Thabit ibn Nasr ibn Malik al-Khuza'i ( Arabic: ثابت بن نصر الخزاعي) (died 813/14) was an Abbasid general and governor of the Cilician frontier zone ( al-thughur al-Sha'miya) with the Byzantine Empire in 808–813.
Thabit was a native of Khurasan, [1] and the grandson of Malik ibn al-Haytham al-Khuza'i, an early Abbasid follower and military leader. [2] He was appointed as governor of the Syrian thughur (essentially comprising Cilicia, with Tarsus as its capital) in the last year of the reign of Harun al-Rashid (808/9). [3] [4] He organized a prisoner exchange with the Byzantines at Podandos in 808, [5] [6] but also led a series of raiding expeditions (sawa'if) against them. [3] In one of these however, in August 812, he suffered a heavy defeat at the hands of Leo the Armenian, losing 2,000 men. [6]
From ca. 810, with the outbreak of a civil war between al-Amin and his brother al-Ma'mun, Thabit, like many other provincial governors and magnates, was able to assume virtually independent control of his province. [3] [7] He died or was killed shortly after the final victory of Ma'mun in 813, [3] according to some accounts poisoned by his cousin Nasr ibn Hamza ibn Malik. [8]
Thabit ibn Nasr ibn Malik al-Khuza'i ( Arabic: ثابت بن نصر الخزاعي) (died 813/14) was an Abbasid general and governor of the Cilician frontier zone ( al-thughur al-Sha'miya) with the Byzantine Empire in 808–813.
Thabit was a native of Khurasan, [1] and the grandson of Malik ibn al-Haytham al-Khuza'i, an early Abbasid follower and military leader. [2] He was appointed as governor of the Syrian thughur (essentially comprising Cilicia, with Tarsus as its capital) in the last year of the reign of Harun al-Rashid (808/9). [3] [4] He organized a prisoner exchange with the Byzantines at Podandos in 808, [5] [6] but also led a series of raiding expeditions (sawa'if) against them. [3] In one of these however, in August 812, he suffered a heavy defeat at the hands of Leo the Armenian, losing 2,000 men. [6]
From ca. 810, with the outbreak of a civil war between al-Amin and his brother al-Ma'mun, Thabit, like many other provincial governors and magnates, was able to assume virtually independent control of his province. [3] [7] He died or was killed shortly after the final victory of Ma'mun in 813, [3] according to some accounts poisoned by his cousin Nasr ibn Hamza ibn Malik. [8]