Abdallah ibn Abi al-Shawarib

Abdallah ibn al-Hasan ibn Abdallah ibn Ali ibn Muhammad ibn Abd al-Malik ibn Abi'l-Shawarib (Arabic: عبدالله بن الحسن بن أبي الشوارب) was a 10th-century Muslim jurist who served as chief qadi of Baghdad.

Abdallah ibn Abi al-Shawarib
عبد الله بن أبي الشوارب
Abbasid Chief Judge
In office
September/October 961 – June 963
Caliph: Al-Muti
Succeeded byUmar ibn Aktham
Personal
BornNovember/December c. 931
Died1025/1027
ReligionIslam
ParentAl-Hasan ibn Abdallah
EraIslamic Golden Age
RegionBaghdad, Iraq
CreedSunni (Hanafi)
Main interest(s)Islamic theology, Tawhid, Islamic jurisprudence

Born in November/December 931,[1] Abdallah belonged to the Banu Abi'l-Shawarib family, a Hanafi legal family that in the 9th and 11th centuries produced 24 qadis, including eight chief qadis, for the Abbasid caliphs.[2] His brother Muhammad served as chief qadi in 944–945 and 946–947.[3]

He became chief qadi in September/October 961,[1] after purchasing the office from the ruling Buyids against a yearly payment of 200,000 silver dirham. To pay for this, he in turn sold appointments to the shurta and hisbah for 20,000 dirham per lunar month.[4] This met with the opposition of Caliph al-Muti, who refused to confirm him in his office or even meet him. It was the Buyid ruler, Mu'izz al-Dawla, who performed the investiture instead.[5] The appointment was broadly opposed, both by the populace and by scholarly opinion, and he was deposed after less than two years in office, in June 963. He was replaced by his immediate predecessor, Umar ibn Aktham, and all his judgements were pronounced void.[6]

The modern historian Heribert Busse regards the episode as "possibly the crassest example of venality" of the entire period, and remarks that the medieval historian al-Khatib al-Baghdadi did not deign to include a biography of Abdallah in his biographical dictionary on the history of Baghdad.[7] Abdallah died sometime in 1025–1027.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Busse 2004, p. 275.
  2. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 270, 271.
  3. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 270, 274, 275.
  4. ^ Busse 2004, p. 266.
  5. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 266–267.
  6. ^ Busse 2004, pp. 267, 275.
  7. ^ Busse 2004, p. 267 (esp. note 7).

Sources edit

  • Busse, Heribert (2004) [1969]. Chalif und Grosskönig - Die Buyiden im Irak (945–1055) [Caliph and Great King – The Buyids in Iraq (945–1055)] (in German). Würzburg: Ergon Verlag. ISBN 3-89913-005-7.