Under the Islamic prophet
Muhammad, beginning in 622, and the first three caliphs,
Abu Bakr (),
Umar () and
Uthman (), Medina served as the capital of the
early Muslim state, which by Uthman's time came to rule over an empire spanning
Arabia, most of the Persian
Sasanian Empire and the
Byzantine territories of
Syria and
Egypt. The capital was moved to
Kufa in
Iraq by the fourth Rashidun caliph, Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law
Ali (), during the
First Muslim Civil War. Ali's rival for the caliphate,
Mu'awiya ibn Abi Sufyan, the governor of
Syria, won the war and made
Damascus the capital of the
Umayyad Caliphate, which he founded in 661.
Political and pious opposition to Yazid The hereditary succession of Mu'awiya's son,
Yazid, in 680 was an unprecedented act in Islamic politics. It was a point of contention among the people of Medina, especially the eminent Muslim leaders of the Hejaz. One of them,
Husayn, a son of Ali and grandson of Muhammad, left Medina to lead a revolt against Yazid in Iraq. He was slain alongside his band of about seventy followers at the
Battle of Karbala by the forces of the Umayyad governor
Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad; Yazid is alleged to have put the head of Husayn on display in Damascus. In 680, Yazid dismissed his cousin
al-Walid ibn Utba ibn Abi Sufyan from the governorship of Medina for having failed to prevent Husayn and the other major opponent to his rule,
Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr, a grandson of Abu Bakr, from leaving Medina. Al-Walid's replacement, the Umayyad
Amr ibn Sa'id al-Ashdaq, failed to capture Ibn al-Zubayr, who took refuge in the
Kaaba in
Mecca, or extract from him the
oath of allegiance to Yazid. Al-Ashdaq mobilized a troop of Medinans enrolled in the army, as well as (sing. ; non-Arab, Muslim freedmen or clients) of the Umayyad clan, to assault Ibn al-Zubayr, but many of the recruited Medinans were reticent to participate and paid others to fight in their place. Ibn al-Zubayr defeated this force, and partly as a consequence, Yazid dismissed al-Ashdaq and reappointed al-Walid ibn Utba in August 681. Feigning an attempted reconciliation with the caliph, Ibn al-Zubayr requested that Yazid replace al-Walid ibn Utba with a milder governor. Yazid acceded, installing his young and politically inexperienced cousin
Uthman ibn Muhammad ibn Abi Sufyan in December 682. Most of the Medinans, and many in the wider Muslim community, sympathized with Ibn al-Zubayr amid general uncertainty about the stability of Umayyad rule and the prospect of Ibn al-Zubayr coming to power. Reports of impious behavior by Yazid, including entertainment by singing girls and a pet monkey, contributed to prevailing attitudes in Medina of his unsuitability as caliph. The Medinans mainly consisted of the
Ansar (native Medinans who had hosted and allied with Muhammad after his
emigration from Mecca in 622) and the
Muhajirun (Muhammad's early supporters who had emigrated with him). The Muhajirun were predominantly from the
Quraysh, the tribe to which Muhammad, Ali, and the Umayyads all belonged. At the time of the opposition to Yazid, the Medinans were mostly the children of these two factions, which collectively represented Islam's first military generation, and felt threatened at the potential loss of the inherited military pensions brought about by Umayyad fiscal reforms. The reforms called for pensions to be given only in exchange for active military service. To reconcile with the Medinans, Yazid requested they send a delegation to his court in Damascus. Uthman ibn Muhammad organized the Medinan embassy. Yazid attempted to win over the delegates by lavishing them with gifts and money. This proved fruitless when the delegates returned and incited the people of Medina with accounts detailing Yazid's scandalous lifestyle. The most vociferous critic among the delegates was
Abd Allah ibn Hanzala. He declared that he and his sons would fight against Yazid should others not join him, and though Yazid respected him, he would use the gifts the latter gave him against the caliph. Ibn al-Zubayr took control of Mecca in September 683 and allied with Ibn Hanzala in opposition to Yazid. The leaders of the Medinan opposition dismissed counsel from Yazid's messengers and friends in Damascus to avoid rebellion as attempts to undermine the unity of the Medinans. Prominent exceptions to this united bloc included the
Alids (family of Ali),
Abd Allah ibn Umar, son of the second caliph, and the companion of Muhammad
Abu Barza. They all considered the anti-Umayyad opposition in the Hejaz to be fighting for power and wealth rather than for a just and pious cause.
Economic and social grievances Mu'awiya had acquired extensive properties and agricultural estates in Medina from its inhabitants. These lands were referred to as in the sources, a term usually reserved for conquered lands that became state property, but in the case of Medina meant acquired lands that became the personal domains of the caliph. According to reports cited by the 9th-century historian
Ibn Qutayba, the people of Medina alleged that Mu'awiya purchased the lands at a hundredth of their value during hunger and desperation. The 9th-century historian
al-Ya'qubi held that the properties were confiscated. The people of Medina considered the acquisitions illegitimate and damaging to their economic interests. Mu'awiya launched cultivation and irrigation projects on the lands and derived considerable returns from dates and wheat. To meet the workforce needs for cultivation and maintenance, Mu'awiya employed numerous , consisting of war captives from the conquered provinces, including many skilled laborers. The were loyal to their patron, in this case, Mu'awiya and later Yazid. The of the Umayyads in Medina were numerous, and the sources record several instances of tensions involving them and the people of Medina. Yazid inherited the estates and of his father. The dispossessed landowners of Medina demanded the restitution of their ownership rights from Yazid. The historian
Meir Jacob Kister asserts the Medinan rebellion emanated from "the conflict between the owners of estates and property in Medina and the unjust Umayyad rulers who robbed them of their property". ==Prelude==