Introduction to Ibn Khaldun Carl Ernst Introduction to Islamic Civilization.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Islamic Achievements Section 4.
Advertisements

North Africa, Southwest, and Central Asia
Introduction to Ibn Khaldun Carl Ernst Introduction to Islamic Civilization.
Ch. 6 & 7 Discussion Questions
New Forms of Political Authority Carl Ernst Reli 180, Introduction to Islamic Civilization.
Middle Eastern Cultures They’re not all Arabs!. The Arab World.
* Scan the titles and pictures in Chapter 7 of your textbook. * Write 3 sentences predicting what you think we will be learning about in our next unit.
Diffusion of Ideas & Systems: The Middle Ages in Africa & Asia.
Expansion of Muslim Rule
The Islamic State and the Rise of Sectarianism. How Muslim History is Written? Stories about the Prophet are transmitted, sometimes orally, sometimes.
Chapter 7: History of the Islamic World
Hampton Webb Joe Hampton. Basis for later Arabic literature came from bedouin poetry This poetry was passed down orally between generations Many of these.
By Samuel Barnard. Full name: Mu ḥ ammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī Date of birth (not exact): 780AD-850AD Nationality: Persian Worked in: The House of Wisdom.
Origins of Islamic Civilization [contested term] Reli 180 Introduction to Islamic Civilization.
Islamic Civilization By Kim Jones October 12, 2007.
Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit.
BYZANTINE & MUSLIM EMPIRES Chapter 10. The Byzantine Empire  OBJECTIVES:  Discover how Constantinople became so powerful  Discover the achievements.
Two Scientific Revolutions II. The Birth of Islamic Sciences The Translation Movement.
Islamic Achievements Standard 7.2. Muslim Learning All knowledge is sacred The development of paper and creation of a paper mill in Baghdad The development.
Introduction to Ibn Battuta Carl Ernst Introduction to Islamic Civilization.
History of Islam. Meaning of Islam Term “Islam” often translated “submission” A Muslim is “one who submits or surrenders to the will of Allah” Believed.
Rise and Spread of Islam
Saudi Arabia. Origin of Name The name of the country comes from the ruling royal family AL-Saud It is the world’s only country named after its ruling.
The Eastern Roman Empire. After the Roman empire collapsed in the West, the Eastern Roman Empire became the center of civilization. The capital of the.
Aim: How did trade and the spread of Islam lead to florescence of new civilizations in West Africa? Do Now: Read “The Trans-Saharan Gold Trade,” and.
Ibn Khaldun ( ) (Abd al-Rahman Ibn Mohammad) Born Tunisia Lived Cairo, Egypt as Judge & Academic at Al- Azhar University ( world’s oldest university.
Islamic Civilization Notes on Sections 1- 3 The Rise of Islam.
The Islamic World After Muhammad Unit 2 Chapter 6 Section 2 Unit 2 Chapter 6 Section 4 Unit 2 Chapter 8 Section 4.
The Arabian Setting. Vocabulary – The Arabian Setting Arabian Peninsula -Oasis -Nomads/Nomadic life - Bedouins -Sedentary lifeTribal culture -
Arabia is a huge peninsula in southwest -ern Asia. Arabia.
IBNU KHALDUN ابو زيد عبد الرحمن بن محمد بن خلدون الحضرمي A PHILOSOPHER, SOCIOLOGIST AND SOCIAL SCIENTIST Juffri Supa’at & Nurhazman Abdul Aziz.
CRISIS OF MUSLIM UMMAH. T HE M USLIM W ORLD Muslims are the majority in 57 countries They speak about 60 languages Muslim : Hindu = 2:1 Muslim:Buddhist.
North Africa People and Dances. North Africa and Mediterranean.
World History EOC Review. What served as a model for European legal systems?
The World(s) of Ibn Khaldun
I NTRODUCTION TO H ISTORY. Define History: “A record of what human beings have done on earth” “An unending dialogue between the present and past”. Edward.
Notes on the political career of Ibn Khaldun Carl Ernst Introduction to Islamic Civilization.
ARABIC 241 THE CONTINUITY OF OLD CLEAVGES Tribe, Village, City.
THE FOUR CALIPHS. QUICK REVIEW Muhammad- born 570 in Mecca Became a trader known for his trustworthiness Called to prophethood by the angel Gabriel Muhammad’s.
Unit 4 Learning Goal 1.  Explain the political, economic, and social impact of Islam on Europe, Asia, and Africa  Describe the interactions among.
ISLAM SECTION 1 and 2 NOTES. Islam Section 1 Notes The Roots of Islam.
 Roman Times: 1- Researchers mentioned that writings on translation go back to the Romans. 2- Cicero and Horace: first theorists who distinguished between.
THE ARAB EMPIRE AND ITS SUCCESSOR EQ: After the death of Muhammad, how did his successors organize the Arabs and set in motion a great expansion?
The Rise of Islam The religion of Islam appeared in the early years of the 7 th century A.D. Began in the cities of Mecca and Medina The word Islam.
Post-Classical TRIVIA. Round 1 Terms Round1, Question 1 A series medieval military expedition made by Europeans to reclaim the Holy land from the Muslims.
Notes on the political career of Ibn Khaldun Carl Ernst Introduction to Islamic Civilization.
NORTH AFRICA VOCABULARY Sixth Grade Social Studies: Unit 11.
KEY Concept 3.1: Expansion and Intensification of Communication and Exchange Networks (Part 3- Cross-Cultural Exchanges) Period 3: 600 CE – 1450 CE.
Homework C-2 due tomorrow.
Islam and Empire E01 Mr. Mims.
The World(s) of Ibn Khaldun
Historiography and Representation
Comparative Issues (Political)
Bellwork What is the best invention ever made? How has it impacted your life for the better? 5 minutes.
The Arabian Peninsula A crossroads of three continents Africa, Europe, Asia Agriculture only in the south and near modern Oman Desert and Town Life.
Islam and the Arab Empire
Ibn Khaldun ‘First’ Social Theorist and World Historian
Middle Eastern and North African History
Ibn Khaldun Methodology and History Writing
Arabia.
Sociology of Religion in Muslim World Week 12 Course Materials
Ibn Khaldun Structure of History and Society
Science in the “Dark Ages”
NEW CHAPTER Kingdoms and Trading States of Africa.
TITLE Authors Institution RESULTS INTRODUCTION CONCLUSION AIMS METHODS
World History Unit 3 vocabulary review
The Golden Age of the Muslim Civilization
Section 2: Building a Muslim Empire
Chapter 15, Lesson 3.
THE SÎRA AND SÎRA LITERATURE
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Ibn Khaldun Carl Ernst Introduction to Islamic Civilization

