Seizure of power from his brother
Thimal in 1030, and became sole ruler of
Aleppo and made it his seat of power. The present citadel (pictured) dates to the 13th century Nasr opposed Thimal's appointment as their father's successor and sought to take sole control of Aleppo. There are two accounts about Nasr's seizure of power, both agreeing that Nasr took the Aleppo citadel while Thimal was away. In the account of the 13th-century Aleppine historian
Ibn al-Adim, Nasr and his men seized the citadel when Thimal was in the Kilabi tribal camps in Aleppo's outskirts attempting to persuade his estranged wife to return to the city. In reaction, Thimal mobilized his Kilabi loyalists with the goal of retaking Aleppo, but the arrival of Romanos's forces spurred the Kilabi chieftains to mediate the dispute between Nasr and Thimal. In the ensuing agreement, Nasr was to control the Syrian part of the emirate from Aleppo, while Thimal would rule the Mesopotamian part from
al-Rahba, a fortress on the
Euphrates River at the crossroads of Syria and Iraq. The account by the 11th-century local historian
Yahya of Antioch, and also cited by Ibn al-Adim, holds that Nasr's coup took place after the Battle of Azaz. Accordingly, when Thimal left Aleppo to bring back his family to the city after Nasr's victory over the Byzantines, Nasr took control of the citadel in his absence. The modern historian Suhayl Zakkar asserts that Yahya's account was the more likely scenario, particularly because Nasr immediately appealed for Byzantine forgiveness and protection, offering an annual tribute of 500,000
dirhams, despite his decisive victory over Romanos at Azaz; Zakkar holds Nasr's spontaneous offer to the Byzantines was prompted by Kilabi dissent or threats organized by Thimal in response to the latter's ouster.
Byzantine vassalage and Fatimid relations Romanos accepted Nasr's offer and declared the emirate of Aleppo a
vassal of the empire, obliging the Byzantines to back and protect Nasr in case of aggression. Nasr's vassalage with the Byzantines became the principal sticking point in Byzantine–Fatimid peace negotiations, which commenced in 1031. While Romanos adamantly sought to include Nasr's emirate in the proposed treaty, he died and was replaced in 1034 by Emperor
Michael IV (); the latter was more conciliatory toward Fatimid concerns. When negotiations concluded in 1036 with a ten-year truce (
hudna), the issue of Aleppo was excluded. According to Zakkar, "Byzantium, which by this Treaty, had solved most of its problems with the Fatimid Caliphate, lost interest in Aleppo, or at least no longer deemed it to be of the same political importance." The Byzantine–Fatimid treaty weakened Nasr's strategic position and forced him to improve relations with the Fatimids. As early as 1030, Nasr had sought Fatimid approval of his rule and dispatched an envoy carrying a large amount of war booty from Azaz to the Fatimid caliph
al-Zahir (). In turn, the caliph accepted Nasr's authority in Aleppo, at least for the time being. However, there is no indication that Nasr paid the Fatimids tribute. Nasr's envoy remained in Cairo for several years and likely did not return to Aleppo until after the accession of Caliph
al-Mustansir (). Zakkar speculates this indicated discord between Aleppo and Cairo due to Nasr's continued tribute to Byzantium instead of to the Fatimids or Fatimid reservations at Nasr's request for the governorship of
Jund Hims (the district of Homs). Following the 1036 treaty, Michael IV mediated between Nasr and al-Mustansir by advising the former to accept the Fatimids' conditions, which are not known; the contemporary chroniclers provided scant information about Nasr's relations with the Fatimids between 1030 and 1036. Nasr's envoy returned to Aleppo in 1037 with a diploma giving Nasr the governorship of Hims, as well as gifts and
robes of honor from al-Mustansir, whose suzerainty was nominally acknowledged by Nasr. Al-Mustansir also bestowed on Nasr the noble titles of ('the distinguished of the emirs'), ('the special one of the
Imam'), ('the sun and glory of the Dynasty') and ('the holder of the two glories'), in addition to his previous title of ('lion cub of the Dynasty').
Fortifications Nasr moved the seat of the emirate to the Aleppo Citadel, marking a change from previous tradition whereby Aleppo's rulers were based in a palace in the city or its outskirts. According to Zakkar, this "brought about the erection of magnificent apartments and reception halls" in the citadel, which thenceforth became the residence of Nasr and later rulers of the city. To make up for the loss of
Hisn Ibn Akkar to the Fatimid governor of
Tripoli in 1033, Nasr strengthened Hisn al-Safh (the future
Krak des Chevaliers) on the northern end of the
Homs Gap, opposite Hisn Ibn Akkar. He garrisoned the fortress with
Kurdish tribal auxiliaries, hence its more common Arabic name ('Fortress of the Kurds').
