Muslim history involves the history of the Islamic
faith as a religion and as a social institution. Apparently, it is
wrong to say that the history of
Islam began
in
Arabia with Muslim Prophet
Muhammad's first recitations of the
Qur'an in the 7th century. According to Islamic Faith
and the Holy Text, Islam began with Adam and Eve. They are
considered the First Apostles of God. Later, even Abraham, Moses,
Jesus, they all taught the same faith, albeit in different regions
or at different points of time.
Like most
world religions, the
historical evolution of Islam had a significant impact on the
political, economic, and military and beyond its primary geographic
areas. Islam's historical development has affected both inside and
outside the
Islamic world. The concept
of the
Islamic world is
useful in observing the different periods of Islamic history;
similarly useful is an understanding of the identification with a
quasi-political community of believers, or
ummah, on the part of Islam's practitioners down
the centuries. Islamic culture encourages identification with a
quasi-political community of believers or the ummah, and this
principle has influenced the behavior of a number of players in
history. The history of Islam is closely tied to the political,
economic, and military.
A century
after the death of Muhammad, an Islamic empire extended from the
Atlantic
Ocean
in the west to Central
Asia in the east. The subsequent empires of the
Umayyads,
Abbasids, the
Fatimids, the
Mughals, the
Safavids,
and
Ottomans were among the largest
and most powerful in the world. The
Islamic civilization gave rise to many
centers of culture and science and produced notable scientists,
astronomers, mathematicians, doctors, nurses and
philosophers during the
Golden Age of Islam. Technology
flourished; there was much investment in economic infrastructure,
such as irrigation systems and canals; and especially, the
importance of reading the Qur'an produced a comparatively high
level of literacy in the general populace.
Later, in the eighteenth century and nineteenth century, many
Islamic regions fell under the tutelage of European imperial
powers. After the
First World War,
the remnants of the Ottoman empire were parcelled out as European
protectorates. Since 1924,
there has been no major widely-accepted claim to the caliphate
(which had been last claimed by the Ottomans).
Although affected by various ideologies such as
communism, during much of the twentieth century,
the Islamic identity and the dominance of Islam on political issues
have arguably increased during the early twenty-first century. The
fast-growing Western interests in Islamic regions, international
conflicts and
globalization have
changed the influence of Islam on the world of the twenty-first
century.
Origins
According to the traditionalist view, the
Qur'an began with revelations on
Muhammad's
divine revelations
in AD
610. The verses of the Quran were written
down and memorized during his life.
Mecca
was
conquered by the Muslims in the year AD 630. In
628 the Meccan tribe
of Quraish and the Muslim community in Medina had signed a truce
called the
Treaty of Hudaybiyya
beginning a ten-year period of peace, which was broken when the
Quraish and their allies, the tribe of
Bakr, attacked the
tribe of
Khuza'ah, who were allies of the Muslims.
Muhammad died in June 632. The
Battle
of Yamama was fought in December of the same year, between the
forces of
Rashidun Caliph Abu Bakr and
Musailima.
Andrey Korotayev and his colleagues
suggest to view the origins of Islam against the background of the
6th century AD
Arabian socioecological crisis
whose model is specified by Korotayev and his colleagues through
the study of climatological, seismological, volcanological and
epidemiological history of the period. They find that most
sociopolitical systems of the Arabs reacted to the socioecological
crisis by getting rid of the rigid supratribal political structures
(kingdoms and
chiefdoms) which started
posing a real threat to their very survival. The decades of
fighting which led to the destruction of the most of the Arabian
kingdoms and chiefdoms (reflected in
Ayyam al-`Arab
tradition) led to the elaboration of some definite "antiroyal"
freedom-loving tribal ethos. At the beginning of the 7th century a
tribe which would recognize themselves as subjects of some
terrestrial supratribal political authority, a "king", risked to
lose its honour. However, this seems not to be applicable to the
authority of another type, the "celestial" one. At the meantime the
early 7th century evidences the merging of the Arabian tradition of
prophecy and the Arabian Monotheist "Rahmanist" tradition which
produced "the Arabian prophetic movement". The Monotheist
"Rahmanist" prophets appear to have represented a supratribal
authority just of the type many
Arab tribes were looking for at this very time, which seems
to explain to a certain extent those prophets' political success
(including the extreme political success of
Muhammad) (
Andrey Korotayev, Vladimir Klimenko, and Dmitry
Proussakov. Origins of Islam: Political-Anthropological and
Environmental Context. Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum
Hungaricae. 53/3–4 (1999): 243–276). v
Early Caliphate
After Muhammad died, a series of Caliphs governed the Islamic
State: Abu Bakr Siddique, Umar, Uthman and Ali. These first Caliphs
are popularly known as the "
Rashidun" or
"rightly-guided" Caliphs in
Sunni Islam.
After the
Rashidun, a series of
Caliphates were established. Each
caliphate developed its own unique laws based on
the sharia. There were at times competing claims to the Sunni
caliphate, and the
Imams of
Ismaili Shi'a Islam,
descended from
Ali and
Muhammad through his daughter
Hazrat Fatimah, set up their own caliphate
which ruled the
Fatimid Empire.
Timeline
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from: 632 till: 661 color:orange text:Al-Rashidun
from: 661 till: 750 color:cyan text:Ummayad
from: 750 till: 960 color:green text:Abbasid
Al-Rashidun - "The Rightly-Guided Caliphs"
Following Muhammad's death, a series of four Caliphs lead the
Islamic Empire during this period. Starting with Abu Bakr, Omar,
Uthman, and ending with Ali.
