In addition to central North Africa, Malta, Sicily and southern Italy became part of the Aghlabid domain. They considered themselves as vassals of the
Abbasids, although with great autonomy, and they maintained their links with Baghdad – the
Abbasid capital – with many commercial and scientific convoys despatched and received, including one that brought back the lustre tiles used to decorate the
mihrab (prayer niche) of the Great
Mosque of Kairouan. In return for Aghlabid loyalty, the
Abbasid Caliph al-Musta‘in (r. 248–52 / 862–66) ordered the construction of the dome above the
mihrab in the Great
Mosque of Zaytuna.