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CHAPTER VI
THE NUMBER OF THE ARMY


    The number of the army, that was in Kufa in the middle years of the first century, A.H was forty thousand fighters. Every year ten thousand fighters of it made a campaign (against the enemies of Islam). (This is what the reliable books have mentioned).
    We have known that the Commender of the faithful (Imam Ali), peace be on Him, prepared forty thousand or fifty thousand fighters according to two different reports to attack the Syrians. However, he had died before he made an attack with them. We think that Al-Hasan's army was a group of the army which the Commander of the faithful prepated to fight against Mu'awiya.
    Then we know nothing about the attitude of these armies towards Al-Hasan b. Ali, peace be on them, when he summoned them to jihad (armed struggle). Besides we have known, from the more than one reference book, that the vanguard which Al-Hasan sent to meet Mu'awiya at Maskan was estimated at twelve thousand fighters. The accepatable idear is that this vanguard was from the groups of the enemy which the commander of the faithful formed before he died. So some of these groups supported Al-Hasan while the rest refused that.
    Then, from another reference, we have known that the Kufans became excited on the day of Al-Hasan, so they called up other four thousand fighter.1
    Thus these are sixteen thousand fighters whom the unquesionable text have showed.
    Also there are other figures concerning the number of the army.
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    1. al-Rawandi, al-Kharaij wa al-Jaraih, p. 228.
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The historians have mentioned them, and hte important declarations have included them. However, their corretness is liable to test and discussion.
    The following are some of texts about these different figures. First we will mention these figures as they are. Then we will check them properly.
    1. In his book (Bihar al-Anwar, vol 10,p 110), he (ie Mohammed Bakr al-Majilisi) said: "Then he ( ie., Al-Hasan) dispached to Him (i.e, Mu'awiya) a leader with four thousand (fighter). He (the leader) was from Kinda. He (Al-Hasan) ordered Him (the leader) to camp in Anbar1 and not to do anything till his (Al-Hasan's order came to Him. When he (the leader)headed for Anbar and stopped at it, Mu'awiya nlew of that, Thus he sent massengers to Him, and wrote: Indeed, if you came to me, I would appoint you as a ruler over some districts os Sham (Syria) and of the Islamd (al-jazirah), and the like, he (Mu'awiya) wnet Him (the leader) five hundren thousand dirhams. So al-Kindi took the money. He deserted Al-Hasan. He went to Mu'awiya with two hundred men from his notables and the memver of his family. Al-Hasan heard of that. So he rose and delivered a sermon: al-Kindi went to Mu'awiya. He deserted me and you. I told you a time after a time (that) you have no faithfulness. you are the slaves of this world. I am going to send anther man to replace Him. I know that he (the man) will do towards me and you as your friend (ie al-Kindi) did. He will never fear Allah concerning me and you. So he (Al-Hasan) sent Him (Mu'awiya) a man from (the tribe of) Murad with four thousnad (fighters). He (Al-Hasan) came forward Him (the man) before the very eyes of the people, confirmed Him, and told Him that he (the man) would desert as al-Kindi did. So he (the man) took a solemn oath before Him (Al-Hasan) that he (the man ) would not do that. So Al-Hasan said: He will
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    1. A city was on the bank of the Eupharates (west of Baghdad). Anbar wa ten leagues far from Baghdad, It was called so, for the stores (anabir) of wheat and barley were gathered together in it during the days of the Persians. Abu al-Abbas al-Saffah al-Abbasi resided in it till he died. He rebuilt palaces and house in it, but they have become extinct.
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desert. When he (the man) headed for Anbar, Mu'awiya sent Him messengers. He wrote to Him as he (Mu'awiya) wrote to his (the man's companion. He sent Him five thousand (maybe he, the reporter, meant five hundred thousand) dirhams. He made Him desire for any district he liked from the districts of Sham and of the Island. So he (the man) deserted Al-Hasan, went to Mu'awiya, and did not keep his word."
    After this text, al-Majilisi mentioned that Al-Hasan took al-Nukhayla as a camp for him, and that Al-Hasan went there.
