1 / 30

Middle East & the Spread of Islam

Explore the origins of Islam from Bedouin society to the Abbasid Empire. Learn about key figures, conquests, and cultural achievements.

roache
Download Presentation

Middle East & the Spread of Islam

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Middle East & the Spread of Islam First Global Civilization? Chapter 6 & 7 Pg. 126-160

  2. Define • Bedouin • Arab • Islam • Muslim

  3. Pre-Islamic Arab World • Arabian Peninsula = harsh desert • Cities • Towns • Bedouins Clans: Rivalry & Vengeance • Harsh climate = dependence on clan • Social cohesion reinforced by warriors, control of pastureland, & water

  4. Bedouin woman • Bedouins on the move from oasis to oasis

  5. Towns & Trade • Several key towns arose near Red Sea as a result of transcontinental trade • Mecca • Medina

  6. Marriage & Family • Bedouin women enjoyed higher status than neighbors • In urban environments, women’s status was much lower Poets & Gods • Because of the harsh environment… • Material culture neglected in favor of oral poetry • Animistic polytheism

  7. Genesis of Islam • Byzantine & Persian empires in N & E Mesopotamia struggled against each other to expand influence • Bedouins face crisis • Muhammad rises to challenge • Meditation → Revelation → Quran • Islam is born!

  8. Persecution, Flight, Victory • Muhammad threatens the status of Mecca’s Umayyad clan • Fled to Medina & earns new converts • Muhammad returns to Mecca smashing idols in Kaba • Islam reigns supreme

  9. Arabs & Islam • Islam addresses needs & weaknesses of Arab society Universal Elements of Islam • Islamic beliefs yield universal appeal • Five Pillars

  10. Question: • Assess the influence of each of the Five Pillars on the spread of Islam. • What are the intended & un-intended consequences of these practices spiritually? culturally? globally? the Kaba

  11. Umayyad: an Arab Empire • Muhammad died in 632 w/o appointing successor, creating a crisis • Caliph • Position to be filled by Ali or Abu Bakr • Abu Bakr = 1st Caliph • Led rapid expansion of Arab empire Consolidation & Division

  12. Motives for Arab Conquests • Arab warriors driven to conquest for wealth & glory rather than jihad Weakness of the Adversaries • Persia – weakened from war & manipulation • Byzantium – weakened from war & resentful minority groups

  13. Succession Problem → Sunni-Shia • Factionalism resulted from confusion over succession between Ali & Umayyad clan • Deep divisions: • Sunni • Shia

  14. Umayyad Imperium • Built extensive empire from Spain to Central Asia • Maintained control through Arab minority

  15. Converts & “People of the Book” • Converts not treated as full citizens • “People of the book” taxed, but allowed to keep religions & communities intact

  16. Umayyad Family & Gender Roles • Women enjoyed stronger status under Muhammad’s leadership during the early years of Islam

  17. Umayyad Decline • Caused by: • Alienated followers by becoming aloof, corrupt, & decadent • Failed to integrate non-Arabs & dissents ↳Sparked revolt in Persia among Abbasid

  18. Questions • Assess the validity of the claim that “The empire built from Umayyad conquests was Arab rather than Islamic.”

  19. Abbasid: an Islamic Empire • Signs of things to come: • Brutal treatment of Umayyad → absolutist • Capital in Baghdad → strong Persian influence • Growing power of wazir → bureaucratization Islamic Conversion • Abbasid era saw full integration of citizens & converts

  20. Town & Country • Abbasid age saw urbanization & expansion of trade • Rural estates prospered: • Large estates – ayan, enriched warriors • Slave labor

  21. First Flowering of Learning • Islamic civilization made key contributions in art, religion, law, philosophy, science, & math • Greece Global Connections • Islam presents the unprecedented rise of backwater nomads to global empire

  22. Abbasid: later in the Heartlands • Key problems surface as early as 3rd Abbasid caliph Imperial Extravagance • Harun al-Rashid’s reign proved pivotal in extravagance & succession • Court factionalism • Rise of Turk mercenaries

  23. Imperial Breakdown • Extravagance & succession disputes fed spiraling financial problems Abbasid Family & Women • Rise of harem & veil meant high class women were increasingly uneducated & secluded • Contrast w/ slaves

  24. Nomadic Incursions • With caliph in disorder, Abbasid splintered into regional kingdoms • Buyids capture Baghdad in 945 • Seljuk Turks capture Baghdad in 1055

  25. Questions • Compare and contrast the Umayyad and Abbasid. • Which is more significant? Why? • Assess the validity of calling the later period of the Muslim empire, “Abbasid.”

  26. Impact of Christian Crusaders • Series of Christian crusades attempt to capture holy land starting in 1096 • Europeans established series of small kingdoms in Eastern Med. until 1291 • Crusades had much larger impact on Europe by intensifying exchange

  27. Age of Learning & Art • As Persians gained greater power, Persian language became language of high culture • EX – history, poetry, mystical revelations Full Flowering of Persian Lit

  28. Achievements in Sciences • Abbasid era established itself as most technologically & scientifically advanced Religious Trends & Expansion • Contradictory religious trends reflect paths in society • Orthodoxy • Sufi movement

  29. New Nomadic Invasion & Fall • 13th century dominated by Mongol invaders • Baghdad & Abbasid fall in 1258

  30. Questions • What seems to be the key in determining status and freedoms of women? • Support your answer with examples from the text.

More Related