:''For the Abbasid Caliph, see
Az-Zahir.
''
'ˤAlī az-Zāhir' (
20 June 1005 –
13 June 1036) (
Arabic: الظاهر بالله) was the Seventh
Caliph of the
Fātimids (
1021 -
1036). Az-Zāhir assumed the
Caliphate after the disappearance of his father
Tāriqu l-Ḥakīm bi Amr al-Lāh.
Governance under the Seventh Caliph
At first, the government was conducted by Ḥakīm's sister
Sitt al-Mulk, but after her death in
1023, a group of her favourites took power.
Under this regime, the Fātimid state slipped into crisis - in Egypt, famine and plague lead to anarchy in the years
1023-
1025, and in
Palestine and
Syria, there was a revolt amongst the
Bedouin (
1024 -
1029). The coalition of rebels was fragmented by Fātimid diplomacy, after which General
Anushtegin ad-Dizbiri was able to defeat it militarily.
Meanwhile, in
1028 one of the governing circle,
ˤAlī ibn Ahmad Jarjarai, was able to eliminate his colleagues and take over the office of
vizir, which he managed to retain until
1045. He enjoyed good relations with the
Byzantine Empire, even though the suzerainty over
Aleppo was constantly disputed, occasionally coming to arms. To improve relations with
Byzantium and the
Christian subjects of the realm, the rebuilding of the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre, destroyed in
1009, was authorised under his caliphate.
During the reign of az-Zāhir, the
Druze sect, which had enjoyed the patronage of his father, was heavily persecuted and driven into mountainous regions of
Syria and
Lebanon.
Death and succession
After ˤAlī died of the plague on
13 June 1036, his son became the Eighth Caliph under the throne name of
al-Mustansir.