Abbasids - "Islamic Golden Age"
The gains
of the Ummayad empire were consolidated upon when the Abbasid dynasty rose to power in 750, with the
conquest of the Mediterranean islands
including the Balearics
and Sicily. The new
ruling party had been instated on the
wave of dissatisfaction propagated against the Ummayads, cultured
mainly by the Abbasid revolutionary,
Abu
Muslim. Under the Abbasids, Islamic civilization flourished.
Most notable was the development of Arabic
prose and
poetry, termed by
The Cambridge History of
Islam as its "
golden age."
This was also the case for commerce and industry (considered a
Muslim Agricultural
Revolution), and the
arts and
sciences (considered a
Muslim Scientific
Revolution), which prospered, especially under the rule of
Abbasid caliphs
al-Mansur (ruled 754 —
775),
Harun al-Rashid (ruled 786 —
809),
al-Ma'mun (ruled 809 — 813), and
their immediate successors.
Baghdad
was made the
new capital of the caliphate (moved from the previous capital,
Damascus) due to the importance placed by the Abbasids upon eastern
affairs in Persia
and
Transoxania. It was at this time however, that the caliphate
showed signs of fracture and we witness the uprising of regional
dynasties. Although the Ummayad family had been killed by the
revolting Abbasids, one family member,
Abd ar-Rahman I, was able to flee to Spain
and establish an independent caliphate there in 756. In the Maghreb
region, Harun al-Rashid appointed the Arab
Aghlabids as virtually autonomous rulers, although
they continued to recognise the authority of the central caliphate.
Aghlabid rule was short lived, as they were deposed by the
Shiite Fatimid dynasty in 909.
By around
960, the Fatimids had conquered Abbasid Egypt, building a new
capital there in 973 called "al-Qahirah" (meaning "the
planet of victory", known today as Cairo
).
Similar was the case in Persia, where the
Turkic Ghaznavids
managed to snatch power from the Abbasids. Whatever
temporal power of the Abbasids remained had
eventually been consumed by the
Seljuq
Turks (a Muslim Turkish clan which had migrated into mainland
Persia), in 1055.
During this time, expansion continued, sometimes by military
warfare, sometimes by peaceful
proselytism.
The first stage in the
conquest of India
began just before the year 1000.
By some 200 (from 1193 — 1209) years
later, the area up to the Ganges river
had been conquered. In sub-Saharan
West Africa, it was just after the year 1000
that Islam was established.
Muslim rulers are known to have been in
Kanem starting from sometime between
1081 to 1097, with reports of a Muslim prince at the head of
Gao
as early as
1009. The
Islamic kingdoms associated
with Mali reached prominence later, in the 13th century.
During the
Abbasid reign, Baghdad
became one
of the greatest cultural centers of the world.The
Abbasids were said to be descendents of Abbas the
uncle of Muhammad claiming that they were the 'messiah' or saviours
of the people under the
Ummayad rule.Abbasid
caliphs
Harun al-Rashid and
Al-Mamun were great patrons of arts and sciences,
and enabled these domains to flourish.Islamic philosophy also
developed as the
Shariah was codified, and
the four
Madhabs were established and built.
This era also saw the rise of classical
Sufism. The greatest achievement, however, was
completion of the canonical collections of
Hadith of
Sahih Bukhari
and others.
Regional powers
The Abbasids soon became caught within a three-way rivalry of
Arabs, Persians and the immigrant Turks. In addition, the cost of
running a large empire became too great. The political unity of
Islam began to disintegrate. The Emirates, still recognizing the
theoretical leadership of the caliphs, drifted into independence,
and a brief revival of control was ended with the establishment of
rival caliphates. Eventually the Abbasids ruled as puppets for the
Buwayhid emirs. During this time, great
advancements were made in the areas of astronomy, poetry,
philosophy, science, and mathematics.
The Fatimid Empire
The
Fatimids had their origins in Ifriqiya
(modern-day Tunisia
and eastern
Algeria
). The
dynasty was founded in 909 by , who legitimised his claim through
descent from
Muhammadby way of his daughter
Fātima as-Zahra and her husband , the first
Imām, hence the name
al-Fātimiyyūn
"Fatimid".
Abdullāh
al-Mahdi's control soon extended over all of central Maghreb, an area consisting of the modern countries
ofMorocco
, Algeria
, Tunisia
and Libya
, which he
ruled from Mahdia
, his
newly-built capital in Tunisia.
The
Fatimids entered Egypt in the late 900s, conquering the Ikhshidid dynasty and founding a new
capital at al-Qāhira(Cairo
) in
969. The name was a reference to the planet Mars, "The
Subduer", which was prominent in the sky at the moment that city
construction started.
Cairo was intended as a royal enclosure for
the Fatimid caliph and his army, though the actual administrative
and economic capital of Egypt was in cities such as Fustat
until
1169. After Egypt, the Fatimids continued to
conquer the surrounding areas until they ruled from Tunisia to
Syria
and even crossed over into Sicily and southernItaly
.
Under the
Fatimids, Egypt became the center of an empire that included at its peak North Africa, Sicily,
Palestine,Lebanon
, Syria
, the
Red
Sea
coast of Africa, Yemen
and the
Hejaz . Egypt flourished, and the Fatimids
developed an extensive trade network in both the Mediterranean
and the Indian Ocean
. Their trade and diplomatic ties extended all
the way to China
and its
Song Dynasty, which eventually
determined the economic course of Egypt during the High Middle Ages.
