Islam as Politics
Mohamed: Merchant, Prophet, Political Leader Revelation: From Merchant to Prophet Hijra 622 Birth of the Umma, Community of Believers Tribal loyalties replaced with a broader community identity The first Islamic State, Constitution of Medina
Khalifa The Origins of Sectarianism
The Rashidun (Sunni) Rightly Guided Caliphs 750 Abu Bakr, Umar ibn al-Kittab, Uthman ibn Affan, Ali ibn Abi Talib The Wars of Apostasy (Rida Wars) Of the six major centres of the revolt four of the leaders of the movement offered competing claims to being prophets themselves.
The Rise of Empires The Umayyads Contenders: Shi’ite, Carmathian, Fatamid, Almoravid, Almohad, Safavid Early and rapid expansion out of Arabia Faced issues of administration not previously encountered Failed to earn legitimacy in religious terms A Kingdom not a Caliphate
Islamic Expansion
The Abbasids By 775 Abbasid rule firmly established and the empire unified, with the exception of Umayyad controlled Spain, Cordoba Caliphate Capital moved to Baghdad Consolidates the relationship between, umma, Caliph and Ulema Creation of a formalised Sharia Closing the ‘Gates of Ijtihad’ Greatest expansion of Islamic territory
Rise of the Ottomans 1258 Mongol Invasion and the Fall of Baghdad Emergence of the Turku-Seljuk State 13th C Changing nature of the relationship between religion and the state Cooption of the Ulema
1900
Islamic Reformation Based ijtihad
Al-Afghani, Salafism and the Encounter with Europe 1839 - 1897 Salafism What accounts for the decline of Islamic civilisation? Opening the ‘Gates of ijtihad’ The Islamic Reformation Liberal and radical reformers
World War I, 1914-18
The dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire The Arab Revolt Sykes-Picot The end of the Caliphate
The Arab Revolt The Arab Revolt 1918 Sykes-Picot Agreement Secret agreement between United Kingdom and France Divided the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire outside the Arabian peninsula into areas of future British and French control
Sykes-Picot Agreement The Great Betrayal Secret agreement between United Kingdom and France Divided the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire outside the Arabian peninsula into areas of future British and French control Lloyd George “I am very keen to see a Jewish state established in Palestine.“ Turning point in Western–Arab relations. Negated the promises made to Arabs for a national homeland in the area of Greater Syria
The End of the Caliphate Treaty of Sèvres 1920 Caliphate abolished March 3, 1924. Abdulmecid II was the last caliph of Islam No framework for united and identity Medina (622)Damascus (662) Baghdad (751), Cairo (1262) Istanbul (1517) Terminated(1924)