This work is an attempt to understand and correctly interpret the
commentaries of the early Muslim historians on the Umayyad caliph
Mu῾āwiya ibn Abī Sufyān. Mu῾āwiya's depiction in the early Muslim
narratives is very much dependent on the period in which these accounts
take place and reflects the attitudes of narrators to the events of
those periods. Thus one finds that pre-civil war Mu῾āwiya is quite
different from civil war Mu῾āwiya and the same goes for post-civil war
Mu῾āwiya. There is no evolution or devolution of the character it is
simply the period in which this particular character finds himself in
that colors the depiction. This work has uncovered the paradigms
utilized by the early historians in their depictions of Mu῾āwiya. It
also shows that although the personality of Mu῾āwiya has been
manipulated by the early Islamic sources, the essential building blocks
of his history remains uniform throughout even within the most hostile
of these sources towards Mu῾āwiya.