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Islamic Empires

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Title: Islamic Empires


1
Islamic Empires

2
A Brief History of Islam
  • The religion of Islam was founded in, what is
    today, Saudi Arabia.

3
Pre Islamic Arabia
  • Harsh ethic of desert warfare,
    extermination of enemies no mercy
  • Patriarchal women veiled segregated, no
    property, female infanticide, child marriage
  • Caravan Culture Trade central to economy
  • Tribal organization -- alliances and client
    states
  • Pilgrimage to Mecca essential to economic and
    political success of leading tribes (Quraysh).
  • Violent, warrior states based on vendetta culture
  • ghazu (raids) on caravans

4
The Prophet Mohammed
  • Founded Islam during his lifetime (570-632 CE)
  • He was an orphan who grew up with his uncle, a
    caravan trader, near the city of Mecca.
  • Claimed he received a divine revelation at the
    age of 40 from the Angel Gabriel.

5
The Koran (Quran)
  • Muslims believe
  • The Koran is the direct word of God (Allah)
  • Mohammed was illiterate but remembered the
    messages and recited them to scribes in Arabic.
  • It took 23 years to collect all the verses.

6
The Prophet Mohammed
  • Married a rich widow who was much older to him
    named Khadijah when he was 25.
  • This was a wise business decision because it
    insured Mohammed great wealth and prestige in the
    community.

7
The Wives of Mohammed
  • He would later marry several other wives, as was
    the custom of the day. Muslim men are today only
    allowed 4.
  • Mohammed married the widows and orphans of
    regions that were conquered in war to save them
    from starvation and destitution.
  • Mohammeds second wife, Ayesha, was only nine
    when he married her according to some accounts.
    She was said to be his favorite wife and gathered
    an army to defend his successor.

8
The Islamic Community
  • Mohammed began to preach in public in Mecca.
  • He taught his followers that there was only one
    God.
  • He preached against
  • those who worshipped
  • idols in the Kaaba.

9
Persecution
  • Mohammed was seen as a threat
  • to the rulers of the city who were pagans his
    own tribesmen, the Quraysh.
  • If they removed their idols from the Kaaba
    there would be no more pilgrims, no more trade,
    and no more wealth.
  • Mohammed, his family, and followers were mocked,
    threatened with death and persecuted. Some of
    his enemies even tried to assassinate the Prophet.

10
The Hijra
  • Mohammed and
  • his followers
  • fled Mecca and
  • escaped to the
  • city of Yathrib (Medina).
  • This Hijra
  • (flight) marks the
  • beginning of the
  • Islamic Calendar

11
Importance of Hijra
  • Moving to Yathrib (Medina) was mor than a change
    of address
  • Saved the Ummah from total extinction
  • Allowed the implementation of a new polity
    Quranic ideal of a state with Muhammed as head of
    many tribes.
  • Put the religious community (ummah) above the
    sacred blood ties of tribe and clan.

12
Mohammed led raids on Meccan caravans and rallied
an army to defend Medina from a Meccan
attack. The Muslims conquered many neighboring
tribes.
13
Mohammed and the Jews
  • Contract with Jewish tribes in Medina
  • Jewish tribes betray Mohammed -- two tribes
    expelled.
  • The Massacre of Qurayzah 700 men killed, women
    and children sold as slaves.
  • 7th century Arabia no mercy for traitors
  • Mohammed NOT ANTI SEMITIC.
  • Part of the process of Mohammeds consolidation
    of power at his base in Medina over a period of
    3-5 years.

14
Return to Mecca
15
Return to Mecca
  • Muhammad marched on Mecca with an enormous force,
    said to number 10,000 men.
  • He took the city without bloodshed.
  • Most Meccans converted to Islam and Muhammad
    destroyed the idols in the Kaaba.
  • Muslim pilgrims re-inact the return to Mecca
    every year by performing the Hajj

16
Approximately 2-3 million pilgrims from all over
the world make the Hajj to the Kaaba in Mecca
each year. Devout Muslims turn towards the
Kaaba in Mecca to pray five times each day.
17
Pilgrims circle the Kaaba 7 times in a clockwise
motion and perform other rituals of devotion
during the Hajj.
18
Warrior or Preacher?
  • For most of the sixty-three years of his life,
    Muhammad was a merchant, then a preacher. He took
    up the sword late in his life. He was a warrior
    for only ten years.

