard his rear. He prepared for battle at Walaja.
3
For the whole of the next day the two armies remained in their
respective camps, keeping each other under observation, while commanders and
other officers carried out reconnaissances and made preparations for the
morrow. The following morning the armies deployed for battle, each with a
centre and wings. The Muslims armies were again commanded by Asim bin Amr and
Adi bin Hatim.
The battlefield consisted of an even plain stretching between two low,
flat ridges which were about 2 miles apart and 20 to 30 feet in height. The
north-eastern part of the plain ran into a barren desert. A short distance
beyond the north-eastern ridge flowed a branch of the Euphrates now known as the
River Khasif. The Persians deployed in the centre of this plain, facing
east-south-east, with the western ridge behind them and their left resting on
the north-eastern ridge. Khalid formed up his army just forward of the
north-eastern ridge, facing the Persians. The centre of the battlefield, i.e.
the mid-point between the two armies, was about 2 miles south-east of the
present Ain-ul-Muhari and 6 miles south of the present Shinafiya.
Andarzaghar was surprised at the strength of the Muslim army. Only about
10,000 he guessed. From what he had heard, Andarzaghar had expected Khalid's
army to be much larger. And where was the dreaded Muslim cavalry? Most of these
men were on foot! Perhaps the Persian survivors of Kazima and the River had
exaggerated the enemy's strength, as defeated soldiers are wont to do. Or
perhaps the cavalry was fighting dismounted. Andarzaghar did not know that the
Muslims who faced him were also surprised at their numbers, for they did not
seem to be as many as they had been the day before. But the matter did not
worry them. The Sword of Allah knew best!
The situation put Andarzaghar in high spirits. He
would make mincemeat of this small force and clear the land of Iraq of these
insolent desert-dwellers. He would at first await the Muslim attack. He would
hold the attack and wear down the Muslims; then he would launch a
counter-attack and crush the enemy.
When Khalid's army advanced for a general attack, Andarzaghar was
overjoyed. This was just what he wanted. The two armies met with a clash of
steel, and the men lost all count of time as they struggled mightily in combat.
For some time the battle raged with unabated fury. The agile, skilful
Muslims struck at the heavily armed Persians, but the Persians stood their
ground, repulsing all attacks.
After an hour or so both sides began to feel tired-the Muslims more so
because they were fewer in number and each of them faced several Persians in
combat. The Persians had reserves which they employed to replace their men in
the front line. However, the example of Khalid kept Muslim spirits undaunted.
He was fighting in the front rank.
In particular, during this first phase of the battle, the Muslims gained
further confidence from the thrilling spectacle of Khalid's duel with a Persian
champion of gigantic proportions known as Hazar Mard, who was said to have been
the equal of a thousand warriors. 1 This giant of a man stepped forward and
extended a general challenge which was accepted by Khalid. After a few minutes
of duelling, Khalid found an opening and felled the man with his sword. When
the Persian's body lay quite still, Khalid sat down on his great chest and
called out to his slave to bring him his food. Then, seated on this grisly
bench, Khalid ate a hearty lunch! 2
The first phase was over. The second phase of the battle began with the
counter-attack of the Persians. The experienced eye of Andarzaghar could see
clear signs of fatigue on the faces of the Muslims. He judged that this was the
right moment for his counter-stroke; and in this he was right. At this command
the Persians surged forward and struck at the Muslims. The Muslims were able to
hold them for some time, but the Herculean efforts that they were called upon
to make placed an almost unbearable strain on their nerves and limbs. Slowly
they fell back, though in good order. The Persians launched furious charges,
and the Muslims looked to Khalid for any sign of a change in plan or anything
to relieve the tension. But from Khalid they got no such sign. He was fighting
like a lion and urged his men to do likewise. And his men did likewise.
1.
In
Persian, Hazar Mard means a thousand
men, and this was an appellation given to especially formidable warriors in
recognition of their prowess and strength.
2. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 560. Abu Yusuf: p. 142.
4
The Persians were paying heavily for their advance, but they exulted in
the success that they were gaining. Andarzaghar was beside himself with joy.
Victory was just round the corner. He had not reached the top rung of the
Persian socio-military ladder, but now he saw visions of a 100,000 dirham-cap.
The Muslims continued to fight with the suicidal desperation of wild animals at
bay. They had reached the limits of human endurance; and some even began to
wonder if Khalid had at last met his match. A little more of this and the front
would shatter into a thousand pieces.
Then Khalid gave the signal. We do not know just what this signal was,
but it was received by those for whom it was intended. The next moment, over
the crest of the ridge which stretched behind the Persian army appeared two
dark lines of mounted warriors-one from the Persian left-rear, the other from
the right-rear. Cries of Allah-o-Akbar rent the air as the Muslim cavalry
charged at a gallop; and the plain of Walaja trembled under the thundering
hooves of the Arab horse.
The joy of the Persians turned to terror. While a moment before they had
been shouting with glee, they now screamed in panic as the Muslim cavalry
rammed into the rear of the Persian army. The main body of Muslims under
Khalid, refreshed and strengthened by the sight they beheld, resumed the attack
against the Persian front, at the same time extending its flanks to join hands
with the cavalry and completely surround the Persians. The army of Andarzaghar
was caught in a trap from which there could be no escape.
In an instant the disciplined Persians turned into a rabble. When groups
of soldiers turned to the rear they were pierced by lances or felled by swords.
When they turned to the front they were struck down by sword and dagger.
Recoiling from the assaults that came from all directions, they gathered in an
unwieldy mass, unable to use their weapons freely or avoid the blows of their
assailants. Those who wanted to fight did not know whom to fight. Those who wanted
to flee did not know where to go. In a mad urge to get away from the horror
they trampled each other and fought each other. The battlefield of Walaja
became a hell for the army of Andarzaghar.
The ring of steel became tighter as the furious charges of the Muslims
continued. The very helplessness of the Persians excited the Muslims to greater
violence, and they swore that they would not let the Persians and Iraqi Arabs
escape this time.
In this the Muslims succeeded. A few thousand imperial warriors did get
away; for no army can be so completely destroyed that not a single survivor
remains, but the army as a whole ceased to exist. It was as if a vast chasm had
opened under it and swallowed it up. While the armies of Hormuz and Qarin had
suffered crushing defeats, the army of Andarzaghar was annihilated. The army of
Andarzaghar was no more. (For a graphic illustration of the phases of this
battle see Map 13 below.)
Andarzaghar himself, strangely enough, managed to escape. But the
direction of his escape was towards the desert rather than the Euphrates, and
having no desire but to put as much distance as possible between himself and
the hell of Walaja, he went deep into the desert. In the desert the ill-fated
man lost himself and died of thirst.
After the battle Khalid got his exhausted men together. He realised that
this battle had imposed a terrible strain upon them. It had been the fiercest
of the three fierce battles which they had fought in Iraq; and he wanted to
make certain, that their spirits were not dampened by memories of the trial,
for more trials awaited them.
He
addressed the men. He started by praising Allah and calling His blessings upon
the
Holy
Prophet. Then he continued:
"Do
you not see the wealth of the land of the Persians? Do you not remember the
poverty of the land of the Arabs? Do you not see how the crops in this land
cover the earth? If the holy war were not enjoined by Allah, we should still
come and conquer this rich land and exchange the hunger of our deserts for the
abundant eating which is now ours." 1
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 559.
5
And the
warriors of Khalid agreed.
The day before the Battle of Walaja was fought,
Khalid had sent for two of his officers, Busr bin Abi Rahm and Saeed bin Marra.
1
He made each of them the commander of a mobile striking force of about 2,000
cavalry and instructed them as follows:
a. They would take their horsemen out during the night and move wide round
the south of the Persian camp.
b. On arrival on the far side of the ridge which stretched behind the
Persian camp, they would conceal
their men but keep them ready to move at short notice.
c. When battle was joined in the morning, they would keep their men mounted
behind the crest of the ridge and
position observers to watch for the signal of Khalid.
d. When
Khalid gave the signal, the two striking forces would charge the Persian army
in the rear, each group echeloned a
bit to one flank.
Necessary orders were issued by Khalid to those who had to be in the
know of the plan, so that the organisation and preparation of the striking
forces could be carried out without a hitch; but the utmost secrecy was
maintained and the Muslim rank and file knew nothing of the planned manoeuvre.
In the morning, the cavalry comprising these striking forces was nowhere to be
seen; and Khalid formed up the rest of his army, about 10,000 men in front of
the Persians.
This was the plan of the Battle of Walaja, fought in early May 633
(third week of Safar, 12 Hijri). It was a frontal holding attack combined with
a powerful envelopment. The operation went, down to the smallest detail, as
planned by Khalid. Only a master could have done it.
This is not the first time in history that this brilliant manoeuvre was
carried out. It had been done before. The most famous example of this type of
manoeuvre was the Battle of Cannae in 216 BC, at which Hannibal did much the
same to the Romans. After Hannibal's battle this type of manoeuvre became known
as a Cannae.
But
Khalid had never heard of Hannibal. With Khalid this was an original
conception. 2
2.
There is
a difference between Walaja and Cannae in that Hannibal's cavalry moved out on
both flanks, drove off the Roman cavalry, and then, at the appropriate time, fell
upon the rear of the Romans, while Khalid's cavalry moved (as we reconstruct
the battle) round one flank. But this is a matter of pre-battle movement. The
pattern of battle was the same.
Chapter
22
(The
River of Blood)
"Allah watered the dead with the relentless
Euphrates, And others in the middle areas of Najaf." [ Al-Qa'qa' bin Amr, commander in Khalid's army]1
The third great battle with the Persians had been won, and Khalid was
nearer his ultimate objective-Hira. But he still had far to go and had no
illusions about the journey. It was unlikely that the proud Persians would
withdraw from his path. Much blood must yet be shed.
In spite of his masterly manoeuvre and his best efforts, a few thousand
enemy warriors did manage to escape from the Battle of Walaja. They were mainly
Christian Arabs from the tribe of Bani Bakr (Muthanna's tribe-those elements
which had not accepted the new faith and had clung to Christianity). Much of
this tribe lived in Iraq, as Persian subjects. They had responded to the call
of Andarzaghar and with him they had fought and suffered at Walaja.
These Arab survivors of Walaja, fleeing from the battlefield, crossed
the River Khaseef and moved between it and the Euphrates (the two rivers were
about 3 miles apart, the former being a branch of the Euphrates). Their flight
ended at Ullais, about 10 miles from Walaja (see Map
10). Here they felt reasonably safe, as the place was on the right
bank of the Euphrates, and on the other side of Ullais ran the Khaseef, which
actually took off from the Euphrates just above Ullais. Ullais could only be
approached frontally, i.e. from the south-east. 2
For a few days Khalid rested his exhausted troops and himself remained
busy with the distribution of the spoils and preparations for the onward march.
