Basus War

Tribal war in 5th and 6th-century Arabia


title: "Basus War" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["490s-conflicts", "6th-century-conflicts", "5th-century", "6th-century-in-asia", "banu-taghlib", "banu-bakr", "battles-of-pre-islamic-arabia", "himyar", "pre-islamic-arabia"] description: "Tribal war in 5th and 6th-century Arabia" topic_path: "history/military" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basus_War" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Tribal war in 5th and 6th-century Arabia ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox military conflict"]

FieldValue
conflictBasus War
date
placeThe region of Najd in South Arabia
resultIndecisive victory; Banu Taghlib tribes all dispersed into Iraq
combatant1Banu Taghlib
combatant2Banu Bakr and all its subdivisions, including the Banu Shayban
commander1*Abu Layla al-Muhalhel
commander2*Jassas ibn Murrah
units1Tribal soldiers from Banu Taghlib
units2Tribal soldiers from Banu Bakr
combatant3Himyarite Kingdom
commander3*Marthad'ilan Yu'nim
units3At least 500 Himyarite warriors
::

| date = June 2024 | conflict = Basus War | date = | place = The region of Najd in South Arabia

Modern scholarship, however, increasingly treats the Basus War not as a single, prolonged historical war but as a composite and progressively elaborated narrative, likely originating in a limited skirmish, later expanded in scope, duration, and moral significance through oral poetry, genealogical rivalry, and adab literature. Early sources differ substantially on the sequence of events, the identities of participants, and even the basic motivations involved, suggesting that the narrative stabilized only gradually over time.

Background

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c7/Qabr_Kulaib_ibn_Rabiah.jpg" caption="The tomb of Kulaib ibn Rabiah located at Wadi Khaitan"] ::

According to literary accounts, the conflict began when Kulaib ibn Rabiah, a leading figure of Taghlib, killed a camel belonging to Basus, a woman related to Jassas ibn Murrah of the Shayban branch of Banu Bakr. The lament of Basus, presented poetically, provoked Jassas to kill Kulayb, setting of off retaliatory violence between two tribes.

Course of conflict

On a day known as Yawm al-Hazr, the Banu Taghlib carried out an assault against the Banu Shayban. They were victorious, and majority of the casualties were from the Banu Shayban. Then a few days later, the Banu Taghlib confronted the Arab tribe of Zubaid. No casualties were reported, and later on the Banu Taghlib continued their attacks on Banu Shayban, killing one of the important Banu Shayban members. Gradually, the whole group of Banu Bakr (including all subdivisions) participated in the war against Banu Taghlib. One of the first victories against Banu Taghlib was on a day known as Yawm 'ala Istirad, where a criminal from that tribe was killed.

Ultimatum

Some years later, some of the subdivisions of Banu Bakr pulled out from fighting. This angered the Bakry chief Uday ibn Murrah, who called out all those Bakrys who backed off. Internal dissent occurred amongst the Banu Bakr, but it was eventually resolved. The decision was to retreat and hold a session. Due to the high number of losses, the decision was made for them to retreat, reproduce and then go back to war. So they did, they attacked some forty years later by their fresh younger generations and that's why its referred to as the 40-year-war. It took them forty years to breed a new army and go back and finish off the battle with a final victory.

Himyarite involvement

The Himyarite ruler Marthad'ilan Yu'nim dispatched at least five hundred soldiers to assist Imru' al-Qays in his mission to reunite the tribes of Taghlib and Banu Bakr, with the goal of fighting against the Banu Asad.

Aftermath and end of conflict

After the Banu Taghlib had suffered several defeats, their leading commander, Abu Layla al-Muhalhel fled but was captured by a Madh'hiji tribe in South of Arabia and forced to marry a woman from that tribe. The Banu Taghlib tribe eventually dispersed into the lands of Iraq, where they stayed for the rest of their lives. The fighting soon died down, and by the 530s, the war had already ended.

Banu Taghlib were the victors of the war at first since they killed most of the Banu Bakr forces. But they eventually capitulated after forty years as Banu Bakr came for retaliation and started the killing again. The poetry that came along the war is documented specifically until our time.

In popular culture

The Basus War is referenced as an aphorism against having grudges, family feud, vendettas and violent rivalries.

References

Bibliography

References

  1. (26 November 2016). "This is where the Basous war erupted: "Hima Dhariya" still recalls the sad history of the Arabs, represented by the Basous war that sparked over the killing of a camel". Alarabiya News English.
  2. Abu Mansur al-Thalabi. (2018). "Thimar al-Qulub fi al-Madaf wa al-Mansub". Dar al-Ma'arif.
  3. Ibn Abd Rabbih. (1937). "Kitāb al-ʿIqd al-Farīd". Maktaba At-Ta'lif At-Taryama Wa'l Nasar.
  4. Abd al-Qadir al-Baghdadi. "Khizānat al-adab wa-lubb lubāb lisān al-ʻArab". Al Khanji Library.
  5. Abu Abdullah al-Zanjani. "Kitab Sharh al-Tafasir al-Sabi'a". Shamela.
  6. Ibn al-Sayyid al-Batalyusi. (2003). "al-Hulal fi Sharah 'Abyat al-Jumal". Dar al-Kutub al-Ilmiyah.
  7. Ahmed Jad Al Mawla. "Days Of The Arabs In Pre-Islamic Times". Dar Ihya' al-Kutub al-Arabi.
  8. Jawad Ali. (1955). ["Tarikh al-'Arab qabl al-Islam"](https://books.google.com/books?id=OF0knQAACAAJ). *Majma al-Ilmi al-Iraqi*.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

490s-conflicts6th-century-conflicts5th-century6th-century-in-asiabanu-taghlibbanu-bakrbattles-of-pre-islamic-arabiahimyarpre-islamic-arabia