Domestic affairs Upon seizing power, Nasr, like his father, appointed an Aleppine Christian, al-Mu'ammal al-Shammas, as
vizier to administer civilian and military affairs. During Mirdasid rule, a large influx of peasants and nomads from the countryside moved to Aleppo, resulting in the establishment of crowded quarters and suburbs within and outside the city's walls. Al-Mu'ammal, aided by his brother, oversaw the urbanization of these suburbs and the construction of
mosques and
hammams (bathhouses) to accommodate the new arrivals. Nasr sealed ties with the
Numayrids, a Bedouin dynasty which ruled a string of cities in the western Jazira, by marrying al-Sayyida Alawiyya, sister of
Shabib ibn Waththab, the Numayrid emir of
Harran. The Numayrids were distant tribal kin and traditional allies of the Banu Kilab and the Mirdasids. In 1031, Nasr took part in a Byzantine campaign against a
Druze uprising in
Jabal al-Summaq (also called Jabal al-A'la), southwest of Aleppo, which "threatened both their interests", according to the historian
Hugh N. Kennedy. Nasr's vassalage to the Byzantines provoked the opposition of
Salim ibn al-Mustafad, Aleppo's (municipal chief) and leader of the (urban paramilitaries), who had been appointed by Salih. Ibn al-Mustafad stirred a rebellion among the and the lower and middle-class residents of the Zajjajin quarter in protest at the alliance. This prompted the Byzantine governor of Antioch to request Nasr kill Ibn al-Mustafad. Accordingly, Nasr had Ibn al-Mustafad arrested and executed in 1034.
Downfall and death Nasr's acquisition of Hims in 1037 came at the expense of its Fatimid-appointed,
Berber governor, Ja'far ibn Kulayd al-Kutami, who was concurrently dismissed from the governorship. Ibn Kulayd appealed for the assistance of Anushtakin, who at the time was the
Damascus-based Fatimid governor of Syria. The latter was already perturbed by the expansion of the Mirdasid realm to Hims, which would give the Byzantine-backed Mirdasid–Numayrid alliance full control of the lowland regions and routes between the Iraqi frontier and the
Mediterranean Sea. Anushtakin relayed his concerns to the Fatimid court, which was effectively run by the
vizier Ali al-Jarjara'i, the power behind the throne. It was al-Jarjara'i who had granted Nasr the governorship of Hims partly to check Anushtakin's power and territorial ambitions in Syria. Anushtakin did not await Cairo's response, and he and Ibn Kulayd mobilized their forces to assert direct Fatimid rule over northern Syria. Anushtakin's army was bolstered by troops from the
Banu Kalb and Banu Tayy, as well as a faction of the Banu Kilab opposed to the Mirdasids. Moreover, Anushtakin gained Byzantine permission to take Aleppo provided he maintain the emirate's annual tribute. Upon hearing of Anushtakin's campaign against him, Nasr mobilized his local and Kilabi forces, including Thimal and his loyalists, and set out to confront the Fatimid coalition. Nasr's force was defeated in a battle just west of
Salamiyah, and withdrew toward
Hama to regroup. Meanwhile, Anushtakin's troops attacked and plundered Hama and moved against Nasr's camp. On 22 May 1038, the two sides fought at Tell Fas, a site immediately west of
Latmin in Hama's northwestern countryside. During the ensuing battle, Thimal and his men abandoned Nasr and his core loyalists, who were left to face the much larger Fatimid coalition. Thimal's reason for fleeing is not known, though he likely used it as an opportunity to wrest back control of Aleppo. Nasr, meanwhile, was "killed fighting bravely", according to Kennedy. His head was given to Anushtakin and his body was displayed on the gate of the
Hama Citadel.
Succession Thimal succeeded Nasr as emir of Aleppo but, fearing Anushtakin's northward advance, left the city shortly after in the company of Nasr's children, Shabib ibn Waththab, and Nasr's widow al-Sayyida Alawiyya, who Thimal later married. Thimal entrusted governance of the city and the citadel to his kinsmen, Khalifa ibn Jabir al-Kilabi and Muqallid ibn Kamil, respectively. These governors surrendered the city to Anushtakin's forces in June 1038, following a siege. With this, Anushtakin brought all of Syria under direct Fatimid administration for the first time. In 1042, Anushtakin died and Thimal restored Mirdasid rule over the city with al-Jarjara'i's backing. ==References==