Uthman ibn Abi al-As


Uthman ibn Abi al-As al-Thaqafi was a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad from the tribe of Banu Thaqif and the governor of Bahrayn and Oman in 636–650, during the reigns of caliphs Umar and Uthman. During his governorship he led military campaigns against the Sasanian Persians in Fars. After his dismissal, he settled with his brothers in Basra where he was granted a large estate by the caliph. He transmitted numerous hadiths to the scholar al-Hasan al-Basri and died in the city.

Origins and governorship of Ta'if

Uthman was the son of Abu al-As ibn Bishr ibn Abd Duhman of the Banu Thaqif tribe based in Ta'if in the Hejaz. They specifically belonged to the Banu Hutayt, a prominent family of the Banu Jusham, which was one of the two principal branches of the Thaqif. Uthman had five brothers: al-Hakam, al-Mughira, Abu Umayya, Abu Amr—all of whom were sons of Uthman's mother Fatima bint Abdillah—and Hafs.
Uthman was the youngest member of a six-man delegation of Thaqif representatives sent to establish peace with the Islamic prophet Muhammad on 9 December 630, shortly before the Muslim conquest of their city in 631. The delegation embraced Islam during this meeting, though the 8th-century historians al-Waqidi and Umar ibn Shabba hold Uthman had already converted to Islam during a previous visit to Muhammad in Medina, but had kept it secret from his tribe. Despite his youth, Muhammad declared Uthman governor of Ta'if. His appointment stemmed from his apparent zeal in studying Islam and the Quran, as testified to Muhammad by Abu Bakr, the future first caliph. Uthman's jurisdiction was over the settled inhabitants of Ta'if and its environs and he remained in the post at the time of Muhammad's death in 632. He was the first member of the Thaqif to achieve prominence under Islam.
After the death of Muhammad, many Arab tribes rebelled against the nascent Muslim state. Uthman played a key role maintaining the loyalty of the Thaqif to Islam. During the Ridda wars launched by Abu Bakr against the rebel tribes, Uthman dispatched a force from Ta'if against rebel clans from the tribes of Azd and Bajila in Yemen. He later contributed a twenty-man force from the city under the command of his brother to assist Medina's war efforts in Yemen. Abu Bakr kept Uthman in his post as did his successor Caliph Umar.

Governor of Bahrayn and Oman

Uthman was appointed governor of Bahrayn and Oman by Umar in 636, following the dismissal of al-Ala al-Hadhrami. The province of the Yamama was administratively attached to Bahrayn at the time. Uthman was permitted by Umar to nominate al-Hakam as his replacement in Ta'if.
Uthman dispatched naval expeditions against the ports and positions of the Sasanian Empire and further east to the borders of India. The first Arab naval raids against the ports of the Indian subcontinent were carried out on the orders of Uthman. According to the history of al-Baladhuri, the raids targeted Thane, Debal and Bharuch. The assault on Thane, the first Arab raid in India, was commanded by Uthman's brother al-Hakam and was a success, the Arabs returning to Oman without incurring any fatalities. The following raid on Debal was commanded by another brother, al-Mughira, al-Hakam led the raid on Bharuch. The raids were launched in according to al-Baladhuri, which is supported by the modern historian Nabi Bakhsh Khan Baloch, who suspects they likely occurred in late 636. The naval operations were launched without Umar's sanction and he disapproved of them upon learning of the operations, citing his fear for the safety of Arab troops at sea. The contemporary Armenian historian Sebeos confirms these Arab raids against the Sasanian littoral. According to Baloch, the reasons for Uthman's initiative are not identified by the medieval sources and were possibly zeal-driven adventures for the cause of jihad.
In 637 Uthman was recalled from Bahrayn by Umar and reappointed to Ta'if, likely as a consequence of his unilateral launch of naval raids against India. He was restored to Bahrayn in 638 in the aftermath of an abortive naval raid by al-Ala against the Sasanian province of Fars, which ended in heavy Arab losses. In 638–639 Uthman led in person a major assault along the coast of Fars. His brother al-Hakam accompanied him, while he left al-Mughira to oversee administrative affairs in Bahrayn as his deputy. In 639 or 640, Uthman and al-Hakam captured and garrisoned Arab troops in the Fars town of Tawwaj near the Persian Gulf coast, southwest of modern Shiraz. In 641 Uthman established his permanent headquarters at Tawwaj, which he fortified. From Tawwaj in the same year, he captured the city of Reishahr and killed the Sasanian governor of Fars, a certain Shahruk. By 642 Uthman subjugated the cities of Jarreh, Kazerun and al-Nubindjan.
About 643, Uthman's forces were joined by Abu Musa al-Ash'ari, the Arab governor of Basra, who had been fighting against the Sasanians on the Iraqi front. Uthman retained overall command and together, they conquered Arrajan and the area of Shiraz, while Uthman conquered the city of Darabjird further east without Abu Musa. These conquests occurred between 643 and 644. Umar died in the latter year and was succeeded by Uthman ibn Affan, who retained Uthman in his post for about six more years. Uthman was unable to capture the Sasanian strongholds of Istakhr and Jur in mountainous central Fars, which were conquered in 649 by the Arab governor of Basra, Abd Allah ibn Amir. In that year, Ibn Amir was given supreme command over the armies of Uthman and Abu Musa in Iran.

Later life, death and legacy

Uthman was dismissed by the caliph and retired to Basra after 650. On 29 February 650 Uthman was granted by the caliph a large estate near the city—in al-Ubulla on the bank of the Euphrates river—from which he bestowed portions to each of his brothers to build on. The canal dug on the estate was called Shatt Uthman after him. Uthman died in Basra in 671, 672 or 675.
The prominent Islamic theologian and scholar al-Hasan al-Basri transmitted hadith from Uthman during his time in Basra. From a total of twenty-nine hadiths transmitted by Uthman, three have been recorded in the Sahih Muslim and the remainder in various Sunan volumes. A granddaughter of Uthman, Umm Muhammad bint Abd Allah ibn Uthman was married to the general and governor Salm ibn Ziyad and, during his expedition in 681, became known as the first Arab woman to cross the Oxus river into Transoxiana.