HISTORY OF ISLAM IN SOUTHERN ITALY

The 'Islamic conquest and domination of Sicily', as well as parts of southern Italy, is a process whose origin must be traced back in the general expansion of Islam from the 7th century onwards (see Muslim conquests for more details).

Contents
First attacks
Conquest of Sicily and Southern Italy
Islamic domination of Sicily
Independent Emirate
Decline
Muslims today
The Islamic and Arabic influence
See also
References
Notes

First attacks


The first attacks from Islamic ships to Sicily, then part of the Eastern Roman Empire, occurred in 652: they were Arabs from Syria, led by Mu'àuia ibn-Hodeig (Mu`āwiyah ibn Hudayj) of the Kinda tribe, and remained on the island for several years. The Byzantine exarch of Ravenna Olympius also came to Sicily but were unable to oust the invaders, who returned to Syria after collecting a large amount of booty.
A second expedition occurred in 669. This time the strong, ravaging force consisted of 200 ships from Alexandria. They sacked Syracuse and returned to Egypt after a month of pillaging. After the Umayyad conquest of Africa (complete around 700), attacks from Muslim fleets repeated in 703, 728, 729, 730, 731, 733 and 734, the last two times meeting with a substantial Byzantine resistance.
The first true conquest expedition was launched in 740: in that year the Muslim prince Habib, who participated on the 728 attack, and his son Abdurrahman, after a successful siege of Syracuse, were ready to conquer the whole island when they were called back to Tunisia by a Berber revolt. A second attack in 752 aimed only to sack the city.
In 805 the Imperial patrician of Sicily, Constantine, signed a ten years truce with Ibrahim I ibn al-Aghlab, Emir of Ifriqiya, but this did not prevent other Muslim fleets from other areas of Africa and Spain from attacking Sardinia and Corsica in 806-821. In 812 Ibrahim's son, Abdallah I, sent an invasion force to conquer Sicily. His ships were however first harassed by the intervention of Gaeta and Amalfi, and later a tempest destroyed many of them. However, they managed to conquer the islands of Lampedusa and, in the Tyrrhenian Sea, to ravage Ponza and Ischia. A further agreement between the new patrician Gregorius and the Emir established the freedom of commerce between southern Italy and Ifriqiya. After a further attack by Mohammed ibn-Adballad, cousin of Emir Ziyadat Allah I in 819, no news of subsequent Muslim attack to Sicily are known until 827.