Knowing of the existence of Bahman's army, he could appreciate that another
bloody battle would have to be fought before he got to Hira. Since the centre
of gravity of the campaign in Iraq had now shifted from the Tigris to the
Euphrates, he recalled the Muslim detachments which he had left on the lower
Tigris.
Khalid knew from his agents about the presence of hostile Arabs at
Ullais; but since they were only the survivors of Walaja he did not consider
them a military problem. In any case, he did not wish to over-strain his men by
rushing them into another battle before they had recovered from their great
trial of strength with Andarzaghar. But when about 10 days later he was
informed of the arrival of more Arab forces at Ullais, it became evident that
he would have to deal with a complete and almost new army. The hostile
concentration was large enough to promise a major battle. As soon as his
detachments from the lower Tigris had joined him, Khalid set off from Walaja
with an army whose strength, as at the time of its entry into Iraq, was 18,000
men. 3
Since there was no way
of getting to Ullais from a flank because of the two rivers, Khalid had
no option but to cross the Khaseef and approach his objective frontally.
The annihilation of the army of Andarzaghar, following close upon the
heels of Kazima and the River, shook the Empire of the Chosroes to its
foundations. There appeared to be an unearthly quality about this Army of Islam
which had emerged like an irresistible force from the desert. Any Persian army
that opposed its relentless march vanished. For the proud Persian court,
accustomed to treating the dwellers of the desert with contempt, this was a
bitter pill to swallow. Never before in its long history had the empire
suffered such military defeats, in such rapid succession, at the hands of a
force so much smaller than its, own armies, so close to its seat of power and
glory.
For the first time the Persians found it necessary to revise their
opinions about the Arabs. It was clear that there was something about Islam
which had turned this backward, disorganised and unruly race into a powerful,
closely-knit and disciplined force of conquest. And it was clear also that
there was something about this man Khalid-whose name was now whispered with
fear in Persian homes-that added a touch of genius to the operations of his
army. But a grand empire of 12 centuries is not beaten with three battles. The
Persians were a race of conquerors and rulers who had lost battles before and
risen again. The mood of dismay which had gripped Ctesiphon at the first
reports of Walaja passed, and was replaced by a single-minded determination to
crush this invading army and fling it back into the desert whence it came.
Persia picked herself up, dusted herself, and prepared for another round.
1. Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidayah wan-Nihayah, Dar Abi Hayyan,
Cairo, 1st ed. 1416/1996, Vol.
6 P. 425.
2.
According
to Tabari (Vol. 2, P. 560), Ullais was at a junction of the Euphrates. Musil
(p. 193) places it at Ash-Shasi, which is now known as Al Asi and is 4 miles
west-north-west of Shinafiya. Even now the place can only be approached from
between the two rivers, unless one uses a boat to cross one of them.
3.
Tabari:
Vol. 2, p. 562. There is no record of reinforcements, but the Muslim losses
must have been made up by either reinforcements from Arabia or local volunteers
from Iraq.
2
Meanwhile messengers from the surviving Christian Arabs of the Bani Bakr
arrived at Ctesiphon and informed the Emperor of their situation. They had
sought the help of their fellow-Arabs inhabiting the region between Ullais and
Hira; in response thousands of Arabs were even now marching to join the Bani
Bakr at Ullais where they would fight a do-or-die battle with Khalid. Would not
the Emperor help by sending another army of Persian warriors to join hands with
his loyal Arabs subjects and save the Empire?
The Emperor would. He sent orders to Bahman who was still north of the
Euphrates. On hearing of Walaja, Bahman had stopped in his tracks and decided
not to move until he received further instructions. Now he got the Emperor's
order to proceed with his army to Ullais, take under his command the Arab
contingents assembled there, and bar Khalid's way to Hira.
But Bahman did not himself go to Ullais. He sent the army under his next
senior general, one named Jaban, to whom he passed on the instructions of the
Emperor. And Bahman added, "Avoid
battle until I join you, unless it is forced upon you." 1
As Jaban set off with
the army, Bahman returned to
Ctesiphon. We do not know the purpose of his journey to the capital, we only
know that he wished to discuss certain matters with the Emperor. He arrived at
Ctesiphon to find Emperor Ardsheer very ill and remained in attendance on his
master.
Jaban moved with his army to Ullais and found a vast gathering of
Christian Arabs who had come from the region of Hira and Amghishiya. All had by
now realised that Khalid's mission was to take Hira, and felt that Khalid's
success would mean more bloodshed and enslavement. To prevent this, they had
come to fight Khalid and, if necessary, die fighting. Jaban assumed command of
the entire army, the Christian Arab part of which was commanded by a chieftain
named Abdul-Aswad, who had lost two sons at Walaja and was burning for revenge.
Persian and Arab camped side by side with the Euphrates to their left, the
Khaseef to their right and the river junction behind them.
According to the early historians there was a river here which came into
prominence as a result of actions taken on conclusion of the Battle of Ullais,
as we shall shortly see. This river may once have been a canal, for it was
dammed at its junction with the Euphrates just above Ullais, but at the time of
the battle the river was dry, or almost dry, because the dam was closed. The
Muslims referred to this river as just the
river. I place this river as the Khaseef (which is now a fair-sized river),
for there is no space at Ullais for another river or canal. Since, however, the
name Khaseef may not have been in use
at that time, it is hereafter referred to as The River.
Before the arrival of Jaban and the Persians, Muthanna and his light
cavalry had appeared at Ullais and made contact with the Christian Arabs.
Muthanna informed Khalid of the enemy position, strength and apparent intention
to fight. Khalid increased his pace, hoping to catch the Christian Arabs before
they were reinforced by other Persian forces. But Jaban beat him to Ullais,
perhaps by a few hours; and again Khalid was faced by an enormous army. Again he
determined to kill as many enemy warriors as he could lay his hands on, so that
fewer would appear against him in the next battle. He also decided to fight the
very same day; for the longer battle was delayed the more time the Persians
would have to get organised and co-ordinate their plans. It was now the middle
of May 633 (end of Safar, 12 Hijri).
Khalid stopped just long enough on the march to array his army in battle
formation, appointing Adi bin Hatim and Asim bin Amr once again as the
commanders of his wings, before he started the advance towards Ullais. This
time no outflanking movements were possible, and he would rely for victory on
the speed and violence of his attack rather than on manoeuvre. The Muslim
advance to battle continued for some time before Jaban came to know that he was
about to be attacked.
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 560.
3
This information reached Jaban a little before midday, when it was
mealtime for the Persian army. The cooks had prepared the soldiers' food, and
the Persian soldier, like soldiers of all races and all ages, preferred a hot
meal to a cold one and was reluctant to fight on any empty stomach. The Arab
auxiliaries, however, were ready for battle. Jaban looked at his soldiers and
the tempting pots of food being brought from the kitchens. Then he looked in
the direction from which the Muslims were rapidly approaching in battle array.
The soldiers also saw the Muslim army. They were brave
"I fear", replied Jaban,
"that the enemy will not let you eat in peace." 1
"No!" said the Persians, disobeying their commander. "Eat now; fight later!" The meal-cloths were spread on
the ground and steaming dishes were laid out upon them. The soldiers sat down
to eat. They thought they had time. Meanwhile the Arab auxiliaries, less
sophisticated in their eating habits, had formed up for action.
The Persians had eaten but one or two mouthfuls when it became evident
that the Muslims were about to assault. If they delayed battle any longer, a
full belly would be of no use to them, for they would be slaughtered anyway.
Hurriedly they left their dishes; and as hurriedly Jaban deployed them on the
battlefield along with the Arabs. He was not a minute too soon. He used the
Christian Arabs to form the wings of his army, under the chiefs Abdul-Aswad and
Abjar, and massed his Persian troops in the centre.
The battlefield ran south-east of Ullais between the Euphrates and The River. The Persian army was deployed
with its back to Ullais, while in front of it was arrayed the army of Islam.
The northern flank of both armies rested on the Euphrates and their southern
flank on the river. The battle front was about 2 miles from river to river.
It was a very hard battle. The Battle of Walaja had been the fiercest
battle of the campaign so far, but his was fiercer still. This became a battle
that Khalid would never forget.
We do not know the details of the manoeuvres and other actions which
took place in the battle. We know that Khalid killed the Arab commander,
Abdul-Aswad, in personal combat. We know that the imperial army, though losing
heavily in men, would not yield before the assaults of the Muslims. If ever an
army meant to fight it out to the last, it was the imperial army of Ullais. The
Arab auxiliaries were indeed fighting a do-or-die for if this battle were lost
then nothing could save Hira. The Persians fought to vindicate the honour of
Persian arms.
For a couple of hours the slogging continued. The fighting was heaviest
on the bank of the river, where a large number of Persians fell in combat. The
Muslims-tired, angry, frustrated-could see no opening, no weakening of the
Persian and Arab resistance. Then Khalid raised his hands in supplication and prayed
to Allah:
"O Lord! If You give us
victory, I shall see that no enemy warrior is left alive until their river runs
with their blood!" 2
The Muslims renewed their assaults with greater fury; and Allah gave
them victory. Early in the afternoon the imperial army was shattered and its
soldiers fled from the battlefield. Thousands lay dead, especially in, and on
the bank of, the river whose sandy bed was red with their blood.
As the
Persian army fled from the battlefield, Khalid launched his cavalry after it. "Do not kill them", he ordered the cavalry. "Bring them back alive." 3 The bed of the river was soaked
with blood ... but the river was not "running with blood" as Khalid
had pledged!
2. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 561.
3. Ibid.
The Muslim cavalry broke up into several groups and galloped out in
pursuit of the fugitives who had crossed the Khaseef and were fleeing in the
direction of Hira. Parties of desperate Persians and Arabs were isolated from
one another, surrounded, overpowered, disarmed and driven back to the
battlefield like flocks of sheep. As each group was brought back, it was herded
to the river, and every man was beheaded in the river bed or on the bank whence
his blood ran into the river. The pursuit by the Muslim cavalry, the capture
and return of the Persian and Arab warriors, and their killing in the river
went on for the rest of that day and the whole of that night and the whole of
the next day and part of the next. 1 Every vanquished warrior who fell into the
victors' hands was decapitated. Khalid was keeping his pledge! Not till
sometime on the third day was the last man killed.
