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Rise of Islam

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Revelations directly related to the needs of the Arab people ... Conquered peoples more open to Islam. Heavy burden of taxation. Persecution of faiths ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rise of Islam


1
Rise of Islam
2
The Middle East
3
Themes in Islamic History
  • Islam as Religion
  • Islam as State Empire
  • Islam as Civilization

4
Arabia
5
Arabia in 600 AD
  • Populated by various Arabic-speaking people
  • Bedouin - pastoral nomads organized in tribes
  • Agriculturalists, living either in oases in the
    north, or in the more fertile and thickly
    settled areas to the south
  • Intense tribal loyalties warfare
  • Arab culture revered oral story telling
  • Majority of Arabs followed polytheistic religions
    worshipped idols
  • Few tribes followed Judaism, Christianity or
    Zoroastrianism
  • City of Mecca was a religious trade center
  • Rich mixtures of culture
  • Ka'aba - small temple reportedly founded by
    Abraham
  • Pilgrimage to site
  • Much social injustice economic disparity

6
Muhammad (570 632)
  • Born at Mecca into the powerful Quraysh tribe
  • Orphaned at an early age raised by uncle
  • Illiterate but very articulate well liked
  • Became a successful merchant traveled north
  • Married older wealthy widow at 25 - Khadijah
  • Saw a crisis in Arab society
  • 610 AD.the divine call
  • Visited while meditating in cave by the Archangel
    Gabriel who commanded him to recite verses sent
    by God
  • Revelations continued for the next 22 years
  • Revelations collected in the Quran
  • Revelations directly related to the needs of the
    Arab people
  • First memorized the verses passed them to his
    wife close relatives
  • Small band of followers would memorize the
    recitations
  • First converts wife, cousin Ali, kinsman Abu
    Bakr
  • Starts preaching in 612
  • New recruits mainly from slaves and lower classes
  • Nocturnal journey to Jerusalem

7
Muhammad
  • 612-622 AD - in Mecca preaching and gaining
    followers
  • Seen as a trouble maker for attacking the
    established religion of Arabia
  • Attempts to assasinate him
  • AD 622 the Hegira to city of Medina
  • Request to resolve dispute between rival tribes
  • With followers fled to neighboring city of Medina
  • Year 622 as the start of the Muslim calendar
  • 622-630 AD---in Medina
  • Becomes leader of city
  • Islam becomes state religion
  • Develops concept of Umma - community
  • Mecca and Medina went to war
  • Unites the surrounding tribes behind him through
    conquest and conversion
  • Conflicts suppression of Jews in Medina
  • 630 Mecca captured without fight
  • Cleansed the Kaaba of idols
  • 632 first Hajj or pilgrimage
  • By his death in 632, Muhammad had managed to
    unite the entire Arabian peninsula

8
Legacy of Muhammad
  • Believed Arabs should have a scripture like the
    Jews Christians People of the Book
  • Developed all incompensing religion
  • Developed concept of Ummah Community of Allah
  • First attempt to create a social organization out
    of faith instead of tribal relationships
  • Vision of social justice for the Arabs
  • Weak vulnerable should be protected treated
    with respect
  • Performed the functions of prophet, lawgiver,
    religious leader, chief judge, commander of the
    army and civil head of state
  • Inspiration as role model for living divinely
    inspired life
  • By imitating details of his external life Muslims
    hoped to acquire his interior attitude of perfect
    surrender to God
  • Reproduce how he ate, washed, loved, prayed,
    spoke, etc.

9
Religion of Muhammad
  • Islam is the religion of submission or surrender
    to Allah
  • Simple and uncompromising faith in oneness of God
  • Muhammad did not believe he was preaching a new
    religion
  • Did not wholly reject Judaism and Christianity
  • Sent by God in order to complete and perfect
    those teachings
  • Accepted Abraham, Moses and Jesus as prophets
  • Muhammad is the messenger of God
  • Last in a long line of prophets
  • Chosen by God to preach repentance and submission
    to God
  • Judgment Day Allah rewards the faithful with a
    paradise filled with eternal pleasure
  • Warns of the inevitable apocalypse end of the
    world
  • Humanity will be forced to atone for sins
  • Images of heaven (oasis) hell (desert)
  • Belief in Predestination
  • Whatever happens, good and evil, proceeds from
    divine will

