Early years Lineage and appearance Abd al-Rahman was born in
Córdoba, on 18 December 890. His year of birth is also given as 889 and 891. He was the grandson of
Abdullah ibn Muhammad al-Umawi, seventh independent
Umayyad emir of
al-Andalus. His parents were Abdullah's son Muhammad and Muzna (or Muzayna), a Christian concubine. His paternal grandmother was also a Christian, the royal
infanta Onneca Fortúnez, daughter of the captive king
Fortún Garcés of Pamplona. Abd al-Rahman was thus nephew in the half-blood of queen
Toda of Pamplona. He is described as having "white skin, blue eyes and attractive face; good looking, although somewhat sturdy and stout. His legs were short, to the point that the stirrups of his saddle were mounted just one palm under it. When mounted, he looked tall, but on his feet he was quite short. He dyed his beard black." He had reddish-blond hair, which he reportedly dyed black to appear more "Arab".
Harem youth Muhammad was assassinated by his brother Al-Mutarrif, who had allegedly grown jealous of the favour Muhammad had gained in the eyes of their father Abdallah. Al-Mutarrif had accused Muhammad of plotting with the rebel
Umar ibn Hafsun, and Muhammad had been imprisoned. According to some sources, the emir himself was behind Muhammad's fall, as well as Al-Mutarrif's death in 895. Abd al-Rahman spent his youth in his mother's harem. Al-Mutarrif's sister, known as
al-Sayyida ("the Lady"), was entrusted with his education. She made sure that Abd al-Rahman's education was conducted with some rigour. It was claimed that he had learned and known the local
Mozarabic language.
Accession to throne Emir Abdallah died at the age of 72. Despite four of his sons (Aban, Abd al Rahman, Muhammad and Ahmad) being alive at the time of his death, all of them were passed over for succession. Abdallah instead chose as his successor his grandson, Abd al-Rahman III (the son of his first son). This came as no surprise, since Abdallah had already demonstrated his affection for his grandson in many ways, namely by allowing him to live in his own tower (something he did not allow for any of his sons), and allowing him to sit on the throne on some festive occasions. Most importantly, Abdallah gave Abd al-Rahman his ring, the symbol of power, when Abdallah fell ill prior to his death. Abd al-Rahman succeeded Abdallah the day after his death, 16 October 912. Abd al-Rahman moved to subdue them by means of a mercenary army that included Christians. He first had to suppress the rebel Umar ibn Hafsun. On 1 January 913 an army, led by the eunuch Badr, conquered the fortress of
Écija, at some from the capital. All the city's fortifications were destroyed, aside from the citadel, which was left as the residence of the governor and a garrison for the emirati troops. In the following spring, after sixty-five days of meticulous preparations, Abd al-Rahman personally led an expedition to the south of his realm. His troops were able to recover the
Kūras (provinces) of
Jaén and
Granada, while a cavalry detachment was sent to free
Málaga from ibn Hafsun's siege. He also obtained the capitulation of
Fiñana (in the modern
province of Almería), after setting fire to its suburbs. Subsequently, he moved against the castle of
Juviles in the
Alpujarras. After devastating the surrounding countryside to deprive the castle of any resources, he encircled it. Finding it difficult to bombard with catapults, he ordered the construction of a platform where his
siege engines could be mounted to greater effect, and cut the water supply. The Muwallad defenders surrendered after a few days: their lives, apart from fifty-five die-hards who were beheaded, were spared in exchange for their allegiance to the emir. The campaign continued in a similar vein, lasting for a total of ninety days. Abd al-Rahman forced the defeated Muwallad to send hostages and treasures to Córdoba, in order to secure their continued submission. During the first year of his reign, Abd al-Rahman took advantage of the rivalries between the
Banu Hajjaj lords of
Seville and
Carmona to force them to submit. He initially sent a special corps (
hasam) under Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Hudayr, governor of Écija, to Seville, to obtain their submission. This attempt failed, but gained him the support of Muhammad ibn Ibrahim ibn Hayyay, lord of Carmona, and a cousin of the Sevillan lord, Ahmad ibn Maslama. When the latter was surrounded by Umayyad troops, he sued for help to Ibn Hafsun, but the latter was defeated by the besiegers and returned to Bobastro. Abd al-Rahman next went after the forts in the provinces of Elvira,
Granada, and
Jaén, all of which were either directly or indirectly controlled by Hafsun.
The Levente and Algarve rebels The continued expeditions against the Hafsunids did not distract Abd al-Rahman III from the situation in other regions in al-Andalus, which recognized him only nominally, if not being in open revolt. Most of the loyal governors of the cities were in a weak position, such as the governor of
Évora, who could not prevent an attack by the king of Galicia (and future king of León),
Ordoño II, who captured the city in the summer of 913, taking back a sizable booty and 4,000 prisoners and massacring many Muslims. The caliphate was thought only to belong to the Emperor who ruled over the sacred cities of
Mecca and
Medina, and his ancestors had until then been content with the title of emir. But the force of this tradition had weakened over time; and the title increased Abd al-Rahman's prestige with his subjects, both in Iberia and Africa. and silver dirhams, replacing the "al-Andalus" title with his name. In his new role as caliph, he achieved the surrender of
Ibn Marwan of Badajoz in 930 as well as the surrender of the Banu Dānis of Alcácer do Sal. On the southern front, to counter the increasing Fatimid power in North Africa, abd al-Rahmad ordered the construction of a fleet based in
Almeria. The caliph helped the
Maghrawa Berbers conquer
Melilla (927),
Ceuta (931) In the end he was able to create a protectorate covering the northern and central Maghreb, supporting the
Idrisid dynasty; the Caliphate's influence in the area disappeared after a Fatimid offensive in 958, after which abd al-Rahman kept only the strongholds of Ceuta and Tangiers.
War with the Christian kingdoms of the north Even before al-Andalus was firmly under his rule, he had restarted the war against King
Ordoño II of León, who had taken advantage of the previous troublesome situation to capture some boundary areas and menace the Umayyad territory. In 917 the then emir had sent a large army under his general Ahmad ibn Abi Abda against León, but this force was destroyed at the
Battle of San Esteban de Gormaz in September of that year. Recognizing he had underestimated the power of Ordoño II, in 920 Abd al-Rahman mustered another powerful army to reclaim the territories lost after the previous campaign. He captured the forts of
Osma and
San Esteban de Gormaz. The succession crisis which struck León after Ordoño II's death in the same year caused hostilities to cease until
Ramiro II gained the throne in 932; a first attempt by him to assist the besieged rebels in Toledo was
repelled in 932, despite the Christian king capturing
Madrid. In 934, after reasserting supremacy over Pamplona and
Álava, Abd al-Rahman forced Ramiro to retreat to
Burgos, and forced the Navarrese queen
Toda, his aunt, to submit to him as a vassal and withdraw from direct rule as regent for her son
García Sánchez I. In 937 Abd al-Rahman conquered some thirty castles in León. Next he turned to Muhammad ibn Hashim al-Tugib, governor of
Zaragoza, who had allied with Ramiro but was pardoned after the capture of his city. Despite early defeats, Ramiro and García were able to crush the caliphal army in 939 at the
Battle of Simancas, and almost kill Abd al-Rahman, A 13-year-old Christian was martyred after rejecting both the Caliph's sexual advances and conversion to Islam. Abd al-Rahman had the boy tortured and dismembered. The martyr was later canonised as
Saint Pelagius of Córdoba). Abd al-Rahman spent the rest of his years in his new palace outside Córdoba. He died on 15 October 961 and was succeeded by his son
al-Hakam II. ==Legacy==