Once the killing had stopped, a group of officers gathered around Khalid
on the river bank. They looked upon a messy sight. Qaqa turned to Khalid and
said, "If you kill all the people of the earth their blood will not
flow as long as this river is dammed. The earth will not absorb all the blood.
Let the water run in the river. Thus you shall keep your pledge." 2
Others added, "We have heard
that when the earth absorbs some of the blood of the sons of Adam, it refuses to accept more." 3
Khalid ordered that the dam be opened. As it was opened the water rushed
over the bed of the river and the blood lying in pools on the bed flowed with
the water. This river then became known as the River of Blood.
As night fell after the day on which the battle was fought, while the
Muslim cavalry was out bringing in the fugitives, the army of Khalid sat down
to eat the food of the Persians, laid out upon the meal?cloths. The desert Arab
marvelled at the fine fare on which the Persian soldier was fed.
The Battle of Ullais was over. An enormous amount of booty fell into
Muslim hands and included the families of the defeated imperial warriors.
According to Tabari, 70,000 Persians, and Christian Arabs were killed by the
Muslims including those beheaded in the river. 4 But Jaban escaped.
On the following day Khalid entered into a pact with the local
inhabitants of the district. They would pay the Jizya and come under Muslim
protection; but this time another clause was added to the pact: the local
inhabitants would act as spies and guides for the Muslims.
The episode of the River of Blood has been twisted and exaggerated
beyond all limits by certain writers who have been unable to resist the
temptation of resorting to sensationalism. This has led to some misconceptions
which it would be well to correct.
These writers tell us that the river actually ran with blood; that there
was a mill downstream of the battlefield powered by the water of this river;
that so much blood
This is a fantastic untruth. Balazuri makes no mention at all of any
mill. Tabari, coming to the end of his account of this battle, mentions the
mill, "…as related by Shuaib, who
heard it from Saif, who heard it from
Talha, who heard it from Mugheerah." According to Mugheerah, there was a mill down-stream, powered by the water
of this river; this mill was used for grinding corn for the army of Khalid for
three days; and the water was red.
5
In so far as this report may be correct, it still says nothing about the
mill being run by blood. And there is no other mention in the early accounts of
the mill. The facts are as they have been narrated above. When the dam was
opened, on Qaqa's advice, the water naturally turned red and remained so for
quite some time. But to run a mill with whole
blood for three days would require
the lives of millions of men. The story of the river running with blood for three days can be accepted as something
from the Arabian Nights; it is not history.
Furthermore, to call what happened a "killing of prisoners" is
an oversimplification. Normally they would have been killed in the pursuit, as
had happened before and would happen again, with no questions asked. In this
battle Khalid had pledged to make the river run with blood, so those thousands
of men, instead of being killed in the pursuit, were brought to the river and
killed. And that is all that there is to the episode of the River of Blood.
Of the battles which he had fought in the time of the Holy Prophet, the
Battle of Mutah had a special place in the memory of Khalid. Nowhere else had
he had to take command of so disastrous a situation and save the Muslims from
the jaws of death. Of the battles fought in Iraq, the Battle of Ullais was
similarly engraved upon his memory.
One day, after the campaign had been fought to a successful conclusion,
Khalid sat chatting with some friends. He said, "At Mutah I broke nine swords in my hand. But I have never met an enemy like the Persians.
And among the Persians I have never met an enemy like the army of Ullais."
6
Coming from a man like Khalid, there could be no finer tribute to the
valour of Persian arms. But the Persian court was now down and out. Ardsheer
lay dying, and the empire would send no more armies to face the Sword of Allah.
Ullais was the swansong of Ardsheer, great-great-grandson of Anushirwan the
Just.
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 561.
2. Ibid: Vol. 2, pp. 561-2.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 562.
6. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 569.
(The Conquest of Hira)
1
"And
the day we surrounded the citadels
One after
another, at calm Hirah.
We forced
them down from their thrones,
Where
they had acted as cowardly opponents."
[
Al-Qa'qa' bin Amr, commander in Khalid's army]1
In the middle of May 633 (beginning of Rabi-ul-Awwal, 12 Hijri) Khalid
marched from Ullais towards Amghishiya. This place was very near Ullais; in
fact Ullais acted as an out post of Amghishiya! 2 The same morning the army
reached Amghishiya, and found it a silent city.
Amghishiya was one of the great cities of Iraq-a rival the richness to
Hira in size, in the affluence of its citizens and in find the and splendour of
its markets. The Muslims arrived to city intact, and its markets and buildings
abundantly stocked with wealth and merchandise of every kind; but of human
beings there was no sign. The flower of Amghishiya's manhood had fallen at
Ullais. Those who remained-mainly women and children and the aged-had left the
city in haste on hearing of the approach of Khalid and had taken shelter in the
neighbouring countryside, away from the route of the Muslim army. The fear
which the name of Khalid now evoked had become a psychological factor of the
highest importance in the operations of his army.
The Muslims took Amghishiya as part of the legitimate spoils of war.
They stripped it of everything that could be lifted and transported, and in
doing so accumulated wealth that dazzled the simple warriors of the desert.
After it had been thoroughly ransacked, Khalid destroyed the city. 3
It is believed that the spoils taken here were equal to all the booty that had
been gained from the four preceding battles in Iraq; and as usual, four-fifths
of the spoils were distributed among the men while one-fifth was sent to
Madinah as the share of the State.
By now the Caliph had become accustomed to receiving tidings of victory
from the Iraq front. Every such message was followed by spoils of war which
enriched the state and gladdened the hearts of the Faithful. But even Abu Bakr
was amazed by the spoils of Amghishiya. He summoned the Muslims to the mosque
and addressed them as follows:
"O Quraish! Your lion has
attacked another lion and overpowered him. Women can no longer bear sons like
Khalid!" 3
This was one of the finest
compliments ever paid to Khalid bin Al Waleed.
These
were difficult days for Azazbeh, governor of Hira. He had heard of the disaster
that had befallen the Persian army, at Kazima, at the River, at Walaja and at Ullais; and it was obvious that Khalid
was marching on Hira. If those large armies, commanded by distinguished
generals, had crumbled before the onslaught of Khalid, could he with his small
army hope to resist? There were no instructions from the ailing Emperor.
Azazbeh. was the administrator of Hira as well as the commander of the
garrison. He was a high official of the realm-a 50,000 dirham-man. The Arab
king of Hira, Iyas bin Qubaisa who has been mentioned earlier, was a king in
name only. Other chieftains who were like princes of the realm also had no
governmental authority except in purely Arab or tribal matters. It fell to
Azazbeh to defend Hira; and as a true son of Persia, he resolved to do his best.
He got the army garrison out of its quarters and established a camp on
the outskirts of Hira. From here he sent his son forward with a cavalry group
to hold the advance of Khalid, and advised him to dam the Euphrates in case
Khalid should think, of moving up in boats. This young officer rode out to a
place where the River Ateeq joined the Euphrates, 12 miles downstream from
Hira. Here he formed a base, from which he sent a cavalry detachment forward as
an outpost to another river junction a few miles ahead, where the Badqala
flowed into the Euphrates, a little above Amghishiya. 5
1. Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidayah wan-Nihayah, Dar Abi Hayyan,
Cairo, 1st ed. 1416/1996, Vol.
6 P. 425.
2. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 563; Amghishiya was also known
as Manishiya.
3. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 563.
4. Ibid.
5.
The River
Ateeq still exists. It is a small river, hardly more than a large stream, and
may have been a canal in those days. Taking off from the area of Abu Sukhair,
the Ateeq flows west of Euphrates, going up to 5 miles away from the main river,
and rejoins the Euphrates a mile above modern Qadisiya (which is 8 miles
south-east of the old, historical Qadisiya). In the latter part of its journey,
this stream is also known as Dujaij. The Badqala was a canal or channel which
joined the Euphrates near Amghishiya (Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 563). In his account
of this operation, Tabari is both confusing and confused, and has got the two
river junctions mixed up.
2
Khalid had now resumed his march on what was to be the last leg of his
journey to Hira. He decided to use the river for transport and had all the
heavy loads of the army placed in boats. As the army advanced on camels and
horses, the convoy of boats, manned and piloted by local Arabs, moved
alongside. Khalid had not gone far, however, when the water level fell and the
boats were grounded. The son of Azazbeh had dammed the river.
Leaving the army stranded at the bank of the Euphrates, Khalid took a
detachment of cavalry and dashed off at a fast pace along the road to Hira.
Before long he arrived at Badqala, to encounter the Persian horse sent forward
by the son of Azazbeh as an outpost. These green Persians were no match for the
Muslim veterans; and before they could organise themselves for defence,
Khalid's horsemen bore down upon them and slaughtered them down to the last
man. Next Khalid opened the dam so that the water flowed once again in the
right channel; and the army resumed its advance by river.
The son of Azazbeh also was not as wakeful as, the situation demanded.
In the belief that his outpost at Badqala was sufficient precaution against
surprise by the Muslims-not for a moment doubting that the outpost would inform
him of the approach of danger-he had relaxed his vigilance. Then suddenly he
was hit by Khalid. Most of the Persians in this group were killed, including
the young commander; but a few fast riders managed to get away to carry the sad
news to Azazbeh.
From these riders Azazbeh heard of the loss of the cavalry group and the
death of his son. From couriers who came from Ctesiphon he heard of the death
of Ardsheer. Heartbroken at the loss of his son and staggered by the news of
the Emperor's death, he found the burden of his responsibilities too heavy for
his shoulders. He abandoned all intentions of defending Hira against Khalid;
and crossing the Euphrates with his army, withdrew to Ctesiphon. Hira was left
to the Arabs.
Khalid continued his advance towards his objective. It is not known when
he abandoned the boats and took to the road, but this must have happened a few
miles downstream of Hira. Expecting stiff opposition at Hira, Khalid decided
not to approach it frontally.
Moving his army round the left, he bypassed Hira from the west and
appeared at Khawarnaq, which was a thriving town 3 miles north-north-west of
Hira. 1
He passed through Khawarnaq and approached Hira from the rear. There was no
opposition to his columns as they entered the city. The inhabitants were all
there. They neither fled nor offered any resistance, and were left unmolested
by the Muslim soldiers as they entered deeper into the city.
Soon the situation became clearer; it was a mixed situation of peace and
war. Hira was an open city; the Muslims could have it. But the four citadels of
Hira, each manned by strong garrisons of Christian Arabs and commanded by Arab
chieftains, were prepared for defence and would fight it out. If Khalid wanted
any of these citadels, he would have to fight for it.