Unlike other governments in the area, Fatimid advancement in state
offices was based more on merit than on heredity. Members of other
branches of Islam, like the
Sunnis, were just
as likely to be appointed to government posts as Shiites. Tolerance
was extended even to non-Muslims such as
Christians and Jews, who occupied high levels in
government based on ability. There were,
however, exceptions to this general attitude of tolerance, most
notably
Al-Hakim bi-Amr
Allah.
The
Fatimid palace was two parts. it used to be in the Khan
el-Khalili
area at Bin
El-Quasryn street[1644].
The Iberian peninsula under the Umayyads and the Berber
dynasties
The Arabs, under the command of the
Berber General
Tarik ibn Ziyad, first began their conquest
of southern Spain or al-Andalus in 711. A raiding party led by
Tarik was sent to intervene in a civil war in the
Visigothic kingdom in
Hispania.
Crossing the Strait of Gibraltar
(named after the General), it won a decisive
victory in the summer of 711 when the Visigothic king Roderic was defeated and killed on July 19 at the Battle
of Guadalete. Tariq's commander,
Musa bin Nusair quickly crossed with
substantial reinforcements, and by 718 the Muslims dominated most
of the peninsula. There are some later Arabic and Christian sources
present an earlier raid by a certain
Ṭārif in 710 and one, the
Ad
Sebastianum recension of the
Chronicle of Alfonso
III, refers to an Arab attack incited by
Erwig during the reign of
Wamba
(672–80). and two reasonably large armies may have been gay in the
south for a year before the decisive battle was fought.
The
rulers of Al-Andalus were granted the rank of Emir by the Umayyad Caliph Al-Walid I in
Damascus
. After the Abbasids
came to power in the Middle East, some Umayyads fled to Muslim Spain
to establish themselves there. By the end of
the 10th century, the ruler
Abd
al-Rahman III took over the title of
Emir of Córdoba(912-961).
Soon
after, the Umayyads went on developing a strengthened state with
its capital as Córdoba
. Al-Hakam II
succeeded to the Caliphate after the death of his father Abd
ar-Rahman III in 961. He secured peace with the Christian kingdoms
of northern Iberia, and made use of the stability to develop
agriculture through the construction of irrigation works.
Economical development was also encouraged through the widening of
streets and the building of markets. The rule of the Caliphate is
known as the heyday of Muslim presence in the peninsula.
The rule of the Umayyad Caliphate collapsed in 1031 due to
political divisions and civil unrest during the rule of
Hicham II who was ousted because of his indolence.
Al-Andalus then broke up into a number of mostly independent states
called
taifa kingdoms (Arabic,
Muluk al-ṭawā'if; English, Party kingdoms). The
decomposition of the Caliphate into those
petty kingdoms will then weaken the power of
the Muslims in the Iberian Peninsula
vis-à-vis the
Christian kingdoms of the north. Some of the
taifas such
as that of Seville will consequently be forced to enter into
alliances with the Christian princes and pay tributes in money to
Castille.
The Crusades
Beginning
in the 8th century C.E. the Christian
kingdoms of Spain had begun
the Reconquista aimed at retaking
Al-Andalus
from the Moors.
In 1095,
Pope Urban II, inspired by the
perceived holy wars in Spain and implored by the eastern Roman emperor to help defend
Christianity in the East, called for the First Crusade from Western Europe which
captured Edessa, Antioch
, Tripoli
and Jerusalem
. The Christian
Kingdom of Jerusalem emerged and for a
time controlled many
holy sites of
Islam.
Saladin, however, restored unity
within the Umma by defeating the Fatimids, and was then able to put
an end to the Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1187 C.E.
Other crusades were
launched with at least the nominal intent to recapture the holy
city and other holy lands, but hardly more was ever accomplished
than the errant looting and occupation of Christian Constantinople
, leaving the Eastern Roman, or Byzantine Empire
severely weakened and ripe for later conquest. However, the
crusaders did manage to weaken Muslim territories preventing them
from further expansion into Christendom.
The Mamluks
In 1250
C.E., the short-lived Ayyubid dynasty
(established by Saladin) was overthrown by
slave regiments, and a new dynasty—the Mamluks
—was born. The Mamluks, who were
Turkic, soon expanded into Palestine, expelled
the remaining Crusader states and repelled the Mongol attempt to
invade Syria (see
Battle of Ain
Jalut).
Thus they united Syria
and Egypt
for the
longest period of time between the Abbasid and Ottoman empires
(1250-1517).
Islam in Africa
The first
continent outside of Arabia to have an Islamic history was Africa, particularly Abyssinia (modern day Ethiopia
via modern day Eritrea
).
Islam in Maghreb
This part of Islamic territory has had independent governments
during most of Islamic history, with a number being of historical
importance.
The
Idrisid dynasty were the first
Arab rulers in the western
Maghreb
(Morocco), ruling from 788 to 985. The dynasty is named after its
first
sultan Idris
I.
The
Almoravid dynasty a Berber dynasty from the Sahara that flourished over a wide area of North-Western Africa and the Iberian
peninsula
during the 11th century. Under this dynasty
the Moorish empire was extended over
present-day Morocco
, Western
Sahara
, Mauritania
, Gibraltar
, Tlemcen
(in Algeria
) and a great part of what is now Senegal
and Mali
in the
south, and Spain
and
Portugal
in the north.
