Transcript Chapter 6

Chapter 6
Islamic World
What do you see?
What do you see?
Shi’a (dark green) & Sunni (light green)
What do you see?
Rise of Islam
• Muhammad began to
meditate in the hills
because he became
troubled by the gap
between the honesty
of most Makkans and
the greediness of
trading elites in the
city.
• Muhammad, the main
prophet of the religion
Islam believed Allah’s
teachings were
revealed to him
through the angel
Gabriel.
• The Quran, the Islamic
scriptures, came from
these revelations.
• Muslims were
considered followers
of Islam.
• According to Islamic
belief, Muhammad is
the prophet of Allah.
• For Muslims, obeying
Allah’s will means
following the Five
Pillars of Islam.
• The Five Pillars of Islam are
acts of worship:
1. There is no God but Allah
2. You must pray five times a day
3. Give part of your wealth to the
poor
4. You must fast from dawn to
sunset during Ramadan
5. And you must make a
pilgrimage to Makkah once in
your lifetime
• called the hajj.
• After Muhammad’s death,
Muslim scholars drew up
the shari’ah, which is a
law code that provides
believers with a set of
practical laws to regulate
their daily lives.
• In addition to the Five
Pillars, Muslims must
obey the shari’ah, which
forbids them to gamble,
eat pork, drink alcoholic
beverages, or engage in
dishonest behavior.
Arab Empire and Its Successors
• After Muhammad’s
death, some of
Muhammad’s closest
followers chose Abu
Bakr, Muhammad’s
father-in-law as the
new leader.
• He was named the first
caliph, or successor to
Muhammad.
• To spread the Muslim
movement, Abu Bakr
took part in the
“struggle in the way of
God,” or jihad.
• In 661 general
Mu’awiyah became
caliph.
• He was a rival of Ali
(Muhammad’s son in
law) and was known
for one major virtue:
– He used force only if
necessary.
• He made the office of
caliph (caliphate)
hereditary and began
the Umayyad dynasty.
• A revolt led by
Hussein in the early
Umayyad period led to
the split of Islam into
two groups, the Shiites
and the Sunnis. The
groups disagreed on
who should be the
Shi’a
rightful caliph.
(Shiite)
Muslim
Sunni
• Resentment against
Umayyad rule grew
because non-Arab
Muslims did not like
the way local
administrators favored
Arabs.
• Eventually, the
Abbasids replaced the
Umayyad dynasty.
Growth of Abbasid Dynasty
• During the Abbasid
dynasty, a prime
minister known as a
vizier led the council
that advised the caliph.
• It was during Abbasid
dynasty that the
Christian Crusades
started in 1096.
• Christians feared the
Muslim Empire that
had gained control of
Palestine and
Jerusalem.
• For the next 200 years
Crusaders fought Arab
Muslims for control of
the territory.
• Saladin eventually
took control of the
territory in 1187 by
destroying the
Christian forces in
Jerusalem.
• The Crusades had little
lasting impact on
Southwest Asia,
except to breed
centuries of mistrust
between Muslims and
Christians.
• A far more important
threat had emerged
from the Mongols.
• The Mongols who
seized Baghdad in
1258 eventually blend
with the Muslims who
lived there because
many of the Mongols
converted to Islam.
• They intermarried
with the local people.
• Over time, the
Mongols rebuilt the
cities they destroyed
during the invasion.
Islamic Civilization
• With a population of
two hundred thousand,
Cordoba was Europe’s
largest city after
Constantinople.
• A crucial part of every
Muslim city or town
was the bazaar, which
was a covered market.
• The Quran granted
women spiritual and
social equality with
men, and women
could own and inherit
property.
• But, men dominated in
the Arab Empire.
• Every woman had a
male guardian.
• Women were secluded
at home and kept from
social contacts with
men outside their
families.
Culture of Islam
• It was through the
Muslim world that
Europeans recovered
the works of Aristotle
and other Greek
philosophers.
• Omar Khayyám is
most famous for his
literary works,
especially the
Rubaiyat.
• Muslim scholar and
scientist Ibn Sina
wrote a medical
encyclopedia that was
translated into Latin
and became a basic
textbook in Europe.
• The minaret is the
tower from which the
crier, or muezzin, calls
the faithful to prayer
five times a day.
• Most decorations on
Islamic art are of
repeated Arabic letters,
plants, and abstract
figures. These
geometric patterns are
called arabesques.
• Most importantly, no
representations of the
prophet Muhammad
adorning mosques
because the Hadith
warns against any
attempt to imitate God
by creating pictures of
living beings.
• Abbasids or Umayyad?