In the
pre-Islamic era al-Zarah was an important commercial center along the Arabian coast. By the early seventh century al-Bahrayn had come to be dominated by the
Arab tribes of
Abd al-Qays,
Bakr ibn Wa'il, and
Tamim, but the town itself was also likely host to a considerable population of non-Arab residents. As with the rest of region, al-Zarah was subject to
Persian control during this period, and it was the seat of a
Sassanid marzban or margrave. Following the death of
Muhammad in 632, al-Zarah briefly emerged as a local center of anti-Muslim resistance. During the
ridda wars in the caliphate of
Abu Bakr, the Persian governor
Azad Peroz and a number of
Magians refused to pay the
jizya and fortified themselves in the town, which was then subjected to a siege by
al-Ala ibn al-Hadrami. The garrison held out until the Muslims managed to cut off the water supply, at which point it came to terms and agreed to hand over to al-Ala one-third of the town, one-third of its gold and silver, and half of its outlying parts in c. 634. At the end of the ninth century al-Zarah was governed by one al-Hasan ibn al-Awwam, a member of the
Azd, but a short time later it was burnt down during the
Qarmatian conquest of al-Bahrayn. The town subsequently lapsed into obscurity, and by the turn of the thirteenth century the historian
Majd al-Din ibn al-Athir considered it to no longer be a place name. ==Notes==