Each of the four citadels had a palace in which the commanding chieftain
lived; and each citadel was known after its palace. The citadels were: the
White Palace commanded by Iyas bin Qubaisa ('King' of Iraq); the Palace of Al
Adassiyin commanded by Adi bin Adi; the Palace of Bani Mazin commanded by Ibn
Akal; and the Palace of Ibn Buqaila commanded by Abdul Masih bin Amr bin
Buqaila.
Against each citadel Khalid sent a part of his army under a subordinate
general. These generals, besieging the citadels in the order in which they have
been mentioned above, were: Dhiraar bin Al Azwar, Dhiraar bin Al Khattab (no
relation of Umar), Dhiraar bin Al Muqarrin and Muthanna. All the generals were
ordered to storm the citadels; but before doing so they would offer the
garrisons the usual alternatives-Islam, the Jizya or the sword. The garrisons
would have one day in which to think it over. The generals moved out with their
forces and surrounded the citadels. The ultimatum was issued. The following day
it was rejected by the Christian Arabs and hostilities began.
1. Nothing remains of Khawarnaq but a mound 600 Yards
west of the Nejef road.
3
The first to launch his attack was Dhiraar bin Al Azwar against the
White Palace. The defenders stood on the battlements and in addition to
shooting arrows at the Muslims, used a catapult to hurl balls of clay at their
assailants. Dhiraar decided to knock out the catapult. Working his way forward
with a picked group of archers, he got to within bow?range of the catapult and
ordered a single, powerful volley of arrows. The entire crew of the catapult
was killed, and many of the enemy archers too. The rest hastily withdrew from
the battlements
Similar exchanges of archery were taking place at the other citadels,
though none of the others had a catapult. It was not long before the four
chieftains asked for terms. They
agreed to nominate one from amongst themselves who would speak for all,
to negotiate directly with Khalid. The man chosen was the chieftain of the
Palace of Ibn Buqaila-Abdul Masih bin Amr bin Buqaila.
Abdul Masih came out of his citadel and walked towards the Muslims. He
walked slowly, for he was a very, very old man, "whose eyebrows had fallen
over his eyes." 1
Abdul Masih was in his time the most illustrious son of Arab Iraq. He
was a prince. Known as the wisest and oldest of men, he enjoyed no official
authority from the Persian court, but was held in reverence by the Iraqis and
wielded considerable influence in their affairs. He also had a sparkling, if
impish sense of humour. He had become a noted figure as early as the time of
Anushirwan the Just. Meeting Anushirwan shortly before the latter's death,
Abdul Masih had warned him that after him his empire would decay.
Slowly the old sage approached Khalid. When he stopped, there began one
of the most unusual dialogues ever recorded by historians.
"How many years have come upon you?" asked
Khalid.
"Two hundred", replied
the sage.
Awed by the great age of the man, Khalid asked, "What is the most wonderful thing that you have seen?"
"The most wonderful thing
that I have seen is a village between Hira and Damascus to which a woman
travels from Hira, with nothing more than a loaf of bread."
He was alluding to the incomparable order and system which existed in
the time of Anushirwan. The meaning of his words, however, was lost on Khalid,
who, concluded that the man must be stupid. Without raising his voice Khalid
remarked, "Have you gained nothing from your great age but
senility? I had heard that the people of Hira were cunning, deceitful
scoundrels. Yet they send me a man who does not know from where he comes."
"O Commander!" protested
the sage. "Truly do I know from
where I come."
"Where do you come from?"
"From the spine of my father!"
"Where do you come from?" Khalid
repeated.
"From the womb of my mother!"
"Where are you going?"
"To my front."
1. Abu Yusuf: p. 143.
4
"The end."
"Woe to you!" exclaimed Khalid. "Where do you stand?"
"On the earth."
"Woe to you! In what are you?"
"In my clothes."
Khalid was now losing his
patience. But he continued his questioning.
"Do you understand me?"
"Yes."
"I only want to ask a few questions."
"And I only want to give you the answers."
Exasperated with this dialogue, Khalid muttered: "The earth destroys its fools, but the intelligent destroy the earth. I suppose your people know you better
than I do."
"0 Commander," replied Abdul Masih with humility,
"it is the ant, not the camel, that knows what is in its hole!"
It suddenly struck Khalid that he was face-to-face with an unusual mind.
Everything that the sage had said fell into place; every answer had meaning and
humour. His tone was more respectful as he said, "Tell me something that you remember."
An absent look came into the eyes of Abdul Masih. For a few moments he
looked wistfully at the towers of the citadels which rose above the rooftops of
the city. Then he said, "I remember
a time when ships of China sailed behind these citadels." He was
mentally again in the golden age of Anushirwan.
The preamble was over. Khalid now came to the point. "I call you to Allah and to Islam",
he said. "If you accept, you will be
Muslims. You will gain what we gain, and you will bear what we bear. If you refuse, then the Jizya. And if you refuse to
pay the Jizya, then I bring a people who desire death more ardently than you
desire life."
"We have no wish to fight
you," replied Abdul Masih, "but we shall stick to our faith. We
shall pay the Jizya."
The talks were over. Agreement had been reached. Khalid was about to
dismiss the man when he noticed a small pouch hanging from the belt of a
servant who had accompanied the sage and stood a few paces behind him. Khalid
walked up to the servant, snatched away the pouch and emptied its contents into
the palm of his hand. "What is
this?" he asked the sage.
"This is a poison that works instantaneously."
"I feared", replied Abdul Masih, "that
this meeting might turnout otherwise than it has. I have reached my appointed
time. I would prefer death to seeing horrors befall my people and my
land." 1
1. This dialogue has been taken from Balazuri: (p.
244) and Tabari (Vol. 2, pp. 564-6).
5
In the end of May 633 (middle of Rabi-ul-Awwal, 12 Hijri) the terms of
surrender were drawn up. A treaty was signed. The citadels opened their gates
and peace returned to Hira. The objective given by the Caliph had been taken
after four bloody battles and several smaller engagements. Khalid led a mass
victory prayer of eight rakats . 1
According to the treaty, the people of Hira would
pay the Muslim State 190,000 dirhams every year. The pact included certain supplementary
clauses: Hira would give the Muslim army one saddle (the army was one saddle
short!), 2
the people of Hira would act as spies and guides for the Muslims. And then
there was the clause about an Arab princess!
One day at Madinah the Holy Prophet was sitting in the company of some
of his followers, talking of this and that. The subject turned to foreign
lands, and the Prophet remarked that soon the Muslims would conquer Hira.
Thereupon one Muslim, a simple, unlettered man by the name of Shuwail, 3
said eagerly, "O Messenger of Allah!
When we have conquered Hira may I
have Kiramah bint Abdul Masih?"
Kiramah, the daughter of Abdul Masih, was a princess. The people of
Arabia had heard of her as a breathtaking beauty-a woman more beautiful than
any other in existence. The Prophet laughed as he replied, "She shall be yours?"
4
Hira was now conquered. As Khalid's troops came to hear of his talks
with Abdul Masih and the preparations to draw up the terms of surrender,
Shuwail, who was serving under Khalid, approached the Sword of Allah. "O Commander!" he said. "When Hira surrenders may I have Kiramah bint Abdul Masih? She was promised to me
by the Messenger of Allah."
Khalid found it difficult to believe that the Prophet had promised a
princess of the house of Abdul Masih to this simple fellow. "Have you any witnesses?" he
asked. "Yes, by Allah!" replied Shuwail, and
brought witnesses whose testimony proved the veracity of the man's statement. Khalid then included this point as a clause
in the pact: Kiramah bint Abdul Masih would be given to Shuwail!
The women of the house of Abdul Masih wailed in distress when they were
given the devastating news. Was a princess who had lived all her life in
splendour and refinement to be handed over to a crude Arab of the desert? What
made the situation ludicrous was that Kiramah was an old woman of 80. She had
once been the leading beauty of the day, but that was a long time ago.
The princess herself solved the problem. "Take me to him", she said. "This fool must have heard
of my beauty when I was young, and thinks that youth is eternal." 5 Accompanied by a maid, she left the Palace of Ibn Buqaila.
Excited by visions of amorous delight, Shuwail awaited his prize. Then
she stood before him. The poor man's shock and dismay made a pathetic sight as
he looked at the lined face. He was left speechless.
The princess broke the embarrassed silence. "Of what use is an old woman to you? Let me go!"
Now Shuwail saw his chance of making her pay for her freedom. "No," he replied, "not except on my terms."
"And what are your terms? State your
price."
"I am not the son of the
mother of Shuwail if I let you go for less than a thousand dirhams."
The
shrewd old woman assumed a look of alarm. "A
thousand dirhams!" she exclaimed.
1. A unit of prayer.
2. Balazuri: p. 246.
3.
Tabari:
Vol. 2, p. 569. According to Balazuri, however, this man's name was Khuraim bin
Aus. (p. 245).
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid.
6
"Yes, not a dirham less."
Quickly the princess handed over 1,000 dirhams to the exulting Arab and
returned to her family.
Shuwail rejoined his comrades, many of whom were more knowledgeable than
he. Bursting with pride he told them the story: how he had released Kiramah,
but made her pay through the nose-1,000
dirhams!
He was quite unprepared for the laughter which
greeted his boastful account. "1,000
dirhams!" his friends exclaimed. "For Kiramah bint Abdul Masih you
could have got much, much more."
Bewildered by this remark, the simple Arab replied,
"I did not know that there was a sum
higher than a thousand!" When
Khalid heard the story he laughed heartily, and observed, "Man intends one thing, but Allah intends another." 1
Once Hira was his, Khalid turned to the subjugation of other parts of
Iraq, starting with the nearer districts. He wrote identical letters to the
mayors and elders of the towns, offering them the usual alternatives-Islam, the
Jizya or the sword. All the districts in the vicinity of Hira had the good
sense to submit; and pacts were drawn up with the chiefs and mayors, laying down
the rate of Jizya and assuring the inhabitants of Muslim protection. These
pacts were witnessed by several Muslim officers, including Khalid's brother,
Hisham, who served under him in this campaign.
Meanwhile the affairs of Persia were going from bad , to worse. The
Persians were split over the question of the succession to the throne. In
opposition to Khalid, they were
united, but this was a sterile unity, offering no positive results. With
the military affairs of the Empire in disarray, Bahman had assumed the role of
Commander-in-Chief, and was working feverishly to put the defences of Ctesiphon
in order against a Muslim attack which he was certain would come. Bahman aimed
at nothing more ambitious than the defence of Ctesiphon; and in this he was being
realistic, for over the rest of the region west of the Lower Tigris the
Persians had no control.
