'Ahmad II' (d.
January 12 914) was amir of the
Samanids (
907-914). He was the son of
Isma'il.
Ahmad became amir upon his father's death in late 907. Some time afterwards, he was granted the rights to
Sistan, the heart of the
Saffarid realm, by
Caliph al-Muqtadir. The Saffarids' infighting made the job much easier. Ahmad's army travelled from
Farah to Bust, where they met little resistance. At the same time, Ahmad's Turkic general Simjur al-Dawati received the surrender of Zarang from
Mu'addal. The conquest of the Saffarids complete (
911), Ahmad appointed his cousin Mansur ibn Ishaq as governor of Sistan in the following year. The Samanids also captured a Caliphal rebel,
Sebük-eri, and sent him to
Baghdad.
Mansur's oppressive taxation policies sparked a revolt in Sistan within a year of his appointment. The garrison at Zaranj was destroyed, and Mansur was captured.
'Amr ibn Ya'qub, a Saffarid, was installed, first as a puppet for the leader of the rebellion, then as amir in his own right. A Samanid army, however, under the control of Husain ibn 'Ali Marvarrudhi restored Samanid control to the region. 'Amr was sent to
Samarkand; the other rebel leaders were killed. Simjur al-Dawati was then installed as governor of Sistan.
Tabaristan and
Gurgan, however, soon revolted against Samanid authority as well, and Ahmad was killed before he could deal with them. He was decapitated while sleeping in his tent near
Bukhara by some of his slaves (January 914). Ahmad may become unpopular among his subjects for his order to change the language of the court from
Persian to
Arabic; this order was soon rescinded. He was succeeded by his young son
Nasr II.
References
★ R. N. Fyre (1975). ''The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume Four: From the Arab Invasion to the Saljuqs''. ISBN 0-521-20093-8