Jabalah IV ibn al-Ḥārith, known also by the tecnonymicAbū Shammar, in Greeksources found as Gabalas, was a ruler of the Ghassanids. At first an enemy of the East Roman Empire, he raidedPalestine but was defeated, becoming a Byzantine vassal in 502 until circa 520, and again in 527 until his death a year later.
Biography
Jabalah was the son of al-Harith and grandson of the sheikh Tha'laba. He first appears in the historical sources in 498 during the reign of Byzantine emperorAnastasius I, when, according to Theophanes the Confessor, the Diocese of Oriens suffered from large-scale Arab raids. The head of one of the Arab groups invading Byzantine territory was Jabalah, who raided Palaestina III before being defeated and driven back by the local Byzantine dux, Romanus. Romanus then proceeded to evict the Ghassanids from the island of Iotabe, which controlled trade with the Red Sea and which had been occupied by the Arabs since 473. After a series of hard-fought engagements, the island returned to Byzantine control. In 502, Emperor Anastasius concluded a treaty of alliance with the Kindaites and Ghassanids, turning them into imperial allies. With the outbreak of the Anastasian War againstSassanid Persia, the Ghassanids fought on the Byzantine side, although only one operation, an attack against the Lakhmid capital of al-Hirah in July 513, is explicitly attributed to them. The Ghassanids settled deep inside the Byzantine limes, and in a Syriacsource for July 519 they are attested as having their "opulent" headquarters at al-Jabiya in the Gaulanitis, where Jabalah had succeeded his father as king over his tribe. With the rise of the pro-Chalcedonian Justin I to the imperial throne in 518 and the subsequent re-imposition of Chalcedonian orthodoxy throughout the Empire, however, the staunchly Monophysite Ghassanids withdrew from the alliance in and retreated into the northern Hejaz. Not until the last year of Justin's reign was the alliance between Byzantium and the Ghassanids restored. Although the Ghassanids are not explicitly mentioned by the sources, the scholar Irfan Shahîd identifies Jabalah with the Arab phylarch known with the nickname al-Aṣfar, rendered in Greek as Tapharas. This was the Arabic version of the honorary Roman gentilicum "Flavius", which may have been awarded to Jabalah by the Emperor upon his return to Byzantine allegiance; this identification, however, is not certain. In 528, the Ghassanids took part in the conflict with Persia and her Lakhmid Arab allies, first in a punitive expedition against the Lakhmid ruler al-Mundhir, and then in the Battle of Thannuris under Belisarius's command, where Jabalah/Tapharas was killed when he fell from his horse.
Family
Jabalah's wife appears to have been Māriya, who was according to Arabic tradition a famous Kindaite princess. From her, he had at least three sons: the famous al-Harith ibn Jabalah, the Arethas of the Byzantines, who succeeded him, Abu Karib who was phylarch of the province of Palaestina III, and, as is apparent from his tecnonymic, an older son named Shamir, about whom nothing is known.