Chapter 7 - TeacherWeb
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Transcript Chapter 7 - TeacherWeb
Chapter 7
Abbasid Decline and the
Spread of Islamic Civilization
to South and Southeast Asia
Islamic Heartlands
Court conditions:
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Shi’i revolts, assassinations
Luxuries
Wives, concubines, courtiers
Succession???
Harun al-Rashid
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Thousand and One Arabian Nights
Dependent on advisors (Persian)
Death→civil wars, need for personal armies
Slave mercenary armies (caused more problems)
Internal problems
Constant civil violence (costs $$)
Peasants heavily taxed
Villages destroyed/abandoned
Shi’i also caused problems
Women
Harem and veil
Concubines/slaves
Slaves from surrounding regions
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Prized for beauty and intelligence
Very educated
Leaders spend more time with them
Slave and lower-class women – usually had
more freedom
Upper-class had “behind the scenes”
power
Nomadic problems
Buyids (Persian Shi’i)
• Invaded and captured Baghdad
• Caliphs were “puppet rulers”
• “sultans”
Seljuk Turks (Sunnis)
• Purged Shi’i influence
• Good military
• Opens way for Ottomans later
Mongols later end the Abbasids
Impact of Crusades
Seljuks not unified, surprised so 1st
Crusade was Christian success
Eventually Muslims unite under Saladin,
reconquer area
Little impact on Muslims
Much impact on Christians
• Technology, weapons, science, medicine,
regained Greek learning, textiles
Exchange was mostly one-way
Culture
Expansion of trade and professional
classes
Urban prosperity (artisans)
Literature-Persian
Science-math, chemistry, astronomy,
medicine, maps (practical things)
Religious trends: orthodox/Sufis
Islam in South Asia
Carried by invaders/traders/Sufis/etc
Earlier migrants to India had been
absorbed into culture-Muslims didn’t
Muslim civ. = Indian civ.
Much interaction, both peaceful and
violent
Harsha (north India)
• Forged alliances, united central and east
• Period of peace and prosperity
• Dies without successor
Muslim invasions
Political divisions result
First wave (711)
Muslim traders vs. pirates
Muhammad ibn Qasim- Umayyad
Little change for people – most did
not convert (no reason to)
Exchange of info (esp. science/math)
Second wave
Turkish slave dynasty (Mahmud of
Ghazni)- 200 yrs. raiding in N. India
Muhammad of Ghur-capital at Delhi
Controlled Indus valley and N. India
Next 300 yrs-succession of Muslim
dynasties reign (sultans of Delhi)
Based on military machines
Patterns of
conversion/accommodation
Most conversions-peaceful
Merchants/traders!!!!!!
Sufi mystics
Most from lower castes
Buddhism declines
Hindus took gov’t positions
Muslims adopted some Hindu ideas
“bad” for women
Hindu revival
Response to Muslims
More emphasis on devotional
cults(bhakti)
Open to all (women/untouchables)
Stressed strong emotional bond to
gods
Proves adaptability
Results
Brahmans vs. ulama
Large Muslim community on Indian
subcontinent
Hindus still majority
Hindus still thought Muslims would
be absorbed (NOT!)
SE Asia
Carried by traders/Sufi mystics
Shrivijaya collapses, opening for Muslims
Peaceful and voluntary conversions
Trade was key
Malacca
Conversion helped business
Sufis adapted Islam to fit areas
Women stronger position
In Depth
World religions –broad and flexible
Islam-peaceful converts, adopted,
flexible
Accommodated diverse aspects