10
Quran - Koran
  • Means Recitation
  • Recitation Communicating directly with God
  • Provides a guide for living as a Muslim
  • Textbook from which practically every Muslim
    learns to read Arabic
  • Revelations from God delivered through the angel
    Gabriel to Mohammed over 22 years
  • Revelations came from a heavenly book containing
    Gods wisdom
  • Mother of the Book
  • Final uncorrupted revelation of God
  • Many parallels between Koran Old Testament
  • Contains 114 suras verses
  • Arranged by the length of sura
  • Contents Theological dogma, ceremonial
    regulations, laws related to social, civil and
    criminal behavior
  • Themes Oneness of Allah, his attributes, the
    ethical duties of man, and coming retribution
  • Quran must remain in Arabic
  • Translations not authentic

11
Writing of the Quran
  • None of Quran was written during Muhammads life
  • Still an oral scripture
  • Words of the Prophet at first memorized written
    on parchment or clay by followers
  • Zayd ibn Thabit one of Muhammeds secretaries
  • Began gathering the verses of the Quran soon
    after his death
  • Interviewed closest associates
  • Sorted into a type of order
  • Uthman (644-656) Third Caliph created an
    official and final version
  • Committee charged with compiling Quran in 651
  • Wanted to avoid controversy
  • Collect and authenticate verses
  • Strict criteria for authenticity
  • 2 eyewitnesses had to testify that each verses
    had been recorded in the presence of Muhammad
  • Then verified with companions of Muhammad
  • Approved verses amassed into single text
  • Uthman then ordered all other texts destroyed
  • Quran not altered since

12
Religion of Islam
  • Islam is open to all who accept its tenets
  • Prohibition against idolatry or graven images
  • Islam has no organized hierarchy
  • No religious authority, clerical elite or
    priesthood to act as intermediary
  • Mullahs (teachers) occupy positions of authority
    because of their knowledge of the Quran
  • Sunna or Hadith - written collection of Arab oral
    traditions concerning life of Muhammad
  • Address issues not specifically covered in the
    Quran
  • Sharia Islamic Law
  • Three sources Quran, Sunna and Ijtihad
    analytic reasoning to cover locally raised issues
  • Quran prohibits alcohol and gambling
  • Jihad Call for Holy War against infidels
  • Goal to assume political power in order to
    implement Islamic principles
  • Purpose not territorial expansion or forced
    conversion
  • Allah called for holy war to defend the faith
  • To die in a jihad brought salvation and entry
    into paradise
  • Quran insists that there be no coercion in
    matters of faith

13
The Five Pillars of Faith
  • 1. Profession of Faith - Shahadah
  • There is no God but Allah (God), and
  • Muhammad is His Prophet.
  • First and last words heard
  • Most repeated words by Muslims
  • Person a Muslim once profession is repeated
  • 2. Prayer Salat
  • 13 essentials must be observed
  • Direction toward Mecca
  • 5 times a day Call of Muezzin
  • Dawn, midday, mid-afternoon, sunset
    nightfall
  • Create sense of solidarity and social equality
  • Body posture essential
  • Must use Arabic
  • Friday noon prayer is only mandatory public
    prayer for all adult males
  • 3. Charity Zakat purification
  • Evolved out of compassion for the poor
  • 2.5 of wealth expected

14
The Five Pillars of Faith
  • 4. Fasting - Sawm
  • Ramadan based on lunar calendar different
    each year
  • Daylight hours during month of Ramadan
  • Abstain from sexual intercourse
  • 5. Pilgrimage to Kaaba in Mecca Hajj
  • All those who can afford and physically fit
  • Ideal of equality unity among believers
  • Unites cultures and ideas

15
Women in Islam
  • Under Arabian pre-Islamic law of status, women
    had virtually no rights
  • No limitations were set on men's rights to marry
    or to obtain a divorce.
  • Islamic law provided women with new legal rights
  • Reforms affected marriage, divorce, and
    inheritance
  • Islamic law restricted the polygamy
  • Maximum of four wives
  • Women could obtain a divorce
  • Women could inherit and keep their own property
  • Marriage was no longer viewed as a "status" but
    rather as a "contract"
  • Women are separated from the company of men
  • Law doesn't require women to wear veils

