Al-Muqanna‘, an ethnic Persian from Merv named…
November 775 CE
Al-Muqanna‘, an ethnic Persian from Merv named Hashim ibn Hakim, originally a clothes pleater, had become a commander for Abū Muslim of Khorasan.
After Abū Muslim's murder in 755, al-Muqanna‘ had claimed to be an incarnation of God, a role, he insisted, passed to him from Abū Muslim, who had received it via ‘Alī from the Muhammad.
Al-Muqanna‘ is reputed to wear a veil in order to cover up his beauty; however, the Abbasid Caliphate claims that he wears it to hide his ugliness, being one-eyed and bald.
His followers wear white clothes in opposition to Abbasid black.
He is reputed to have engaged in magic to impress his followers as a maker of miracles.
Al-Muqanna‘ is instrumental to the formation of the Khurramiyya, a sect that claims Abū Muslim to be the Mahdi and denies his death.
When Al-Muqanna‘'s followers starts raiding towns and mosques of other Muslims and looting their possessions, the Abbasids send several commanders to crush the rebellion.
Following the ascension of caliph al-Mahdi, the Shiite-dominated Persian province of Khorasan rejects the Abbasids’ basis for rule over Islam and, led by Al-Muqanna, rises against the caliphate in 775.