Over this region the Arab horse was now supreme. Khalid, having crushed
four large Persian armies, knew that there was no further threat of a
counter-offensive from Ctesiphon, and that he could venture into Central Iraq
in strength. He made Hira his base of operations and flung his cavalry across
the Euphrates. His mounted columns galloped over Central Iraq up to the Tigris,
killing and plundering those who resisted and making peace with those who
agreed to pay the Jizya. For the command of these fast-moving columns he used
his most dashing generals Dhiraar bin Al Azwar, Qaqa, Muthanna. By the end of
June 633 (middle of Rabi-ul-Akhir 12 Hijri) the region between the rivers was
all his. There was no one to challenge his political and military authority.
Along with military conquest Khalid organised the administration of the
conquered territories. He appointed officers over all the districts to see that
the Jizya was promptly paid and that the local inhabitants provided
intelligence about the Persians and guides for the movement of Muslim units.
Khalid also sent two letters to Ctesiphon, one addressed to the court and the
other to the people. The letter to the Persian court read as follows:
In the name of Allah, the
Beneficent, the Merciful. From Khalid bin Al Waleed to the kings of Persia.
Praise be to Allah who has
disrupted your system and thwarted your designs. And if He had not done so it
would have been worse for you. Submit to our orders and we shall leave you and
your land in peace; else you shall suffer subjugation at the hands of a people
who love death as you love life. 2
The letter addressed to the people was in much the same words, with the
added promise of Muslim protection in return for the payment of the Jizya. Both
the letters were carried by local Arabs of Hira and delivered at Ctesiphon.
There was no reply!
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 569; Balazuri: p. 245.
2. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 572.
Chapter 24
(Anbar
and Ain-ut-Tamr)
1
After Ain at-Tamr, when Ayadh wrote to Khalid
requesting reinforcements, Khalid wrote
back,
"Wait a while: there will come to you mounts
Carrying
lions in shining armour,
Battalions followed by battalions."1
The portion of Central Iraq lying between the Euphrates and the Tigris,
below Ctesiphon, was now under Muslim control. The inactivity of the Persians
confirmed Khalid's belief that Ctesiphon was no longer in a position to
interfere with his operations, let alone pose
a threat to his base at Hira or his communications with the desert.
Hence Khalid turned his attention to the north, where his forces had not yet
ventured. There were two places which offered a likelihood of opposition-Anbar
and Ain-ut-Tamr, both manned by sizable Persian garrisons and Arab warriors who
would resist the advance of the Muslims. Both were governed by Persian
officers. (See Map 10.)
Khalid decided to take Anbar first. This was an ancient fortified town
and commercial centre to which trade caravans came from Syria and Persia. It
was also famous for its large granaries. At the end of June 633 (middle of
Rabi-ul-Akhir, 12 Hijri) Khalid marched from Hira with half his army (about
9,000 men), leaving behind a strong garrison at Hira and several detachments in
Central Iraq. Moving along the west bank of the Euphrates, he crossed the river
somewhere below Anbar. As his scouts moved out eastwards to keep the approaches
from Ctesiphon under observation, he moved the army to Anbar and laid siege to
the town. The Muslims found that the town was protected not only by the walls
of the fort, but also by a deep moat filled with water. The moat was within
close bow?range of the wall so that those attempting to cross it would have to
face accurate fire from archers on the walls. The bridges over the moat had
been destroyed at the approach of the Muslims. 2
Anbar was the chief town of the district of Sabat, which lay between the
two rivers west of Ctesiphon. In Anbar resided the governor of Sabat, a man
named Sheerzad who was known more for his intellect and learning than his
military ability. Sheerzad was now faced with the task of defending the fort
against a Muslim army with the forces under his command-the Persian garrison
and a large number of Arab auxiliaries in whom apparently he had little faith.
The day after his arrival Khalid moved up to examine the defences of the
fort. On top of the wall he saw thousands of Persians and Arabs standing around
carelessly in groups, looking at the Muslims as if watching a tournament.
Amazed at this sight, Khalid remarked, "I
see that these people know nothing about war." 2
He collected 1,000 archers-the best of his marksmen-and explained his
plan. They would move up casually to the edge of the moat with bows ready, but
arrows not fitted. At his command they would instantly fit arrows to their bows
and fire salvo after salvo at the garrison. "Aim
at the eyes", Khalid told the archers. "Nothing but the eyes!" 4
The detachment of archers moved towards the fort. The crowds standing on
the wall gaped at the archers, wondering what they would do next. When the
archers had got to the moat, Khalid gave the order, and 1,000 swift missiles
flew across the moat, followed by another 1,000 and yet another. In a few
seconds the garrison had lost 1,000 eyes. A clamour went up in the town: "The eyes of the people of Anbar are
lost!" As a result of this action the Battle of Anbar is also known as
the Battle of the Eyes. 5
When Sheerzad heard of the misfortune that had befallen the garrison, he
sent Khalid an offer to surrender the fort if suitable terms were agreed upon.
Khalid rejected the offer; the surrender would have to be unconditional.
Sheerzad half-heartedly decided to continue resistance.
Khalid resolved to storm the fort. The wall would have to, be scaled,
but this was not too difficult a task. The chief problem was crossing the moat,
which was deep and wide. There were no boats available nor material with which
to make boats or rafts; and the Arab of the desert was no swimmer. Khalid
decided to make a bridge of flesh and bone.
6 P. 428.
2.
Nothing
remains of Anbar except some mounds 3 miles north-west of the present Faluja
and about a mile from the Euphrates. One can still pick up pieces of old
pottery on the mounds which cover an area half a mile square. According to
Yaqut (Vol. 1, p. 367), the Persians called this town Fairoz Sabur.
3. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 575.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid.
For the assault he selected a point where the moat was, narrowest, near
the main gate of the fort. He placed his archers in a position from which they
could shoot at enemy archers on that part of the wall which overlooked the
crossing site, and gave them the task of preventing the enemy archers from
shooting at the moat.
Khalid then ordered the collection of all the old and weak camels of the
army. These jaded animals were led forward to the edge of the moat and under
the covering fire provided by the Muslim archers, were slaughtered in twos and
threes and thrown into the moat. Rapidly the pile of carcasses rose until it
formed a firm though uneven bridge above the level of the water. Then a group
of Khalid's warriors, on receiving his command, rushed on to the bridge of
flesh and bone and crossed over to the far side of the moat.
As these warriors prepared to scale the wall, the gate of the fort
opened and a body of Persians sallied out to drive the Muslims into the moat.
There was some vicious fighting between the two groups, but the Muslims
succeeded in repulsing this counterattack; and the Persians, fearing that the
Muslims might get into the fort by the gate, withdrew hastily and closed the
gate behind them. All this while the Muslim archers kept shooting at the Persian
and Arab archers on the wall, making it impossible for them to interfere with
the bridge-building and the crossing operation.
Khalid was about to order the scaling of the wall when an emissary of
Sheerzad appeared on the gate and delivered another offer from the governor: he
would surrender the fort if the Muslims would let him and the Persians depart
in safety. Khalid took another look at the wall. He could see that it's scaling
and the subsequent fighting inside the fort would not be easy. So he told the
envoy that he would agree to the terms provided the Persians left all their
possessions behind.
Sheerzad was only too glad to be allowed to get away, and accepted
Khalid's terms with relief. The next day the Persian soldiers and their
families departed for Ctesiphon and the Muslims entered the fort. The Christian
Arabs laid down their arms and agreed to pay the Jizya. This happened in the
second week of July 633 (end of Rabi-ul-Akhir, 12 Hijri).
Over the next few days, Khalid received the submission of all the clans
living in the neighbourhood of Anbar.
Sheerzad journeyed with the Persian garrison to Ctesiphon, where he was
severely rebuked by Bahman. Like any ineffective commander, Sheerzad blamed his
troops-in this case the Christian Arabs. "I
was among a people who have no sense," he lamented, "and whose roots are among the Arabs." 1
Khalid appointed an administrator over Anbar, and then once again set
out with the army. He recrossed the Euphrates and marched south. As he neared
Ain-ut-Tamr, he found a purely Arab army deployed across his path in battle
array.
Ain-ut-Tamr was a large town surrounded by date plantations, and is
believed to have been named after its dates: Ain-ut-Tamr means Spring of Dates.
2
Garrisoned by Persian soldiers and Arab auxiliaries, this town was in a much
stronger position than Anbar to oppose the advance of Khalid. The Persian
commander of Ain-ut-Tamr was Mahran bin Bahram Jabeen who was not only an able
general but also a wily politician. The Persian garrison of Ain-ut-Tamr was
larger, and the Arabs here belonged to the proud, fierce tribe of Namr which
considered itself second to none. And there were Christian Arab clans which
joined the Namr to put up a united front against the Muslims. The commander of
all the Arabs was a renowned chief, Aqqa bin Abi Aqqa.
When Arab scouts brought word of the Muslims marching from Anbar in the
direction of Ain-ut-Tamr, Aqqa went to the Persian commander. "Arabs know best how to fight Arabs." he said. "Let me deal with Khalid."
Mahran nodded agreement. "True",
he observed wisely. "You know better
how to fight Arabs. And when it comes
to fighting non-Arabs you are like us." 3
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 575.
2.
Ain-ut-Tamr,
of which nothing remains but a spring, was located 10 miles west-north-west of
the present Shisasa. Shisasa is also called Ain-ut-Tamr these days, but the
original Spring of Dates was situated as indicated above.
3. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 576.
3
Aqqa was flattered by the compliment. Seeing that
his words were having the desired effect, Mahran continued: "You go and fight Khalid. And if you
should need help, we shall be waiting
here to come to your assistance."1
A number of Persian officers were standing beside Mahran during this
exchange. When Aqqa had left, they questioned their commander: "What made you talk like that to this
dog?"
"Leave this matter to me", Mahran replied. "I plan
what is best for you and worst for them. If these Arabs win, the victory shall
be ours too. If they lose, they will at least have weakened the army of Khalid,
and we shall then fight when our enemy is tired and we are fresh." 2
The Persians remained at Ain-ut-Tamr while the Arabs, moved up about 10
miles on the road to Anbar. There, Aqqa deployed his Arab army for battle.
When Khalid arrived to face Aqqa, he was surprised to find an
exclusively Arab force arrayed against him; for so far all his battles in Iraq
had been fought against mixed forces of Persians and Arabs. However, he
deployed his army with the usual centre and wings and placed himself in front
of the centre, accompanied by a strong bodyguard. Across the battlefield, in
front of the Arab centre, stood Aqqa. Khalid decided that he would take Aqqa
alive.
