Slave Soldiers and Islam_ The Genesis of a Military System - Daniel Pipes

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The


First
Military

SlaveSystem 147

Prices are
generally

unknown;
only

the
highest

oneshave

beenrecorded.Thesourcesnote


withawethatal-Ma’mfn’sand

al-MuCtas.im’s


purchasespushed


thecostofa
single

slave
up

to

100,000(6,20)

oreven200,000dirhams
(6,

20,
23).

39

Onocca-

sion,this
money


wastransferredto
Samarqand

(26),sometimes

insilver(32).


Not


allCentralAsianslaveswere
purchased:

some
appear

to

havebeenabducted
(8,9),


some
joinedvoluntarily

(41),and


others were
captured--al-Ma’mfn directly


received 2,000

GhuzzTurks as
captives


from Kabulin

211-12/826-27
(Ibn

Khurdadhbih,p.37)--but


in
general

the
caliphs

reliedontheir

governors


tosend
captives..Talh,

ab.
Tahir,

the
governor

of

Khurasan207-13/822-28,had
enough

slavesofhisowntogive

away


80 mamlftks atonce
(Tayffir, p.

172); presumably


these

were
captives,


foral-Ma’mfinnodoubtprohibited
Tal.ha

from


spending


revenuesto
buy

slavesofhisown.cAbdallahb.

Tthir


senta
yearly

tributetothe
caliph

of 44 milliondirhamsand

either1,012raqqs
(al-Muqaddasi,p.


340)or2,000Ghuzz


Turks

captured


inKhurasan
(Ibn

Khurdadhbih,
p.

39)..Tfalftn,

father

ofthesoldierwhofoundedtheTulunid
dynasty

in
Egypt,

wasa

slavewhohadbeen
captured.

4

AI-Ma’mfan and


al-MuCtas.im

first
acquired

Central Asian

slaveswhile
living

inKhurasan,atthe

closeoftheal-Amin-al-

Ma’mfi civilwar.
AI-MuCtas.im

purchased


]takh
in 199/815

(T, 3:1383); al-Ma’mfinreceived slavesfrom


his
governor

in

Khurasan

astributeas
early

as200/816
(36-38).
AI-Mutas.im

had
acquiredmany

ofhis
principal

slaveaidesbeforeascending

tothethronein

217/833
(7);indeed,

whileal-Ma’mfnwasstill

caliph,al-Mutas.im


had
gathered

some3,000
(4)

or4,000
(al-

Kindi,
pp.

188-189 ITB,2:208-09)slaves.Afterbecoming


caliph,

hecontinuedtosendformore(26:referring

to
220/835),

untilhewas
finally

satisfied(13).

Estimatednumbersofslavesdifferwidelyinthe


sourcesand


are
open

todoubt.Still,they

indicatethe
magnitude

oftheac-

39.Atthistime,

adirhamwasworthaboutthree
grams

ofsilver
(G.

C.Miles,

"Dirham,"

in
El2).

40.Aslave:36,38-40.
Captured:

al-Balawi,p.

34.
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