    2. In his book (Sharh Nahj al-Balagha, vol.4, p.14), b. Abu al-Haddid said: The people went out. They became active for going out. Then Al-Hasan went out to the camp. He had appointed al-Mughira b. Noufal b. al-Harth b. Abd al-Muttalib. as a successor over Kufa. He ordered Him to urge and dispatch people to Him. So he (ie al-Mughira) began urging and dispatching them to the extent that he camp was full (of people). Then Al-Hasan went with a great army and good equipmnt till he stopped at Dir Abd al-Rahman. He stayed at it for three (day) till the people gathered. Then he summoned 'Ubayd Allah b. al-Abbas b. Abd al-Mughira, and said to Him: Cousin, I am going to send with you twleve thousand (men) from the horsemen of the Arabs and (the Koran) readers of the city."
    3. al-Tabari, (vol. 6,p. 94) reported on the authority of al-Zuhri, who said: "When Mu'awiya got rid of 'Ubayd Allah b. Abbas and Al-Hasan, peace be on Him, he came to plot against a man who was the most important the people in plotting against Him (Mu'awiya). There were forty thousand (fighters) with Him. Mu'awiya, Amru, and the Syrians met them.
    4. In his book (Sharh Nahj al-Balagha, vol.4. p. 6), b. Abu al-Haddid has mentioned the following on the authority of al-Mada'ini1 on the authority of al-Musayyab b. Nujayya, who said to Al-Hasan
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    1. He was Abu Al-Hasan b. Mohammed b. Abu Sayf al-Basri. He lived in al-Mada'in, then moved to Baghdad, and died ther in the year 215 A. H. Ibn Abu al-Haddid reported many tradition on his authority. He, may Allah have mercy on Him, has about two hundren books on various matters.
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when he learned Him for his Peace Treaty with Mu'awiya My astonishment at you does not end. you have made peace with Mu'awiya, (while) you have forty thousand (fighters). Or he (al-Musayyab) said: you pledge allegiance to (Mu'awiya), due to different reporters."
    5. In his book (al-Kamil if al-Tarikh, vol.3, pl 61), al-Athir said: "Forty thousand fighters pledged allegiance to the Commander of the faithful Ali). They were ready to die for Him when he told them about something concerning Sham (syria) and appeared. While he was getting ready to advance towards (syria), he was killed. If Allah wills a thing no one is able to repulse it (the thing). When he was killed, the people pledged allegiance to his son, Al-Hasan. He (Al-Hasan) heard of the advance of Mu'awiya and the Syrians towards Him. So he (Al-Hasan) and the army that had pledged allegiance to Ali got ready and left the Kufa to meet Mu'awiya, who had stopped at Maskan. So Al-Hasan arrived in al-Madain. There he appointed Qays b. Abbada, al-Ansari over his vanguard with twelve thousand (fighters). It was said that Al-Hasan appointed Abd Allah1 b. Abbas over his (Al-Hasan's) vanguard. So he (Al-Hasan) appointed Abd Allah b. Abbas over his vanguard in the advance guards of Qays b, Sa'd b. Abbada."
    I (the author) say: Ibn Kuthayr followed such a tradition. Apparently he has taken it letter by letter from the book 'al-Kamil.
    6. al-Mada'ini2 has reported the words of Al-Hasan, peace be on Him, in response to the man who said to Him: "Were you right in what you have done? So Al-Hasan said: Yes, but I am afraid that twenty thousand of eight thousand (fighter) will come on the Day of Resurrection. Their jugular veins will bleed. So they will ask Allah why their blood had been shed.
    7. In his book (al-Imam wa Siyasa, p. 151), b. Qutayba
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    1. He was 'Ubayd Allah, inheriter Abd Allah nor Qays. We have already mentioned the rasons for the error in mentioning each of them.