The
Almohad Dynasty or "the Unitarians,"
were a Berber Muslim religious power which founded the fifth Moorish dynasty in the 12th
century, and conquered all northern Africa as
far as Egypt
, together
withAl-Andalus
.
Islam in East Africa
Islam in
the East Africa can be dated back to the
founding of the religion and the beginning with the hijra; in 615, when a group of Muslims were
counseled by Muhammad to escape persecution
in Mecca
and travel to Abyssinia (an act known as
the First migration to Abyssinia),
which was ruled by, in Muhammad's estimation, a pious Christian
king named al-Najashi (Negus, King of Abyssinia).
Moreover, Islamic tradition states that the first
muezzin Bilal
al-Habeshi, one of the foremost companions of Muhammad, was
from Abyssinia (
Habasha).
There were Islamic governments in
Tanzania. The people of
Zayd were
allegedly the first Muslims to immigrate to East Africa. Islam came
to east Africa mainly through trade routes.
The African peoples
that lived along these routes became converts due to the close
contact they had with Arab traders in areas like Tabora
, from which
they affected the manners of Muslims, this leading to eventual
conversion neither with encouragement nor discouragement by the
Muslim Arabs. In pre-colonial East Africa, the structure of
Islamic authority was held up through the
Ulema (
wanawyuonis, in
Swahili language).
Their base was mainly
in Zanzibar
. These leaders had some degree of authority
over most of the Muslims in East Africa at this time; especially
before territorial boundaries were established. This is because the
majority of Muslims lived within the sphere of influence of the
Sultanate in Zanzibar, the chief
Qadi there
being recognized for having the final religious authority.
Islam in West Africa
Usman dan Fodio after the Fulani War, found himself in command of the
largest state in Africa, the Fulani Empire
. Dan Fodio worked to establish an efficient
government, one grounded in Islamic laws.
Already aged at the
beginning of the war, dan Fodio retired in 1815 passing the title
of Sultan of
Sokoto
to his son Muhammed
Bello.
Islam in Asia
Indian Subcontinent
- See also: Islam in India,
Islam in Pakistan
Islamic
rule came to the region in the 8th century, when Muhammad bin Qasim conquered Sindh
, (Pakistan
). Muslim conquests were expanded under
Mahmud and the
Ghaznavids until the late twelfth century, when
the
Ghurids overran the Ghaznavids and
extended the conquests in northern India.
Qutb-ud-din Aybak, conquered Delhi in 1206
and began the reign of the
Delhi
Sultanates.
In the
fourteenth century, Alauddin Khilji
extended Muslim rule south to Gujarat
, Rajasthan
and Deccan
.
Various other Muslim dynasties also formed and ruled across India
from the 13th to the 18th century such as the
Qutb Shahi and the
Bahmani, but none rivalled the power and extensive
reach of the
Mughal Empire at its
peak.
China
China was not a Muslim country, but, it does contain substantial
Muslim community.
Southeast Asia
Islam reached the islands of
Southeast
Asia through
Indian Muslim
traders from Gujarat near the end of the 13th century. Soon, many
Sufi missionaries translated classical
Sufi literature from Arabic and Persian into
Malay. Coupled with the composing of
original
Islamic literature in
Malay, this led the way to the transformation of Malay into an
Islamic language. By 1292, when
Marco
Polo visited Sumatra, most of the inhabitants had converted to
Islam. The
Sultanate of Malacca
was founded by
Parameswara, a Srivijayan
Prince in the Malay peninsula.
Through trade and commerce, Islam spread to
Borneo
and
Java,
Indonesia
.
By the
late 15th century, Islam had been introduced to the Philippines
.
As Islam spread, three main Muslim political powers emerged.
Aceh
, the most
important Muslim power, was based firmly in Northern
Sumatra. It controlled much of the area between Southeast
Asia and India. The Sultunate also attracted
Sufi poets. The second Muslim power was the Sultanate
of Malacca on the Malay peninsula.
The Sultanate of Demak was the third power, appearing in Java
, where the emerging Muslim forces defeated the
local Majapahit kingdom in the early 16th
century. Although the sultanate managed to expand its
territory somewhat, its rule remained brief.
Portuguese forces captured Malacca
in 1511 under the naval general
Afonso de Albuquerque. With Malacca
subdued, the
Aceh Sultanate and
Brunei established themselves as centers of Islam in Southeast
Asia. Brunei's sultanate remains intact even to this day.
Mongol invasions
The wave of
Mongol invasions, which
had initially commenced in the early 13th century under the
leadership of
Genghis Khan, marked a
violent end to the Abbasid era.
The Mongol
Empire had spread rapidly throughout Central Asia and Persia:
the Persian city of Isfahan
had fallen to them by 1237. With the
election of Khan
Mongke in 1251, Mongol
sights were set upon the Abbasid capital, Baghdad. Mongke's
brother,
Hulegu, was made the head of the
Mongol Army assigned the task of
subduing Baghdad. This was achieved at the
Battle of Baghdad , which saw the
Abbasids overrun by the superior Mongol army. The last Abbasid
caliph,
al-Musta'sim, was captured and
killed; and Baghdad was ransacked and subsequently destroyed.
The
cities of Damascus and Aleppo
fell
shortly afterwards, in 1260. Any prospective conquest of
Egypt was temporarily delayed due to the death of Mongke at around
the same time.
