Al-Husayn brings Harun to al-Mu'tadid, who sends…
May 896 CE
Al-Husayn brings Harun to al-Mu'tadid, who sends a dispatch announcing the victory to Baghdad.
He then marches back to the capital with Harun in custody, reaching it on May 9.
To celebrate the capture of the Kharijite, the streets of Baghdad are decorated and the caliph's army is assembled before the city gate.
The caliph himself then enters the city and proceeds to his palace.
Al-Husayn and other army commanders are rewarded with robes of honor, after which they ride in triumph through the city.
Harun is put on display; mounted on an elephant, he is forced to sit in a woman's litter and wear humiliating clothing.
As a reward for al-Husayn's capture of Harun, al-Mu'tadid agrees to pardon his father Hamdan and release him from custody.
Al-Husayn and his brothers are subsequently appointed to various posts, including a number of governorships in al-Jazira.
In the following century, the Hamdanids will succeed in establishing a de facto independent state in al-Jazira and northern Syria, with al-Husayn's nephews Nasir al-Dawla and Sayf al-Dawla ruling over Mosul and Aleppo respectively.