    2. Ibn Abu al-Haddid, Sharh Nahj al-Balagha, vol 4, p. 7. Ibn Kuthayr, al-Kamil fi al-Tarikh vol. 8, p.42.

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al-Daynwari has reported: "They mentioned that the people pledged allegiance to Mu'awiya. Then he (Mu'awiya) came back to Sham (Syria). Afterwards Sulayman b. Sirt al-Khazai, who was absent from the kufa and was the master and chief if the Iraqis, came to Al-Hasan and said to Him: 'you who have humiliated the believers, al-salamu alayka! Al-Hasan said: wa alayka al-salam, sit down, may Allah have mercy on your father. He (b. Qutayba) said: Sulayman sat down and said: 'Now then, our astonishment at you does not end bacause of your pledge of allegiance to Mu'awiya. you have one hundred Iraqi fighters who receives salaries. you have a similar number to them from their sons and friends. Moreover, you have followers (Shia) in Basra and Hijaz.
    I (the author) say: In his book (Tansiz al-Anbiya) al-Murtada, in his book (al-Manaqib) b. Sharashub, and in his book (al-Bihar) al-Majilisi have reported he complete text of what happened between Sulayman b. Sirt and his companions and Al-Hasan, peace be on Him. No one fo the (the authors) have narrated on the authority of Sulayman and his companions that the number of army was more than forty thousand (fighters).
    So only b. Qutayba has reported on the authority of Sulayman that the number of the army was one hundred (fighters). Also only he used the words pledge of allegiance (al-bay'a) in stead of the word Peace (sulh).
    8. Zyyad b. Abih, who was the governor of Al-Hasan over Persia, said the following in response to Mu'awiya's threat: "Indeed, the son of she who ate the livers (ie.Hind), of the shelter of hypocrisy, and of the rest of the allies (ahzab) has written to me to threaten me. Between me and him are the two grandsons of the Apostle of Allah. They have ninety thousand (fighters) {according to a report seventy thousands (fighters)} who have put the hilts of their swords under their chins. No one of them turns till he dies. Indeed, by Allah, if he (ie, Mu'awiya) came to me, he would find me stronger (than Him) in
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hitting with the sword."1

Discussion

    In this manner, these texts with various froms have suggested different figures about the number of the army. The large figures in these texts are forty thousand, eighty thousand, and one hundred thousand (fighters).
    Indeed, all these three figures are liable to doubt and check, even the smallest ones of them. Now, you read the following explanations:
    1. The argest figures is one hundred thousand or ninety thousand (fithters). Zyyad b. Abih referred to this figure. Only al-Daynwari has attributed it to Sulayman b. Sirt al-Khaza'i. This figure is unacceptable for several reasons:
    The most important nes f these reasns are:
    A. Both leaders (ie., Sulayman and Zyyad) did not attend the pledge of allegiance to Al-Hasan. They did not take part in the jihad of Al-Hasan. They were not present during the succession of Al-Hasan in Kufa. Generally speaking, they left their homeland in Iraq for two Years.2
    Thus they did not attend the situation that prevailed Kufa at that time. Namely, they did not witness the strong formation of the parties and the ignoble tardiness that spread all over Kufa, and with which the Kufans daced their Imam to whom they pledged allegiance. Therefore
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    1. al-Yaqubi, Tarikh, vol 2, p. 194. Ibn al-Athir, al-Kamil fo al-Tarikh. vol, 3, p. 166.
    The former has narrated that the number of the army was ninety thousand fighters, while the latter has mentioned that it was seventy thousand fighters.

    2. Ibn Qutayba (in al-Imam wa Siyasa) and al-Murtada (in Tanzh al-Anbiya) have mentioned that Sulayman was not in Kufa for two years. As for Zyyad, he was the governor of Basra. Then Abd Allah b. Abbas dispateched Him to Persia, to be a goveror over it in the year 39 A.H, al-Tabari mentioned that Zyyad was in 'Basra before the year 39.

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the figures they have mentioned are worthless.
    When Sulayman and Zyyad mentioned these figures of the fighters, they compared the present time of Kufa with its past time. They thought that the Kufans mobilized fighters during the time of Al-Hasan as they did during the time of his father, the Commander of the faithful. in the year 37 and 38 A, H.