When forming up the Muslims, Khalid had instructed the commanders of the
wings to engage the enemy wings on his signal but not to attack with any great
violence-only enough to tie down the enemy wings before he launched the attack
of the centre. Now Khalid gave the signal, and the Muslim wings moved forward
and engaged the opposing wings. For some time this action continued. Aqqa was
left perplexed about why the Muslim centre was not attacking. Then Khalid,
followed by his bodyguard, charged at Aqqa.
The bodyguard engaged the Arab warriors who stood near Aqqa, while
Khalid and Aqqa began to duel. Aqqa was a brave and skilful fighter, prepared
to give as good as he took; but to his dismay he soon found himself overpowered
and captured by Khalid. When the soldiers in the Arab centre saw heir commander
captive, many of them surrendered and the rest of the centre turned and fled.
Its example was followed by the wings; and the Arab army, leaving many of its
officers in Muslim hands, retreated in haste to Ain-ut-Tamr.
The Arabs arrived at the fort to find the Persians gone. Mahran had sent
a few scouts to watch the battle and report its progress. As soon as they saw
the Arabs turn their backs to Khalid, these scouts galloped back to inform
Mahran of the Arab defeat. Without wasting a moment Mahran led his army out of
Ain-ut-Tamr and marched off to Ctesiphon. Discovering that they had been
abandoned, the Arabs rushed into the fort, closed the gates, and prepared
rather uncertainly for a siege.
The Muslims arrived and besieged the fort. Aqqa and the prisoners were
paraded outside the fort, so that the defenders could see that their commander
and comrades were helpless captives. This had an unnerving effect on the
defenders, who called for a surrender on terms, but Khalid rejected the call.
There would be no terms; they could surrender unconditionally and place
themselves at his mercy. The Arab elders debated the situation for a while, and
then decided that an unconditional surrender involved less risk than fighting
on; for in the latter case their chances of survival would be slim indeed. In
the end of July 633 (middle of Jamadi-ul-Awwal, 12 Hijri) the defenders of
Ain-ut-Tamr surrendered to Khalid.
On the orders of Khalid, warriors who had defended
the fort and those who had fought the Muslims on the road to Anbar were
beheaded. 3
These included the chief Aqqa bin Abi Aqqa. The remainder were made captive,
and the wealth of Ain-ut-Tamr was taken and distributed as spoils of war.
In Ain-ut-Tamr there was a monastery in which the Muslims found 40
boys-mainly Arabs-who were being trained for the priesthood. They were all
taken captive. Among these captives there was a boy called Nusair, who was
later to have a son called Musa, and Musa would become famous as the Muslim
governor of North Africa and the man who launched Tariq bin Ziyad into Spain.
After a few days spent in dealing with problems of organisation and
administration, Khalid prepared to return to Hira. He was about to set out when
he received a call for help from Northern Arabia. After a brief consideration
of this request, Khalid changed the direction of his march and gave his men a
new destination-Daumat-ul-Jandal.
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 576.
2. Ibid: p. 577.
3. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 577.
(Daumat-al-Jandal
Again)
After the episode of Daumat-ul-Jandal, Khalid returned to Hirah, whose
inhabitants received him with singing and amusement. He heard one of them say
to his companion,
"Pass
by us, for this is a day when evil is happy."1
Daumat-ul-Jandal
was one of the large commercial towns of Arabia, widely known for its rich and
much-frequented market. It was also an important communication centre, a
meeting point of routes from Central Arabia, Iraq and Syria. In Part 1 of this
book, I have described how Khalid came to Daumat-ul-Jandal during the Prophet's
expedition to Tabuk and captured Ukaidar bin Abdul Malik, the master of the
fort. Ukaidar had then submitted and sworn allegiance to the Prophet, but
subsequent to the operations of Amr bin Al Aas and Shurahbil bin Hasanah in the
apostasy, he had broken his oath and decided to have nothing more to do with
Madinah. Now he ruled over a principality of Christians and pagans.
At about
the time when Khalid set off from Yamamah for the invasion of Iraq, Abu Bakr
had sent Ayadh bin Ghanam to capture Daumat-ul-Jandal and once again bring the
northern tribes into submission. The Caliph probably intended to send Ayadh to
Iraq, to assist Khalid, after this task had been completed. Ayadh arrived at
Daumat-ul-Jandal to find it strongly defended by the Kalb-a large Christian
Arab tribe inhabiting this region and the eastern fringe of Syria. He deployed
his force against the southern face of the fort, and the situation that now
developed was, from the military point of view, absurd. The Christian Arabs
considered themselves to be under siege, but the routes from the northern side
of the fort were open. The Muslims, engaged closely against the fort,
considered themselves so heavily committed that they could not break contact.
According to early historians both sides were under siege! The operations considered
mainly of archery and sallies by the garrison of the fort, which were
invariably repulsed by the Muslims. This state of affairs continued for several
weeks until both sides felt equally tired and equally hurt by the stalemate.
Then one day a Muslim officer said to Ayadh, "In certain circumstances wisdom is better than a large army. Send to Khalid for
help." 2 Ayadh
agreed. He wrote Khalid a letter explaining
the situation at Daumat-ul-Jandal and seeking his help. This letter reached
Khalid as he was about to leave Ain-ut-Tamr for Hira.
It did not take Khalid long to make up his mind. The situation on the
Iraq front was now stable and he had able lieutenants to deal with the
Persians, should they decide to launch a counter-offensive from Ctesiphon. He
sent a letter to Qaqa at Hira telling him that he would act as Khalid's deputy
and command the front in his absence. He left a garrison at Ain-ut-Tamr. And
with an army of about 6,000 men, he left Ain-ut-Tamr the following day to join
Ayadh. Ahead of him sped Ayadh's messenger, carrying Khalid's letter, which
contained nothing more than the following in verse:
Wait a
while for the horses come racing.
On their
backs are lions brandishing polished swords;
Regiments
in the wake of regiments.
The movement of Khalid was discovered by the defenders of
Daumat-ul-Jandal a good many days before his arrival, and there was alarm in
the fort. With their present strength they could hold off the Muslim force
under Ayadh, but they would not have a chance if Khalid's army also took the
field against them. In desperate haste they sent couriers racing to
neighbouring tribes. The Christian Arab tribes responded spiritedly to the
appeal for help. Contingents from several clans of the Ghassan and the Kalb
joined the defenders of the fort, many of them camping under the fort walls
because of the insufficient room within This put Ayadh in a delicate situation,
and he prayed for the early arrival of Khalid.
The Christian Arab forces were led by two great chiefs: Judi bin' Rabi'a
and Ukaidar. The only chief who had any personal experience of dealing with
Khalid was Ukaidar, and this man had been ill at ease ever since he heard of
the march of Khalid from Ain-ut-Tamr.
When the clans gathered at Daumat-ul-Jandal, Ukaidar called a conference
of the tribal chiefs. "I know more
about Khalid than anyone else", he said. "No man is luckier than he. No man is his equal in war. No people face Khalid in battle, be they
strong or weak, but are defeated. Take my advice and make peace with him."
3
1. Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidayah wan-Nihayah, Dar Abi Hayyan,
Cairo, 1st ed. 1416/1996, Vol.
6 P. 429.
2. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 578.
3. Ibid
But they spurned his advice and determined to fight it out with Khalid.
Ukaidar, however, had by now completely lost his nerve. He could not bring
himself to face another encounter with the Sword of Allah, and one night he
slipped out of the fort and set off on the road to Jordan. But it was too late.
Khalid's army had just arrived and one of his mounted detachments, under Asim
bin Amr, intercepted and captured the fleeing chief.
Again Ukaidar stood before Khalid. If he hoped that memories of the
peaceful ending of their last encounter would kindle a spark of kindness in the
heart of Khalid, he was mistaken. In Khalid's mind the situation could not be
clearer: Ukaidar had broken his oath of allegiance; he was a rebel. Khalid
ordered the execution of Ukaidar, and the sentence was carried out without
delay. This was the end of Ukaidar bin Abdul Malik, prince of the Kinda, master
of Daumat-ul-Jandal.
The following day Khalid took Ayadh under command and incorporated his
detachment into his own army. He deployed Ayadh's men on the south of the fort
to block the Arabian route; positioned part of his army of Iraq to the east, the
north and the west of the fort, covering the routes to Iraq and Jordan; and
kept the remainder back as a strong reserve. Khalid appreciated that at present
the fort was strongly manned and to storm it in its present state would prove a
costly operation. He therefore decided to wait, in the hope that the defenders,
tiring of the siege, would sally out to fight him in the open. Then he could
inflict the maximum damage upon them and storm the fort after the garrison had
been weakened. He accordingly held his forces some distance back from the fort.
With the departure of Ukaidar the entire Christian Arab army had come
under the command of Judi bin Rabi'a. Judi waited for the Muslims to make the
first move, but the Muslims remained inactive. When some time had passed and
Judi saw that the besiegers were making no attempt to close up on the fort, he
became impatient for a clash with
Khalid. Consequently he ordered
two sallies. One group would attack Ayadh on the Arabian route while the other,
a large group comprising his own clan, the Wadi'a, operating under his direct
command, would attack Khalid's camp to the north.
Ayadh
drove back the Arabs who came out to attack him. Leaving behind many dead, they
hastily returned to the fort and closed the gate. This group was lucky. It had
only had to face an inexperienced general like Ayadh bin Ghanam and men who
were not of the calibre of the hardened veterans of Khalid.
The other and larger group-the clan of Wadi'a operating under Judi-came
out at the same time as the group against Ayadh, and made for Khalid, who stood
back from the fort and deployed his army for battle. Seeing no move from
Khalid's side, Judi became bolder. He formed up his clan for battle and
advanced to meet Khalid. The two forces were now very close, and Judi imagined
that he would send the Muslims, reeling from the battlefield.
Then suddenly Khalid struck at
Judi with the utmost violence and speed.
The Arabs
never knew just what hit them. In minutes they had collapsed like a house of
cards. Judi was captured along with hundreds of his clansmen, while the rest,
losing all cohesion and order, fled in panic towards the fort. The Muslims were
not just pursuing them; they were with them, among them, all over them. If the
first to reach the gate of the fort was a Christian Arab, the second was a
Muslim. The Arabs who had remained in the fort saw a horde rushing towards the
gate of which at least half was Muslim. They closed the gate in the face of
their comrades, and the clan of Wadi'a which had sallied out with Judi was
locked out. Hundreds were made prisoner by the Muslims. The rest perished-some
in the short violent battle and the rest in the pursuit to and the fighting at
the gate. It was with bitterness that they recollected the counsel of Ukaidar. Such
indeed was Khalid! But now it was too late.