With Mongol conquest in the east, the
Ayyubid dynasty ruling over Egypt had been
replaced by a man who was born prince struggled as a slave named
Mamluks also known as Lion of Ain Jaloot in
1250. This had been done through the marriage between
Shajar al-Durr, the widow of Ayyubid caliph
al-Salih Ayyub, with the Mamluk
general
Aybak. Military prestige was at the
center of Mamluk society, and it played a key role in the
confrontations with the Mongol forces. After the assassination of
Aybak, and the succession of
Qutuz in 1259,
the Mamluks challenged and decisively routed the Mongols at the
Battle of Ain Jalut in late
1260. This signalled an adverse shift in fortunes for the Mongols,
who were again defeated by the Mamluks at the
Battle of Hims a few months later, and then
driven out of Syria altogether. With this, the Mamluks were also
able to conquer the last of the crusader territories.
Three Muslim empires of the Early Modern Era
In the 15th and 16th centuries three major Muslim empires were
created: the aforementioned
Ottoman
Empire in much of the
Middle East,
the
Balkans and
Northern Africa; the
Safavid Empire in
Greater Iran; and the
Mughul Empire in
South
Asia. These new imperial powers were made possible by the
discovery and exploitation of
gunpowder,
and more efficient administration. By the end of the 19th century,
all three had declined significantly, and by the early 20th
century, with the Ottomans' defeat in World War I, the last Muslim
empire collapsed.
Mughal Empire
The Mughal Empire was a product of various
Central Asian invasions into the
Indian subcontinent.
It was founded by the
Timurid prince Babur in 1526 with the destruction of the Delhi sultanate, with its capital in
Agra
. Babur's death some years later, and the
indecisive rule of his son,
Humayun, brought
a degree of instability to Mughal rule. The resistance of the
Afghani Sher
Shah, through which a string of defeats had been dealt to
Humayun, significantly weakened the Mughals. Just a year before his
death, however, Humayun managed to recover much of the lost
territories, leaving a substantial legacy for his son, the 13 year
old
Akbar (later known as
Akbar
the Great), in 1556. Under Akbar, consolidation of the Mughal
Empire occurred through both expansion and administrative reforms.
After Akbar, Jahangir and Shah Jahan came to power. Subsequently,
Aurangazeb ruled vast areas include Afghanisthan, Pakistan, India
and Bangladesh.
The
empire ruled most of present-day India
, Pakistan
, Bangladesh
and Afghanistan
for several centuries, before it declined in the
early 18th century, which led to India being divided into smaller
kingdoms and princely states. The Mughal dynasty was
eventually dissolved by the
British
Empire after the
Indian
rebellion of 1857. It left a lasting legacy on Indian culture
and architecture.
Famous buildings built by the Mughals,
include: the Taj
Mahal
, the Red
Fort
, the Badshahi Mosque
, the Lahore
Fort
, the Shalimar Gardens
and the Agra Fort
. During the empire's reign, Muslim
communities flourished all over India, particularly in Gujarat
, Bengal
and
Hyderabad
. Various Sufi orders from Afghanistan
and Iran
were very
active throughout the region. Consequently, more than a
quarter of the population converted to
Islam.
Safavid Empire
The
Safavids ( ) were an Iranian
dynasty from Iranian
Azarbaijan that ruled from 1501 to 1736, and which established
Twelver Shi'a Islam as Iran's official religion and united its
provinces under a single Iranian sovereignty, thereby reigniting
the Persian
identity.
Although claiming to be the descendants of
Ali ibn Abu Talib, the Safavids were
originally
Sunni (the name "Safavid" comes
from a Sufi order called
Safavi). Their origins go back to
Firuz Shah Zarrinkolah, an
Iranian local dignitary from Iran's north.
During their rule,
the Safavids recognized Twelver Shi'a Islam as the State religion, thus giving
Iran
a separate identity from its Sunni neighbours.
In 1524,
Tahmasp acceded to the throne,
initiating a revival of the arts in the region.
Carpet making became
a major industry, gaining new importance in Iran
's
cities. But the finest of all artistic revivals was the
commissioning of the
Shahnama. The
Shahnama was
meant to glorify the reign of the
Shah through artistic
means. The two-volume copy contained 258 large paintings to
illustrate the works of
Firdawsi, a Persian
poet. The Shah also prohibited the drinking of wine, forbade the
use of
hashish and ordered the removal of
gambling casinos, taverns and brothels.
Tahmasp's grandson,
Shah Abbas I, also managed to increase the
glory of the empire.
Abbas restored the shrine of the eighth
Twelver Shi'a Imam, Ali al-Ridha at
Mashhad, and restored the dynastic shrine at Ardabil
. Both shrines received jewelry, fine
manuscripts and Chinese porcelains.
Abbas also moved the empire's capital to
Isfahan
, revived old ports, and established thriving trade
with the Europeans. Amongst Abbas's most visible cultural
achievements was the construction of Naqsh-e
Jahan Square
("Design of the World"). The plaza, located
near a Friday mosque, covered , thus dwarfing Piazza San
Marco
and St. Peter's
Square.
Ottoman Empire
The Seljuk Turks fell apart rapidly in the second half of the 13th
century, especially after the
Mongol invasion of Anatolia.
This resulted in the establishment of multiple Turkish
principalities, known as
beyliks.
Osman I, the founder of the Ottoman dynasty, assumed leadership of one
of these principalities (Söğüt
) in 1281, succeeding his father Ertuğrul. Declaring an independent
Ottoman emirate in 1299, Osman I led it to a series of consecutive
victories over the Byzantine Empire.