    B. The attitude of both men (ie, Sulayman and Zyyad) at the emotional moment when they mentioned these figures indicates that they inclined to exaggeration. This exaggeration about the number of the army resulted from the Sulayman's strong anger. Thus he censured Imam Al-Hasan, peace be on Him, for making peace with Mu'awiya. Also it resulted from the threat Zyyad made in response to Mu'awiya's threat.
    Therefore there is nothing correct in these two figures. Thus we must not rely on them to determine the number of the army.
    Besides we have known that Sulayman was the friend of al-Musayyab b. Nujayya. In othe words Sulayman had ties with al-Musayyab other than the personal frienhship. In text no, 4, you have read that al-Musayyab admonished Al-Hasan for making peace with Mu'awiya. "you have forty thousand (fighters). It is undeniable that these two friends did not diffter over the affairs of the members of the House (ahl al-Bayt), peace be on them, as they differed over these figures.
    Accordingly, the reason for these unsual figures of Sulaymans b. Sirt is that al-Daynwary, only who reported such reports about the matter of Al-Hasan , did not check the out.
    Fate had decided to punish these two leaders (Sulayman b. Sirt and Zyyad.) before they left the life in this world. For they recklessly blamed Imam Abu Mohammed (ie, Al-Hasan), peace be on Him, for making peace with Mu'awiya.
    So in the year 65 A.H , eighteen thousand people pledged allegiance to Sulayman and Zyyad to avenge the blood of al-Husayn, peace be on Him. When the Battle of Ayn al-Warda took place most people deserted them. Thus suffered from the desertion of the people.
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Such a kind of desertion reminded them of the attitude of the people towards the matters of the members of the House (ahl al-Bayt), peace be on them.
    Then Sualyman and al-Musayyab. who were the leaders of the Movement of the Repentant, were killed at the Battle of Ayn al-Warda. Also most of their followers were killed on that day.
    2.As for the number eighty thousand or seventy thousand fighters, it was mentioned by Al-Hasan when he answered the man who asked Him: Were you right in what you have done."
    The words of Al-Hasan, in fact, indicate that he had not more than twenty thousand fighters accoerding to the greatest assessment. That is because when Al-Hasan mentioned those whose jugular veins will bleed on the Day of Judgment," he ranged their number he did not mean his soldiers in patticular. Rather he meant the total number of the two fighters armies. Moreover, we have known that the number of the Surans during their advance against Al-Hasan was sixty thousand fighters. So the rest of the number of Al-Hasan's private army.
    Al-Hasan's hesitation in determining the number is clear in what we have mentined. That is because if he had meant his army with the exception of the army of the others, he would have mentioned its number without hesitation. For he was the most knowledgeable of the people in the number of his army.
    3. As for the number forty thousand fighters, it has been mentioned more than one historians. Also al-Musayyab b. Nujayya has mentioned it. We have nothing concerning this number but two ideas:
    A. This number disagrees with Al-Hasan's words with which he referred to the number of the army you have known that his words do not mean more than twenty thousand fighters according to the greatest estimation. Also ths number disagrees with his other words, with which he described the attitude of the people towards Him. Namely, he described their attitude as "Sluggishness in fighting."1 Thus if
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    1. al-Majlisi, Bihar al-Anwar, vo. 10,p. 113.
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Al-Hasan had had forty thousand fightes, the people would not have been sluggish in fighting alongside Him. So the number is still liabel to doubt.
    B. The doubt imposed the number on those blieved in it. So they thought that the Commander of the faithful, peace be on Him, prepared forty thousand fighters for his final campaign against Sham. then his holy life had ended before he advanced against Sham with his arm. So they thought that the soldiers of the father (ie.Imam Ali) were added to the soldiers of the son (ie. Al-Hasan), However, they forgot to mention the number of the people who deserted the new Successor in Kufa.
    Therefore, the figures based on these errors is worthless.
