some fifteen years after the event,
and in the reign of Al Mâmûn, would say; for the siege
of Mecca was then, in point of fact, the last which
had taken place, under the insurgent, Abu Sarâya, in
the year 200 A.H. Had the Apology been written later
on, say in the fourth century, the "latest attack" on
Mecca would not have been that of Abu Sarâya, but of
Soleimân Abu Tâhir in 317 A.H. So also, in illustrating
the rapine and plunder of the early Moslem campaigns,
Al Kindy mentions, as of a similar predatory and ravaging
character, the insurrection of Bâbek Khurramy, and the
danger and anxiety it occasioned thereby "to our lord
and master the Commander of the Faithful." This rebellious
leader, as we know, had raised the. standard of revolt
in Persia and Armenia some years before, routed an army
of the Caliph, and long maintained himself in opposition
to the imperial forces; and the notice, as one of an
impending danger then occupying men's minds, is precisely
of a kind which would be natural and apposite at the
assumed time, and at no other.1
Once more, in challenging his friend to produce a single
prophecy which had been fulfilled since the era of Mahomet,
he specifies the time that had elapsed as "a little
over 200 years," and uses the precise expression to
denote the period, which one would expect from the pen
of a person writing about the era,