Spread of Islam
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Transcript Spread of Islam
Chapter 7
The World of Islam
The Middle East in the time of Muhammad
1. Arabia is a bleak land about 1500 miles long and 1200 miles wide. It features two large deserts, portions of which have no rainfall. The residents of
Arabia are a Semitic people who primarily live along the shores of the peninsula and on the southern highlands where there is some rainfall. These
people, principally farmers and shepherds, were small in numbers and insignificant until about 1200 B.C.E. when the camel was domesticated which
not only made nomadic life possible but also provided a livelihood in transit trade between India, the Mediterranean, and Africa. Although the
Bedouns (or desert Arabs) are nomadic, before 450 C.E. powerful states in Yemen did exercise control. The decline of authority and the return to
nomadism was reinforced by Ethiopian and Sasanid invasions in the sixth century.
2. The economic life of Arabia was enhanced by protracted wars between the Byzantines and Sasanids in the early seventh century that resulted in
a shift southward of the Africa-Asia caravan routes. Towns grew to take advantage of this, specifically Mecca which was near the caravan routes
from Yemen in the south to Syria. It grew to be a commercial as well as a financial center as the mercantile wealth made the city rich. Controlling the
affairs of Mecca at the time of Muhammad was the Quaraysh tribe from northern Arabia.
Muhammad's clan, the Hashim, was a part of one
of the two federations into which the Quaraysh had split.
3. The Hashim operated caravans north into Syria and had worked out a system of protection with the hostile Bedoun tribes in northern Arabia by
sharing profits from the Meccan trade and hiring the tribes to escort the caravans.
4. Mecca was not only at the juncture of major trade routes but also an old religious center where the Ka'ba was located. The Ka'ba was a shrine that
served as a center of worship for the different Arabian classes and tribes. In addition to images of the deities (some 360, including Jesus), the Ka'ba
also housed the Black Stone worshiped as a miraculous relic by followers of many of the divinities.
Questions:
1. How did the geography of Arabia shape the development of its people?
2. Examine how the Arabian people became involved in international trade.
The Middle East in the time of Muhammad
The Rise of Islam
Bedouins
Sheikh
Majlis
Mecca
Ka’aba
Muhammad (570-632)
Caravan manager
Hegira (Hijrah), 622
Yathrib (Medina)
Umma
Visit to the Ka’aba, 630
Spread of Islam
1. Arabia is a bleak land about 1500 miles long and 1200 miles wide. It features two large deserts, portions of which have no rainfall. There are a few
seasonal streams but no real rivers. Although the people are nomads, before 450 powerful states in Yemen did exercise control. The decline of
Yemen's authority and the return to nomadism was reinforced by Ethiopian and Persian invasions in the sixth century.
2. There are numerous theories as to the cause of the expansion of Islam: the harsh environmental conditions, population pressure, religious zeal,
the longing of single men in the army for booty, or the desire to export the religious reform of Arabia.
3. Muhammad was born in 570 in a Mecca that was undergoing considerable change due to the growth of trade. Significantly, the new economic life
had failed to accommodate the old moral values of Arab life. Desert Arabs retained a religion centered on the belief in the immortality of the tribe and
clan. However, as seen with Muhammad, in Mecca where the sacred black stone was housed at the Ka'ba, a concept of monotheism was evolving.
His god was called Allah, derived from the Arab word al-ailah meaning "the god." Thus, a word was used which needed no explanation. The earliest
converts were young men who were preaching against the abandonment of the old virtues. The merchant aristocracy generally resisted
Muhammad's teachings as a challenge to their gods and goddesses as well as threatening ancestral ways. Preceded by his Meccan followers, in
July 622 Muhammad fled to Yathrib (later changed to Medina meaning "the city," i.e. the city of the prophet) which had requested his aid as a neutral
arbitrator among its five tribes (three were Jewish). Here Muhammad had success in converting the people and when he became both the secular
and spiritual authority of the city, an attack was initiated against Mecca. It fell in 629 in part due to a grain boycott on the agriculturally dependent city.
