Muhammad ibn Nafi'

Muhammad ibn Nafi' (Arabic: محمد بن نافع) was a ninth century governor of the Yemen for the Abbasid Caliphate.

Muhammad was appointed to Sana'a by the caliph al-Ma'mun (r. 813–833) in an attempt to conciliate the Yemenis, who had become disorderly under the previous governor Ishaq ibn al-'Abbas ibn Muhammad al-Hashimi. Despite this, he was soon faced with the rebellion of one Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-'Umari, nicknamed Ahmar al-'Ayn (the Red-Eyed One), in the central highlands, and he was eventually driven out of the province by the rebel. During his governorship, al-Jawf was separately administered by the Hamdani chief Malik ibn Luqman al-Arhabi.[1]

Notes

  1. Al-Mad'aj 1988, p. 213; Al-Ya'qubi 1883, p. 561; Al-Tabari 1987, p. 176.

References

Preceded by
Ishaq ibn al-Abbas ibn Muhammad al-Hashimi
Abbasid governor of the Yemen
827–828
Succeeded by
Abu al-Razi Muhammad ibn Abd al-Hamid
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