Battles of Ajnadayn and Fahl In the spring of 634, the prominent veteran commander of the Ridda wars
Khalid ibn al-Walid was directed by Abu Bakr to leave his campaigning in the desert frontier of Iraq and join the Muslim armies in Syria. He embarked on an unconventional
march across the Syrian Desert, including six days through a waterless trek. He managed the trek by increasing his camels' water intake, sealing their mouths to prevent them from eating, and slaughtering them for water as needed by his troops. He bested pro-Byzantine Arabs from the
Bahra tribe in the vicinity of
Palmyra. Afterward, on 24 April 634, he landed upon a group of pro-Byzantine Ghassanid Arabs celebrating
Easter at the Marj Rahit meadow north of Damascus. His troops proceeded to raid the
Ghouta gardens around the city. They then rendezvoused with Muslim forces positioned near
Bosra, the capital of
Arabia Province and a center of trade in the
Hauran region south of Damascus which historically provided the nomadic Arabs with oil, wine and grain. Khalid was appointed to the supreme command of the Muslim armies in Syria by Abu Bakr or by the Muslim commanders already present. The Muslims besieged and captured Bosra in May, facing token resistance by its defenders. The city surrendered in a pact obliging its inhabitants to pay an annual poll tax, the
jizya. Khalid and the other commanders moved to join Amr ibn al-As in southern Palestine to help him counter a large number of Byzantine troops mobilized against him. The ensuing
Battle of Ajnadayn, fought at a site in the
Wadi al-Simt valley southwest of Jerusalem, was the first major confrontation between the Muslims and the Byzantines. The two sides incurred significant losses, including several prominent Muslims and the Byzantine
cubicularius, but the battle ended with the Byzantines routed. The battle is variously dated to July 634 or January 635. In the aftermath of Ajnadayn, Amr captured several towns in the interior of
Palestine, including
Sebastia,
Nablus (Neapolis),
Lydda,
Yibna,
Amwas (Emmaus-Nicopolis),
Bayt Jibrin (Eleutheropolis) and
Jaffa. Most of these towns fell after minor resistance, hence the scant information available about their captures in the sources. Remnants of the Byzantines from Ajnadayn regrouped to the northeast, in
Pella ('Fahl' in Arabic), a town with a Byzantine garrison on the eastern bank of the
River Jordan, across from
Scythopolis ('Beisan' in Arabic). The Muslims pursued them there, encountering difficulty traversing the muddy grounds around Beisan with their horses, a result of floods from the breaking of the river banks by the Byzantines. The Muslims defeated the Byzantines, who incurred heavy casualties, at the
Battle of Fahl and occupied the city in December 634 or January 635. They may have engaged with Byzantine troops in another
battle at Marj al-Suffar, south of Damascus, in which the Muslims suffered heavy losses but drove the Byzantines off nonetheless. Marj al-Suffar is dated variously to March 635 or before Fahl, in July 634.
Siege of Damascus , one of six gates of
Damascus besieged by the commanders of the Muslim armies in Syria From Fahl, the Muslims marched on Damascus, where the Byzantines there were joined by their comrades from the previous battles with the Muslims. They were under the command of
Vahan. All the Muslim commanders participated in the
siege of Damascus, each posted to one of the city's five gates, while a sixth unit was positioned at the village of
Barzeh to intercept Byzantine reinforcements from the north. After a lengthy siege, Damascus capitulated in August or September 635. Although they disagree in the identities of the commanders, most of the Muslim accounts agree that Muslim forces breached one of the city gates, while on another side of the city, the local leaders opened a gate after negotiations with a different Muslim unit. The Muslim commanders ultimately met in the city center where they drafted a capitulation agreement with the inhabitants. Although several versions of the treaty were recorded in the early Muslim and Christian sources, they generally concur that the inhabitants' lives, properties and churches were to be safeguarded, in return for their payment of the
jizya (
poll tax). Imperial properties were confiscated by the Muslims. The treaty probably served as the model for the capitulation agreements made throughout Syria, as well Iraq and Egypt, during the early Muslim conquests.
Battle of the Yarmuk After Damascus, Muslim forces proceeded to capture
Baalbek and then, after a months-long siege, occupied
Homs in December 635 or January 636. Heraclius, who had been observing events from his base in
Antioch, responded to the string of Muslim victories and occupations of major cities by mobilizing a massive force of Byzantine imperial troops, local garrisons from Antioch,
Aleppo,
Chalcis,
Mesopotamia, Armenians under their commander Gregory, and Syrian Arab tribesmen under the Ghassanid chief
Jabala ibn Ayham. The overall command of the Byzantines was held by the
sacellarius and Vahan. This force's march south prompted the Muslims to abandon Homs, Baalbek and Damascus and regroup at
Jabiya in the Golan Heights. The Byzantines took up position nearby, along the
Ruqqad river, prompting the Muslims to set up camp at the adjoining
Yarmuk River. This hilly area straddled the borders of four Byzantine provinces and served as the main pasture grounds for the Ghassanids. As the Byzantines advanced, the Muslims feigned retreat, inducing the Byzantines to assault the Muslims' camp at
Dayr Ayyub. This left the Byzantines' left flank vulnerable and Muslim forces used the wide gap and poor coordination between the Byzantine cavalry and infantry to inflict heavy casualties on the latter. Byzantine forces subsequently fled for safety to a site between the Ruqqad and
Allan streams, but the site's only viable exit, the bridge over the Ruqqad, was captured in a night raid by Khalid's cavalry. The Muslims afterward assaulted the Byzantines' encampments between the two streams and at the village of Yaqusa on the edge of the Golan, where most of the Byzantine troops were slain, though many Arab Christian auxiliaries had deserted by that point. The Muslim
victory at the Yarmuk destroyed the main Byzantine army in Syria and ended the Byzantines' will to confront the Muslims on the field. It sealed Muslim gains in Palestine and Transjordan and paved the way to their quick reoccupation of Damascus and the
Beqaa Valley. In the assessment of historian John Jandora, Yarmuk was one of "the most important battles of World History", ultimately leading to Muslim victories which expanded the
Caliphate between the
Pyrenees mountains and Central Asia. ==Occupation of Syria==