Muhammad ibn al-Ba'ith


Muhammad ibn al-Ba'ith ibn Halbas also known as Ibn Ba'ith was an Arab governor of Marand during the Abbassid caliphate.
After the Arab conquest of Persia, Halbas, who was a mercenary took Marand. Muhammad ibn al-Ba'ith built castles in Marand and eventually took Tabriz and Shahi. He started in good terms with the Khurramite movement of Babak, but later joined the Caliph against the Khurramites by capturing one of Babak's generals. However, his relationship with the Abbassids did not last long and he was imprisoned under the Caliphate of Mutawwakil. Ibn Khordadbeh who wrote in 848 AD mentions Marand as being Muhammad ibn al-Ba'iths fiefdom. The historian al-Tabari retells a very graphic expedition sent against the town. Tabari states that there were walls which enclosed Marand, and its garden's was a Farsang in circumference. The forest outside of the town gave the town of Marand further protection. Ibn Ba'ith had collected some 2200 adventurers, reinforced by a number of non-Arab Iranian elements. But this was not enough and he was seized in around 849-850 AD by the forces of the Abbassid caliphate. When he was taken to the court of Mutawwakil, the Caliph ordered Ibn Ba'ith to be beheaded. However, Ibn Ba'ith recited some Arabic poetry and Mutawwakil was amazed by his poetic gifts. Subsequently he was only imprisoned and he died in prison.
Ibn Ba'ith was also considerably Iranicized and the elders of Maragha praised his bravery and quoted his Persian poetry. His Persian poetry also is an evidence of the existence of the cultivation of poetry in Persian in northwest Iran at the beginning of the 9th century.