19
Who will be Mohammeds successor?The Caliph
debate
  • Abu Bakr vs.
  • Muhammad's
  • father-in
  • law and close
  • friend
  • Ali
  • Mohammeds
  • cousin and
  • son-in-law

Supported by Sunni Muslims
Supported by Shia Muslims
The schism or divide happened during the First
Islamic Civil War 656661 CE
20
The First Four Caliphs
  • Elected Abu Bakr as first Caliph (632-34), unites
    Arabia..
  • Umar (634-44) Unites ummah through outward
    aggression (to replace ghazu economics) Syria,
    Egypt and Iraq.
  • Professional soldiers and garrison towns
  • Soldiers Rights vs. Central Authority
  • Uthman (644-56) Arabs move into Byzantine
    territory, across North Africa
  • More tension, less plunder, soldiers exhausted.
  • NEPOTISM
  • Mutiny, assassination of Uthman call for Ali to
    be new caliph.

21
Before his death in 632, Muhammad had established
Islam as a social and political force and had
unified most of Arabia. A few decades after his
death, his successors had united all of Arabia,
and conquered Iran, Iraq, Egypt, Palestine,
Syria, Armenia, and much of North Africa.
22
First Civil War (Fitnah)
  • 656-661
  • Muawiyyah (Uthmans kinsmen) vs. Ali (the
    son-in-law of the prophet).
  • Battle of the Camel (Aisha anti Ali)
  • War ends with arbitration, Ali to except M. as
    Caliph
  • M. proclaims himself Caliph in Jerusalem. Ali is
    murdered by rebels in 661, leaving his son Hasan
    as possible Caliph.
  • M. moves capital to Damascus, Syria.

23
Kharijites
  • the seceders from Arabic word to go out
  • They first emerged in the late 7th century AD,
    concentrated in today's southern Iraq, and are
    distinct from the Sunnis and Shiites.
  • Rebelled against Ali when he accepted the
    arbitration between himself and Muawiyyah.
  • Felt betrayed by Ali and murdered him in 661.

24
First Civil War continued
  • 1st Umayyad Caliph Muawiyyah (661-80), strong
    govenor, unified ummah under strong
    administration.
  • Umayyad Dynasty rule 661-750
  • Ms son Yazid inherits caliphate (no-no!) 680 and
    the second son of Ali, Husain, is massacred in
    Iraq by Ummayads with all the women and children
    of his household. The prophets own
    grandchildren slaughtered by Muslims!

25
Sunni vs. Shia
  • Sunni short for Ahl Al-Sunna wa al-Jamah the
    year of the jamiyat or the year of the 1st Muslim
    Civil War that ended with Ali accepting the peace
    treatry
  • Shia means the party of Ali.

26
The Courtyard of the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus
27
Second Civil War
  • Yazid dies 683.
  • Al-Zubayr challenges Umayyads and starts Second
    Civil War 683-692
  • Al-Zubayr in Mecca, cant take Syria or Egypt
  • Marwan I (r. 684-685) elected Caliph
  • For short time, Zubayrs family ruled Iraq.
  • Marwans son, Malik, reconquered Iraq and
    defeated Al-Zubayr by bombarding Mecca!

28
Today, the majority of the worlds Muslims are
Sunni. Iran and Iraq are the only countries in
the world where most the Muslims are Shia. The
people of Iran are Persian (not Arabic) and in
Iraq most people are of Arab descent.
29
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30
The Abbasid Dynasty
  • The Umayyads were overthrown in the east by the
    Abbasid dynasty after their defeat in the Battle
    of the Zab in 750, following which most of the
    clan was massacred by the Abbasids.
  • An Umayyad prince, Abd-ar-rahman I, took over the
    Muslim territory in Al-Andalus (Hispania) and
    founded a new Umayyad dynasty there.

