the rise of islam

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UNIT III THE RISE OF ISLAM

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Page 1: THE RISE OF ISLAM

U N I T I I I

THE RISE OF ISLAM

Page 2: THE RISE OF ISLAM

MUHAMMAD THE PROFIT

• From Mecca in modern day Saudi Arabia

• Muhammad was a middle aged merchant who claimed the Angel Gabriel asked him to recite the word of God

• As a Merchant Muhammad had exposure to the ideas of Judaism and Christianity• Maybe even Persians

Page 3: THE RISE OF ISLAM

MUHAMMAD TAKES POLITICAL POWER

• Mecca was already a

popular pilgrimage site

• Muhammad was kicked

out because Islam

threatened the pilgrimage

• Muhammad and his

followers went to Medina

• Prayer switches from

Jerusalem to Mecca

• Muhammad became a

political and military

leader

• 630 CE Muhammad takes

back Mecca

Page 4: THE RISE OF ISLAM

THE SPREAD OF ISLAM

• Abu Bakr, Muhammad's

successor began

attacking the Byzantine

Empire and recording

the Qur'an

• A vast empire grew out

of the principals of Islam

in just 200 years

• Muhammad's

successors relentlessly

spread the religion

through military

conquest

Page 5: THE RISE OF ISLAM

THE RAPID SPREAD OF ISLAM

Page 6: THE RISE OF ISLAM

BASIC BELIEFS

• Conquered people do not have to convert, only pay a larger tax.• Followers of Judaism and Christianity are specifically

mentioned in the Qur’an as “people of the book”

Five Pillars of Islam

1. Shahadah- declaring there is no god except God (Allah), and Muhammad is God’s messenger

2. Salat- Prayer five times a day

3. Zekat- Giving 2.5% of one’s savings to the poor

4. Sawm- Fasting during the holy month of Ramadan

5. Hajj- Pilgrimage to Mecca

Page 7: THE RISE OF ISLAM

THE FIVE PILLARS OF ISLAM

Page 8: THE RISE OF ISLAM

BASIC BELIEFS

Guiding text:

• The Qur'an

• Absolute Monotheism

• Taking care of those less

fortunate than you

• Hadiths; a collection of

sayings and stories about the

profit Muhammad

A believer in Islam is part of the

Uma or community of believers

Islam becomes a restoration religion

• Muslims believe the Monotheisms before Muhammad had

strayed from purity

• Muslims believe Mohamed was the last profit sent by God

Page 9: THE RISE OF ISLAM

SHIA- SUNNI SPLIT

• Root of split goes back

to Muhammad's first

successor

• Abu Bakr, Muhammad's father in law became the

first Caliph

• Many wanted his son in

law, Ali to take over

• Shia Muslims believe the

Caliph should be a

descendent of

Muhammad

• Caliph means

“successor”

• Meaning Abu Bakr was

a “successor” to the

prophet

Page 10: THE RISE OF ISLAM

MODERN SHIA- SUNNI DIVIDE

Today Shia Muslims make up 16% of the Islamic population

Page 11: THE RISE OF ISLAM

THE ISLAMIC SPLIT HAS SERIOUS RAMIFICATIONS TODAY

Page 12: THE RISE OF ISLAM

BAGDAD: THE CENTER OF LEARNING

• The Abbasid Caliphate (750- 1258 CE) became the center for learning

• The Persian ruling class moved the capital to Baghdad• Baghdad becomes the center of learning

• Large library held the work of Greek philosophers, Greek scientist, and Buddhist and Hindu text

• Openness to foreigners and their ideas • Possibly largest blending of cultures since Hellenistic times • Brought to an end by the Mongols

Page 13: THE RISE OF ISLAM

IBN SINA (980- 1037 CE)

• Often known by Latin

name Avicenna

• Gained great advances

in the field of medicine

• Created the Canon of

Medicine

• Became the standard

medical text book for

centuries

Page 14: THE RISE OF ISLAM

HOW’S THIS FOR A VACATION?

Page 15: THE RISE OF ISLAM

IBN BATTUTA (1304-1368 CE)

• Moroccan explorer

• Traveled the known

Muslim world

• Recorded his travels

in the Rihla

(translated to

“Journey”)

• Helped link Africa to

the Islamic World

• The most well

traveled man to date

Page 16: THE RISE OF ISLAM

THE ABRAHAMIC TRADITIONS

Judaism est. around

1000 BCE Christianity est. around

40 CE

Islam est. around

600 CE

Page 17: THE RISE OF ISLAM

WHAT DO THE ABRAHAMIC RELIGIONS ALL HAVE IN COMMON?

