It is impossible to say when the first Bashmurian revolt in the region broke out. Although there had been Coptic revolts in Egypt as early as the seventh century, most were quickly crushed. Only the Bashmurians were able to resist for long periods, inflict heavy losses on the government and endure long sieges. Of the nine recorded Egyptian revolts between 693/694 and 832, only the Bashmurian revolts required the personal intervention of the caliphs.
720 According to
al-Kindī, during the governorship of
Bishr ibn Ṣafwān (April 720 – April 721), the
Byzantine navy landed at
Tinnis. Ibn Aḥmar, the son of the local ruler, Maslama al-Murādī, was killed. The northern Delta area does not appear to have been under Umayyad control at the time, and may have been controlled by rebels.
749 By 749, the Bashmurians were in open revolt. The leader of the rebels is called Abū Mina by al-Kindi and Mina ibn Bāqīra (Menas, son of Apacyrus) in the
History of the Patriarchs of Alexandria. It is not unusual for a Coptic name beginning with
apa- to be interpreted as a
kunya with
Abū in Arabic. This revolt began in Shubra near
Samannūd. According to
Sāwīrus ibn al-Muqaffaʿ, multiple land and sea campaigns by the governor
Ḥawthara ibn Suhayl had failed to subdue them. The failure of the governor to crush the revolt prompted the Caliph
Marwān II to come in person with an army from
Damascus. Although he proposed an armistice, the Bashmurians rejected it and the army was sent against them from Damascus. At this juncture, Ḥawthara took the Coptic patriarch,
Michael I, hostage to
Rosetta, and threatened to have him killed if the Bashmurians did not lay down their arms. The Bashmurians attacked Rosetta and sacked it, massacring its Arab inhabitants. There was an offensive as far as
Pelusium against an Umayyad army. In response, Marwān ordered the pillaging and razing of Coptic villages and monasteries throughout the Delta. His campaign was a failure and in 750 he was overthrown in the
Abbasid Revolution. The Abbasids granted an amnesty to the Bashmurians and exempted them from taxes for their first two fiscal years. Abū Mina was killed during the revolt.
767 A general revolt of the Delta took place in 767. The Bashmurians (called Bashruds in the Arabic sources) joined with Arab settlers against the Abbasid government. Local officials were killed, and the governor
Yazīd ibn Ḥātim sent a force against them, but it was defeated and forced to retreat to
al-Fusṭāṭ.
831–832 of al-Maʾmūn The rebellion of 767 had never been brought properly under control when the Caliph
al-Maʾmūn sent his
Sogdian general
al-Afshīn to the Delta in 830, 831 or 832. The rebels in the eastern Delta and in
Alexandria were crushed, but the Bashmurians successfully resisted al-Ashfīn's efforts. They manufactured their own weapons. The Sogdian induced the patriarch
Joseph I to send letters and bishops entreating the Bashmurians to come to terms, but the Bashmurians abused the bishops. When this failed, al-Ashfīn urged the caliph to come in person. The caliph brought with him
Dionysius of Tel Mahre,
patriarch of Antioch, to negotiate with the rebels. The offer of a general amnesty in return for surrender and resettlement was rejected, an indication of the importance the rebels attached to geography. The negotiations failed, al-Maʾmūn launched a large attack from Shubra near Samannūd, guided by natives from Shubra and Tandah, resulting in high losses on both sides. When al-Maʾmūn offered an armistice, the rebels accepted. Their success was short-lived. Many armed men were executed, women and children end up deported to
Iraq or sold as slaves in the slave markets of Damascus. The region of Bashmur was burned and systematically destroyed to prevent further uprisings. According to some historians, the crushing of the rebellion in 832 demoralized the Coptic Christian population. The Christian Copts were heavily pressured to convert to Islam. ==Legacy==