Muza Ibn Fortún ibn Qasi, valì de Zaragoza, Arnedo y de Tudela

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Muza Ibn Fortún ibn Qasi, valì de Zaragoza, Arnedo y de Tudela

Arabic: موسى بن فورتون, والي سرقسطة, Spanish: Muza ibn Qasi, valì de Zaragoza, Arnedo y de Tudela, Linaje Banu Qasi
Also Known As: "Banu Qasi Musa I ibn Fortún", "Chief of the BANU QASI; Governor/"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Aragon, Spain
Death: 802 (57-66)
Guadalajara, Castile-La Mancha, Spain (España)
Immediate Family:

Son of Fortún ibn Qasi, valí de Zaragoza and 'A'isha ibn Abdul Aziz
Father of Musa Ibn Musa lbn Qasaw, Walí de Tudela, Huesca y Zaragoza; Mutarrif ibn Musa, valí de Huesca; Jonás (Yunus) ibn Musa; Yuwartas ibn Musa; Lupo (Lubb) ibn Musa and 2 others
Brother of Zahir ibn Fortún

Occupation: Gouverneur de Saragosse, Walí de Zaragoza, Saragossa Governor, Gobernador de Zaragoza, Gouverneur de Saragoza, Wali de Zaragoza
Managed by: Henn Sarv
Last Updated:

About Muza Ibn Fortún ibn Qasi, valì de Zaragoza, Arnedo y de Tudela

MedLands

MUSA ibn Fortun ([745]-Zaragoza 789 or Dec 802). Ibn Hazm names "Musa y Zahir" as the sons of "Fortun"[390]. His parentage is confirmed by Al-Udri when he names his descendant "Muhammad ibn Lubb ibn Muhammad ibn Musa ibn Musa ibn Fortun ibn Garsiya"[391]. [Lucas de Tuy records that "ex Chaldeis duos magnos tyrannos…Hienchaza…[et] Alporu cum filio suo Azeth" captured "Muza [et] filius eius Lupus" in battle, dating the event to the reign of "Carolus…magnus Franciæ Rex" (so before he was crowned emperor in 800)[392]. However, the passage is confused and in a later part records the death in battle of "genere eiusdem Muzæ…Garsia", which appears to refer to the son-in-law of Musa ibn Musa who was killed in battle in 859. It is therefore uncertain whether Lucas de Tuy is referring to Musa ibn Fortun or Musa ibn Musa.] Ibn Idari records that Musa ibn Fortun expelled the rebel Said ibn al-Husayn Yahya Ansari from Zaragoza A.H. 172 [10 Jun 788][393]. Ibn al-Athir records that Musa ibn Fortun was murdered by Chahdar, a follower of Said ibn al-Husayn A.H. 173 [789][394]. Al-Udri records that "[Musa ibn Fortun]" rebelled in Zaragoza against "el imam al-Hakam" but died in the same town "en du l-hiyya" A.H. 186 [Dec 802][395]. m (x) as her first husband, ---, daughter of ---. She married secondly Íñigo [de Pamplona]. Her two marriages are indicated by Al-Udri who names "Yannaqo ibn Wanniqo" as "hermano de madre de Musa ibn Musa"[396]. Ibn Hayyân names "Musa et son allié Garsiya ibn Wannaqo, emir des Gascons (d'autres dissent que son allié était Furtun ibn Wannaqo, son frère uterin)" and records in a later passage that "Musa ibn Musa al-Qasawi…fut aidé par son frère utérin, le chef de Pampelune, ibn Wannaqo"[397]. Settipani highlights the lively academic debate over whether Musa was the first or second husband of the wife of Íñigo[398]. [The Libro de Regla of Leire Monastery, compiled in 1076, records the death "era DCCV" of "rex Enneco Garseanes", adding that his wife was "Eximena"[399]. This source is confused and contradicted by numerous other primary sources in many of the details which it records. It is not certain to whom "Enneco Garseanes" refers. It has been decided not to include "Jimena" as the name of the wife of "Íñigo", considering the number of uncertainties in the text.] Musa had five children by unknown [wives/concubines]

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Musa ibn Fortún, también conocido como Musa o Muza I (antes del 740 - Zaragoza 801 o 802). Fue gobernador de Arnedo, Tarazona y Zaragoza. Nieto del conde Cassius e hijo de Fortún, tuvo entre su descendencia al conocido y poderoso Musa II.

Probablemente ayudo a Abderramán I a someter Zaragoza en el 772, ya que poco después éste le nombró valí de algunos lugares del valle del Ebro.

Tras varios triunfos, declaró su independencia del emirato de Córdoba, fundando la dinastía de los Banu Qasi.

Murió asesinado en Zaragoza un año después de que naciese Musa II.

Descendencia  [editar]Casó con Onneca (Íñiga o Ignacia) con quien tuvo siete hijos:

Mutarrif, gobernador de Pamplona.

Iñigo, gobernador de Pamplona.

Lope, señor de Borja.

