Yazid ibn Abi Sufyan

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Distinguish". Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters". Yazid ibn Abi Sufyan ibn Harb ibn Umayya (Template:Langx; died 639) was a leading Arab Muslim commander in the conquest of Syria from 634 until his death in the plague of Amwas in 639. Following the capture of Damascus around 635, he was placed in command of the city and its military district. After the death of the overall Muslim commander of Syria, Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah, in 639, he was appointed by Caliph Umar (Template:Reign) the governor of Damascus, Jordan and Palestine.

Yazid was the elder half-brother of Mu'awiya ibn Abi Sufyan, who was appointed as his successor over Damascus and Jordan by Umar and gradually became governor over all of Syria.

Early life

File:Sufyanid dynasty genealogy.png
Genealogical tree of the Sufyanids, the branch of the Umayyads to which Yazid belonged and which became the ruling family of the Umayyad Caliphate, founded by Yazid's brother Mu'awiya in 661

Yazid was a son of Abu Sufyan, a chief of the Quraysh tribe of Mecca, belonging to the Umayya branch of its Banu Abd Shams clan. His mother was Zaynab bint Nawfal (also identified as Zaynab bint Hashim) of the Kinana tribe.Template:Sfn He embraced Islam with his father and paternal half-brother Mu'awiya when the Islamic prophet Muhammad captured Mecca in 630.Template:Sfn

Soon afterward, he fought with the Muslims against the Thaqif tribe and its nomadic allies at the Battle of Hunayn. He was among the Qurayshites who the Islamic prophet won over through his generosity, in his case receiving a present of one hundred camels and forty ounces of silver.Template:Sfn

Yazid was married to Fakhita, a daughter of Muhammad's close companion Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf.Template:Sfn

Commander and governor in Syria

Yazid was appointed by caliph Abu Bakr (Template:Reign) one of the main commanders of the Muslim conquest of Byzantine Syria, launched in 633 or 634.Template:Sfn Yazid and his men, who numbered between 3,000 and 7,500 according to the sources, were initially dispatched to the Balqa region east and northeast of the Dead Sea.Template:Sfn

In May 634 Yazid and the other main commanders, including Amr ibn al-As, Shurahbil ibn Hasana and Khalid ibn al-Walid, besieged and captured Bosra, the first major Byzantine town to fall to the Muslims in Syria.Template:Sfn After their major victory against the Byzantines at the Battle of Ajnadayn, during which Yazid acted as lieutenant commander,Template:Sfn he launched further operations in the Balqa. Among these was the capture of the Amman fort in 635.Template:Sfn

Yazid took part in the siege of Damascus, beginning in 634.Template:Sfn Following the fall of city in 635,Template:Sfn or later in 637, Yazid became the deputy governor of Damascus under Abu Ubayda ibn al-Jarrah's overall command over the Muslims in Syria.Template:Sfn From Damascus, according to some of the early Muslim sources, Yazid dispatched lieutenant commanders against various places, including Dihya ibn Khalifa of the Banu Kalb to Palmyra in the desert to the northeast and a certain Zahra of the Banu Qushayr to the Batanea plain in the Hauran region south of Damascus; the defenders of both places capitulated after negotiations.Template:Sfn He later left Damascus to confront a Byzantine force led by a patrician, Theodore, sent by the Byzantine emperor Heraclius to recapture the city. Yazid was reinforced by Khalid and the Byzantines were defeated.Template:Sfn

In the Battle of the Yarmuk in 636, where the Muslims scored a decisive victory against the Byzantines, which consolidated and extended their conquest of much of Syria, Yazid was one of the four principal Muslim field commanders.Template:Sfn He and Mu'awiya also launched operations against the Syrian littoral, capturing the Mediterranean port towns of Sidon, Beirut and Byblos.Template:Sfn

When Abu Ubayda died in the plague of Amwas in 639, Yazid was appointed by Caliph Umar (Template:Reign) as the governor of Damascus, Jordan and Palestine.Template:Sfn The plague had afflicted much of Syria and took an enormous toll on the Muslim troops there. Later in 639, Yazid succumbed to the plague as well. He did not leave any children.Template:Sfn Umar appointed Mu'awiya in his brother's place over Damascus and Jordan.Template:Sfn

Image

Yazid is referred to in later Islamic sources as 'Yazid al-Khayr' (Yazid the Good) because of his positively viewed role in the Syrian conquest. Because of the nature of his death during a state of war he is considered by these sources to be a Script error: No such module "lang". (martyr).Template:Sfn

References

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Bibliography

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