Umayyad dynasty Article

Umayyad Dynasty Timeline

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627 ce

The Umayyads, headed by Abū Sufyān, convert to Islam after initial resistance. They are a family of mostly merchants living around Mecca. After converting to Islam, they become administrators for the caliphate under Muhammad and his immediate successors.

656

ʿUthmān ibn ʿAffān, the third caliph to rule after the death of Muhammad, is murdered by Egyptian rebels. This sets off the first Muslim civil war, with a struggle for the caliphate between Abū Sufyān’s son Muʿāwiyah and Muhammad’s son-in-law ʿAlī.

661

Muʿāwiyah emerges victorious over ʿAlī at the end of the civil war and establishes himself as the first Umayyad caliph. The Umayyad dynasty, also spelled Omayyad, is the first great Muslim dynasty to rule the empire of the caliphate.

661–684

The Sufyānids, a branch of the Umayyad family, rule the caliphate, centralizing authority in Damascus, Syria. Muʿāwiyah I reigns during most of these years (661–680).

684

Civil war and the deaths of Muʿāwiyah’s son Yazīd I and Yazīd’s son Muʿāwiyah II bring Sufyānid rule to an end by 684. Amid tribal wars, Marwān I is proclaimed caliph in Syria, ushering in the era of the Marwanids, another branch of the Umayyad family.

685–705

Under the rule of ʿAbd al-Malik, the Umayyad caliphate expands into India and Central Asia.  

691–692

One of the architectural feats of the Marwanids, the Dome of the Rock is completed in Jerusalem.

717

The Umayyads’ Syrian army is defeated by the Byzantine emperor Leo III.

724–743

During the reign of Hishām ibn ʿAbd al-Malik, Muslim advances into France and Anatolia are stopped, and frontier defenses hold off challenges by Turks in Central Asia and Berbers in North Africa.

749

A religio-political faction called the Hāshimiyyah denies the legitimacy of Umayyad rule and proclaims as caliph Abū al-ʿAbbās al-Saffāḥ.

750

The last Umayyad caliph, Marwān II, is defeated at the Battle of the Great Zab River in Mesopotamia.

756

Members of the Umayyad house are hunted down and killed, but one of the survivors, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān, escapes and in 756 establishes himself as a Muslim ruler in Spain, founding a dynasty of Umayyads in Córdoba.