Spread of Islam to Southeast Asia
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Transcript Spread of Islam to Southeast Asia
Andrew Vitkus, Caelin Lewis, Duncan Liseski
ISLAM AND SOUTH ASIA
Mosque in Sindh
Sindh was the first part of Southern Asia to adopt Islam.
Key Terms
Muhammad ibn Qasim
Muhammad Ghur
Qutb-ub-din Aibak
Bhaktic Cults
Mira Bai
Kabir
Shrivijaya
Malacca
Demak
Key Terms
Muhammad ibn Qasim: general under Hajjaj; appointed
commander of the all important invasion of Sindh when
he was seventeen years old; managed to win all of his
military campaigns; established peace, order, and a good
administrative structure in the areas he conquered.
Mahmud of Ghazni: Sultan of the kingdom of Ghazna
(998-1030); Ghazna comprised of modern Afghanistan
and northeastern modern Iran; eventually including
northwestern India and most of Iran
Muhammad of Ghur: conquests established first Great
Muslim Empire in northern India; spent much of his time
campaigning in Afghanistan or eastern Persia
Key Terms
Qutb-ub-din Aibak: captured and sold as a slave
when he was a child to Muhammad of Ghur; became
Sultan after Muhammad of Ghur was assassinated;
died after falling from a horse while playing polo in
1210
Bhaktic Cults: Hindu groups dedicated to gods and
goddesses; stressed the importance of strong
emotional bonds between devotees and the god or
goddess who was the object of their veneration;
most widely worshipped gods were Shiva and Vishnu
Mira Bai: celebrated Hindu writer of religious poetry;
reflected openness of bhaktic cults to women
Key Terms
Kabir: Muslim mystic; played down the importance of
ritual differences between Hinduism and Islam
Shrivijaya: Trading empire centered on Malacca Straits
between Malaya and Sumatra; controlled trade of empire;
Buddhist government resistant to Muslim missionaries;
fall opened up southeastern Asia to Muslim conversion
Malacca: Portuguese factory or fortified trade town
located on the tip of the Malayan peninsula; traditionally a
center for trade among the southeastern Asian islands
Demak: Most powerful of the trading states on north
coast of Java; converted to Islam and served as point of
dissemination to other ports
Mosque
The Coming of Islam to Southeast Asia
Political Divisions and the First Muslim Invasion
Indian Influences on Islamic Civilization
From Booty to Empire: The Second Wave of Muslim
Invasions
Patterns of Conversion
Patterns of Accommodation
Islamic Challenge and Hindu Revival
Stand-Off: The Muslim Presence in India at the End
of the Sultanate Period
Political Divisions and the First
Muslim Invasion
The first Muslim intrusion came in 711
Indirectly caused by the peaceful trading contacts
who introduced Muslims to Indian civilization
Muslim traders attacked by pirates
Muhammad ibn Qasim lead more than 10,000
troops into Sindh to avenge the traders
The Muslims treated the Hindus and
Buddhists as “people of the book”
Freedom to worship as please
Paid special tax
Indian Influences on Islamic
Civilization
Islam had little impact on Indian culture
Muslims learned from the Indians
Indian scientific knowledge rivaled Greeks.
Indian Scholars traveled to Baghdad
From Booty to Empire: The Second
Wave of Muslim Invasions
After a decline of Muslims . Turkish slave
dynasty changed India.
Mahmud of Ghazni- Led a expedition that raided
and conquered Northern India.
Muhammad of Ghur
Qutb-ud-din Aibak seized control after
Muhammad's death.
Delhi was capital.
Patterns of Conversion
Islam converters- Merchants and Sufis
Muslim Converts
Buddhists and low caste groups
Reasons for conversions
Escape head tax for non-believers
More egalitarian social arrangement.
Intermarriage between local peoples and Muslim
migrants.
Patterns of Accommodation
Muslims made little impression on Hindu
community as a whole.
Hindus worked with Muslims, but were socially
aloof.
Hindus thought Muslims would be absorbed by
Hindus superior religion.
Unfortunate for women
Married at earlier ages
Prohibited widows to marry.
Sati
Islamic Challenge and Hindu Revival
Hindus found Islam impossible to absorb
Hindus placed greater emphasis on devotional cults of gods
and goddesses
Bhaki mystics and gurus stressed the importance of a
strong emotional bond between the devotee and the god
or goddess of veneration
The Bhakti movement did a lot to stem the flow of converts to
Islam such as increasing popular involvement in Hindu worship
and by enriching and extending the modes of prayer and ritual
Stand-Off: The Muslim Presence in India
at the End of the Sultanate Period
Muslim religious experts grew increasingly
aware of the problems Hinduism would cause
for Islam
Attempts to fuse the two religions were rejected
The religious experts worked to promote unity
within the Indian Muslim community
Non-Muslims, particularly Hindus, remained
the overwhelming majority of the population
of the vast lands south of the Himalayas
Muslim Population in Modern Day South Asia and
Africa
Interesting Fact-Islam is the most widely practiced religion in Southeast Asia, numbering
approximately 240 million adherents which translate to about 40% of the entire
population, with majorities in Brunei, Indonesia and Malaysia.
The Spread of Islam to Southeast Asia
Trading Contacts and Conversions
Sufi Mystics and the Nature of Southeast Asian
Islam
Trading Contacts and Conversions
Most spread was from peaceful contacts
First were small port centers
Malacca to Malaya, Sumatra, Demak, and Java
Port cities were the most common to covert
Slow progress in areas with Hindu-Buddhist
dynasties
Central Java, Bali, Central Asia
Sufi Mystics and the Nature of
Southeast Asian Islam
Sufis infused mystical strains and tolerated
animist beliefs and rituals
Allowed people to maintain pre-Islamic beliefs
and law
Mosque
Muslim mosques such as this one are visited by thousands of Muslims in Asia
Overall Importance
The overall importance of the spread of
Islam to Southern and Southeastern Asia is
that it helped the religion of Islam progress
further and introduced a new belief to a lot of
people who had never heard of Islam. It
helped Islam become one of the major
religions in the world of today.
Citations
http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php
?t=123798&page=2
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http://www.farhan-aliqadri.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1221&sid=266
742cf753dc5e2d57519f13029473d
http://www.arzoomag.com/wp-
content/uploads/2008/09/eid-300x216.jpg
http://www.webindia123.com/tourism/pilgrim/glr
y/mosque/m11.jpg
Mosque