16
Islam After Muhammad
  • At death Muhammad in 632 he left no son to
    succeed him
  • Daughter Fatima
  • Split between Shiites and Sunnis
  • Great arqument over succession
  • Shiites Only descendants of Fatima or her
    husband Ali should succeed Mohammed
  • Death of Husain (son of Ali) most celebrated
    event in Shiite calendar
  • Sunnis any follower of Islam should be eligible
    to lead
  • Division political religious
  • Never settled to this day
  • Series of Caliphs governed the Islamic State

17
Struggle for Succession
  • Number of conflicting parties sought to succeed
    Muhammad
  • Companions belonged to Muhammads tribe or had
    accepted mission early
  • Legitimists heir must belong to family of
    Muhammad
  • Ali paternal cousin, husband of daughter Fatima
    one of first believers
  • Aristocracy of Quraysh Umayyads
  • Held reigns of power wealth in pre-Islamic days
  • Companions triumphed with selection of abu-Bakr
  • Rashidun - Four righteous caliphs (632-661 AD)
  • All were close associates and relatives of
    Muhammad
  • Abu Bakr (632-634) Father-in-law of Muhammad and
    one of first believers
  • Umar (634-644) main military genius who carried
    Islam forward from the Arabian peninsula
  • Uthman (644-656) - empire fell into a civil war
    called the Fitna
  • In 656 Uthman is assassinated by followers of Ali
  • Ali  (656-661) Muhammad's son-in-law and cousin
  • Many refused to accept Ali as a leader
  • Killed by assassin
  • Umayyad dynasty claims the caliphate Damascus
    capital
  • Abbasid dynasty 754 seizes caliphate
  • al Mansur (754-775) builds new capital at Baghdad

18
Conquest Expansion
  • Expansion of Islamic empire against Byzantine
    Sassanid (Persian) empires
  • Abu-Bakr Orders jihad (holy struggle) against
    the "infidel" Christian or Byzantine Empire north
    of Arabia
  • Damascus becomes capital
  • Umar
  • 637 Defeated great Persian Sassanid army
  • 639 Conquers Alexandria base of Byzantine
    navy
  • 643 Arabs to border of India
  • Tariq ibn Zaid crossed from North Africa
    (Morocco) into Spain in 711
  • Expansion stopped in France in 732 Charles
    Martel
  • Military victories
  • Booty not fanaticism
  • No longer making war with other Arabs
  • Use of cavalry and camels
  • Remarkable mobility
  • High morale from religious enthusiasm
  • Conquered peoples more open to Islam
  • Heavy burden of taxation
  • Persecution of faiths

19
The Spread of Islam
20
Medieval Baghdad
21
Medieval Baghdad
  • 762 - Abbasid dynasty moved the capital of
    Islamic empire to the newly-founded city of
    Baghdad
  • Caliph Al-Mansur founded
  • Banks of the Tigris River
  • Known as the Round City
  • Foreign influences Persian, Syrian
    Hellenistic
  • Baghdad capital of "Golden Age" of Islamic
    civilization
  • Magnificent architectural achievement
  • Muslim scholars - important contributions in the
    sciences, humanities, medicine, mathematics,
    astronomy, chemistry, and literature
  • Became city of museums, hospitals, libraries
  • World's richest most intellectual city of the
    time
  • Believed to be largest city in the world from 775
    to 935 - possibly over 1,000,000
  • Baghdad was destroyed by the Mongols in 1258
  • Ended era of the Abbasids

22
Medieval Baghdad
  • Bayt al-Hikmah (the House of Wisdom)
  • World famous center of learning
  • Attracted scholars from all over the world
  • Library, academy and translation bureau
  • Translate Greek works of Aristotle, Plato, Galen,
    Hippocrates, Euclid, and Pythagoras
  • Translate Persian, Sanskrit, Syriac into Arabic
  • Al-Khawarizmi, the "father" of algebra 
  • Merchants played a major role in the city
  • From Persia, China, India, Africa Europe
  • Sinbad the Sailor recounts actual voyages made
    by Muslim merchants
  • Caliphal palace known as the Golden Gate or the
    Green Dome
  • Dome of audience chamber rose to 130 feet

