, the Lakhmids' capital city,
Founding The Lakhmids appear to have emerged soon after the emergence of the
Sasanian Empire, in the late third century, appearing in the western frontiers of their sphere of hegemony. The capital of the kingdom was set up at
Al-Hira, located in south-central modern
Iraq. The founder of the Lakhmids' kingdom was
Amr ibn Adi, who is identified as the 'Amr ibn Lakhm' in two inscriptions: the
Paikuli inscription, written in
Pahlavi/
Parthian, and a second
Coptic inscription. His reign is traditionally dated to CE. Islamic histories present all Lakhmid kings, going back to the earliest period, as members of the Nasrid dynasty (Banu Nasr). However, this is unlikely, and it is only the last of the Lakhmid kings who are likely to have been members of the Banu Nasr. Little is heard again of the Lakhmids of Iraq until the 5th century. Irfan Shahid suspects this part of the tribe either migrated back to Iraq around that time or had remained there, not accompanying their king Imru al-Qays and the rest of the Lakhm to Syria (
see below).
History and relations with the Persians The earliest evidence of the Lakhmids acting in service of the Persians comes in the late third century, which lists the "king of the Lakhmids" as one of the vassals of the Sasanian king
Narseh. In the fourth century, sources attest to the use of Sasanian-allied Arab tribes fighting against Roman forces. The rise of the Lakhmids as Sasanian allies can be understood in the context of the collapse of the
Kingdom of Hatra and the
Palmyrene Empire at the hands of the Romans around the same time, which previously dominated and buffered the region separating the Roman and Persian empires. While later Arab sources portray the Lakhmids as strict subjects, and even slaves of the Persians, this image is unrealistic, influenced by later Abbasid notions of hierarchy and a delegitimization of pre-Islamic kingship. Though clients to the Persians, the Lakhmids also maintained a real geopolitical presence, with their own substantial territories, a major capital city, stable institutions, and a real army. entrusted the guardianship of his son
Bahram V to the Lakhmid ruler
al-Nu'man I ibn Imru' al-Qays. Miniature From the
Baysunghur Shahnameh. In the sixth century, as the late Sasanian state became increasingly centralized and more formally administered, the Lakhmids became more formal subordinates of the Persian empire. At this time, the main function that the Lakhmids served for the Persians was to project Persian hegemony into the Arabian Peninsula, protect the Sasanian Empire from incursions by aggressive nomadic Arab tribes, and in the sixth century, to serve as a counterbalance against the main Arab client kingdom and ally of the Romans, the
Ghassanids. The most successful Lakhimd king, in this regards, was
Al-Mundhir III ibn al-Nu'man, who reigned for around fifty years (c. 505–554) and defeated the Ghassanids at the famous
Battle of Callinicum in 531 AD. A peace treaty between the Romans and the Sasanians a few decades later, in 561, indicates that the Romans were paying tribute to Al-Mundhir III to prevent him from attacking them. However, this apogee began to decline with the death of Al-Mundhir III, and in the second half of the sixth century, Lakhmid affairs became less common and the Persians began intervening with them more often.
Fall of the Lakhmids and the Muslim conquests The Lakhmids remained influential throughout the sixth century. Nevertheless, in 602, the last Lakhmid king,
al-Nu'man III ibn al-Mundhir, was deposed by the Sasanian emperor
Khosrow II. According to one account by the Arab scholar
Abu ʿUbaidah ( 824), this was done out of spite, as al-Nu'man refused to marry the daughter of the emperor. This account, however, is treated as fantastical and with suspicion by historians. An alternative account of events by
Hisham ibn al-Kalbi lacks this element. In either account, however, the fall of the Lakhmids, the Arab client kingdom of the Sasanians, paves the way for the defeat of the Sasanians to the Arab tribal confederation
Banu Bakr at the
Battle of Dhi Qar, only a few years later. Coupled with increasing instability in Persia proper after the downfall of Khosrow in 628, these events heralded the decisive
Battle of Qadisiyya in 636 and the
Muslim conquest of Persia. Some believed that the annexation of the Lakhmid Kingdom was one of the main factors behind the
fall of the Sasanian Empire and the Muslim conquest of Persia as the Sasanians were defeated in the
Battle of Hira by
Khalid ibn al-Walid. At that point, the city was abandoned and its materials were used to reconstruct
Kufa, its exhausted twin city. == Culture ==