By 1331, the Ottomans
had captured Nicaea
, the
former Byzantine capital, under the leadership of Osman's son and
successor, Orhan I. Victory at the
Battle of Kosovo against the
Serbs in 1389 then facilitated their expansion
into Europe. The Ottomans were firmly established in the
Balkans and Anatolia by the time
Bayezid I ascended to power in the same year, now
at the helm of a swiftly growing empire.
Further growth was brought to a sudden halt, as Bayezid I had been
captured by Mongol warlord
Timur (also known
as "
Tamerlane") in the
Battle
of Ankara in 1402, upon which a turbulent period known as the
Ottoman Interregnum ensued. This
episode was characterized by the division of the Ottoman territory
amongst Bayezid I's sons, who submitted to
Timurid authority. When a number of the
territories recently conquered by the Ottomans regained independent
status, potential ruin for the Ottoman Empire became imminent.
However,
the empire quickly recovered, as the youngest son of Bayezid I,
Mehmed I, waged offensive campaigns against
his ruling brothers, thereby reuniting Asia Minor
and declaring himself the new Ottoman sultan in
1413.
At around
this time the naval fleet of the Ottomans
developed considerably, such that they were able to challenge
Venice
, traditionally a naval power. Focus was also
directed towards reconquering the Balkans.
By the time of Mehmed
I's grandson, Mehmed II (ruled 1444 —
1446; 1451 — 1481), the Ottomans felt strong enough to lay siege to
Constantinople
, the capital of Byzantium. A decisive factor
in this siege was the use of
firearms and
large
cannons introduced by the Ottomans,
against which the Byzantines were unable to compete. The Byzantine
fortress finally
succumbed to the
Ottoman invasion in 1453, 54 days into the siege.
Mehmed II, entering
the city victorious, renamed it Istanbul
. With its capital conceded to the
Ottomans, the rest of the Byzantine Empire quickly disintegrated.
The future successes of the Ottomans and later empires would depend
heavily upon the exploitation of
gunpowder.
In the early 16th century, the Shi'ite
Safavid dynasty assumed control in Persia
under the leadership of
Shah Ismail I, upon the defeat of the ruling
Turcoman federation
Aq
Qoyunlu (also called the "White Sheep Turkomans") in 1501. The
Ottoman sultan
Selim I quickly sought to
repel Safavid expansion, challenging and defeating them at the
Battle of Chaldiran in 1514.
Selim I also deposed the ruling Mamluks in Egypt, absorbing their
territories into the Ottoman Empire in 1517.
Suleiman I (also known as
Suleiman the
Magnificent), Selim I's successor, took advantage of the
diversion of Safavid focus to the
Uzbeks on
the eastern frontier and recaptured Baghdad, which had previously
fallen under Safavid control. Despite this, Safavid power remained
substantial, with their empire rivalling the Ottomans'.
Suleiman
I also advanced deep into Hungary
following the Battle of Mohács
in 1526 — reaching as
far as the gates of Vienna thereafter, and signed a
Franco-Ottoman alliance with Francis
I of France against Charles V of the Roman Empire 10 years later.
Suleiman
I's rule (1520 — 1566) signified the height of the Ottoman Empire,
after which it fell into a relative decline with the rapid
industrialization of the European
empires.[[Image:Humanyu.JPG|thumb|250px|right|Humayun's
Tomb
in they were hit badly because there faith
were not stronger like our prophets had it.
Wahhabism
During the 18th century,
Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab (1703
– 1792) led a religious movement (
Wahhabism) in
Najd (central
Arabia) that sought to purify Islam. Wahhab wanted to return Islam
to what he thought were its original principles as taught by the
as-salaf as-saliheen (the earliest converts to Islam) and
rejected what he regarded as corruptions introduced by
bid‘ah (religious innovation) and
Shirk . He allied himself with the
House of Saud, which eventually
triumphed over the
Rashidis to control
Central Arabia, and led several revolts against the Ottoman empire.
Initial
success (the conquest of Mecca and Medina) was followed by
ignominious defeat, then a resurgence which culminated in the
creation of Saudi
Arabia
.
The 20th century
The modern age brought radical technological and organizational
changes to Europe and Islamic countries found themselves less
modern when compared to many western nations. Europe's state-based
government and rampant colonization allowed the West to dominate
the globe economically and forced Islamic countries to question
change.
Demise of the Ottoman Empire
By the end of the 19th century, the Ottoman empire had declined due
to internal conflict. Their decision to back Germany in World War I
meant they shared the Central Powers' defeat in that war, which led
directly to the overthrow of the Ottomans by Turkish nationalists
led by the victorious general of the Battle of Gallipoli; Mustapha
Kemal, who became known to his people as Atatürk, "Father of the
Turks." It was fundamentally Atatürk who is to credit for
successfully renegotiating the treaty of Sèvres (1920) which ended
their involvement in the war and establishing the modern Republic
of Turkey, which was officially recognized by the Allies in the
Treaty of Lausanne (1923). Atatürk went on to implement an
ambitious program of modernization that emphasized economic
development and secularization. He effectively transformed Turkish
culture to reflect European style laws and clothing, adopted
Hindu-Arabic numerals, the Roman alphabet, separated the religious
establishment from the state, and emancipated woman- even giving
them the right to vote roughly contemporary with the same
transformation in western law for the first time. Following
World War I, the vast majority of former
Ottoman territory located outside of Asia Minor were parceled out
as European
protectorates. Despite
Allied promises to subject peoples of the former Ottoman Empire
during the war for future independence in exchange for their
assistance fighting the central Turkish powers in Asia Minor; to
their dismay, old-fashioned European imperialism was put in to
practice through this system of "protectorates" which was a mere
smoke-screen for their continued subjugation by the new ideas in
the region: the British and the French. Such struggles for
independence from their Turkish overlords and cooperation of
partisan forces with the British were romanticized in the stories
of British secret intelligence agent T.E. Lawrence- later known as
"Lawrence of Arabia."
