Battle of Fakhkh

Battle of Fakhkh
Part of the Alid uprisings against the early caliphates
Date11 June 786
Location
Fakhkh (Wadi al-Zahir), near Mecca
21°27′11.4″N 39°48′24.4″E / 21.453167°N 39.806778°E / 21.453167; 39.806778
Result Abbasid victory, suppression of the Alid uprising
Belligerents
Abbasid Caliphate Alids
Commanders and leaders
Muhammad ibn Sulayman ibn Ali Al-Husayn ibn Ali 
Strength
~330 mounted men, unknown number of infantrymen Over 300
Casualties and losses
Unknown Over 100 killed in battle; further executions
Battle of Fakhkh is located in Saudi Arabia
Battle of Fakhkh
Location within Saudi Arabia

The Battle of Fakhkh (Arabic: يوم فخ, romanizedyawm Fakhkh, lit.'Day of Fakhkh') was fought on 11 June 786 between the forces of the Abbasid Caliphate and the supporters of a pro-Alid rebellion in Mecca under al-Husayn ibn Ali, a descendant of Hasan ibn Ali.

Husayn and his supporters planned an uprising at Medina during the annual Hajj pilgrimage of 786, but their hand was forced by a confrontation with the local governor, al-Umari. The conspirators rose in revolt on the morning of 16 May, and seized the Mosque of the Prophet, where Husayn's supporters swore allegiance to him. The revolt failed to gather support among the populace, and the reaction of the Abbasid garrison prevented the rebels from establishing control over the city, and eventually confined them to the Mosque itself. After eleven days, the Alids and their supporters, some 300 strong, abandoned Medina and headed to Mecca.

Informed of these events, the Abbasid caliph al-Hadi appointed his uncle Muhammad ibn Sulayman ibn Ali to deal with the rebels, with an army composed chiefly of the armed retinues of the various Abbasid princes who on that year had gone to the pilgrimage. In the ensuing battle, at the wadi of Fakhkh near Mecca, Husayn and over a hundred of his followers were killed, many others were captured, and some escaped by passing themselves off as pilgrims, including the future founder of the Idrisid dynasty in what is now Morocco. The uprising had a strong social character, with Husayn drawing inspiration from Zayd ibn Ali's 740 revolt, and itself impacted later Zaydi Shi'a practices.


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