4. Expansion west through Byzantine Egypt was preceded by thrusts against Syria and Mesopotamia. Despite stubborn resistance from the
Byzantines, by 640 Syria had fallen and Damascus and Jerusalem were occupied. Egypt was in Muslim hands six years later. The struggle here
was made easier by the people's weariness over taxation and the theological and factional struggles of Christianity. Muslim promises of political and
religious freedom were enticing. From Egypt there was a slow drive across North Africa leading eventually into Spain in 711. With only weak
opposition, Spain fell to the Muslims as Christian resistance fell back to northwestern Iberia. By 732 Muslim raiders were in the kingdom of the
Franks and near Tours fought an indecisive battle. Since this amounted to no more than an adventure, the raiders returned to Spain. However, they
did not venture across the Pyrenees again.
5. In the east, Persian forces succumbed to the Muslims by 650. The Umayyad dynasty (661-750) pushed their conquests to the Indus River. After
660 the Umayyad capital was moved to Damascus since this was the center of power for Mu'awiya (661-680), the first Umayyad ruler.
6. The Slavs in the north and the Muslims in the east were pressing the Byzantine Empire. The Umayyad navy held several Aegean island and
from these attacked Constantinople between 674 and 678. For the moment, the Arab advance was checked with a successful defense. This
success was followed in 718 with the defeat of a Muslim naval fleet in the Sea of Marmara.
7. The Umayyad Dynasty fell in 750 bringing to power the Abbasid Dynasty (750-1258) that built a new capital at Baghdad. The location shifted
Islam’s center to Iraq and marked the beginning of enormous prosperity that drew from contacts on three continents: spices, minerals, dyes, silks,
and porcelain from India and China; gems and fabrics from Central Asia; honey and wax from Scandinavia and Russia; and ivory and gold dust from
Africa.
Spread of Islam
Questions:
1. What role did geography have to play in the expansion of Islam?
2. Why was Islam so successful in expanding into Christian lands?
Teachings of Muhammad
Koran and Five pillars
Ulama
Shari’ah
Hadith
The Arab Empire and Its Successors
Abu Bakr
Caliph (khalifa)
Jihad
Battle of Yarmuk, 636
Umar
Uthman
Muhammad Ali (656-661)
Mu’awiyah
The Umayyads (661-750)
Damascus
Tariq, 710
Battle of Tours, 732
Constantinople, 717
Shi’ite
Sunnite
The Abbasid Caliphate at the Height of its Power
1. In 750 the weakened Umayyads fell to the Abbasids (750-1258) who moved the capital from Damascus to Baghdad (Persian for "city of God")
which was built between 762 and 766 on the banks of the Tigris River. The location was strategic since it could take advantage of the river traffic to
the Persian Gulf and the caravans from the Mediterranean and central Asia. The greatest extent of the Abbasid Empire was under Haroun alRashid (786-809).
2. In the wake of the Abbasid victory, many of the Umayyad leaders were executed. One who escaped was Abd al-Rahman who made his way to
Spain where he re-established the Umayyad dynasty in 756. The Umayyad power began to deteriorate in the middle of the tenth century and Muslim
Spain disintegrated into the smaller states of Seville, Malaga, Toledo, Saragossa, and Granada under the control of various families.
3. In 788 a independent Sunnite regime was established in Morocco. By the tenth century the Umayyads of Cordoba had gained control of
Morocco but were quickly replaced in the middle of the eleventh century by the Almoravids. The Almoravids also conquered western Algeria and
southern Spain. Their capitals were at Marrakech and Seville. As the Christians in Spain gained territories in the twelfth century, the weak
Almoravids were succeeded by the Almohads (Muslim Berbers) from the Atlas Mountains of Morocco. The Almohads soon conquered parts of
southern Spain, Algeria, Tunisia, and Tripoli in response to Norman expansion from Sicily.
4. In 909 control over Africa (Algeria and Tunisia) was seized by a claimant who professed to be a descendent from Fatimah, Muhammad's
daughter. In the second half of the tenth century, Egypt was conquered by the Fatimids and they transferred the capital from Tunisia to newly built
Cairo. By 1000 the Fatimids also controlled southern Syria, the Hejaz, and Yemen as well as most of North Africa. In the early eleventh century the
Fatimid empire began to disintegrate permitting Byzantine control over northern Syria and make possible the successes of the Crusaders.
