Origins According to the traditional Arabic sources, before their entry into the Oriens, the Salihids had been established in northern
Arabia. The 8th-century historian
Umar ibn Shabba reported that as early as the 3rd century, the Salihids had allied with the
Palmyrene Empire and were settled by the latter in the (watchtowers of the
Limes Arabicus, the Byzantine–Arabian frontier) between the
Balqa (central
Transjordan) and
Huwwarin. Most sources point to an original migration from
Wadi Sirhan, a valley whose northern end opened into the Byzantine province of
Arabia Petraea. This valley was also home to the Salihids' Quda'a kinsmen, the Banu Kalb, making it more plausible that the Salihids entered Oriens from Wadi Sirhan. The Salihids' first settlements in the
Limes Arabicus and their main power base were likely in the provinces of Arabia,
Palaestina Salutaris and
Phoenice Libanensis, all situated in the southern
Levant. According to Shahid, this was the natural area where a tribe entering Byzantine territory from Wadi Sirhan would settle; moreover, this was the region where the
foederati were most needed by the Byzantines in the 5th century as the peace with the
Sasanian Empire left only the Arabian Peninsula as the most likely source for hostile forces to the empire.
Rise The precise period in which the Salihids, or more specifically, their Zokomid ruling house, dominated the Arab
foederati of the Byzantine Empire is not certain. According to historian
Warwick Ball, the Salihids became Byzantium's chief Arab ally by the end of the 4th century following the decline of the Tanukhids, whose power and favor deteriorated particularly as a result of a failed revolt in 383. It is apparent that their heyday was between the reigns of emperors
Arcadius (395–408) and
Anastasius (489–518). The founder of the Zokomid household, Zokomos, known in Arabic as Ḥamāṭa and nicknamed
Ḍujʿum (the mighty) was already a powerful tribal figure before his service with Byzantium. Sozomen indicated that Zokomos became a
phylarch under the Byzantines and converted to Christianity along with "all his subjects" after "a certain monk of great celebrity" prophesied the birth of his son on condition of embracing the Christian faith. Zokomos bore two sons, Amr and Awf. The former may have been the aforementioned prophesied son because his name signifies a good omen. This son founded the less important branch of the Zokomid household and Shahid speculates Amr was the founder of the monastery of
Dayr Amr to the north of Jerusalem, which is currently a Christian locality known by the same name. Amr was the father of Mundhir, of whom nothing is known but his name. Awf had a son named Amr, who fathered Habāla, Habūla (possibly the same person) and Ḥawthara. Nothing is known about Awf's son and grandsons. The offspring of Mundhir and Amr ibn Awf's grandsons have been documented to varying extents. They were the last generation of Zokomid/Salihid phylarchs. Habala/Habula's son Dawud was the best-known Salihid phylarch and king, largely due to the short biography of him in the . The latter says of Dawud the following: And he was a king who used to engage in raiding expeditions. Then he became a Christian, repented, loathed the shedding of blood, and followed the religious life. He built a monastery and used to carry the water and the mortar on his back, saying 'I do not want anyone to help me,' and so his clothes became wet, and he was nicknamed
al-Lathiq, 'the bedraggled.' When he became averse to bloodshedding and killing, his position weakened and he became himself the target of raids until he was killed by Thaʿlaba ibn ʿĀmir al-Akbar and Muʿawiya ibn Ḥujayr. — by
Hisham ibn al-Kalbi According to Shahid, the 's statement that Dawud converted to Christianity "must be a mistake" since the Zokomids had already been Christians since the time of Zokomos around 400 CE, but Dawud's newfound piety "is correct and cannot be viewed with suspicion". Dawud's name, which is Arabic for "
David", is unique among the Salihids and their Tanukhid and Ghassanid predecessors and successors, in that it was biblical and not Arabic. This indicated that Dawud or his father were evidently attached to biblical tradition or the
Israelite king David in particular. Dawud was the builder of a monastery bearing his name, Dayr Dawud, in northern Syria, between
Resafa and
Ithriya. Before becoming the Salihid king and phylarch, Dawud was considered a (commander of one thousand [warriors]) or
chiliarch, according to Hisham's pupil
Ibn Habib. As indicated in the and in a poetic verse composed by Dawud's anonymous daughter, Dawud was slain by Tha'laba ibn Amir and Mu'awiya ibn Hujayr, the respective chiefs of the brother tribes of Banu Kalb and Banu Namir ibn Wabara. According to Shahid, it is clear that Dawud's killers were from allied tribes seeking to weaken the dominant Salihids. From Dawud's daughter's verse, it is apparent that the battle took place between
al-Qurnatayn (modern
al-Shaykh Saad) in the
Hauran and Mount Harib in the
Golan Heights. Dawud's death, without recorded progeny, was a major contributor to the Salihids' ultimate downfall. Furthermore, Emperor
Leo I the Thracian's incorporation of a large Salihid contingent in his expedition against the
Vandals in
North Africa significantly weakened Salihid power as the contingent was
annihilated in battle. Dawud's cousin or brother, Ziyad, may have succeeded Dawud as phylarch when the latter took up a religious life or died. He too was a , according to Ibn Habib, and participated in the
battle of al-Baradān, which most likely took place at a spring in the vast (the desert between Syria and southern Iraq). After an initial Salhid success, the battle turned in favor of the opposing Kinda tribe led by Akil al-Murar Hujr, and Ziyad was slain. Shahid asserts it was not Akil al-Murar Hujr, who apparently died in the early or mid-5th century, but his great-grandson Hujr ibn Harith, who is said by the Byzantine sources to have attacked the
Limes Arabicus, and presumably the Salihid guardians of that frontier, in .
