The Early Islamic World 600-1258. Pre-Islamic Arabia, c. 600 Bedouin clans Camel herders and town...

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The Early Islamic World

600-1258

Pre-Islamic Arabia, c. 600 Bedouin clans Camel herders and town dwellers Frequent feuds over pasturing/water

resources Trade network Place of women Role of religion < tribal customs

Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam Merchant, travels introduced him to

monotheism Revelations 610-632, later written into the

Qur’an (=recitation) Escape from Mecca, 622 Return in triumph, 628 Death left no clear successor

The Appeal of Islam

Uncompromising monotheism in a land that had known only insignificant gods

Belonged to no single tribe or clan – possibility of unity

Arab in origin (alternative to foreign faiths of Judaism and Christianity)

Ethical system to heal social divisions

Five Pillars of Islam

Statement of faith: “There is no god but Allah, and Muhammad is his prophet.”

In Arabic: http://www.islam-guide.com/frm-ch3-16-1.htm

Prayer 5 times a day,

facing Mecca

How to pray: http://english.islamway.com/prayer/BegSound.htm

Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca)

Final two pillars:

Fasting during RamadanZakat (tithe for charity)

After Muhammad – Division Within… 4 caliphs, though disagreements about

whether the caliph should be a direct relative of the prophet

Ali, 4th caliph and Muhammad’s cousin and brother-in-law, was rejected and assassinated by the Umayyads

Continued split between Sunni and Shi’ites Muslims

…but also great success Under caliphs, Arabia was reunited

following brief breaking away after Muhammad’s death

Sassanid (Persian) empire conquered and much Byzantine territory seized

Strength of Arab armies combined with weakness of neighbors

Motives for expansion? Release of martial energy? Payback for centuries of contempt? Not a motivation at least at first: conversion.

Qur’an: “There is no compulsion in religion.” Also: did not want to share booty of conquest or give up right to tax non-Muslims.

Umayyad Empire, 660-750

Women Dhimmis Mawali Shi’ite Merchants Ayan Small farmers

Treatment of

Umayyads alienated many Placed capital at Damascus Soldiers, especially on frontiers, unhappy

with distant, corrupt, unfair rulers Abbasid rebellion started in eastern part of

empire (Iran) but spread, drawing support from dissident groups, among them Shi’ite ans and mawali

Abbasid Empire

Women Dhimmis Mawali Shi’ite Merchants Ayan Small farmers

750-850: unified, center at Baghdad

Treatment of

Abbasid Empire, cont. 850-1050: breakup into regional dynasties:

Umayyads in Spain, Fatimids in Cairo (ruled Egypt & Syria), Turkish tribes swept into Middle East from Central Asia, converted to Islam and controlled the Islamic heartland Authority of caliph became more religious than political Regional sultans sought confirmation of their power from the

caliph

Abbasid Empire, cont. 11th-13th c.: new external threats

Christian Crusades Mongols – threatened entire Middle East,

remained in power in Iran & Iraq, where they converted to Islam

Invasions helped cause the fall of the old states & slow creation of 3 new states

3 New states emerge, 1258-1600 Safavid (Shi’ite) dynasty in Iran Moghul dynasty in India Ottoman Empire centered in Asia Minor

(which will conquer Byzantines in 1453)

CreditsSlide 6 photo: (Uzbek Muslims paying)

http://www.helsinki-hs.net/picpage.asp?IsoID=4B7WRDh8w

Slide 7 photo: http://lexicorient.com/e.o/index.htm (search for Hajj)

Slide 8 photo: http://lexicorient.com/e.o/index.htm (search for Ka’ba)

Slide 13 map: http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~davidyag/map6-a.jpg

Slide 14 map: http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/maps/islam2map.gif

Slide 19 map: http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~davidyag/map6-b.jpg

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