Abà « GhÃÂlib TammÃÂm ibn ÿAlqama al-Thaqafë (), also transliterated Ibn ÿAlḳama al-Thaḳafë (720ÃÂ728 â 811), was an Arab military leader in al-Andalus during the establishment of the ÿUmayyad Emirate of Córdoba.
Ibn ÿAlqama was descended from a mawlà(freedman) of ÿAbd al-RaḥmÃÂn ibn Umm al-Ḥakam, the governor of Kà «fa in Iraq in 678 under the first ÿUmayyad caliph, MuÿÃÂwiya I. He thus belonged to the tribe of Thaqëf and the faction of Ḳays. He was born between 720 and 728.
He arrived in al-Andalus in 741 in the á¹Âalëÿa (vanguard) of the Syrian army of Balj ibn Bishr. When the ÿUmayyad prince ÿAbd al-RaḥmÃÂn I made his play to restore ÿUmayyad rule in al-Andalus in 755, Ibn ÿAlqama was one of the first to rally to his banner after the ÿUmayyad's agents met with in Zaragoza. With the mawlàBadr, he rescued ÿAbd al-RaḥmÃÂn from the Berbers in Africa later that year. He became ÿAbd al-RaḥmÃÂn's chief minister (ḥÃÂjib) with the rank of ḳÃÂþid in his army. Assisted by Badr, he captured the city of Toledo in 764 and became its governor. Afterwards he was appointed governor of Huesca, Tortosa and Tarazona. His son GhÃÂlib succeeded him at Toledo, but was executed by ÿAbd al-RaḥmÃÂn's successor, HishÃÂm I, in 788. Ibn ÿAlqama remained loyal to the dynasty, however, and rose to prominence again under al-Ḥakam I (796âÂÂ822). He died in 811 at a very advanced age. His great-great-grandson, TammÃÂm ibn ÿAlqama al-Thaqafë, was also prominent in ÿUmayyad service.
Ibn ÿAlqama is the most probable source for the account of the period 741âÂÂ788 in the AkhbÃÂr majmà «Ã¿a, which is the earliest Arabic history of al-Andalus. This section of the AkhbÃÂrâÂÂwhich did not reach its final form until the 11th centuryâÂÂis sometimes called the "Syrian chronicle". He was an eyewitness to most of the most important events in this period. He must have left behind writings, since he is quoted as an eyewitness source in Ibn ÿIdhÃÂrë's al-BayÃÂn al-mughrib and by Aḥmad al-RÃÂzë.