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The Muslim World 622-1250

The Muslim World 622-1250.

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The Muslim World 622-1250

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  1. The Muslim World622-1250

  2. Early Expansion: Arab conquests of the first Islamic century brought vast territory under Muslim rule, but conversion proceeded slowly. In most areas outside the Arabian peninsula, the only region where Arabic was then spoken, conversion did not accelerate until the third century after the conquest.

  3. Rise of Islam600-1200 AD • How did Muhammad become the prophet of Islam? • What are the teachings of Islam? • How did Islam help shape the way of life of its believers? • How did Arab conquests grow out of the career of Muhammad? • Why did the caliphate break up? • How did Muslim societies differ from region to region? • What was the relationship between urbanization & development of Islamic culture?

  4. Geography

  5. Geographic Context • Islam emerged from the Arabian Peninsula • Mostly desert but farming possible in many areas • Trading on coasts • Bedouins dominated desert • Traded with others • Frequent wars over water

  6. Arabia BeforeMuhammad • Diverse due to geography but linked by caravan trading • Some Arabs allied w/ Sasanians, some w/Byzantines • pastoralists in South isolated/independent- dominated caravan trade of incense • camel saddle • Rise of caravan cities-Petra • Polytheistic-each tribe had own gods • Animistic/natural forces, celestial bodies

  7. Mecca: Religious & Trade Center • Market town at Xroads of 2 main caravan routes • Safety zone • Trade/Pilgrimage brought profit to local merchants • Idols housed in Kaaba-ancient shrine-believed built by Abraham • Nearby site where God asked Abraham to sacrifice his son -not Isaac-Ishmael son of Hagar • housed statues of many local gods/goddesses

  8. The Kaaba • black stone embedded in corner-gift from angel Gabriel to prophet Abraham • Housed stones, statues, Christian pictures • Ruling tribe- Quraysh- encouraged tribes to place their idols for protection • By 500 AD 360 idols were within the Kaaba

  9. Population of Mecca • Heterogeneous, diverse • Arab tribes • Syrians-caravan leaders • Merchants • Traveling monks • Christians • Jews • No social unity

  10. Muhammad’s Early Life • Born in Mecca in 570 • orphan • Became shepherd in uncle’s Bedouin tribe • Became trader • Married older, rich widow, Khadija • son died • Devoted husband/father to daughters

  11. Muhammad’s Vision • Troubled by idol worship/ moral decline in society • Went to cave to meditate • He heard voice saying, “Recite” • “Recite in the name of your God, the Creator, who created man from clots of blood” • Angel Gabriel, called him to be messenger of God • Khadija, Ali,his uncle’s son & Abu Bakr, his BFF, believed in him- became first converts • received revelations until his death • These became the Qu’ran • Islam means submission or surrender

  12. The Hijra: A Turning Point • Muhammad’s message angered Meccan merchants • Feared loss of pilgrimage profits • In 622, faced with murder, Muhammad & followers left Mecca for Yathrib • Renamed Medina, or “city of the Prophet” • 1st year of Muslim calendar

  13. Turning Point • welcomed in Medina as religious & political ruler • Reputation grew, many converted • Muhammad & followers attacked- defeated Meccans

  14. Destruction of the Idols • In 630, he returned to Mecca- destroyed idols in Kaaba • United Arabs under Islam • Died in 632

  15. Teachings of Islam • Monotheistic • The Quran • God is all powerful • People are responsible for their actions • Final judgment before God • No official priests to mediate between people and God

  16. The Five Pillars

  17. People of the Book • Same God as Jews and Christians • Quran is God’s final and complete revelation • Torah & Bible are partial revelations from God • All are “People of the Book”

  18. Muhammad’s Teachings • Message of equality & God’s sovereignty based on Judeo-Christian tradition but with major differences

  19. Muhammad’s Teachings • Allah was the one & only God & all should submit-be thankful to Him • All believers were equal under Allah • The rich should share wealth with poor • Allah knows every person’s destiny • People should strive to live righteously- avoid impiety • All would be subject to Judgment Day

  20. Prophet Muhammad & Muslim Army Battle of Uhudillustrated manuscript 1594

  21. The Caliphate • Muhammad died 632 CE • Crisis - no heir, no instructions • Abu Bakr –Muhammad’s father-in-law & loyal follower became 1st Caliph • “If you worship Muhammad, Muhammad is dead. If you worship God, God is alive.”

