In the late 730s, Ubayd Allah ibn al-Habhab had begun leaning more heavily on the
Berbers under his jurisdiction to make up for the financial shortfalls. Contravening
Islamic law and the 718 edicts of the Caliph
Umar II, Ubayd Allah reinstated some of the extraordinary
dhimmi taxation (the
jizyah and
kharaj) and slave-tributes on the Muslim Berber population, provoking immense opposition. Similar policies were implemented by his deputies Uqba ibn al-Hajjaj al-Saluli in al-Andalus and (with particular zeal) Umar ibn Abd Allah al-Muradi in Morocco. But Ubayd Allah went above and beyond his duties. Seeking to satisfy the luxurious tastes of the nobles of Damascus, Ubayd Allah sent his officials in the relentless pursuit of the highly prized wool of unborn
Merino lambs, seizing (and destroying) entire flocks—the livelihoods of many Berber communities—just to gather the handful he could dispatch back to Syria. Berber girls and women were also highly prized as concubines by Damascus lords. Ubayd Allah, eager to please as always, ordered them seized and kidnapped in great numbers, not stopping even at the wives and daughters of loyal Berber chieftains. Berber patience finally broke in 740, in what became known as the
Great Berber Revolt. It began with an uprising in
Tangiers against Ubayd Allah's tax-collectors and raiders. Fired up by
Sufrite (
Kharijite) activists, the Berber tribes of western Morocco (the
Ghomara,
Miknasa and
Berghwata) formed a coalition and acclaimed the Berber chieftain
Maysara al-Matghari as 'caliph'. Tangiers fell into the hands of the Berber rebels hands, and soon enough the entire length of Morocco, from the Straits down to the Sous. Ubayd Allah's own son, Ismail, then a governor in the Sous, was killed by the rebels. Ubayd Allah immediately dispatched orders to Habib ibn Abi Ubayda al-Fihri to break off the Sicilian invasion and return the Ifriqiyan army to Africa. In the meantime, he dispatched a vanguard cavalry force, composed of the aristocratic Arab elite of Kairouan under the command of
Khalid ibn Abi Habib al-Fihri, to hold the line against the Berber rebels while awaiting the Sicilian expeditionary force. After a few skirmishes with the Arab vanguard in the outskirts of Tangiers, the Berber rebels decided to depose Maysara and reorganize their forces under the
Zenata chieftain
Khalid ibn Hamid al-Zanati. Khalid ordered an immediate attack and destroyed the Ifriqiyan vanguard at the
Battle of the Nobles in October 740, cutting down the cream of the Ifriqyan Arab nobility. The main Ifriqiyan force under Habib ibn Abi Ubayda arrived too late to prevent the massacre, and retreated to
Tlemcen, which was already in open revolt following a massacre of Sufrites by Arabs. Governor Ubayd Allah ibn al-Habhab forwarded the report of the battle to Damascus and requested reinforcements. Caliph Hisham, shocked at the news, dismissed Ubayd Allah in February, 741 and began preparations to dispatch a large eastern Arab army under a new governor,
Kulthum ibn Iyad al-Qushayri to crush the Berber rebellion. The disgraced Ubayd Allah left Ifriqiya in April 741, and returned to the east. ==See also==