Conquest of Sicily and Southern Italy


The Muslim conquest of Sicily and Southern Italy lasted 75 years. According to some sources, the conquest was spurred by the Byzantine commander on the island, Eufemius, who feared the punishment from Emperor Michael II for a sexual misfit. After a short-lived conquest of Syracuse, during which he was proclaimed emperor, he was compelled by the loyal forces to flee to Africa at the court of Ziyadat Allah. The latter accepted to conquer Sicily, with the promise to leave it to Eufemius in exchange of a yearly tribute, and entrusted its conquest to the 70 years old qadi Asad ibn al-Furat. The Muslim force counted 10,000 infantry, 700 cavalry and 100 ships, reinforced by Eufemius' ships and, after the landing at Mazara del Vallo, knights. A first battle against the Byzantine loyal troops occurred on July 15, 827, near Mazara, resulting in an Aghlabid victory.
Asad subsequently conquered the southern shore of the island and laid siege to Syracuse. After a year of siege, and an attempted mutiny, his troops were however able to defeat a large army sent from Palermo, also backed by a Venetian fleet led by doge Giustiniano Participazio. But when a plague killed much of the Muslim troops, as well as Asad himself, the Muslims retreated to the castle of Mineo. Later they returned to the offensive, but failed to conquer Castrogiovanni (the modern Enna, where Eufemius died) and retreated back to Mazara. In 830 they received a strong reinforcement of 30,000 African and Spanish troops. The Spanish Muslim defeated the Byzantine commander Teodotus in the July-August of that year, But again a plague forced them to return to Mazara and then to Africa. The African Berber units, which had been sent to besiege Palermo, managed to capture it after a year-long siege in the September 831.[1]
Ziyadat Allah sent his cousin on the island in Abu-Fihr in 833. The Byzantines were defeated in the early 834 and in the following year, his troops reaching as far as Taormina. The war dragged on for several years with minor Ahglabid victories, the Byzantines resisting in their strongholds of Castrogiovanni and Cefalù. New troops arrived in the island by the new Emir Al-Aghlab Abu Affan, which occupied Platani, Caltabellotta, Corleone, Marineo and Geraci, granting the Muslim the total control of western Sicily.
In 836 Muslim ships helped Andrew II of Naples, their ally, besieged by Beneventan troops,[2] and with Neapolitan support in 843 Messina was also conquered. In 845 also Modica fell and the Byzantines suffered a crushing defeat near Butera, losing c. 10,000 men. Lentini was conquered in 846. In 847 Bari on the coast of Puglia was dominated by the Arabs. It became its own Emirate and regulated Saracen rule throughout Southern Italy except for Sicily who was its own Emirate also. Bari received great Saracen influence and became a very moorish style city. Ragusa was conquered in 848.
In 851 the governor and general Al-Aghlab Abu Ibrahim, whose rule had been highly appreciated by his new Palermitan and Sicilian subjects, especially if compared to the former Byzatine vessations, died. He was succeeded by Abbas ibn-Fadhl, the ferocious victor of Butera. he started a campaign of ravages against the lands still in Byzantine hands, capturing Butera, Gagliano, Cefalù and, most of all, Castrogiovanni (winter 859). All the Christian survivors from that fortress were executed, children and women sold as slaves at Palermo. The fall of the most important fortress in the island pushed the emperor to send a large army in 859-860, but this was defeated by Abbas, as well as the fleet which had carried it. The Byzantines reinforces led many of the cities subjugated by the Muslim to revolt, and Abbas devoted the years 860-861 to reduce them. Abbas died in 861, replaced by his uncle Ahmed ibn-Jakub and, from February 862, by Abdallah, son of Abbas; the latter was in turn replaced by the Aghlabids with Khafagia ibn-Sofian, who captured Noto, Scicli and Troina. In the summer of 868 the Byzantines were defeated a first time near Syracuse.
More concrete hostilities were resumed in the earlysummer of 877 by the new sultan Jafar ibn-Muhammad, who strongly besieged it. The city fell on May 21 878. The Byzantines now maintained the control of a short stretch of coast around Taormina, while the Muslim fleet attacked Greece and Malta. The latter was however destroyed in a naval battle in 880: for a moment it seemed that the Byzantines could regain Sicily, but new land victories for the Muslims reestablished the situation. A revolt in Palermo against governor Seuàda ibn-Muhammad was soon crushed in 887.
The death of the strong emperor Basil I in 886 also encouraged the Muslim to attack Calabria, where the imperial army was soundly defeated in the summer of 888. However, the first inner revolt was followed by another in 890, mostly spurred by the hostility between Arabs and Berbers. In 892 an emir sent from Ifriqiya by Ibrahim II ibn Ahmad Palermo, but was ousted again a few months later. The prince did not relent, and sent to Sicily another powerful army under his son Abu l-Abbas Abdallah in 900. The Sicilians were defeated at Trapani (August 22) and outside Palermo (September 8), the latter city resisting for another ten days. Abu l-Abbas moved against the remaining Byzantine strongholds, and was also able to capture Reggio Calabria on the mainland on June 10 901.
As Ibrahim was forced to abdicate in Tunis, he decided to led in person the operations in southern Italy. Taormina, the last main Byzantine stronghold in Sicily, fell on August 1 902. Messina and other cities opened their gates to avoid the same massacre.
Ibrahim's army also marched in southern Calabria, besieging Cosenza. Ibrahim died of dysentery on October 24. His grandson stopped the military campaign and returned to Sicily.

