It is not possible to be precise about the date of accession of Sumūyafaʿ Ashwaʿ. A native Ḥimyarite and a
Christian, he was appointed by the Aksumite king
Caleb, who had defeated and killed the previous king of Ḥimyar,
Dhū Nuwās, sometime between Pentecost 525 and February 531. A fragmentary inscription appears to give Kaleb's full title as the King of Saba', Dhu Raydan, Hadramawt, Yamnat and their Arabs, on Tawdum and Tihamat. The text records the founding of a building, most likely a church. After his victory, Caleb returned to Aksum but left part of his army behind as a garrison. The
Roman emperor Justinian I sent two embassies to Ḥimyar during the brief reign of Sumūyafaʿ Ashwaʿ. Sometime between April and September 531, he sent an embassy to the court of Aksum and to Sumyafa' Ashwa, hoping for an alliance against
Persia and for Ḥimyarite aid to the Roman ally
Qays ibn Salama ibn al-Ḥārith. The Roman historian
Procopius details the embassy of the ambassador Julian: At that time, when Hellesthaeus [Caleb] was reigning over the Aethiopians [Aksumites], and Esimiphaeus over the Homeritae [Ḥimyarites], the Emperor Justinian sent an ambassador, Julianus, demanding that both nations on account of their community of religion should make common cause with the Romans in the war against the Persians. . . As for the Homeritae, it was desired that they should establish Caïsus [Qays], the fugitive, as captain over the Maddeni [Maʿadd], and with a great army of their own people and of the Maddene Saracens make an invasion into the land of the Persians. This Caïsus was by birth of the captain’s rank and an exceptionally able warrior, but he had killed one of the relatives of Esimiphaeus and was a fugitive in a land which is so utterly destitute of human habitation. So each king, promising to put this demand into effect, dismissed the ambassador, but neither one of them did the things agreed upon by them. A little later
Nonnosos was sent on a mission to
Kinda and Aksum, but "in addition to these goals [he was] to visit the Ameritae", that is, the Ḥimyarites. In 535,
Abraha, the commander of the Aksumite forces in Ḥimyar, revolted and overthrew Sumyafa' Ashwa, who was imprisoned in a fortress. Caleb sent two further military expeditions to restore Sumūyafaʿ Ashwaʿ, but both ended in failure. The details of these events are found in Procopius. In the 540s, when Abraha had inscriptions added to the
Maʾrib Dam to commemorate its repair, he noted his victory over a son of Sumyafa' Ashwa. The Aksumite military general,
Aryat, of later Islamic accounts may be partially based on Sumyafa' Ashwa. Later Christian historiography generally omitted Sumyafa' Ashwa in order not to expose Abraha—a Christian hero in these accounts—as an usurper. This often extended to falsely lengthening the reign of Abraha to include that of his predecessor. Thus, Sumyafa' Ashwa is not mentioned in the
Martyrionof
Arethas, the
Bios of
Gregentios, the
Chronographia of
Theophanes of Byzantium or the
Chronicle of
Michael the Syrian. On the basis of the
Laws of the Ḥimyarites, part of the
Bios of Gregentios,
Irfan Shahîd argued that Sumūyafaʿ Ashwaʿ took the throne name Abraham, causing confusion between him and his successor because of the similarity of their names. ==References==