Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Harashi

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BranchAbbasid Army
RankGeneral
Commands
Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Harashi
AllegianceAbbasid Caliphate
BranchAbbasid Army
RankGeneral
Commands
Conflicts
  • Abbasid–Byzantine wars
  • Suppression of the Kharijite rebellions

Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Harashi (Arabic: يحيى بن سعيد الحرشي) was an eighth-century military commander and official for the Abbasid Caliphate. He served as the governor of several provinces during his career, including Egypt, Arminiyah and Mosul.

The sources give differing details of Yahya's name and origins. Historians such as al-Ya'qubi and Yazid ibn Muhammad al-Azdi call him "Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Harashi,"[1] while al-Tabari omits the patronymic and merely refers to him as "Yahya al-Harashi."[2][3] Egyptian authors such as al-Kindi and Ibn Taghribirdi, on the other hand, describe him "Yahya ibn Dawud al-Kharsi,"[4] but Orientalists Eduard von Zambaur and Patricia Crone consider the latter form to be a likely corruption of his actual name.[5]

Crone identifies Yahya as a descendant of Sa'id ibn Amr al-Harashi, an Arab general and governor of Khurasan for the Umayyad Caliphate.[6] Al-Kindi, providing a variant background, claims that Yahya was descended from a foreign father and a mother who was the aunt of the king of Tabaristan, and that he and his brothers were at one time slaves of the Khurasani commander Ziyad ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Qushayri.[7] Ibn Taghribirdi, writing much later, mentions that he was considered to be a member of the "people of Khurasan" or of those of Nishapur.[8]

Career

Notes

References

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