  22. The Caliphate & Spread of Islam • Abu Bakr & next 3 “Rightly Guided Caliphs” unified Arabs-conquered through series of jihads against neighboring empires • Attacked Syria, which was controlled by Byzantine Empire • Iraq ruled by Persian Sasanians

  23. The Second “Rightly Guided” Caliph • Abu Bakr died in 634 CE • Umar elected as Second Caliph • Ruled for 10 years • Captured Damascus & Jerusalem • By 644 CE Muslims controlled all of Persian area of Iraq-most of Iran

  24. The Third “Rightly Guided” Caliph • Uthman ibn Affan • serious conflicts within the umma • Uthman’s family were Umayyads-had opposed Muhammad- some resented his leadership • Opposition to Uthman grew • 659 CE, he was assassinated

  25. Fourth “Rightly Guided” Caliph • Ali– son of Muhammad’s uncle • Fatima- Muhammad’s daughter • Ali’s followers believed only Muhammad’s blood relations should rule • Conflict between Ali & Uthman’s clans • Ali assassinated in 661 by own followers-unhappy b/c he negotiated rather than destroyed his enemies • last caliph who knew Muhammad personally

  26. Shi’a & Sunni Sects • Mu’awiyah - governor of Syria took over leadership • Moved capital to Damascus • Began Umayyad Dynasty • Conflict with descendants of Ali- called Shi’a- over leadership • Shi’a led many revolts against Umayyads

  27. Sunni • Caliph should be chosen by leaders of the community • Should be pious • Political leader-not religious authority • Inspiration came from Muhammad’s example

  28. Shiites • True successor must be descended from Muhammad’s daughter & son-in-law Fatima & Ali • Descendants divinely inspired • Admire martyrdom as demonstration of faith

  29. Sufi • Arabic for wool • mystics sought communion w/ God through meditation, fasting, prayer & other rituals • Respected for piety & miraculous powers • Helped spread Islam through missionary work • Blended Muslim beliefs & culture w/ local traditions

  30. Inducing an Ecstatic State

  31. Which of the following was not under Muslim control by 750? Spain, Egypt, Syria, Ethiopia?

  32. End of Umayyads (Mostly) • Vigorous religious & political opposition led to downfall of Umayyad caliphate • Abbasids overthrew Umayyads in 750 AD • Ruthlessly murdered all Umayyads • Only Prince Abd al-Rahman escaped & fled to Spain (al-Andalus) which was controlled by Berbers-Muslims from N. Africa • Set up rival Umayyad caliphate

  33. Rise of Abbasids • Moved capital to Baghdad in 762AD • Controlled key trade routes-provided access to goods, gold, information • Strong bureaucracy • Treasury kept track flow of money • Taxes on land, imports, exports, non-Muslims • Special department managed the army • Diplomats sent to major courts Europe, Asia, Africa • Foreign diplomats welcomed to Baghdad

  34. More Rivalry • Abbasids could not maintain unity of caliphate • Fatimid Caliphate formed in N. Africa- spread across Red Sea, into Arabia & Syria • Still united under Islam, language, trade, economy

  35. Muslim Trade Network • Connected to all parts of the world • Single language • Single currency • Banks • Sakks (checks)

  36. Islam: A Way of Life • Both a religion & way of life • Islamic law govern many aspects of daily life • Traditions determine ethical behavior & influence family relations

  37. Sharia • Does not separate religious from secular • Applies the Qu’ran to all legal situations • Regulates moral conduct • Family life • Business practices • Government • Helped unite Muslims • Legal ruling is called a fatwa

  38. Reasons for Success? • Weakness of Byzantine & Persian empires • Common faith • Belief in Islam & paradise • Arabs welcomed as liberators from unpopular Byzantine & Persian rulers • Bold, efficient fighting methods • Camel & horse cavalry

  39. Muslim Culture: Cities • Symbolized strength of caliphate • Baghdad was capital of Abbasid empire • Baghdad’s city plan included circular design & protective walls

  40. Social Classes • Muslims by birth • Converts to Islam • Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians • slaves

  41. Role of Women • All are equal • Men are managers of women’s affairs • Women should be obedient • Legal rights: marriage, family, divorce, property • Shari’a allowed men to have 4 wives “If the wives of a man, or the daughters of a man go out into the street, their heads are to be veiled. The prostitute is not to be veiled. Maidservants are not to veil themselves. Veiled harlots and maidservants shall have their garments seized and 50 blows inflicted on them and bitumen poured on their heads.”

  42. Responsibilities of Women • Varied with income of husband • Poor women worked with husband • Wealthy women managed household • Access to education • Raised children • During early period women could participate in public life & gain an education • Over time, secluded/veiled

  43. Muslim Science & Scholarship • Muhammad promoted learning • Astronomers & Mathematicians were necessary: • Time of prayer • Direction of Mecca • Curious about world • Desire for truth

  44. Art and Science Flourish • House of Wisdom • Research, editors, linguists, technical advisors • Standards, techniques for research • Used Greek ideas • Influenced later European learning

  45. Muslim Literature • The Qur’an • Poetry • Popular Literature One Thousand and One Nights

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