Jabir ibn al-Ash'ath al-Ta'i

Jabir ibn al-Ash'ath ibn Yahya al-Ta'i
جابر بن الأشعث بن يحيى
Abbasid Governor of Egypt
In office
811–812
Monarchal-Amīn
Preceded byHatim ibn Harthamah
Succeeded byAbbad ibn Muhammad
Personal details
Parent
  • Al-Ash'ath (father)

Jabir ibn al-Ash'ath ibn Yahya al-Ta'i (Arabic: جابر بن الأشعث بن يحيى الطائي) was a governor of Egypt, from 811 to 812.

He was appointed in March 811 by the caliph al-Amin, replacing Hatim ibn Harthamah ibn A'yan. Soon afterwards however he was forced to contend with the outbreak of civil war between al-Amin and his brother al-Ma'mun, and before long his continued loyalty to the former had put him at odds with a faction of the local jund led by al-Sari ibn al-Hakam, which favored recognizing al-Ma'mun as caliph instead. In the spring of 812 the jund, with the encouragement of al-Ma'mun, openly switched their allegiance and revolted, and Jabir was overthrown from his position. A partisan of al-Ma'mun, Abbad ibn Muhammad ibn Hayyan, then assumed the governorship and took up power in Fustat, but other parts of Egypt continued to remain loyal to al-Amin under the anti-governor Rabi'ah ibn Qays ibn Zubayr al-Jurashi.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ Al-Kindi 1912, pp. 147–49; Ibn Taghribirdi 1930, pp. 148–50; Gordon et al. 2018, p. 1198.

References

Preceded by Governor of Egypt
811–812
Succeeded by