31
The Abbasid Dynasty
  • It seized power in 750, when it finally defeated
    the Umayyads in battle, and flourished for two
    centuries, but slowly went into decline with the
    rise to power of the Turkish army they had
    created, the Mamluks. Ended 1258.
  • A number of medieval thinkers and scientists
    living under Islamic rule played a role in
    transmitting Greek, Hindu, and other pre-Islamic
    knowledge to the Christian West. They contributed
    to making Aristotle known in Christian Europe. In
    addition, the period saw the recovery of much of
    the Alexandrian mathematical, geometric and
    astronomical knowledge, such as that of Euclides
    and Claudius Ptolemy. These recovered
    mathematical methods were later enhanced and
    developed by other Islamic scholars

32
The Umayyads of Cordoba (Spain)
33
The Umayyads of Cordoba (Spain)
  • Islamic Spain 756-1031
  • Threatened by Fatimids mMuslim rivals of Cairo
    in 10th century
  • For 100 years, the Caliph of Córdoba ruled over
    Spain and North Africa.
  • Scholarship, science, art, music and medicine
  • Empire crumbles into small fiefdoms over time and
    overcome by Christians
  • The Reconquista (Reconquest) refers to the
    liberation of the Iberian Peninsula from Muslim
    rule, conducted from 718 to 1492.

34
The Alahambra, 1248-1354
35
Court of the Lions, Alahambra
  • Granada in
  • Al Andalus
  • Last stronghold of
  • The Moors in Iberia.
  • Isabelle and
  • Feridnand, 1492

36
The Christians called Santiago their protector
saint (todayhe is still the patron of Spain)
under the rubric ofSantiago Matamoros ("St.
James the Moor-killer").
37
Fatimid Dynasty
  • Shia dynasty ruled much of North Africa from CE
    5 January 910 to 1171. The Fatimids had their
    origins in the Tunisia area ("Ifriqiya"), but
    after the conquest of Egypt ca. 970, they moved
    their capital there CAIRO
  • Tolerant to Sunnis, Jews, Christians
  • Empire spread to middle east, eaten away by
    Turks, the Crusades, finally absorbed into
    Abbasid in 1171.

38
  • The Five Pillars of Islam

39
The Five Pillars of Islam
  • 1) Shahadah Declaration of Faith

There is no god but Allah, and Mohammed is His
Prophet.
40
The Five Pillars of Islam
  • 2) Salah Prayer 5 times daily (facing Mecca)

41
The Five Pillars of Islam
  • 3) Sawm Fasting during the month of Ramadan

Abstaining from drinking, eating, smoking,
sexual intercourse and other worldly pleasures
42
The Five Pillars of Islam
  • 4) Zakah Giving alms (donations) to charity

43
The Five Pillars of Islam
  • 5) Hajj The pilgrimage to Mecca

Performance of the Hajj at least once in one's
lifetime is obligatory to all who are physically
and financially able to undertake it.
44
  • Key concepts

45
Key concepts
  • Shariah Law Muslim law based on Quran, Hadith,
    and community consensus.
  • The Hadith traditions related to the sayings
    and doings of Mohammed.

46
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47
Key concepts
  • Madrassah university

48
Key concepts
  • Jizya Tax on non-Muslim males in Islamic
    Empires.

49
Tax TOLERANCE
  • The Ottoman Empire organized society around the
    concept of the millet, or autonomous religious
    community. The nonMuslim "People of the Book"
    (Christians and Jews) owed taxes to the
    government in return they were permitted to
    govern themselves according to their own
    religious law in matters that did not concern
    Muslims. The religious communities were thus able
    to preserve a large measure of identity and
    autonomy.

50
Key concepts
  • the People of the Book Jews, Christians,
    Muslims who all share common creation stories
    (Adam and Eve), prophets (Abraham and Moses) and
    one god (monotheism).

51
Key concepts
  • Muslims believe Jesus was a
  • wise teacher, sage and prophet
  • (but not divine).
  • One of the books in the Quran
  • is named Maryam after Mary
  • and tells the story of Jesus
  • birth.

52
Key concepts
  • Jihad The Struggle to live a Muslim life.

53
Key concepts
  • Women and Islam

54
The Great Muslim Empires
  • Ottoman (1362-1915)based in Annatolia
  • Mughal (1526-1857) based in South Asia
  • Safavid (1501-1740) based in Persian plateau

55
Ottoman Empire
56
Safavid Empire
57
Mughal Empire
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