Battle of Firaz

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Battle of Firaz
Part of the Arab–Byzantine Wars and
Islamic conquest of Persia
Mohammad adil rais-Khalid's conquest of Iraq.png
DateJanuary 634
Location
Firaz, Mesopotamia (Iraq)
Result Rashidun victory[1]
Belligerents
Rashidun Caliphate Simple Labarum2.svg Byzantine Empire
Derafsh Kaviani flag of the late Sassanid Empire.svg Sasanian Persian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Khalid ibn al-Walid Hormozd Jadhuyih[2]

The Battle of Firaz (Arabic: معركة الفراض) was the last battle of the Muslim Arab commander Khalid ibn al-Walid in Mesopotamia (Iraq) against the combined forces of the Byzantine Empire and the Sasanian Empire.[2]

The result of the battle was a victory for Khalid and the first Muslim conquest of Mesopotamia.

Background[]

By the end of 633, the Muslims were the masters of the Euphrates valley. In this valley, Firaz at the outermost edge of the Persian Empire still had a Persian garrison. Khalid decided to drive away the Persians from this outpost as well fearing that the Persians would execute a well planned re-invasion of lost territory. He marched to Firaz with a Muslim force and arrived there in the first week of December 633. Firaz was the frontier between the empires of Persia and Byzantium, and the garrisons of the Persians as well as the Byzantines were cantoned there. In the face of the Muslims, the Byzantine garrison decided to come to the aid of the Persian garrison.

The battle[]

Khalid gave the enemy the option to cross the Euphrates. As soon as the enemy had crossed the Euphrates, Khalid commanded the Muslim force to go into action. The united forces of the Persians and the Byzantines had the river at their back. At Firaz, Khalid adopted the same tactics as he had adopted at Mazar. As the front ranks of both the forces committed themselves in the fighting, Khalid fixed his enemy on either flank with the help of his rear wings. Making a swift movement, the Muslims dashed for the bridge on the river, and succeeded in occupying it. The enemy was thus held in a pincer movement.

Aftermath[]

Sir William Muir, noted that the casualties of the coalition army "must be a great number, since the traditional accounts placed their casualties at fabulous number of 100.000 death" as the remaining fleeting soldiers were pursued and cut down by the cavalry of Rashidun[3]

Khalid's oath[]

There is an Islamic legend, which runs as follows:

In the beginning of the battle of Firaz when the odds appeared to be against the Muslims, Khalid undertook an oath that if he was victorious, he would undertake pilgrimage (Hajj) to Mecca, the House of God. After the victory of Firaz, Khalid stayed at Firaz for some days and made the necessary arrangements for the administration of the territory. In January 634, while a garrison was kept at Firaz, orders were issued to the main Muslim army to return to Al-Hirah. Khalid stayed behind with the rear of the army. As the army moved forward on the road to Al Hirah, Khalid separated himself from the army, and took an unfrequented route to Mecca with a small escort. Khalid reached Mecca in time to perform the Hajj. After performing the pilgrimage secretly and fulfilling his vow, Khalid and his party rode back to Al Hirah. Before the last contingent of the main army from Firaz had entered Hirah, Khalid was also there, as if he had been all the time with the rear guard.

References[]

  1. ^ Michael G. Morony, Iraq After the Muslim Conquest, (Gorgias Press, 2005), 225.[1]
  2. ^ a b Parvaneh Pourshariati, Decline and Fall of the Sasanian Empire:The Sasanian-Parthian Confederacy and the Arab Conquest of Iran, (I.B.Tauris, 2008), 201-202. [2]
  3. ^ Muir 1891, p. 62.

Primary sources[]

  • Muir, William (1891). The Caliphate Its Rise, Decline, and Fall (Digitized May 19, 2012 ed.). p. 62. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  • Tabari, Abu Jaafar, Mohammed bin Jarir, Tarikh ar Rusul wal Mulk, Volume II

External links[]

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