Islamic domination of Sicily


At his point, Sicily was almost entirely in control of Aghlabids, with the exception of some minor strongholds in the rugged interior. The population had been increased by the immigration of Muslims from Africa, Asia and Spain, as well as Berbers, who were most concentrated in the southern of the island. The emir in Palermo nominated the governors of the main cities (''qadi'') and those of the less important ones (''hakim''), and the other functionaries. Each city had a council called ''gema'', composed by the most eminent members of the local society, which was entrusted of the care of the public works and of the social order.
The conquered Sicilian population was subjected to the typical discrimination against the Infidel found in most Muslim dominated lands. They were permitted freedom of worship, but only if they accepted the inferior status of a dhimmi. As dhimmi they were subjected to extra taxation -- the jizya (poll tax) and the kharaj (land tax). They were prohibited and/or excused from serving in the military. There were restrictions on repairing or building new churches. The dhimmi could not bear arms or ride a horse and were required to wear distinctive clothes so that they could be easily identified as dhimmi. This subservient position and these additional restrictions could be avoided by converting to Islam. This resulted in the spread of Islam among the inhabitants (whether by honest conviction or economic and societal compulsion). However, many Greek Christian communities managed to survive as dhimmi until the arrival of the Normans -- especially in the hill towns of Northeastern Sicily. These Sicilians generally welcomed the Norman invaders.
The Arabs initiated land reforms which in turn, increased productivity and encouraged the growth of smallholdings, a dent to the dominance of the landed estates. The Arabs further improved irrigation systems. Palermo in the 10th century is the most populous city in Italy, with c. 300,000 inhabitants[3]
A description of the city was given by Ibn Hawqual, a Baghdad merchant who visited Sicily in 950. A walled suburb called the Kasr (the citadel) is the center of Palermo until today, with the great Friday mosque on the site of the later Roman cathedral. The suburb of Al-Khalisa (Kalsa) contained the Sultan's palace, baths, a mosque, government offices and a private prison. Ibn Hawqual reckoned 7,000 individual butchers trading in 150 shops.

Independent Emirate


In 909 the African Aghlabid dynasty was replaced by the Shiite Fatimids. Four years later, the Fatimid governor was ousted from Palermo, the island declaring its independence under the emir Ahmed ibn-Kohrob. His first deed was a failed siege of Taormina, which had been rebuilt by the Christians; he was more successful in 914, when a Sicilian fleet under his son Mohammed destroyed the Fatimid fleet sent to recover the island. The following year, the destruction of another fleet sent against Calabria, and the unset caused by ibn-Kohrob reforms, led to a revolt of the Berbers.
Those captured and hanged ibn-Kohrob, allegedly in the name of the Fatimid caliph al-Mahdi, hoping he would leave them freedom of rule in Sicily. al-Madhi sent instead an army which sacked Palermo in 917. The island was governed by a Fatimid emir for the following 20 years. In 937 the Berbers of Agrigento revolted again but, after two sounding successes, were decisively beaten at the gates of Palermo. This did not prevent the revolt to extend to the capital itself; an army sent by the new caliph al-Qa'im besieged Agrigento twice, until it fell on November 20 940. The revolt was totally suppressed in 941, with much of the prisoners sold as slaves and the governor Khalil boasting to have killed 600,000 people in his campaigns.
After suppressing another revolt, in 948 the Fatimid caliph Ismail al-Mansur named Hassan al-Kalbi as emir of the Island. As his charge became soon hereditary, his emirate became ''de facto'' independent from the African government. In 950 Hassan waged war to the Byzantines in southern Italy, reaching up to Gerace and Cassano. A second Calabrian campaign in 952 resulted in the defeat of the Byzantine army; Gerace was again besieged, but in the end emperor Constantine VII was forced to accept to have the Calabrian cities to pay a tribute to Sicily.
In 956 the Byzantine replied reconquering Reggio and invading Sicily. A truce was signed in 960. Two years later a revolt in Taormina was bloodily suppressed, but the heroic resistance of the Christians in Rametta led the new Emperor Nikephoros II Phokas to send an army of 40,000 Armenians, Thracians and Slavs under his nephew Manuel, who captured Messina in October 964. On 25 October a fierce battle between the Byzantines and the Kalbids resulted in a defeat for the former, Manuel himself killed in the fray, as well as 10,000 of his men.
The new emir Abu al-Qasim (964-982) launched a series of attacks against Calabria in the 970s, while the fleet under his brother attacked the coasts of Apulia, capturing some strongholds. As the Byzantines were busy against the Fatimids in Syria and the Bulgars in Macedon, the German emperor Otto II decided to intervene. The allied German-Lombard army was however defeated in 982 in the Battle of Stilo. However, as al-Qasim himself had been killed, his son Jabir al-Kalbi prudentially retreated to Sicily without exploiting the victory.
The emirate lived the peak of its splendour under the emirs Jafar (983-985) and Yusuf al-Kalbi (990-998), both patron of arts. The latter's son Ja'far was instead a cruel and violent lord, who expelled the Berbers from the island after an unsuccessful revolt against him. Ja'far's power did not survive another uprising in Palermo in 1019, and was exiled to Africa, being replaced by his brother al-Akhal (1019-1037).
With the support of the Fatimids, al-Akhal defeated two Byzantine expedition in 1026 and 1031. His attempt to raise a heavy tax to pay his mercenaries caused a civil war. al-Akhal asked support to the Byzantines, while his brother abu-Hafs, leader of the rebels, received troops from the Zirid emir of Ifriqiya, al-Muizz ibn Badis, commanded by his son Abdallah. The operation were initially favourable to the Byzantine-Kalbids, but when the Byzantines returned to Calabria al-Akhal

