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The queen-mother Shaghab and the harem in reign of Al-Muqtadir 18 Caliph of Abbasid Caliphate.
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The queen-mother Shaghab and the harem in reign of Al-Muqtadir 18 Caliph of Abbasid Caliphate.
Asslamoalaikum sisters brothers friends and elders, we started describing about Abbasid Caliphate and its caliphs biography, reign, style of reign, incidents and others, today In this informative islamic historical video, we are describing The queen-mother Shaghab and the harem in reign of Al-Muqtadir 18 Caliph of Abbasid Caliphate. so friends please be with us upto end of this video, and also watch our all videos regarding Islamic history to you know what was going on during our muslim history espcially Abbasid Caliphate, so lets start..
Al-Muqtadir was the first underage Caliph in Muslim history, and as such during the early years of his reign, a regency council (al-sada, "the masters") was set up, comprising, according to al-Tanukhi, his mother Shaghab, her personal agent (qahram?na) Umm Musa, her sister Khatif, and another former concubine of al-Mu'tadid's, Dastanbuwayh. Saghab, usually known simply as al-Sayyida ("the Lady"), utterly "dominated her son to the exclusion of the other women in his harem, including his wives and concubines"; al-Muqtadir would spend much of his time in his mother's quarters. As a result, government business came to be determined in the private quarters of the sovereign rather than the public palace dominated by the bureaucracy, and Saghab became one of the most influential figures of her son's reign, interfering in the appointments and dismissals of officials, making financial contributions to the treasury, and undertaking charitable activities. Indeed, a common feature of all accounts by medieval sources is that "mentions of al-Muqtadir are indissolubly tied to mentions not only of his viziers, but also of his female household", and this was one of the main points of criticism for subsequent historians. Thus the contemporary historian al-Mas'udi condemned al-Muqtadir's reign as one where "those who had power were women, servants and others", while the Caliph himself "did not concern himself with State affairs", leaving his officials to govern the state. Likewise, the 13th-century chronicler Ibn al-Tiqtaqa, regarded al-Muqtadir as a "squanderer" for whom "matters concerning his reign were run by women and servants, while he was busy satisfying his pleasure". Shaghab in particular is usually portrayed as a "rapacious and short-sighted schemer" by later historians.
Shaghab spent most of her life confined in the harem, where she had her own parallel bureaucracy, with her own kutt?b devoted to both civil and military affairs. Her power was such that when her secretary Ahmad al-Khasibi was appointed vizier in 925 due to her own and her sister's influence, he regretted the appointment, since his post as k?tib to the queen-mother was more beneficial to himself. The most important members of her court were the stewardesses or qahram?na, who were free to exit the harem and act as her agents in the outside world. These women wielded considerable influence, especially as intermediaries between the harem and the court; their influence with Shaghab could lead to the dismissal of even the viziers. The first incumbent was one Fatima, who drowned in the Tigris when her boat was caught in a storm. She was followed by Umm Musa, a descendant of one of the Abbasid clan's junior branches. Her plotting for her favourites, the corruption of her family, and her hostility towards the "good vizier" Ali ibn Isa al-Jarrah, who was dismissed due to her machinations in 917, are underlined in the chronicles of the period. However, when she married her niece to Abu'l-Abbas, a grandson of al-Mutawakkil (r. 847–861), her rivals were quick to accuse her of aspiring to overthrow the Caliph and place her nephew on the throne. In 922/3, she was arrested and replaced by Thumal, who tortured Umm Musa, her brother, and her sister, until they had revealed where her treasure—reportedly valued at one million gold dinars—was hidden. Thumal enjoyed a reputation for cruelty; her first master, Abu Dulaf, had used her to punish servants who displeased him. Another qahram?na, Zaydan, was the antithesis of Thumal: her house was used to jail several senior officials after they were dismissed, but it was a comfortable captivity, and she often provided refuge to those persecuted by their political rivals.
We pray to Allah alimighty to read,understand and follow Quran wa hadith, Ameen, So friends tomorow, we will be described, Biography and Reign of Al-Qahir Billah 19th Caliph of Abbasid calphate.
Allah Hafiz
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