• All three use a religious text that provide guidelines

ethical and moral behaviors as well as how to

govern believers

• Judaism- Torah

• Christians- The Bible

• Islam- The Qur'an

• All three recognize Abraham, Mosses and other

figures from the old testament as important religious

figures

• All three believe in fundamental monotheism

• All three originated in the same region, and claim

several of the same cities as religious holy sites

Page 18: THE RISE OF ISLAM

JERUSALEM

Page 19: THE RISE OF ISLAM

FUNDAMENTAL DIFFERENCES IN THE ABRAHAMIC RELIGIONS

Judaism

• Judaism does not actively seek converts and the

religion is associated with a group of people

Christianity

• Christians believe Jesus was the son of God (or

Messiah)

• Catholic leaders must remain unmarried

Islam

• Islam is the newest and only Abrahamic tradition to

reference the other two in the holy text

Page 20: THE RISE OF ISLAM

MODERN DISTRIBUTION

Page 21: THE RISE OF ISLAM

OVER HALF THE WORLD PRACTICES AN ABRAHAMIC RELIGION

Page 22: THE RISE OF ISLAM

U N I T I I I

ANCIENT AFRICA

Page 23: THE RISE OF ISLAM

AFRICAN RELIGION

• Traditionally African religion was Syncretic• Syncretic can be described as the blending of various ideas

• When Christianity and later Islam arrived, religions were often blended with traditional beliefs

• Can this be a conflict with a Monotheistic religion?

Page 24: THE RISE OF ISLAM

SUDANIC EMPIRES

GHANA, MALI, SONGHAI

• All three started in the Sahel

region around the

headwaters of the Niger

River

• These Empires acquired

wealth in gold accumulated

in Trans-Saharan Trade

• Old world importance of

land trade

• Era of pre-European maritime

importance

Page 25: THE RISE OF ISLAM

WHAT’S SO GOOD ABOUT BEING A

“MIDDLE MAN?”

• Conversion to Islam was important for trade relationships

• Arab and Berber traders had salt to the north

• Many groups to the southextracted Gold and produced Ivory

• All the trade empires successfully taxed all goods coming through the Empire.

• They were successful in receiving tribute

Page 26: THE RISE OF ISLAM

GHANA EMPIRE (830-1235 CE)

Page 27: THE RISE OF ISLAM

MALI EMPIRE (1230- 1600 CE)

Page 28: THE RISE OF ISLAM

SONGHAI EMPIRE (1430- 1591 CE)

Page 29: THE RISE OF ISLAM

TRADE NETWORKS

Salt to the north

Gold to the south

Page 30: THE RISE OF ISLAM

MANSA KANKAN MUSA I (MANSA MUSA)

• Very effective ruler, divided the

Empire into different provinces

• Mali became an important

cultural and intellectual center

under Mansa Musa

• Important City of Timbuktu

• Pilgrimage to Mecca 1324.

• Brought thousands of solders

and hundreds of camels

• Flooded the Egyption gold

market with tribute

• Decrease in value from 10 to 25%

Page 31: THE RISE OF ISLAM

BANTU MIGRATIONS

Page 32: THE RISE OF ISLAM

BANTU MIGRATIONS

• Long complex process

where two groups of

Bantu speakers

eventually linked up

• Bantu based languages

began to dominate the

continent

• This can still be seen today

• The Bantu people

brought new

agricultural practices to

mostly nomadic

peoples

Page 33: THE RISE OF ISLAM

MODERN LANGUAGE FAMILY MAP OF AFRICA

• What language

family has the

most land?

• What is

important about

the Niger River?

Page 34: THE RISE OF ISLAM

SWAHILI CITY-STATES

• A large scale ocean trading network developed on the Indian Ocean • Chinese, Indian and Arab

merchants all began trading on the East African coast

• Swahili Culture was born• A blend of native Bantu

based languages and Arabic

• Islam became the religion of the area

• City-states such as Zanzibar, Mombasa, and Mogadishu became wealthy through trade

Page 35: THE RISE OF ISLAM

COMPARED TO EUROPE

• What happens when there is plenty of land and plentiful trade?

• Europe had more blood shed and all conflict was over land

• Europe’s only source of wealth was land

• European monarchs would envy Ghana, Mali’s and Zanzibar’s resources and wealth

• Mali was an intellectual hub while Europe crawled out of the Dark Ages