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The Beginnings of Islam
Today’s LEQs: What were the primary causes and consequences of intensified trade and communication during Period 3? The Beginnings of Islam
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Arabian Peninsula Pre-Islam
Mostly nomadic tribes Tribes often fought Worshipped large variety of gods Took pride in oral traditions/group loyalty TRADERS (Muhammad was a merchant)
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Abraham’s Geneology
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The Prophetic Tradition
Prophets = people who speak to humanity on behalf of God Adam Noah Abraham Moses Jesus (Deity to Christians, Prophet in Judaism and Islam) Muhammad (last and most important prophet in Islam)
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Mecca Major trading/religious city Importance of Kaaba
Located between Byzantine and Sassanid Empire
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The Messenger Muhammad (570-632CE) Retreats and revelations
Famous text: Quran Rejection of the Kaaba’s gods Growing movement towards Allah/Yaweh as deity #1! Followers kicked out of town (the Hijra in 622CE)
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Quran Holy book of Islam
Called for creation of a new society (Umma) based on justice
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Five Pillars of Islam Five practices of Islam that all observant Muslims supposed to do: The Shahada – declaration of faith (monotheism is the main point of Islam!) The Salat – prayers performed five times a day The Zakat – almsgiving (charitable donations) of about 2.5% of your total wealth The Sawm – fasting during holy month of Ramadan from sunrise to sunset The Hajj – pilgrimage to Mecca at least once in a Muslim’s lifetime (millions go every year)
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Muslims in the World Today
Arabs make up only 20% of the Muslim world – huge misconception Most Muslims found in Southeast Asia today!
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Past AP exam question…
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The Spread of Islam Easy to learn and practice No priesthood
Teaches equality Follow one law; the Sharia Non-Muslims allowed religious freedom but paid additional taxes Easily “portable: nomads and trade routes Weakness of nearby empires (Byzantine and Sassanid) allowed easy conquest
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The Dar al-Islam Unity found across Muslim areas supported by common practice (the 5 pillars)
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Arab Empire: Early Years
Muhammad’s death caused division – who should lead? Abu Bakr elected ( CE) Goal of conquest brings the umma together
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Motives for Conquest United all Arabs
Distraction from internal fighting Promised a share of the booty AVOIDED mass conversions (at first) So they wouldn’t have to share their booty So they could tax subjects at higher rates
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Sunni vs. Shi’a At issue: Who should lead the Muslim Umma?
First 4 caliphs = “The Rightly Guided,” most agreed on these guys Eventually, they split into two m ain sects: Sunni – “the majority” (caliph should be chosen by the umma) Shi’a – “Party of Ali” (Muhammad’s relatives are rightful caliphs)
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Umayyads Expansion (central Asia, N.W. India, N. Africa, Spain)
Capital = Damascus (modern Syria) Arab conquest state Bureaucracy – Arab elite ruled over non-Arab, non-Muslim populations Religious freedom tolerated, but had to pay extra taxes Segregated into garrison towns to prevent mixing
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Family and Gender Roles
Women’s status pretty good Islam teaches that all people’s souls are equal Active in commerce Pastoralist background Became more patriarchal over time
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Umayyad Decline & Fall Revolt led by Abbasid family
Non-Arab converts and Shi’ites joined Abbasids
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Abbasid Caliphate Centralized
Capital = Baghdad (Imitated Persian culture) Non-Arab converts fully integrated Opportunities for education/gov’t position LOTS of conversions
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Abbasid Economy & Culture
Urban Madrassa schools Trade & Hajj = constant and quick ideas exchange House of Wisdom in Baghdad = Center of Learning Ancient authors translated (especially Greeks like Aristotle!)
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Abbasid Decline Overexpansion
Caliphs hired personal armies of Turkic Central Asian pastoralists (slave soldiers) Centralization breaks downs Mamluk & Seljuk Turkic slave soldiers really run the gov’t (caliph = figurehead) Mongols – kill the last caliph in 1258
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