Decline


In 1038 a Byzantine army under George Maniaces crossed the strait of Messina. This included a corps of Normans which saved the situation in the first clash against the Muslim from Messina. After another decisive victory in the summer of 1040, Maniaces halted his march to lay siege to Syracuse. Despite his conquest of the latter, Maniaces was removed from his position: the subsequent Muslim counter-offensive reconquered all the cities captured by the Byzantines.
The Norman Robert Guiscard ("the cunning"), son of Tancred, invaded Sicily in 1060. The island was split between three Arab emirs, and the sizeable Christian population insurrected against the ruling Muslims. One year later Messina fell, and in 1072, Palermo was taken by the Normans. The loss of the cities, each with a splendid harbor, dealt a severe blow to Muslim power on the island. Eventually all of Sicily was taken. In 1091, Noto in the southern tip of Sicily and the island of Malta, the last Arab stongholds, fell to the Christians. By the eleventh century Muslim power in the Mediterranean had began to wane.[4]
A large scale Muslim rebellion broke out in 1190, triggering organized resistance and systematic reprisals and marked the final chapter of Islam in Sicily. The “Muslim problem” characterized Hohenstaufen rule in Sicily under Henry VI (1194-97) and his son Frederick II (1197-1250). In the 1220s, in order to stamp out the Muslim rebellion, Frederick adopted a programmatic extermination of Sicilian Islam, marked by expulsion and forced deportation to the Apulian town of Lucera. The annihilation of Sicilian Islam was completed by the late 1240s, when the final deportations to Lucera took place.

Muslims today


A community of Muslims, especially fishermen from Tunisia, has deep roots in the history of the town of Mazara del Vallo, on the south-western coast of Sicily.
During the 1970s, a prosperous Italian ecomony saw immigration of Muslims from Jordan, Syria and Palestine.

The Islamic and Arabic influence


Ibn Hawqal, the eminent Arab traveler, visited Sicily in year 972 and described the city of Palermo in his book ''Al-Masalik wal Mamlik'' as "the city of the 300 mosques". This Islamic and Arabic identity of the island was still preserved even 100 years after the arrival of the Normans as described by the Spanish-Arab geographer Ibn Jubair who landed in the island after returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca in 1184.
To his surprise, Ibn Jubair enjoyed a very warm reception by the Norman Christians. He was further surprised to find that even the Christians spoke Arabic, that the government officials were still largely Muslim, and that the heritage of some 200 previous years of Muslim rule of Sicily was still intact[5]

See also



Islam in Italy

Emirate of Sicily

Kalbid

Aghlabid

Fatimid

Norman conquest of southern Italy

History of Italy

History of Sicily

Muslim conquests

Ottoman-Habsburg wars

Umayyad conquest of North Africa

List of Ottoman sieges and landings

References



Storia dei Musulmani di Sicilia, , M., Amari, Le Monnier, 2002,

The Shorter Cambridge Medieval History, , C. W., Previte-Orton, Cambridge University Press, 1971,

Notes


1. Previte-Orton (1971), vol. 1, pg. 370
2. Previte-Orton (1971), pg. 370
3. Overview of Italy in the late 9th century at cronologia.leonardo.it
4. Previte-Orton (1971), pg. 507-11
5. AramcoWorldMagazine


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