Ottoman successor states include today's
Albania
, Bosnia and Herzegovina
, Bulgaria
, Egypt
, Greece
, Iraq
, Lebanon
, Montenegro
, Romania
, Saudi
Arabia
, Serbia
, Syria
, Jordan
, Turkey
, other
Balkan states, North Africa and the
north shore of the Black sea.
Many Muslim countries sought to adopt European political
organization and
nationalism began to
emerge in the Muslim world.
Countries like Egypt
, Syria
, and
Turkey
organized
their governments with definable policies and sought to develop
national pride amongst their citizens. Other places, like
Iraq
, were not as successful due to a lack of unity and
an inability to resolve age-old prejudices between Muslim sects and
against non-Muslims.
Some
Muslim countries, such as Turkey
and
Egypt
, sought to separate Islam from the secular
government. In other cases, such as Saudi Arabia
, the new government brought out new religious
expression in the re-emergence of the puritanical form of Sunni
Islam known to its detractors as Wahabism
which found its way into the Saudi
royal family.
Partition of India
The
partition of India refers to the creation in August 1947
of the two sovereign states of India
and
Pakistan
. The two nations were formed out of the
former
British Raj, including treaty
states, when Britain granted independence to the area (see
Undivided India).
In particular, the
term refers to the partition of Bengal
and
Punjab, the two main
provinces of what would be Pakistan.
In 1947, after the partition of India, Pakistan became the largest
Islamic Country in the world (by population) and the tenth largest
post-WWII state in the modern world.
In 1971, after a
bloody war of independence the Bengal part of Pakistan became an
independent state called Bangladesh
.
Today, Pakistan is the second largest Islamic country in the world
following Indonesia. Pakistan is presently the only nuclear power
of the Muslim world.
Arab-Israeli conflict
The Arab-Israeli conflict spans about a century of political
tensions and open hostilities.
It involves the establishment of the modern
State of
Israel
as a Jewish nation state, the consequent displacement of the Palestinian people, as well as the adverse
relationship between the Arab nations and the
state of Israel (see related Israeli-Palestinian
conflict). Despite initially involving the Arab states,
animosity has developed between other
Muslim nations and Israel. Many countries,
individuals and non-governmental organizations elsewhere in the
world feel involved in this conflict for reasons such as cultural
and religious ties with
Islam,
Arab culture,
Christianity,
Judaism,
Jewish culture or for ideological,
human rights, or strategic reasons.
While some consider the Arab-Israeli conflict a part of (or a
precursor to) a wider
clash of
civilizations between the
Western
World and the Arab or
Muslim world,
others oppose this view. Animosity emanating from this conflict has
caused numerous attacks on supporters (or perceived supporters) of
each side by supporters of the other side in many countries around
the world.
Oil wealth
Between 1953 and 1964, King Saud re-organized the government of the
monarchy his father, Ibn Saud, had created. Saudi Arabia's new
ministries included Communication (1953) Agriculture and Water
(1953), Petroleum (1960), Pilgrimage and Islamic Endowments (1960),
Labour and Social Affairs (1962) and Information (1963). He also
put Talal, one of his many younger brothers (by 29 years his
younger) in charge of the Ministry of Transport.
In 1958-59, Talal proposed the formation of a National Council. As
he proposed it, it would have been a consultative body, not a
legislature. Still, he thought of it as a first step toward broader
popular participation in the government. Talal presented this
proposal to the king when the Crown Prince was out of the country.
Saud simply forwarded the proposal to the
ulama asking them whether a National Council was a
legitimate institution in Islam. The idea seems to have died in
committee, so to speak. It would be revived more than three decades
later. A Consultative Council came into existence in 1992.
Meantime, the
Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries came into existence in 1960. For
the first decade or more of its existence, it was ineffectual in
terms of increasing revenue for member nations. But it would have
its day. Tension between Faisal and Saud continued to mount until a
final showdown in 1964. Saud threatened to mobilize the Royal Guard
against Faisal and Faisal threatened to mobilize the National Guard
against Saud. It was Saud who blinked, abdicating and leaving for
Cairo, then Greece, where he would die in 1969. Faisal then became
King.
The 1967 war had other effects.
It effectively closed the Suez canal
, it may have contributed to the revolution in Libya
that put Muammar al-Gaddafi in
power, and it led in May 1970 to the closure of the "tapline" from
Saudi Arabia through Syria
to Lebanon
. These developments had the effect of
increasing the importance of petroleum in Libya
, which is a
conveniently short (and canal-free) shipping distance from
Europe.
In 1970, it was
Occidental
Petroleum which constituted the first crack in the wall of oil
company solidarity in dealing with the oil producing nations;
specifically, in this case, with the demands for price increases
from the new Qaddafi government.
In
October 1973, another war between Israel and its Muslim neighbors,
known as the Yom Kippur War, got
underway just as oil company executives were heading to Vienna
, site of
a planned meeting with OPEC leaders.
