Origins of Islam - Walker World History
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Transcript Origins of Islam - Walker World History
Origins of Islam
Chapter 10 Section 1
Where it all began-Geography
The Arabian
Peninsula
Modern Day
Countries:
Saudi Arabia
Bahrain
Kuwait
Oman
Qatar
UAE
Yemen
Where it all began -Geography
Physical Features
Desert
Some parts reach 100
Degrees everyday in the
summer
Sand dunes stretch
hundreds of miles
Water exists in oases
Wet fertile area in a desert
How People Lived
Nomads
Lived in tents
Raised herds of goats, sheep, and camels
Traveled around in search of food and water
Tribes offered safety
How People Lived
Towns
People who settled in oases
Farmed
Became centers of trade
Merchants
Beginnings of Islam (Vocab)
Islam - Submit to
God
Muslims - People
who practice
Islam
Qur’an - the holy
book of Islam
Mosque - Building
for Muslim Prayer
Beginnings of Islam
Muhammad - Founder of Islam
He was born around 570 in Mecca
He managed a caravan business for a
wealthy woman, Khadijah
Married Khadijah at age 25
In Mecca the tradition was for the wealthy
to give to the poor, but this was not
happening often
Beginnings of Islam
Around age 40 Muhammad was praying
and meditating when an angel spoke to
him and said,
“Recite in the name of your Lord who
created, created man from clots of blood!
Recite! Your Lord is the Most Bountiful One,
who by the pen taught man what he did not
know.”
Muslims believe God made Muhammad
a prophet
Beginnings of Islam
Muhammad continued to receive
messages from God for the rest of his
life and these were recorded in the
Qur’an
Spread of Islam
Muhammad was forced out of Mecca
and fled to Medina (the Hegira) in 622
This year is the 1st year of the Islamic
calendar
He became a spiritual and political
leader in Medina
Died in 632, but Islam continued to
spread
Islamic Beliefs
There is only one God, Allah, which
means “the God” in Arabic
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all
believe in the same God, just what they
believe about God is different
All people who believe in Allah are
bound like a family and should take care
of each other
Urged slaveholders to be kinder
Muslim Empires
Chapter 10
Section 2
Muhammad’s Death
Muhammad died in 632 after a
pilgrimage to Mecca
Disagreement between Muslim groups
Abu Bakr - Sunni
Ali - Shiite
Abu Bakr
Abu Bakr is named Caliph
Successor to Muhammad
Muhammad’s closest companion and
adviser
First convert to Islam
Muhammad married Aisha, his daughter
Led pilgrimage to Mecca in 631
Arab tribes united
Many tribes were loyal to Muhammad,
but not Islam
Many did not like mandatory zakat
Abu Bakr used military force to compel
tribes to convert to Islam
United Arab tribes under one leader and
stopped fighting between tribes
Victory
Under the first four
Caliphs the united
Arabs conquered
large portions of
the Byzantine
Empire and the
entire Persian
Empire
Umayyad & Abbasid
Caliphate
Chapter 10
Umayyad Dynasty
Ali was assassinated in 661
Mu’awiya took control and started the
Umayyad Dynasty
5th Caliph
Mu’awiya
Emphasized a more secular government
Moved capital to Damascus
Modeled government after Byzantine
Named his son Yazid as his successor
Yazid
Challenged and killed Hussein (Ali’s son)
in Karbala
Ruled for a short period of time
Abd ‘al-Malik
Ruled 20 years
Unified the empire
Made Arabic the common language
Constructed mosques
Unified coinage
Dome of the Rock constructed during his
reign
Umayyad Expansion
Abd ‘al-Malik’s heirs expanded the empire
and ruled from the Iberian Peninsula to the
Indus River
Abbasid Dynasty
Defeated the Umayyad Dynasty in 750
Joined with other groups opposed to secular
government to bring down the Umayyad
Moved the capital to Baghdad
Leaders were Arab, but influenced by
Persians
Contact with Chinese
Abbasid Dynasty – The Golden
Age
9th and 10th Century
Established Beyt al Hikma (House of
Wisdom)
Al Khwarizmi developed the number
system we use today
Father of algebra
Translated Greek, Persian, and Hindu
texts and became a center of knowledge
Abbasid Dynasty – The Golden
Age
Ibn Sina (Avicenna)
Canon of Medicine 1025
The first medical encyclopedia
A Thousand and One Nights 12th
Century
Decline
Mongol invasion in 1258
Burned Baghdad and destroyed the palaces
and the centers of learning and research