Originally from Africa, in Abyssinia, or from
Koufa (the sources differ, it could be that it was his ancestors who came from Africa)., formerly a slave, he was the freedman of the Banû Wâlibah, a clan of the Banû Asad Ibn Khuzaymah tribe. At the battle of Jamājim in 82 AH (699-701),
Ibn al-Ash'ath and his followers, including 100,000 from amongst the
mawāli, took on the army of
al-Hajjāj (d. 714), the governor of the Iraqi provinces during the reign of the
Umayyad caliph Abd al-Malik. Within their forces was a group known as the 'Battalion of Qur'an Reciters' headed by
Kumayl ibn Ziyad an-Nakha`i and including Sa`īd ibn Jubayr. The revolt was brutally put down and Sa`īd was forced to flee to the outskirts of
Mecca. He persisted in travelling to Mecca itself twice a year to perform the
hajj and
`umrah and would enter Kufa secretly to help resolve peoples' religious issues. He also was the first men to be associated with
blindfolded chess games. ==Dialogue between Ibn Jubayr and al-Hajjaj==