The Muslim World 600-1250 - Arlington Public Schools
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The Muslim World
600-1250
Roots of Islam
Bedouins
in Arabia
Sasanid Empire, 224-651
–Control
–Zoroastrianism
–Silk Road
Arabian Peninsula before Muhammad
Settled
people
Nomads rare, but important –
caravan link
CROSSROADS OF TRADE
Muhammad
Born in 570
Caravan
trader
In 610,
revelations
Qur’an
(contains actual
revelations of
Allah)
Beliefs of Islam
Five
Pillars of
Islam
–Faith (Allah is supreme
God)
–Prayer
–Zakat (offerings,
charity)
–Fasting
–Hajj (pilgrimage)
Formation of the Umma
Muhammad fleas from Mecca to Medina with followers
and establishes a community of believers– “umma”
Spread of Islam under Muhammad
Islam Spreads
Caliph
(successor)
Four caliphs
By 750, the Muslim empire
stretched from the Atlantic
Ocean to the Indus River
http://mapsofwar.com/ind/history-of-
religion.html
http://mapsofwar.com/ind/imperi
al-history.html
The Four Caliphs
Abu
Bakr (632-634)
Umar (634-644)
Uthman (644-656)
Ali (656-661)
Muslim World, 1200
Copyright © McDougal Littell. All Rights Reserved.
Muslim Empire Splits
Umayyads
caliph (Ali)
Sunni
Shi’a
Sufi
succeed the fourth
Umayyad (661-750) Land Conquests
In Spain, the Umayyads held power over a society in which Islamic,
Roman, German, and Jewish cultures combined to form a unique
Iberian variant of Islamic civilization. Muslim Spain saw substantial
urbanization; the introduction of citrus crops; a diverse, irrigated,
agricultural sector; and a florescence of Muslim and Jewish
intellectual activity.
Downfall of the Umayyid
Abbasids Give it a Shot
Rise and Fall of the Abbasid
Caliphate
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All Rights Reserved.
Rise of Abbasid Caliphate
Family of Abbas—an uncle of Muhammad—took
over and established the Abbasid Caliphate
Provided renewed religious leadership, which they
combined with a style of rulership and royal
ceremony derived from the Sasanids
Literature and learning, including the translation
of Greek texts and secular Arab poetry, thrived
under the Abbasids
Baghdad was a center of Abbasid culture; other
areas shared in this culture to varying extents.
The Abbasid period: high rate of non-Muslim
subjects convert to Islam
Muslim Conquests
SHARIA
Women in the Islamic World
1. Muslim women did have rights under Islamic law
• right to inherit and own property and to retain it
in marriage
• right to divorce, to remarry
• to testify in court
• go on pilgrimage
HOWEVER,
2. Women were veiled and secluded as they had been
previously in the Byzantine and the Sasanid
empires.
• Could be influential in the family, but only
slave women could have a public role or
appear in public before men.
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Chapter 8 – BIG PICTURE!
Islam emerged among the nomadic
pastoralists and caravan traders of Arabian
peninsula
Muhammad (Arab trader from Mecca)
experienced revelations that called people
to submit to God’s will
Muhammad fled to Median with followers–
where umma was formed
Succession troubles: Sunni and Shi’ite split
– Caliph = office(s) or leader(s) of succession
Ch. 8– BIG PICTURE! (con’t)
Early
successor- Abu Bakr confirmed
5 Pillars
Shari’a = foundation of Islamis
civilization (derived from Quran)
Women in general enjoyed relatively
high status under Islamic law, though
tended to live in seclusion
Urbanization and religious conversion
reinforced each other and prompted
the expansion of agriculture, trade,
science, technology