23
Harun al-Rashid
  • Abbasid caliph (r.786-809)
  • Baghdad a city of immense wealth and
    international significance under al-Rashid
  • Tribute paid by many rulers to the caliph
  • Used on architecture, arts luxurious life at
    court
  • Great patron of arts sciences
  • Encouragement of learning, art, poetry, music
  • A scholar and poet himself
  • Invited many scholars to the kingdom
  • Founded first Muslim hospital
  • Built Green Dome palace in Baghdad
  • Fabulous court inspired the book One Thousand and
    One Nights
  • Displays of extravagant wealth
  • Entertainers flocked to his court poets, wits,
    musicians, singers, and dancers
  • Diplomatic relations with Charlemagne

24
Islamic Spain
  • Influence on Medieval European civilization
  • Ummayyad Caliph
  • In Spain from 711 to 1492
  • Cordoba
  • Center of culture that rivaled Baghdad
  • Libraries, palaces, street lights, running
    water
  • Cultural center of Medieval Europe
  • Mosque early vaulting like later Gothic
    cathedrals

25
Creation of Islamic Civilization
  • Islamic civilization developed slowly
  • Centuries before majority of people in Syria,
    Mesopotamia, and Persia accepted Islam
  • People generally converted from self interest
  • Escape taxes seek identification with ruling
    class
  • Combination of cultural influences
  • Arabs assimilated, adapted reproduced the
    intellectual cultural heritage of those they
    conquered
  • Arabs adopted best art, architecture, philosophy,
    medicine, science, literature, and government
    mainly from Hellenized Aramaic Persian
    civilizations
  • Arab contribution was mainly in language and
    religion
  • Final culmination of Semitic civilization which
    started in the Fertile Crescent developed by
    Assyro-Babylonians, Phoenicians, Aramaeans and
    Hebrews

26
Islamic Unity
  • Arabic became language of business, government
    literature
  • Uniform enforcement of law contributed to growth
    of united culture
  • Vast trade network extended from India to the
    Mediterranean

27
Rich Cultural Achievements
  • Many Islamic centers of culture and science
  • Baghdad
  • Cairo
  • Damascus
  • Cordoba
  • Alexandria
  • Scholarship
  • Produced notable scientists, astronomers,
    mathematicians, doctors and philosophers
  • Importance of reading the Qur'an produced a
    comparatively high level of literacy in the
    general populace
  • Heirs to Hellenistic Learning
  • Maintained Classical learning
  • Translation of Greek texts - Aristotle
  • Medicine
  • Architecture
  • Mosques, Palaces Minarets
  • Art
  • Geometric patterns, calligraphy, metal work

28
Science Medicine
  • Muslim scientists
  • Saw no contradiction between religion and laws
    governing natural world
  • Scientific method born
  • Utilized Classical Greek medical texts
  • Alchemy beginnings of chemistry
  • Muslim medicine
  • Advanced techniques ideas
  • Theory that disease born through air
    born organisms
  • Study of anatomy
  • Vascular cancer surgery
  • Study of light, lenses physiology of
    eye led to camera
  • Use of anesthetics
  • Pharmacies
  • Hospitals separate disease in
    different wards

29
Pioneers of Medicine
  • Razi (865 925) Rhazes in the West
  • Authored more than 100 books on medicine
  • First to diagnose and treat smallpox
  • Ibn Sina (980 1037) Known as Avicenna
  • Contributions in philosophy, music, mathematics,
    geography literature
  • Utilized experimentation observation
  • wrote Canon of Medicine encyclopedia
    of medicine
  • Study of infectious disease
  • Main medical text for 6 centuries
  • Printed extensively throughout the West

30
Mathematics
  • Introduced Arabic numerals originally from
    India
  • Replaced Roman numerals
  • Included the zero made for complex calculations
  • Perfected use of decimals and fractions
  • Invented Algebra

31
One Thousand and One Nights
  • Classic of world literature
  • Stories were created over many centuries, by many
    people and in many styles
  • Originally Arabian, Persian, Indian folk tales
  • Collected during time of al-Rashid
  • Best known stories
  • Ali Baba, Sinbad the Sailor, and Aladdin
  • al-Rashids court frequent setting
  • Frame story
  • Efforts of Scheherezade to keep her husband, King
    Shahryar from killing her by entertaining him
    with a tale a night for 1,001 nights
  • Always a cliff hanger
  • British translator Richard Burton

32
Architecture
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