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Thamal al-Dulafi
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Thamal al-Dulafi (; ) was an military commander and longtime governor ( or ) of Tarsus and the borderlands with the in (). A former slave, he commanded several successful raiding expeditions, mostly by sea, against the Byzantines, but also against the in and against the in .


Life
Thamal was a , and, as his nisba of "al-Dulafi" indicates, began his career as a slave ( ) of the autonomous of , which was suppressed by the caliph al-Mu'tadid in 896. He is first mentioned in 917/8, when he was appointed by the caliph as commander of a naval expedition against the . He led his fleet to a successful raid, returning with prisoners and booty, while the governor of Tarsus, , led the year's overland raid.

In 920, he led his fleet of 25 ships to , where he participated in the repulsion of a invasion. His arrival prevented the Fatimid ships from entering the branch of the , and on 12 March, near , he inflicted a crushing defeat on the Fatimid fleet, whose vessels were driven to the shore by the wind. Most of the Fatimid crews were either killed or captured. In spring 921, Thamal and his fleet sailed to , captured by the Fatimids in 919. The fleet entered the city's harbour and after a fight drove out its Fatimid garrison, while the populace was evacuated to Rosetta as a precaution. He then joined with the rest of the army under the Abbasid commander-in-chief Mu'nis al-Muzaffar to blockade the , where the remaining Fatimid forces had withdrawn, and forced them to burn their equipment and retreat westwards over the desert.

In 923, while Mu'nis al-Muzaffar led the land raid against the Byzantines, Thamal once more led the seaborne expedition, which allegedly made 1,000 prisoners and took much plunder, including over 28,000 animals. By this time, he had apparently already been appointed as governor of Tarsus. In 924, according to al-Mas'udi, he led his fleet, augmented by and Egyptian ships, to the vicinity of itself. There he made contact with the Bulgarians and agreed joint action in Tsar Simeon's war against the Byzantines; some of the Bulgarians even returned with Thamal to Tarsus, although nothing further is known to have come of this. However, in 924–926 he left the borderlands and went to , where he participated in the fighting against the . During his absence, Tarsus was governed by his lieutenant Bushra, who along with the eunuch Muflih also supervised the prisoner exchange with the Byzantines in September–October 925.

Having returned to Tarsus in late 926/early 927, he led the summer raid against the Byzantines in 927. During the campaign Thamal defeated a Byzantine army, and during his return defeated the leader , who had renounced Islam and entered Byzantine service. Thamal returned to Tarsus in December 927/January 928. In March/April 931, according to , he embarked on a raiding expedition in March/April. The campaign was hampered by the weather—his horses reportedly sank in snow up to the breast—but Thamal defeated a Byzantine force, killing 600 and capturing 3,000 soldiers and taking much booty. Immediately after his return to Tarsus in July/August, he left for the main summer expedition, which reached as far as , which was abandoned by its garrison and plundered by the Muslims. Thamal then led his men up to , before returning to Tarsus in September/October. The women and children caught during this raid reportedly fetched 136,000 on the slave market. In the next year his raid was successful enough that letters declaring "victories on land and on sea" were read in the mosques.

Thamal is no longer mentioned after this, unless he can be identified with "al-Thamali" who led a raid in 941/2. The latter however is most likely one of Thamal's retainers ( ), who remained a powerful force in Tarsus and the thughur for some time to come: Thamal's lieutenant Bushra succeeded him as governor, followed a few years later by another of his ghilman, ; while the Thamaliyya ("men of Thamal") are mentioned as a faction in 938, when they killed their rival Tarif. Thamal's ghilman are attested in Tarsus during the subsequent period as well, as late as the mid-960s.


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