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Before the time of
Muhammad,
Arabia was inhabited by
Arabs, most of whom were
Bedouin. The city of
Mecca was a religious and commercial center. The '''History of Islam''' begins in Arabia in the
7th century. At that time the
Arabs followed various
polytheistic religions; a few of them followed
Judaism,
Christianity (including the followers of
Nestorius) and
Zoroastrianism.
Muhammad was born in the
Year of the Elephant, which most Muslims equate with the Western year
570 CE but a few equate with
571 CE. His father died before his birth, and his mother died at a very early age, so he was raised by his uncle
Abu Talib. When he was about 25 years old, Muhammad married a wealthy widow,
Khadija, who was 40, and began his career as a trader. Fifteen years later, according to Islamic tradition, he experienced his initial
prophetic call, while meditating alone inside a cave in the hills above Mecca — a city in the Arabian peninsula. Thus the origin of Islam as a religion can be dated from about
610 CE.
Muslims believe that Muhammed was chosen by
God, like prophets before him, to teach a sacred message. Though marginalized and opposed initially, Muhammad began to gain followers, most of whom came from lower classes and marginalized peasantry. The first wealthy men accepting the prophet-hood of Prophet Muhammad were
Abu Bakr and
Umar ibn al-Khattab.
As Islam attracted more believers, Muhammad encountered severe opposition by residents of Mecca who felt threatened because Islam undermined the pagan idols around the
Ka'aba. The pagan idols around the
Ka'aba were important to the residents of Mecca not only for religious reasons, but also for economic reasons. As pilgrims visited the idols in Mecca, they brought economic prosperity to the city, and the fear was that a monotheistic religion would remove this source of prosperity and trade.
As Muhammad's opponents in Mecca — including one of his uncles, Abu Lahab, who was among his worst enemies — began to organize to bring about an end to his prophecy, Muhammad withdrew with many of his followers to
Medina in September of
622 CE. This migration is called the
Hijra, and its year is used to establish the Muslim calendar; thus the year
622 CE is the year 1 A.H. (''Anno Hegirae''). The A.H. system dates from the beginning of the lunar year in which the Hijra took place, so it does not neatly coincide with the
Julian or
Gregorian year numbers. After three major battles and one last battle with Mecca, almost all Arabia fell to Muhammad in
630 CE and great number of tribes established alliance with the prophet.
After Muhammad's death on
June 8,
632 CE, Abu Bakr was accepted as
caliph, or head of the
Islamic state. The next three caliphs were all relatives of the prophet, but were succeeded by another household of the same Makkan tribe, a change not universally accepted, leading to the major division in Islam between the
Sunnites (in the majority) and the
Shiites (in the minority). The new household was the first major
caliphate dynasty, the
Umayyads, who conquered the
Sassanian empire (
Persia) and the southern Byzantine provinces as far as
Spain. See also
Ali Ben Abu Talib
Most Muslims believe that when Muhammad died in 632 CE, he did not name a successor. The next four leaders of Islam are known as the Four Rightly Guided
Caliphs. Abu Bakr was the first as he was the oldest and seen as the wisest; he was Muhammad's father-in-law, and he laid foundations for the years ahead uniting the tribes of Arabia under Islam. He began the great wave of Muslim conquests, initiating the advance into
Syria, leading to the decisive victory against the
Byzantine Empire at the
Battle of Yarmuk. Umar was next, and he conquered Persia, Syria, Egypt, and northern Africa. After him came
Uthman, who conquered even more territory and developed a navy based in
Alexandria, Egypt. Within three generations the Muslims had gone from being a group of wandering camel-herders to being in charge of one of the largest empires the world has ever known.