Musa II

Fortún


Leadership of the Banu Qasi

The following men are the documented leaders of the Banu Qasi (entried in italics are of uncertain affiliation to the family):

Cassius, fl. 714

Abu Taur, Wali of Huesca, fl. 778, perhaps son of Cassius

Musa ibn Fortun, (perh. assassinated 788), grandson of Cassius

Musa ibn Musa ibn Qasi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Musa ibn Musa was great-grandson of Cassius, who converted to Islam after the Muslim conquest of Iberia. His father, Musa ibn Fortun, appears in scattered accounts of the late 8th century, and was apparently assassinated in Musa’s youth. His mother, whose name is unknown, was also mother by another husband of Basque chieftain Íñigo Arista, Musa’s half-brother.



Musa ibn Fortún (en árabe, موسى بن فرتون), también conocido como Musa o Muza I (antes del 740 - Zaragoza 801 o 802), fue uno de los jefes de la casa de los Banu Qasi. Fue gobernador de Arnedo, Tarazona y Zaragoza. Nieto del conde Casio e hijo de Fortún, tuvo entre sus hijos al conocido y poderoso Musa ibn Musa, también conocido como Musa II o Musa el Grande.

Probablemente ayudo a Abderramán I a someter Zaragoza en el 772, ya que poco después éste le nombró valí de algunos lugares del valle del Ebro. Tras varios triunfos, declaró su independencia del emirato de Córdoba. Es Musa ibn Fortún quien transforma a los Banu Qasi de una poderosa familia de la cuenca media del Ebro en los gobernantes de la zona.

Murió asesinado en Zaragoza un año después de que naciese su hijo Musa.

Descendencia

Casó con Onneca (Íñiga o Ignacia) con quien tuvo varios hijos:

Mutarrif, gobernador de Pamplona.

Musa ibn Musa

Fortún



Walí de Zaragoza.

O uale, uáli ou váli[1] (em árabe ﻭﺍﻟﻲ, transl. wāli) é o nome dado ao governador de um vilaiete (província) em alguns países árabes e no antigo Império Otomano.



Musa ibn Fortun
Musa ibn Fortún (in Arabic : موسى بن فرتون , Mūsā furtun bin ), also known as Musa or Muza I st (before 740 - Saragossa, 801 or 802 ), was one of the leaders of the dynasty of Banu Qasi or Banu Kazi . He was governor of Arnedo , Tarazona and Zaragoza . Grandson of Count Cassius and son of Fortun ibn Qasi , he counted among his sons the famous and powerful Musa ibn Musa, also called Musa II or Musa the Great.

It probably helped Abd al-Rahman I st to submit Zaragoza in 772 , since shortly after it made him wali of some towns of the valley of the Ebro . Through various triumphs he declared his independence from the emirate of Cordoba . It was Musa ibn Fortun who made the Banu Qasi or Banu Kazi, powerful family of the Middle Valley of the Ebro, the governors of the region.

He died murdered in Zaragoza a year after the birth of his son Musa ibn Musa .

Descendancy He married Oneca (Íñiga or Ignacia), widow of Íñigo Ximenes Arista (died in 780) and mother of the future king of Navarre Eneko Arista , who gave him:

Musa ibn Musa (-862) Probably from a first marriage, he had five or six 1 other son:

Mutarrif I st ibn Musa , governor of Pamplona (-799) Yunus ibn Musa Yuwartas ibn Musa 2 Lubb I st ibn Musa 3 García ibn Musa Fortún I st ibn Musa (-802) 4 Christian Settipani attributes the maternity of Lubb (Loup, Lope ) and García to Oneca 5 , these Christian names being new to the Banu Qasi , especially if Oneca was the daughter of the Duke Wolf II of Vasconie , and suggests that García could be the son of Iñigo or Jimeno, father of Eneko Arista , and not of Musa ibn Fortun. He also indicates that the order of the two marriages of Oneca is discussed according to the authors (he prefers to place the one with Musa ibn Fortun first), which does not change the general form of family trees.

External links The reference article on Banu Qasi is due to Alberto Cañada Juste, "Los Banu Qasi (714-924)", downloadable online: [1] [ archive ] A genealogical tree of the Medieval Lands project, page "Moorish Spain", can be found at the following address: [2] [ archive ] Notes and references ↑ according to other language versions ↑ the etymology of the name is a mystery. The Catalan version calls it Yuqàrtaix (pronounced Youqartach ), whose Arabic spelling is close to the previous one and which can be reminiscent of a Jugurtha ( ancient Greek Iougourthas , Kabyle Iugurten ) of Berber ancestry ... ↑ cited in the family tree on page 87 of the article by Alberto Cañada Juste, where his brother Fortún does not appear ↑ cited in the genealogical tree of the project Medieval Lands, page "Moorish Spain", where his brother Lubb does not appear. ↑ Christian Settipani , The Nobility of the South Carolingian , Oxford, Linacre College, Prosopographical Unit for Research al. "Occasional Publications / 5",2004, 388 p. ( ISBN 1-900934-04-3 ) , p. 109


Musa ibn Fortún (en árabe, موسى بن فرتون‎), también conocido como Musa ibn Fortún ibn Qasi (antes de 740a​ – Zaragoza, 788/802)2​, uno de los jefes del clan de los Banu Qasi, fue gobernador de Arnedo, Zaragoza y Tarazona. Nieto del conde Casio e hijo de Fortún,3​ tuvo entre sus hijos al conocido y poderoso Musa ibn Musa, llamado asimismo Musa el Grande.