The first part of Khalid's plan had been accomplished. He next moved the
army close to the fort to let the defenders see that there was no possibility
of escape, and then called upon the garrison to surrender, but the garrison
refused to comply.
3
Khalid had Judi and his captive clansmen paraded near the fort for all
to see. Then, under the horrified gaze of the defenders, Judi and the captives
were beheaded. But this, instead of breaking the spirit of the defenders of
Daumat-ul-Jandal, as Khalid had hoped, hardened their determination to fight to
the last.
The siege
continued for a number of days. Then one day Khalid stormed the fort. The
defenders put up such resistance as they could, but against the superb,
battle-conditioned troops of Khalid they never had a chance. Most of the
garrison was slaughtered, but women and children and many youths were taken
captive. This happened in about the last week of August 633 (middle-of
Jamadi-ul-Akhir, 12 Hijri).
Khalid had always been attracted by beautiful
women. And he appears to have had an especial fondness for the womenfolk of the
chiefs who fought him. He purchased the lovely daughter of Judi and kept her as
a slave!
Khalid spent the next few days in
settling the affairs of Daumat-ul-Jandal. Then he set off
for Hira, taking Ayadh with him
as a subordinate general. He would return to find the situation in Iraq
somewhat altered, for the Persians were on the warpath again.
1
"We
attacked them with mounted troops, and they saw
The
darkness of death around those leafy gardens.
By
morning they said we were a people who had swarmed
Over the
fertile country from rugged Arabia."
[
Al-Qa'qa' bin Amr, commander in Khalid's army]1
Khalid
had not gone from Ain-ut-Tamr many days when word of his departure arrived at
the Persian court. It was believed that Khalid had returned to Arabia with a
large part of his army; and Ctesiphon breathed more easily. After a few days,
this mood of relief passed and was replaced by an angry desire to throw the
Muslims back into the desert and regain the territories and the prestige which
the Empire had lost. The Persians had resolved not to fight Khalid again; but
they were quite prepared to fight the Muslims without Khalid.
Bahman set to work. By now he had organised a new army, made up partly
of the survivors of Ullais, partly of veterans drawn from garrisons in other
parts of the Empire, and partly of fresh recruits. This army was now ready for
battle. With its numerous raw recruits, however, it was not of the same quality
as the armies which had fought Khalid south of the Euphrates. Bahman decided
not to commit this army to battle until its strength had been augmented by the
large forces of Christian Arabs who remained loyal to the Empire. He therefore
initiated parleys with the Arabs.
The
Christian Arabs responded willingly and eagerly to the overtures of the Persian
court. Apart from the defeat at Ain?ut-Tamr, the incensed Arabs of this area
also sought revenge for the killing of their great chief, Aqqa. They were
anxious, too, to regain the lands which they had lost to the Muslims, and to
free the comrades who had been captured by the invaders. A large number of
clans began to prepare for war.
Bahman divided the Persian forces into two field armies and sent them
off from Ctesiphon. One, under Ruzbeh, moved to Husaid, and the other, under
Zarmahr, moved to Khanafis. For the moment these two armies were located in
separate areas for ease of movement and administration, but they were not to
proceed beyond these locations until the Christian Arabs were ready for battle.
Bahman planned to concentrate the entire imperial army to either await a Muslim
attack or march south to fight the Muslims at Hira.
But the
Christian Arabs were not yet ready. They were forming into two groups: the
first, under a chief named Huzail bin Imran, was concentrating at Muzayyah; the
second, under the chief Rabi'a bin Bujair, was gathering at two places close to
each other-Saniyy and Zumail (which was also known as Bashar). These two
groups, when ready, would join the Persians and form one large, powerful army.
It was
while these preparations were in progress that Qaqa, commanding the Iraq front
in the absence of Khalid, took counter-measures. He pulled back some of the
detachments which Khalid had sent across the Euphrates and concentrated them at
Hira. And he sent two regiments forward-one to Husaid and the other to
Khanafis. The commanders of these regiments were ordered to remain in contact
with the Persian forces at these places, to delay the advance of the Persians,
should they decide to push forward, and to keep Qaqa informed of Persian
strengths and movements. These regiments moved to their respective objectives
and made contact with the Persians. In the mean time, Qaqa kept the rest of the
army in readiness to take the field.
This was the situation that greeted Khalid on his arrival at Hira in the
fourth week of September 633 (middle of Rajab, 12 Hijri). The situation could
assume dangerous proportions, but only if the four imperial forces succeeded in
uniting and took offensive action against Hira. Any plan that the Muslims
adopted would have to cater for two strategical requirements: (a) to prevent
the concentration of the imperial forces into one great, invincible army, and
(b) to guard Hira against the enemy in one sector while the Muslims operated
against the enemy in the other.
Khalid decided to fight the operation in a way which had now become
typical of him. He would take the offensive and destroy each imperial force
separately in situ. With this strategy in mind, he divided the Muslim garrison
of Hira into two corps, one of which he placed under Qaqa and the other under
Abu Laila. Khalid sent them both to Ain-ut-Tamr, where he would join them a
little later, after the troops who had fought at Daumat-ul-Jandal had been
rested.
A few days later the entire Muslim
army was concentrated at Ain-ut-Tamr, except for a small garrison left under
Ayadh bin Ghanam to look after Hira. The army was now organised in three corps
of about 5,000 men each, one of which was kept in reserve. Khalid sent Qaqa to
Husaid and Abu Laila to Khanafis with orders to destroy the Persian armies at
those places. The two generals were to take command of the Muslim regiments
already deployed in their respective sectors. It was Khalid's intention to
fight both Persian armies speedily as well as simultaneously, so that neither
could get away while the other was being slashed to pieces. But this was not to
be; for the march to Khanafis was longer than to Husaid, and Abu Laila failed
to move his forces with sufficient speed to make up for this difference.
Meanwhile Khalid remained with his reserve corps at Ain-ut-Tamr to guard against
any offensive movement from Saniyy and Zumail towards Hira.
1. Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidayah wan-Nihayah, Dar Abi Hayyan,
Cairo, 1st ed. 1416/1996, vol.
6 p. 426.
Qaqa marched to Husaid, and Abu Laila followed him out of Ain-ut-Tamr on
his way to Khanafis, both proceeding on separate routes to their objectives. As
Qaqa neared his objective, Ruzbeh, the Persian commander at Husaid, sent an
appeal for help to Zarmahr, the Persian commander at Khanafis. Zarmahr would
not send his army to Husaid, because he had to have Bahman's permission before
he could move the army from Khanafis. But he went to Husaid in person to see
things for himself, and arrived just in time to take part in the Battle of
Husaid, which was fought about the middle of October 633 (first week of Shaban,
12 Hijri).
As soon as Qaqa arrived at Husaid, he deployed his corps and launched it
against the Persian army, which was much larger in strength. Ruzbeh was slain
by Qaqa. Zarmahr also stepped forward with a challenge which was accepted by a
Muslim officer who killed him. There was no dearth of courage among the
Persians, but they were nevertheless roundly defeated by Qaqa and driven from
the battlefield. Leaving behind a large number of dead, the Persians retreated
in haste to Khanafis, where they joined the other Persian army, now under the
command of another general, named Mahbuzan.
The Persian survivors of Husaid arrived at Khanafis only a short while
before the corps of Abu Laila. Reports of the Muslims' approach had been
received. Being a sensible general, Mahbuzan drew the right lesson from the
defeat at Husaid and decided to avoid battle with the Muslims. Setting off at
once from Khanafis, he moved to Muzayyah where he joined the Arab force
gathered under the command of Huzail bin Imran. So Abu Laila arrived at
Khanafis to find the Persians gone. He occupied Khanafis and informed Khalid of
the departure of the Persians for Muzayyah.
At Ain-ut-Tamr Khalid heard of the defeat of the Persian army at Husaid.
He next heard of the movement of the second Persian army, along with the
remnants of the first, from Khanafis to Muzayyah. This move left Ctesiphon
uncovered and vulnerable to attack, though it would no doubt have a garrison
for local defence. Muzayyah now contained the strongest concentration of
imperial forces. The Arab concentrations at Saniyy and Zumail, on the other
hand, ceased to be a threat to Hira, as with the reverses suffered by the
Persians at Husaid and Khanafis, these Arabs were not likely to venture out of
their camps with aggressive intentions.
Khalid now had a choice of three objectives: the imperial capital, the
imperial army at Muzayyah, and the Arab force at Saniyy and Zumail. He
considered the possibility of attacking Ctesiphon, but discarded it for two
reasons. Firstly, according to Tabari, he feared the displeasure of the Caliph
which he would earn by an attack on Ctesiphon. 1 Abu Bakr apparently did
not wish it. Secondly, and this was a purely military consideration, by
advancing to Ctesiphon he would expose his flank and rear to the strong forces
at Muzayyah. These forces could then either attack him in the rear while he was
engaged with Ctesiphon, or advance and capture his base at Hira, severing his
communications with the desert.
Of the two remaining objectives, Khalid selected Muzayyah. The other was
a smaller objective and could be dealt with later without difficulty. By now
the exact location of the imperial camp at Muzayyah had been established by
Khalid's agents, and to deal with this objective he designed a manoeuvre which,
seldom practised in history, is one of the most difficult to control and
co-ordinate-a simultaneous converging attack from three directions made at night.
Khalid first issued orders for the move. The three corps would march
from their respective locations at Husaid, Khanafis and Ain-ut-Tamr along
separate routes he had specified between the Euphrates and the Saniyy-Zumail
line, and meet on a given night and at a given hour at a place a few miles
short of Muzayyah. This move was carried out as planned, and the three corps
concentrated at the appointed place. Here Khalid gave orders for the attack. He
laid down the time of the attack and the three separate directions from which
the three corps would fall upon the unsuspecting enemy. He was putting his army
to a severe test of precision; only a highly efficient military machine could
carry out such a finely timed manoeuvre at night.
1. For Khalid's mission is Iraq, see Note 4 on
Appendix B.
3
And so this manoeuvre was carried out. The Persians and the Arabs slept
peacefully, for the last reported locations of the Muslim corps showed them at
a considerable distance and there was no apparent danger of a surprise attack.
This proved to be their last night in Muzayyah. The imperial army knew of the
attack only when three roaring masses of Muslim warriors hurled themselves at
the camp.