5. In the east, Iran was increasingly difficult for the Abbasids to govern as independent dynasties were created. Out of weakness the caliph
recognized their defacto control. Among the most important were the Samanids controlling Khorasan and Transoxiana from Bukhara and the Zaidi
sect of Shi'ites who flourished in northern Iran and northern Yemen in the ninth century.
6. The Seljuk Turks, originating in the steppes of Turkistan, served as mercenaries for the Abbasids. Taking advantage of the weakness of the
Abbasid, the Seljuks seized Baghdad and control of the empire. In 1071 the Seljuks defeated the Byzantines in eastern Anatolia and then seized
most of the peninsula.
Question:
1. Examine the expansion and disintegration of the Abbasid Empire.
The Abbasid Caliphate at the Height of its Power
Turkish Occupation of Anatolia
1. The loss of Byzantine territory was reversed by Emperor Heraclius (610-641) whose revitalized army and navy succeeded in freeing Syria and
Egypt from Sasanid control. The financial strains of these wars and the cost in terms of manpower, however, weakened the Byzantine Empire and
ultimately resulted in the loss of the recovered provinces to the Muslim Arab advances. Throughout the remainder of the seventh century not only did
Byzantium continue to contract but the Muslims conquered the Sasinad Empire.
2. Muslim armies pushed through Anatola and reached the shores of the Sea of Marmara. A 677 attack on Constantinople by sea failed as did a
combined sea and land operation in 717 which witnessed the use of "Greek fire." This failure not only preserved the Byzantine Empire but helped
save the West from a Muslim invasion. Under Emperor Leo (717-741), the Byzantines were able to reconquer most of Anatolia and achieve a
stalemate against the Muslims. As Islamic power decayed in the second half of the tenth century, the Byzantines were able to regain most of Syria.
3. The Seljuk Turks, originating in the steppes of Turkestan in central Asia, became avid Muslims as they moved westward through Persia, Iraq, and
Syria. In late 1055 they seized Baghdad. The caliph became a puppet to the Turkish sultan ("he with authority"). In 1071 the Seljuks under Arp
Arslan met a Byzantine army at Manzikert and annihilated it while capturing the emperor. The Seljuks overran the eastern Byzantine provinces in
Anatolia and ultimately conquered much of Syria. A separate sultanate of Rum (Rome, i.e. Byzantine Anatolia) was set up. Internal weaknesses
appeared in the early twelfth century and were complicated by the arrival of the Crusaders. In 1194 Seljuk rule in Baghdad ended. By the middle of
the thirteenth century the power of the sultan of Rum was broken by the Mongols who were conquering Persia and Iraq.
4. The Ottomans originated from the northwestern corner of Anatola. They began to break out of the area in the late thirteenth century and by 1326
Bursa had fallen. Further military successes brought the northwestern corner of Asia Minor from the Aegean to the Black Sea under Ottoman
control by 1345. Soon after, the Ottomans crossed the Dardanelles into Europe and pushed northward and westward into the Balkans. By the
fifteenth century Byzantium constituted only Constantinople. After a seven week siege, on May 29, 1453, Constantinople fell.
Questions:
1. How did the Seljuks expand their territory?
2. What would be the consequences of the Seljuk's control of Anatolia and much of the Middle East?
Turkish Occupation of Anatolia
The Abbasids (750-1258)
Baghdad
Harun al-Rashid (786-809)
Fatimids
Seljuk Turks
Baghdad, 1055
Battle of Manzikert, 1071
The Crusades
Byzantine emperor Alexius I, 1096
Saladin (1174-1193)
Jerusalem, 1187
Acre, 1291
The Mongols
Islamic Civilization
Political structure
Caliph
Diwan
Vizier
Trade and Manufacturing
Banking
Urbanization
Society
Upper class
Slavery
Women
Urban dwellings
Culture of Islam
Philosophy and science
Ibn Rushd (Averroës)
Galen (c. 180-200)
Ibn Sina, (Avecinna), 980-1037
Islamic Literature
Book of Lords
Ferdowzi (940-1020), Book of Kings
Rabe’a of Qozdar
al-Mutanabbi (915-965)
Omar Khayyam, Rubaiyat
The Tales from 1001 Nights
Sadi (1210-1292), Rose Garden
Art and Architecture
Dome of the Rock
Mosques
Palaces
Woolen rugs
Arabesque
Wailing Wall in Jerusalem, below Dome of the Rock