Al-Abna'

Al-Abnāʾ (Arabic: الأبناء, literally "the sons") was the name of a colony in pre-Islamic and early Islamic Yemen who were descended from Sasanian officers and soldiers of Persian origin who intermarried with local Arab women. These Persians had been garrisoned in Sanaa and its surrounding after the Sasanian reconquest of Yemen in the 570s.[1]

According to a commentary on a poem by Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani in Kitab al-Aghani, up to his time (10th century), these people were called banū al-aḥrār (بنو الأحرار) in Sanaa and al-abnāʾ (الأبناء) in Yemen.[2]

What is known about their history is mostly about their early (Persian conquest of Yemen) and their late history (during the rise of Islam). It is uncertain whether they kept practicing Zoroastrianism, or had been influenced by the South Arabian paganism and the local Christianity. According to al-Tabari, Khurrah Khosraw, the fourth Sasanian governor of Yemen, was replaced by Badhan due to too much assimilation of the former to the local society.[1]

The authority of the Persian governors of Yemen was reduced as the Byzantines advanced into the Persian heartland in 628. This coincided with the rise of Islam. The Persian leaders in Yemen, including Badhan, Fayruz al-Daylami, and Wahb ibn Munabbih, responded favorably to the diplomatic missions from Muhammad, and converted to Islam in 631. After Badhan's death, his son Shahr partially replaces his father as governor, but is killed by the rebellious Al-Aswad Al-Ansi, who claimed prophet-hood, in the First Ridda War. Al-Aswad was later killed by Fayruz al-Daylami, who became the governor of Yemen. After that, Ghayth ibn Abd Yaghuth rebels, this time against al-abna' themselves, seeking their expulsion from the Arabian Peninsula. Dādawayh, an abna' leader, was killed, while Fayruz al-Daylami and Jushnas (Gushnasp) managed to flee with their allies, and later defeated Ghayth ibn Abd Yaghuth. Fayruz al-Daylami and the abna' were later active in the fertile crescent and Yemen under Caliph Umar during the Second Ridda War.[1]

The abna' retained their distinct identity during the Islamic period, but was gradually absorbed into the local population and thus disappeared from records. Their nisba was al-Abnāwī (الأبناوي).[1] There is a village named Al-Abna' in the modern Bani Hushaysh District, Sanaa Governorate, Yemen.[3]

This title "al-abna'" may have been the root of the title "al-abna'" used to refer to the influential Persians of Baghdad in Abbasid period.[4] The "abna'" recorded in some conflicts among Arabs of Khorasan in Umayyad period is not related to the abna' of Yemen.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 C. E. Bosworth, “Abna,” Encyclopædia Iranica, I/3, p. 226-228; an updated version is available online at http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/abna-term (accessed on 25 January 2014).
  2. Zakeri, Mohsen (1995). Sasanid Soldiers in Early Muslim Society: The Origins of 'Ayyārān and Futuwwa. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 98. ISBN 9783447036528.
  3. https://fa.wikipedia.org/wiki/ابناء_(یمن)
  4. http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/baghdad-iranian-connection-1-pr-Mongol
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