    Al-Zuhri's report is very unsual. For it denotes that there were forty thousand fighters with Qays b. Sa'd b. Abbada al-Ansari. They blonged to the army of Al-Hasan. Namely, they were with Qays who became the commander of the vanguard in Msakan when 'Ubayd Allah and his followers had escaped. This means that only the vanguard of Al-Hasan had forty eight thousand fighters before the events of escaping.
    Thus this idea is incorrect in history.
    The reports of al-Zuhri concerning the matters of the members of the house (alh al-Bayt) are the weakest of all reports, and the most confused of them all in subjects. The author if the book (dirasat fi al-Islam) regarded al-Zuhri as a mercenaty for the Umayyads. This is enough evidence for the weakness of his reports.
    Al-Zuhri, said: "Mu'awiya, Amru, and the Syrains stopped at them. Now, we want to act freely with this narration of his. We want to correct this intentional confusion as follows: the above mentioned words contain a pronous that is "them". If we attribute the pronoun to Mu'awiya's arm and exclude Qays's army, then the number will concern Mu'awiya's soldiers with whom he met Qays. The concerned ones of them were those who received salaries. The concerned ones of the Syrians were the volunteers other than those who received salaries. In ths way there will be coherence between this narration of his and
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the other narration that has added the soldieres of Mu'awiya to the vanguard of Al-Hasan.
    4. Ibn Abu al-Haddid has used the phrase 'the geat army' to described the movement of Al-Hasan from al-Nukhayla to Dir Abe al-Rahman on his way to his camps. These words, as you see, are brief. They agree with the number that we have already mentioned. Indeed, sixteen thousand fighters were a great army. I if you refuse that, then they were twenty thousand fighters.
    5. The narration in the book Bihar al-Anwar' is the best of all reports which we have mentioned to understand what has been reported about this matter. there is an order in the frequent events of this narraions so that such an order imposes doubt on it.
    When this narration shows the same events, it ignores the names of the two leaders (ie, al-Kindi and al-Muradi.) For this narration indicates that they met Mu'awiya before 'Ubayd Allah. Also they deserted Al-Hasan before Him. In the history of such a kind of event, the people do not know that ignoring the names of two leaders during two events is among the ugliest events of man in history.
    Apart rom ignoring the names of the two leaders, this narration which is in Bihar al-Anwar underlines that the Imam (Al-Hasan) insisted on accusing the two leaders (of deserted) before he dispatched them. Moerover, this narration underlines that the Imam sent them to meet Mu'awiya though he as aware of their desertion.
    Some of this (explanation is enough so that we will not go on discussing this narration, for it is very easy to understand.
    I (the author) say: In spite of this discusson, we have not gotten any result about the matter which we have mentioned under the topic: The Number of the Army. These texts, though many, are some examples about the fabrications from which the matter of Al-Hasan suffered. No wonder when we mention this fact (matter), repeat it, regard its danger as great, condemn it, and draw the attention of peole to its results. These are eight texts. No one of them is able to resist the disussion so that we cannot use them as historical proofs.
    Then we have nothing except the number of the army of the
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vanguar, that was twelve thousand fighters, and the number of the volunteers in Kufa, that was four thousand fighters. Then we have to mention that the groups of the people who came to Al-Hasan at Dir Abd al-Rahman when he stayed there for three days. They were about twenty thousand fighters. All these groups of people were the army of Al-Hasan when he headed for his two camps at Maskan and al-Mada'in.
    As for the fighters from al-Mada'in itself, they did not tarry from the battle fields headed by Ali, peace be on Him. We have already mentioned that, so it was impossible for them to desert his son (Al-Hasan) when he camped among them.
    This is what makes us believe that the number of the army at both camps was twenty thousand fighters or little over.
    This number was 'the great army' which b. Abu al-Haddid meant. Also it is the number that agrees with the foregoing words of Al-Hasan, peace be on Him. There is no proof better than Al-Hasan's words concerning his matters.
    Then we no not know whether Al-Hasan, peace be on Him, received any help from any party when he was in al-Mada'in.

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