Page:Baladhuri-Hitti1916.djvu/375

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The Conquest of Ifrîḳiyah
359

the beasts, snakes and deadly scorpions. This ibn-Nâfiʿ was a righteous man whose prayer was answered. He prayed to his Lord, who made the scorpions disappear; even the beasts had to carry their young and run away.

Al-Wâḳidi says, "I once said to Mûsa ibn-ʿAli, 'Thou hast seen the buildings in Ifrîḳiyah that are connected together and that we still see to-day. Who was it that built them?' And Mûsa replied, 'The first one was ʿUḳbah ibn-Nâfiʿ al-Fihri who marked out the plans for the buildings, himself built a home, and the Moslems at the same time built houses and dwelling-places. He also built the cathedral mosque that is in Ifrîḳiyah.'"

It was in Ifrîḳiyah that Maʿbad ibn-al-ʿAbbâs fell a martyr in the campaign of ibn-abi-Sarḥ during the caliphate of ʿUthmân. Others say he met natural death during the war; but that he fell a martyr is the more authentic report.

According to al-Wâḳidi and others, Muʿâwiyah ibn-abi-Sufyân dismissed Muʿâwiyah ibn-Ḥudaij[1] and conferred the governorship of Egypt and al-Maghrib on Maslamah ibn-Mukhallad al-Anṣâri,[2] who appointed his freedman, abu-l-Muhâjir, governor of al-Maghrib. When Yazîd ibn-Muʿâwiyah, however, came to power, he reinstated ʿUḳbah ibn-Nâfiʿ in his position, and the latter invaded as-Sûs al-Adna,[3] which lay behind Ṭanjah. There he went about without being molested or fought by anybody. At last he departed.

Yazîd ibn-Muʿâwiyah died and his son Muʿâwiyah ibn-Yazîd, surnamed abu-Laila, was proclaimed caliph. Muʿâwiyah called a general public prayer meeting, and resigned the caliphate. He retired to his home where he died after

  1. ʿAdhâri, vol. i, p. 14.
  2. Suyûṭi, Ḥusn, vol. ii, 7.
  3. i. e., the nearer (== Darʿah) in distinction from al-Aḳṣa—the farther; Yaʿḳûbi, Buldân, pp. 359–360.