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May peace
and blessings of Allah be on thee
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Islam
From The Beginning To 1300
Date: 2002
The Spread Of Islam
The Islamic state expanded very rapidly after the death of Muhammad
through remarkable successes both at converting unbelievers to Islam and
by
military conquests of the Islamic community's opponents. Expansion of the
Islamic state was an understandable development, since Muhammad himself
had
successfully established the new faith through conversion and conquest of
those who stood against him. Immediately after the Prophet's death in 632,
Abu
Bakr, as the first Caliph, continued the effort to abolish paganism among
the
Arab tribes, and also to incorporate Arabia into a region controlled by
the
political power of Medina. United by their faith in God and a commitment
to
political consolidation, the merchant elite of Arabia succeeded in
consolidating their power throughout the Arabian peninsula and began to
launch
some exploratory offensives north toward Syria.
Expansion Under The First Four Caliphs
During the reigns of the first four caliphs (632-661), Islam spread
rapidly. The wars of expansion were also advanced by the devotion of the
faithful to the concept of jihad. Muslims are obliged to extend the faith
to
unbelievers and to defend Islam from attack. The original concept of jihad
did
not include agressive warfare against non-Muslims, but "holy war" was
sometimes waged by Muslims whose interpretation of the Koran allowed them
such
latitude. Jihad was directly responsible for some of the early conquests
of
Islam outside of the Arabian peninsula.
The Islamic cause was also aided by political upheavals occurring outside
of Arabia. The Muslim triumphs in the Near East can be partly accounted
for by
the long series of wars between the Byzantine and Persian empires. Earlier
Byzantine victories had left both sides exhausted and open to conquest.
Moreover, the inhabitants of Syria and Egypt, alienated by religious
dissent
and resenting the attempts of the Byzantine Empire to impose Christianity
on
the population, were eager to be free of Byzantine rule. In 636, Arab
armies
conquered Syria. The Muslims then won Iraq from the Persians and, within
ten
years after Muhammad's death, subdued Persia itself. The greater part of
Egypt
fell with little resistance in 640 and the rest shortly afterward. By the
end
of the reigns of the first four caliphs, Islam had vastly increased its
territory in the Near East and Africa.
The new conquests of Islam were governed with remarkable efficiency and
flexibility. The centralization of authority typical of military
organization
aided in the incorporation of new peoples. Unbelievers in the conquered
territories became increasingly interested in the new religion and
accepted
Islam in great numbers. In addition to the obvious power of the religious
message of Islam, the imposition of a personal tax on all non-Muslims
encouraged many to become converts. Contrary to exaggerated accounts in
western Europe of the forceful imposition of Islam upon conquered peoples,
Jews and Christians outside of Arabia enjoyed toleration because they
worshiped the same God as the Muslims; many non-Muslims participated in
the
Islamic state and prospered financially and socially.
Islam was and remains one the most effective religions in removing
barriers of race and nationality. Apart from a certain privileged position
allowed Arabs, distinctions were mostly those of economic rank in the
early
days of conquest. The new religion converted and embraced peoples of many
colors and cultures. This egalitarian feature of Islam undoubtedy aided
its
expansion.
Arab Domination Under The Umayyads
The first three caliphs of Islam were chosen in consultation with the
elders and leaders of the Islamic community, and a pattern was established
for
selecting the caliph from the Karaysh tribe of Mecca. The fourth caliph,
Ali,
who was the son-in-law of Muhammad, was devoted to Islam and convinced
that
leadership of the Islamic community should remain in the family of the
Prophet. The followers of Ali were later called Shii or Shiites (after
Shiat-u-Ali, or "party of Ali"), and believed that the first three caliphs
had
been usurpers to legitimate power. Ali and his followers were opposed
first by
Muslims under the leadership of Muhammad's widow Aisha, daughter of Abu
Bakr,
and later by the forces of Muawiyah, the governor of Syria and a relative
of
the third caliph. In 661 Muawiyah proclaimed himself caliph, made Damascus
his
capital, and founded the Umayyad Dynasty, which lasted until 750. Thus the
caliphate became in fact, although never in law, a hereditary office, not,
as
previously, a position filled by election.
Umayyad military campaigns of conquest for the most part were highly
successful. The Umayyad navy held Cyprus, Rhodes, and number of Aegean
islands, which served as bases for annual seaborne attacks on
Constantinople
from 674 to 678. With the aid of Greek fire Constantinople was
successfully
defended, and the Arab advance was checked for the first time. Westward
across
North Africa, however, the Umayyad armies had much greater success. The
Berbers, a warlike nomadic people inhabiting the land between the
Mediterranean and the Sahara, resisted stubbornly but eventually converted
to
Islam. The next logical expansion for Islam was across the Strait of
Gibraltar
into the weak kingdom of the Visigoths in Spain. The governor of Muslim
North
Africa sent his general, Tarik, and an army across the Strait into Spain
in
711. Seven years later the kingdom of the Visigoths completely crumbled.
The
Muslims advanced across the Pyrenees and gained a strong foothold in
southwest
France, where they carried out a major raid to explore the possibility of
a
further northward advance. However, they were defeated by Charles Martel
near
Tours in 732, in a battle which, together with their defeat by the
Byzantine
emperor Leo III in 718, proved decisive in halting their northward
expansion
into Europe. Meanwhile the Muslims had been expanding eastward into
Central
Asia, and by the eighth century they could claim lands as far as Turkestan
and
the Indus valley.
The mainstay of Umayyad dynastic power was the ruling class consisting of
an Arab military aristocracy, who formed a privileged class greatly
outnumbered by non-Arabic converts to Islam - Egyptians, Syrians,
Persians,
Berbers, and others. Many of these converted peoples possessed cultures
much
more advanced than that of the Arabs, and the economic and cultural life
of
the Arab empire came to be controlled by these non-Arab Muslims (mawali).
Because they were not Arab by birth, they were treated as second-class
citizens. High government positions were closed to them. They paid higher
taxes than Arabs, and as soldiers they received less pay and loot than the
Arabs. Resentment grew among the non-Arabic Muslims who objected to their
lesser status as a violation of the Islamic laws of equality. Eventually
the
resentment of the mawali helped bring about the downfall of the Umayyads.
[See Expansion Of Islam: The expansion of Islam to 750 AD]
Shia Movement Against The Ruling Group
This resentment also found expression in the religious sphere, where
large numbers of non-Arabic Muslims joined the sect known as the Shia,
which
had been forced from power on the accession of the Umayyads. The Shia
continued to regard Ali and his descendants as the rightful rulers of the
Islamic community, and believed that in every age a messiah-like leader
would
appear and that he must be obeyed. The Shia also rejected the Sunna, the
body
of later tradition concerning Muhammad that was not contained in the
Koran;
they insisted on the Koran as the sole and unquestioned authority on the
life
and teachings of the Prophet. Though originally an Arab party, the Shia in
time became a general Islamic movement that stood in opposition to the
ruling
Arabic dynasty. The Shia evolved into one of the two major groups in
Islam.
The majority, called Sunni because they were the "orthodox" perpetrators
of
Muhammad's Sunna, or tradition, upheld the principle that the caliph owed
his
position to the consent of the Islamic community. The numerical
superiority of
the Sunni Muslims has continued to this day.
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