Notes on Bruce Lawrence’s Introduction “What distinguished Ibn Khaldun was neither his Arab lineage nor his linkage to Berbers via marriage but his Mediterranean location…. [he was] heir to Greek science and Arab poetry” (vii) Toynbee: “undoubtedly the greatest work of its kind that has ever yet been created by any mind in any time or place” (A Study of History) 2

Structure 1.Muqaddima or Introduction 2.Book of Admonitions [Warnings] (Kitab al- `ibar), a history of dynasties of North Africa 3.Autobiography: Information on Ibn Khaldun and his Journey (rihla) in West and East 3

Key terms `Asabiyya or “group feeling” (nowadays used as an Arabic translation of French fanatisme) Badawa or nomadic lifestyle (of Bedouin) `Umran or city life, i.e., civilization in the generic sense, also called hadara Mubtada` or grammatical subject Khabar or grammatical predicate Mutabaqa or conformity with experience 4

Outline of the Muqaddima (Part 1) 1.On human civilization and the part of the earth that is civilized 2.On desert civilization among tribes and savage nations 3.On dynasties, caliphate, & royal authority 4.On sedentary civilization, countries, cities 5.On crafts and ways of making a living 6.On sciences, their acquisition and study 5

Full title of part 2 Kitab al-`ibar Wa diwan al-mubtada` wal-khabar Fi Ayyam al-`Arab wal-`Ajam wal-Barbar Wa-man `asarahum min dhawi as-sultan al-akbar The Book of Lessons and Archive of Early and Subsequent History, Dealing with Political Events Concerning Arabs, non-Arabs, and Berbers, and their Contemporary Supreme Rulers 6

Major question: audience Multiple audiences? Muqaddima as intended for an elite circle, with the history (Book of Admonitions) aimed at a wider audience (xiii, note 12) 7