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At about 776 or 778 CE, Abd Al-Rahman became the Imam of the
Ibadites of Tahert. He seems to have had a very peaceful reign and worked hard to ensure that justice and simplicity were also instilled in Tahert's legal system. The eastern Abadite communities held high respect for him and sent him a
279:
Gaiser, Adam (2013). "Slaves and Silver Across the Strait of
Gibraltar: Politics and Trade between Umayyad Iberia and Kharījite North Africa". In Liang, Yuen-Gen; Balbale, Abigail Krasner; Devereux, Andrew; Gómez-Rivaz, Camillo (eds.).
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Abd al-Rahman was a quick and energetic learner, and had studied under Abu Ubaida Muslim in Basra. Abd al-Rahman became one of the five missionaries who was ultimately responsible for the spread of the
Ibadite doctrine in the Maghreb.
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number of money and presents, in addition to recognizing his right to an
Imamate. He is alleged to have died at about 784 CE and his son Abd Al-Wahhab succeeded him.
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209:(central North Africa) to Abd al-Rahman (in June 758—the same year—Ibn al-Asha'ath retook Kairawan). Ibn al-Ash'ath was after him though.
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and their companions took refuge in the central
Maghrib and ended up founding the town of Tahert, which is now known as
252:
Prevost, Virginie (2011). "Ἁbd al-Raḥmān ibn Rustum al-Fārisī. Une tentative de biographie du premier imam de Tāhart".
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of the
Ibadites had captured Kairouan from the Warfadjuma warriors and after his conquest, he gave several parts of
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The
Encyclopædia of Islam: A Dictionary of the Geography, Ethnography and Biography of the Muhammadan Peoples
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pilgrim she had met in Mecca and the couple raised Abd al-Rahman at
Kairouan.
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near Kuzul. The city was quickly populated with
Ibadite emigrants from
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Spanning the Strait: Studies in Unity in the
Western Mediterranean
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Der Islam: Journal of the History and Culture of the Middle East
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from about 776 or 778 CE to 908 CE. He was also the founder of
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or its surroundings. According to the 13th-century historian
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177:. Abd al-Rahman's grandfather, Bahram, had been a mawla of
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149:man, left Iraq with his son and wife to join the
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286:. Leiden and Boston: Brill. pp. 53–54.
310:. Holland: EJ Brill. 1913. pp. 56–57.
212:Quickly though, Abd Al-Rahman and his son
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185:. Abd al-Rahman's mother had remarried a
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338:8th-century Islamic religious leaders
145:. His father, Rustam ibn Bahram, a
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134:Abd al-Rahman was probably born
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109:and the founder of
175:al-Ghamr ibn Yazid
98:عبد الرحمن بن رستم
343:Arab slave owners
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328:784 deaths
322:Categories
236:References
201:The first
71:c. 784–785
55:c. 729–730
266:0021-1818
260:(1): 45.
197:Conquests
187:Kairouani
42:Successor
222:Ifriqiya
207:Ifriqiya
100:) was a
218:Tagdemt
173:prince
171:Umayyad
151:Maghreb
147:Persian
125:History
115:Algeria
102:Persian
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183:Medina
130:Origin
119:Tiaret
94:Arabic
165:mawla
155:Mecca
77:House
34:Reign
288:ISBN
262:ISSN
224:and
203:Imam
143:Iraq
106:imam
68:Died
58:Iraq
52:Born
28:Imam
16:Imam
181:in
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