Page:Baladhuri-Hitti1916.djvu/367

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The Conquest of Alexandria
351

ʿUthmân to keep ʿAmr until he was through with the fight against the Greeks, because he had special knowledge of warfare and inspired awe in the enemy. ʿUthmân did so; and ʿAmr defeated the Greeks. ʿUthmân then wanted ʿAmr to be in charge of the army, and ʿAbdallâh in charge of the kharâj; but ʿAmr refused, saying, "My case is that of one who holds the horns of the cow while the chief milks it." ʿUthmân then appointed ibn-Saʿd to the governorship of Egypt.

The Abyssinians of al-Bîma. For seven years after the conquest of Egypt, the Abyssinians of al-Bîma[1] kept up their resistance, and could not be subjugated because of the water with which they flooded their thickets.

The second conquest of Alexandria. ʿAbdallâh ibn-Wahb from Mûsa ibn-ʿAli's father:—ʿAmr conquered Alexandria for the second time by capitulation, which conquest took place in the caliphate of ʿUthmân after the death of ʿUmar.

  1. Ṭabari, vol. iii, p. 1106.