In July 1234, Sa’îd ibn Hakam took over power through an armed
coup and negotiated a new treaty with James I, in which he ruled alone with the title of Ra’îs of Manùrqa. This is believed to be the only time in the history of the island that it was an independent political entity, although tributary to the Kingdom of Majorca. Under his harsh rule, Manûrqa became an Islamic law-abiding structured state. It is said that he executed by beheading those Muslims found drunk. He constructed a strong political apparatus in
Madina al Jazira (modern
Ciutadella) with a council of ministers, secretaries and clan representatives, and a small military force consisting of mercenaries. His political shrewdness allowed for the survival of this Islamic entity while other Muslim territories fell to the Christian Reconquista:
Cordoba (1236), his hometown Tavira (1242), and
Seville (1248). Only the
Kingdom of Granada remained independent, although vassal to the Kingdom of Castille. At the death of James I (1276), the Crown of Aragon was split in two: the Kingdom of Majorca (the Balearic Islands and counties of Roussillon and Cerdagne) went to his son
James and the Crown of Aragon (The
Principality of Catalonia and the kingdoms of
Aragon and
Valencia) to his other son
Peter. Manûrqa remained tributary to James II. This division would ultimately mean the fall of Manûrqa. Sa’îd ibn Hakam died in 1282 in Madina al Jazira, and his son
Abû 'Umar ibn Sa'îd became the next and last Ra’îs of Manûrqa. Sa’îd ibn Hakam was also an important Islamic intellectual figure of the 13th century, learned in Islamic law and medicine, philologist, grammarian and poet. He managed a great library at Madina al Jazira. Some samples of this collection are kept in the library of
El Escorial. ==Footnotes==