OPEC had been emboldened by the success of Libya's demands anyway,
and the war strengthened the unity of their new demands.
The Arab defeats in the
Six Day and
1973 Arab-Israeli wars
triggered the
1973 oil crisis. In
response to the emergency re-supply effort by the
West that enabled Israel to defeat Egyptian and Syrian
forces, the Arab world imposed the 1973 oil embargo against the
United States and Western Europe. Faisal agreed that Saudi Arabia
would use some of its oil wealth to finance the "front-line
states," those that bordered Israel, in their struggle.
The centrality of petroleum, the
Arab-Israeli Conflict and political
and economic instability and uncertainty remain constant features
of the politics of the region.
Two Iranian revolutions
The
Iranian
Constitutional Revolution took place between 1905 and 1911.
The
revolution marked the beginning of the end of Iran's feudalistic society and led to the establishment
of a parliament in Persia
and
restriction of the power of Shah (king).
The first constitution of Iran was approved. But after the final
victory of revolutionaries over Shah, the modernist and
conservative blocks began to fight with each other. Then
World War I took place and all of the combatants
invaded Iran and weakened the government and threatened the
independence of Iran.
The system of constitutional monarchy
created by the decree of Mozzafar
al-Din Shah that was established in Persia
as a result
of the Revolution was weakened in 1925 with the dissolution of the
Qajar dynasty and the ascension of Reza Shah Pahlavi to the
throne.
In 1979
the Iranian Revolution (also
called "The Islamic Revolution" ) transformed Iran
from a
constitutional monarchy, under
Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi, to a populist theocratic Islamic
republic under the rule of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, a Shi`i Muslim cleric and marja. Following the Revolution, an
Iranian referendum established the
Islamic republic as a new government, and a
new constitution was approved, electing Ruhollah Khomeini
Supreme Leader of Iran. During the following
two years, liberals, leftists, and Islamic groups fought with each
other, and ultimately Islamics captured power.
At the same time, the
U.S.
, USSR
, and most
of the Arab governments of the Middle
East feared that their dominance in the region was challenged
by the new Islamic ideology, so they encouraged and supported
Saddam Hussein to invade Iran, which
resulted in the Iran-Iraq
war.
The 21st century
Islam in Turkey
Since the
establishment of the Republic of
Turkey
in 1923, there has been a strong tradition of
secularism in Turkey
established and institutionalized by Atatürk's Reforms. Although
the First Grand National Assembly of Turkey had rallied support
from the population for the Independence War against the occupying
forces on behalf of Islamic principles, Islam was gradually omitted
from the public sphere after the Independence War. The principle of
secularism was thus inserted in the Turkish Constitution as late as
1937. This legal action was assisted by stringent state policies
against domestic Islamist groups and establishments to neutralize
the strong appeal of Islam in Turkish society. Even though an
overwhelming majority of the population, at least nominally,
adheres to
Islam in Turkey; the
state, which was established with the
Kemalist ideology has no
official religion nor promotes any and it
actively monitors the area between the religions using the
Presidency of Religious
Affairs. The
Republic Protests
were a series of peaceful mass rallies by Turkish secular citizens
that took place in Turkey in 2007. The target of the first protest
was the possible presidential candidacy of the Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan,
afraid that if elected President of Turkey Erdoğan would alter the
Turkish secularist state
Dynasties of Muslim Rulers
There are
Muslim Dynasties
which can be found in
list of dynasties of Muslim
Rulers
See also
Notes
-
http://www.islamonline.net/servlet/Satellite?c=Article_C&cid=1212925100226&pagename=Zone-English-ArtCulture%2FACELayout
Milestones of Islamic History
- Lewis (1993), p.84
- Holt (1977a), p.105
- Holt (1977b), pp.661-663
- "Abbasid Dynasty", The New Encyclopedia Britannica
(2005)
- "Islam", The New Encyclopedia Britannica (2005)
- Nasr (2003), p.121
- Nasr (2003), p. 121-122
- Lapidus (1988), p.129
- Collins (2004), 139.
- Hourani, pg.41
- Hourani, pg.85
- Nasr (2003), p. 143
- Bloom and Blair (2000), p. 226-230
- Armstrong (2000) p. 116
- Bloom and Blair (2000), p. 211-219
- Bloom and Blair (2000), p. 199-204
- Holt (1977a), p.263
- Koprulu (1992), p.109
- Koprulu (1992), p.111
- Armstrong (2000), p.116
- www.muslimdecline.blogspot.com
- (Citation: Bentley, Jerry H. and Ziegler, Herbert F.
"Traditions and Encounters: A Global Perspective on the Past." New
York: McGraw Hill, 2006, pp. 961 and 969.
- Citation: Bentley, Jerry H. and Ziegler, Herbert F. "Traditions
and Encounters: A Global Perspective on the Past." New York: McGraw
Hill, 2006, pp. 971-972.
- Berkshire Encyclopedia of World History, vol.4,
p.1402
- Causes of Anti-Americanism in the Arab World: A
Socio-Political Perspective by Abdel Mahdi Abdallah (MERIA
Journal. Volume 7, No. 4 - December 2003
- Arab-Israeli Conflict: Role of religion (Israel
Science and Technology)
- Arab-American Psychiatrist Wafa Sultan: There is No Clash
of Civilizations but a Clash between the Mentality of the Middle
Ages and That of the 21st Century
- "Secular rally targets Turkish PM", BBC News, April
14, 2007.
References and further reading
Books and journals
Encyclopedias
External links