In the confusion of the night and the panic of the moment the imperial
army never found its feet. Terror became the mood of the camp as soldiers
fleeing from one Muslim corps ran into another. Thousands were slaughtered. The
Muslims struck to finish this army as completely as they had finished the army
of Andarzaghar at Walaja; but large numbers of Persians and Arabs nevertheless
managed to get away, helped by the very darkness that had cloaked the surprise
attack.
By the time the sun rose over the eastern horizon no, living warrior of
the imperial army remained at Muzayyah.. We do not know the fate of the Persian
general, Mahbuzan, but the Arab commander, Huzail bin Imran, made good his
escape and joined the Arab force at Zumail.
This action took place in the first week of November 633 (fourth week of
Shaban, 12 Hijri). The manoeuvre had worked beautifully; the timing was
perfect!
Among the Arabs who lost their lives at Muzayyah were two Muslims. These
men had travelled to Madinah a short while before the invasion of Iraq and had
met Abu Bakr, accepted, Islam and returned to live among their Christian
clansmen. When Madinah heard of the death of these two Muslims at the hands of
Khalid's army, Umar walked up to the Caliph and angrily denounced what he
called the tyranny of Khalid; but Abu Bakr shrugged it off with the remark: "This happens to those who live among
infidels." 1 Nevertheless, he ordered that blood-money
be paid to their families. As for Khalid, the Caliph repeated his now famous
words: "I shall not sheathe the
sword that Allah has drawn against
the infidels."
From Muzayyah, Khalid turned to Saniyy and Zumail-Saniyy was closer and
thus became the first objective, for which Khalid decided to repeat the
manoeuvre of Muzayyah. His army would operate in three corps as before. From
Muzayyah the corps would march on separate axes and converge for the attack on
Saniyy on a predetermined night and time. Khalid advanced on the direct route
from Muzayyah while the other corps moved wide on his flanks. On the appointed
night and at the appointed time-in the second week of November 633 (first week
of Ramazan, 12 Hijri)-the three corps fell upon the Arab camp at Saniyy. This
time even fewer Arabs survived the slaughter. The women and children and many
youths, however, were spared, and taken captive. The Arab commander, Rabi'a bin
Bujair, also met his death, and his beautiful daughter was captured; but she
was not taken by Khalid. She was sent to Madinah, where she became the wife of
Ali. 2
Khalid was now manoeuvring his army with the effortlessness with which
one might move pieces on a chessboard. Two or three nights after Saniyy he did
the same to Zumail
- three corps attacking from
different directions-and the Arabs at Zumail too were swallowed up by the
earthquake which hit Muzayyah and Saniyy. 3
Once he had disposed of the captives and the booty
taken at Zumail, Khalid turned his steps towards Ruzab, where Hilal, the son of
Aqqa, was gathering more Arab clans to avenge his father's death. But when the
Muslims arrived at Ruzab not a soul was to be seen. At the last moment these
Arabs had decided that further resistance was futile and had melted away into
the desert.
1. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 581.
2. Tabari: Vol. 2, p. 582.
3.
There is
uncertainty about the location of these four battlefields. For an explanation
see Note 6 in Appendix B.
4
Khalid could now sit back and rejoice over his victories. In less than a
month he had crushed large imperial forces in four separate battles covering an
operational area whose length measured 100 miles. He had done this by
exploiting the tremendous mobility of his mounted army, by the use of audacity
and surprise, and by violent offensive action. He had accomplished the mission
given by the Caliph; there was no opposition left for him to crush. The
Persians had ventured out of the imperial capital on hearing of Khalid's
departure from Ain-ut-Tamr, but Khalid had returned and done it again.
Ctesiphon withdrew into its shell.
Several raids were launched by Khalid into the region between the
rivers. Places which had so far not felt the heavy hand of war now echoed to
the tread of Muslim cavalry and
the call of 'Allah is Great!' But the humble masses of Iraq were left
unmolested. These people considered the arrival of the Muslims a blessing; for
they brought order and stability such as had not been known since the golden
years of Anushirwan the Just.
But it was not in Khalid's nature to sit back and take his ease. It was
in his nature to be discontented with past achievements, ever seeking fresh
glory and striving towards distant horizons. The Persian capital seemed
reluctant to slake his thirst for battle by sending more armies against him so
it was a pleasure for Khalid to be reminded that a strong Persian garrison
still existed on the Euphrates at Firaz (near present day Abu Kamal-see Map at
endpaper), which marked the frontier between the empires of Persia and Eastern
Rome. This was the only Persian garrison left west of Ctesiphon; and since he
had been instructed by the Caliph to "fight the Persians", Khalid
decided to eliminate this force also. He marched to Firaz. On arrival here in
the first week of December 633 (end of Ramadhan, 12 Hijri), Khalid found two
garrisons-a Persian and a Roman. These garrisons, representing empires which in
the preceding two decades had fought each other in a long and costly war, now
united to battle the Muslims, and were joined in this purpose by many local
Christian Arab clans.
For more than six weeks nothing happened. The two armies stood and
glared at each other across the Euphrates, the Muslims on the south bank and
the Romans and Persians on the north bank, neither side willing to cross the
river. Then, on January 21, 634 (the 15th of Dhul Qad, 12 Hijri) Khalid was
able to entice the allies across the Euphrates onto his side; and their
crossing was hardly complete when he attacked them with his usual speed and
violence. Thousands of them were slain before the rest found safety in flight.
This was neither a great nor a decisive battle; nor was the enemy force
a very large one, as some early historians have stated. (No Persian strategist
in his senses would leave a powerful garrison in a peaceful frontier town like
Firaz while Central and Western Iraq was being lost and Ctesiphon itself was
threatened.) Its importance lies only in the fact that it was the last battle
in a brilliant campaign.
Khalid spent the next 10 days at Firaz, then, on January 31 634, the
army left Firaz on its way to Hira. For this march it was formed into an
advance guard, a main body and a rear guard; and Khalid let it be known that he
would travel with the rear guard. But as the rear guard filed out of Firaz,
Khalid and a few close friends struck out on their own in a southerly
direction. They were off to Makkah, to perform the Pilgrimage which was due in
a fortnight. This was to be a peaceful adventure; almost an escapade!
The
actual route taken by Khalid is not known. All that is known is that he and his
comrades traversed a trackless waste-a difficult and inhospitable region which
no guides knew and into which even bandits feared to enter. 1
But they made it. At Makkah they performed the pilgrimage inconspicuously to
avoid being recognised. Then they rushed back to Iraq. The speed at which
Khalid and his wild, adventurous comrades travelled can be judged by the fact
that the Muslim rear guard had not yet entered Hira when Khalid rejoined it. He
rode into Hira with the rear guard as if he had been there all the time! Only
the commander of the rear guard had known the secret; but the men did wonder
why Khalid and a few others had shaven heads! 2
Shortly after this adventure, Khalid went out on another. Tiring of the
peace and quiet which now prevailed in Iraq, he decided to lead a raid in
person in the area close to Ctesiphon. Along with Muthanna he raided the
prosperous market of Baghdad and returned laden with spoils.
2. It is traditional for Muslims to shave the head
when they perform the pilgrimage.
5
If Khalid had hoped that he would not be recognised in Makkah, he was
mistaken. He had hardly got back from the raid on Baghdad when he received a
letter from Abu Bakr warning him "not to do it again!" The warning
was accompanied by another great mission: Khalid was to proceed to Syria. The Campaign in Iraq was over. 1
The invasion of Iraq was a splendid success. The Muslims had fought
several bloody battles with Persian armies much larger in size, and they not
only won every battle but also inflicted crushing defeats on the Persians and
their Arab auxiliaries. And the Persian Army was the most fearsome military
machine of the time!
Khalid's strategy in this campaign, and it was one from which he never deviated,
was to fight his battles close to the desert, with his routes to the desert
open in case he should suffer a reverse. The desert was not only a haven of
security into which the Persians would not venture but also a region of free,
fast movement in which he could move easily and rapidly to any objective that
he chose. He did not enter deep into Iraq until the Persian Army had lost its
ability to threaten his routes to the desert.
The Persian military strategy was conditioned by the political necessity
of defending the imperial borders, and this led to their fighting their battles
with the Muslims on the boundary between the desert and the sown, as Khalid
wished. But within this political limitation, they followed a sound course and
planned a massive concentration of strength for battle. Qarin should have
joined Hormuz; Bahman should have joined Andarzaghar; and Ruzbeh and Zarmahr
should have joined the Arab forces at Muzayyah and Saniyy-Zurmail. Had these
combinations taken place, the campaign may have taken an altogether different
course. But they did not take place, thanks to Khalid's fast movement and his
deliberate design to bring the various armies to battle one by one, separating
them from each other in time and space.
The main instruments that Khalid used to make his ambitious manoeuvres
successful were the fighting quality of the Muslims and the mobility of the
army. These he exploited to the limits of human and animal endurance. Though
only part of his army was actual cavalry, the entire army was camel mounted for
movement and could strike at the decisive place and the decisive time as its
commander wished. It could move fast enough to fight a battle at A, and then be
present at B for another battle before the enemy could react.
There is no record of the strength of the Persian forces which faced
Khalid in the various battles, or of the casualties suffered by either side.
Certain casualty figures given for the Persians are probably exaggerated. What
is certain is that they were very large armies and suffered staggering losses,
especially at Walaja, Ullais, Muzayyah and Saniyy-Zumail, where they ceased to
exist as effective fighting forces. The Persian armies that faced Khalid at
Kazima, MaqiI, Walaja and Ullais probably numbered between 30,000 and 50,000
men. An enemy force up to two or three times their strength would not worry
Khalid and his stalwarts. They would take it in their stride. Nor would armies
of this size be too large by Persian standards. (At the Battle of Qadissiyah,
fought three years later, the Persians fielded an army of 60,000 men!) As for
Muslim casualties, considering that
the army remained at a high level of effectiveness throughout the
campaign, they must have been light.
Above all, it was the personality of Khalid that made the invasion of
Iraq possible and successful against such staggering odds. He was the first of
the illustrious Muslim commanders who set out to conquer foreign lands and
redraw the political and religious map of the world. He imposed no hardship upon
his men which he did not bear himself. It was the limitless faith which his
warriors had in the Sword of Allah that made it possible for them to brave such
dangers.
Khalid swept across Iraq like a violent storm. Like a violent storm he
would now dash to Syria and strike the armies of another proud empire-Eastern
Rome.
1. For an explanation of the dates of the battles in
this campaign see Note 7 in Appendix
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