When Uthman died,
Ali Ben Abu Talib became Caliph. Ali was a cousin and son-in-law of Muhammad. Ali was the husband of
Fatima Zahra, Muhammad's daughter. There are people that believe that he should have been the first Caliph because he was named by the prophet. This was rejected by the majority of Muslims who said that the best person for the task of leader should be chosen. His supporters were known as Shi'a ul Ali, (of Party of Ali) or
Shi'a for short. The Shi'a believe that the other three Caliphs were illegitimate because they were not named by the prophet. Over time, differences between Shi'a Muslims and Sunni Muslim rose, to the point that a few Sunni leaders hold that Shi'a is not truly a form of Islam (and vice-versa). These are, however, a small minority of the leaders. In
Lebanon open warfare erupted between, among many other religious factions, Sunni and Shi'a. In
Iraq, the secular Sunni
Baathist government oppressed the Shi'a majority. However with the fall of Saddam Hussein the Shi'a majority are now calling for more political power in the new Iraqi government. In
Iran the religious Shi'a majority has made life difficult for Sufi, Sunni and other Muslims. In
Saudi Arabia, the religious Sunni majority has made life difficult for Shi'a Muslims.
The majority of this new empire was of course non-Muslim, and aside from a protection tax (''
jizya'') the conquered people found their religions tolerated. Nonetheless the new religion penetrated deeply, to the point where conversions were discouraged since they might have been motivated by avoiding taxes, rather than true belief, and choosing a religion should override such economic concerns. At the same time the Umayyads had dedicated their prestige to conquering the
Byzantine empire, and started running into real opposition from the Orthodox provinces. Thus there was a revolution in
750 CE, and a new dynasty, the
Abbasids, took the caliphate, marking the transition to a more settled empire and a, disputed,
golden age.
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 two rival caliphates: the
Fatimids in north Africa, and the Umayyads in Spain (the emirs there being descended from an escaped member of that family). Eventually the Abbasids ruled as puppets for the
Buwayhid emirs.
A series of new invasions swept over the Islamic world. First, the newly converted
Seljuk Turks swept across and conquered most of Islamic Asia, hoping to restore orthodox rule and defeat the Fatimids but soon falling prey to political decentralization themselves. After the disastrous defeat of the Byzantines at the
Battle of Manzikert in
1071 CE the west launched a series of
Crusades and for a time captured Jerusalem.
Saladin however restored unity, defeated the Fatimids and recaptured the city, and later crusades accomplished little other than the looting of
Constantinople, leaving the Byzantine empire open to conquest.
Meanwhile, though, a second and far more serious invasion had arrived: that of the
Mongols, who conquered most territories up to the borders of Egypt, and permanently ended the Abbasid caliphate. Their wanton destruction left the Islamic world damaged and confused. However it reached a new peak under the Ottoman empire, a tiny state in
Turkey that conquered the Byzantines and extended its influence over much of the Muslim peoples.
In the
18th century there were three great Muslim empires: the
Ottoman in Turkey, the Middle East, and the Mediterranean; the
Safavid in Iran; and the
Mogul in India. By the end of the
19th century, all three had been destroyed or weakened by massive influence of Western civilizations.
Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab (
1703–
1792 CE) led a religious movement in the east of Arabia that saw itself as purifying Islam. His most important follower was the then leader of the family of
ibn Saud, which came with massive funding and political support. This movement is controversial among Muslims, as its adherents claim to follow the
Quran and
Sunnah while rejecting traditional Islamic scholarship regarding
Fiqh. But so, too, do other movements in more
modern Islamic philosophy, some of which claim also to be purifying or restoring Islam, in particular, to be renewing
ijtihad.
See also:
Islamism
'''Dynasties of Islamic Rulers'''
:
Umayyad - Eastern and Western
:
Abbasid
::
Banu Salih
::
Samanid
:
Abbadid
:
Almohad
:
Almoravid
:
Fatimid
:
Safavid
:
Ottoman
:
Mughal
==See also==
*
Timeline of Islam
*
Islamic invasion of India
==External links==
*
A history of Islam in America
*
History of Islam in China - Muslims in China
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