Fall to the Ghassanids Another Zokomid, Sabīṭ ibn al-Mundhir, served as a (tax collector), charged with collecting taxes from the Arab tribes in Oriens on behalf of the Byzantine authorities. He may have been delegated this authority by Dawud. This was significant, according to Shahid, because it sheds light on the "functions of the Arab phylarchs of Byzantium: they not only fought but also collected taxes for the empire from their fellow Arabs". Sabit was slain by the deaf, one-eyed Ghassanid chief, Jidʿ ibn ʿAmr, when Sabit attempted to collect the tax from the Ghassanids. This ignited the Salihid–Ghassanid war that ended in a Ghassanid victory and their subsequent supremacy over the Arab federate tribes of Byzantium. The Ghassanids had crossed the
Limes Arabicus around 490 and were obliged to pay tribute to the Salihid guardians of the
Limes. The terms of the Ghassanids' tribute was, according to Ibn Habib, one dinar, a dinar and a half, and two dinars, for each Ghassanid tribesman, depending on their status. The killings of Dawud, Ziyad and Sabit, the Salihids' decreased strength after the 468 Vandalic campaign, and the assaults by the powerful Kindites and Ghassanids of Arabia toward the end of the 5th century, all led to the Salihids' weakened state by 502, when the Ghassanids formally became the dominant Arab federates of Byzantium. Afterward, the Salihids continued to operate, but were demoted. Between 502 and 529, they constituted one of many Arab
foederati and directly answered to the
dux (governor) of their province or the
magister militum per Orientem (commander of the field army of Oriens). This period of time may have been the
floruit of Ḥārith ibn Mandala, the last Zokomid phylarch, according to the 's genealogical table of the Salihids. According to
Ibn Durayd, the
Tayyid poet
Amir ibn Juwayn declared in a verse that Harith ibn Mandala went on a raiding expedition (presumably on behalf of the Byzantines) against an Arab tribe, possibly the
Banu Asad, and never returned. When the Ghassanids under their king
Jabala ibn al-Ḥarith were made the supreme phylarchs over all the Arab federate tribes, the Salihids became their subordinates, though tensions and clashes persisted between them. In 580, relations between the Ghassanids and Byzantines became considerably fraught, and authority over the Arab federate tribes was again decentralized. The Salihids may have become independent of the Ghassanids as a result, and one of their phylarchs participated in the Byzantine siege of
Mardin in 586.
Remnants in the Islamic era Nothing further is heard of the Salihids until the
Muslim conquest of the Levant in the 630s when they fought alongside other Arab Christian federate tribes against the Muslim Arabs. At
Dumat al-Jandal in northern Arabia, a Byzantine army composed of the Salihids, Kalb, Tanukhids and Ghassanids, was defeated by the Muslim commander
Iyad ibn Ghanm. Later, this same Arab Christian coalition, boosted by the
Lakhmids and the
Judham, was defeated by the Muslim general
Khalid ibn al-Walid at
Ziza in the Balqa. The Salihids appear again with the Tanukhids in 638, this time in the (military encampment) at
Qinnasrin; at that time, the Muslim general
Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah asked the members of the to convert to
Islam, but the Orthodox Christian Salihids refused. The Salihids likely dispersed throughout
Islamic Syria and
Iraq and their clans may have joined other tribes. During early Umayyad rule, the Kalb-led Quda'a confederation maintained a privileged position in government and during the
Second Muslim Civil War (680–692) entered a
long-running feud with its chief tribal rival, the
Qays of northern Syria. It was during this period, Caskel asserts, that the Salihids joined the Quda'a. Their membership was likely due to their need for support on the one hand and the Kalb's efforts to strengthen the Quda'a to counter the Qays; the same situation applied with the northern Syrian Tanukhids, which joined the Quda'a around the same time. Only one Salihid, Usāma ibn Zayd al-Salīḥī, attained prominence during the Islamic era. He served under the Umayyad caliphs
al-Walid I () and
Sulayman () as the overseer of the (land tax) in Egypt and under caliphs
Yazid II () and
Hisham () as their (scribe). Otherwise, the Salihids' staunch Christianity rendered them isolated in the Islamic era, unlike the Tanukhids and Ghassanids, whose members and clans continued to flourish. According to
Abbasid-era geographers, members of the Salih were found living near
Kufa in southern Iraq alongside their Tayyid allies, and near
Latakia in northern Syria.
Al-Bakri, who preserved Ibn Shabba's accounts on the Salihids, reported that the Salihids' descendants still inhabited al-Balqa and Huwwarin at the time Ibn Shabba wrote his work in 876.
Modern era In modern-day
Jordan (al-Balqa), the ancient Salihi presence is attested to various places: the village of al-Salīḥī about northwest of
Amman, the ʿAyn al-Salīḥī spring and the Wādī al-Salīḥī valley. Moreover, in the vicinity of these places lives the al-Salīḥāt (colloquially: Sleiḥat) tribe; Shahid asserts that the latter are "almost certainly, because of the rarity of the name, the descendants of the ancient Salīḥids". ==References==