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Stearns, Chapter 11
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Bedouin Social organization = clans Shaykhs, slave families, rivalries Constant fighting Mecca dominated by Umayyad clan Medina is disputed territory Women have status and don’t wear veils Why does Islam flourish here?
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Muhammad Khadijah 610- revelations Quran Umayyads plot against him – why? Flees Mecca to Medina Hijra – flight (622) Treaty in 628 with Quraysh
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The new religion offers society… Monotheism Umma Ethical system Zakat Universal Elements…. Five pillars Ramadan Hajj
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Term combining the ideas of a leader, successor, and deputy (of the Prophet) Abu Bakr was the first caliph; 2 years Muslim teaching maintained that there is no distinction between the temporal and spiritual domains; social law is a basic strand in the fabric of comprehensive religious law. Abu Bakr led many assaults; Ridda Wars
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Umar, Uthman, Ali Caliphate becomes an ‘institution’ Umar began conquests outside Arabia Prohibited Arabs from assuming ownership of conquered territory Collected taxes from non-Arabs; remained the minority (language) Did not try to convert the conquered
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Asserted the right of the caliph to protect the economic interests of the entire umma Publication of the definitive text of Qur’an Armies consisted of Muslim Arabs Introduce Arabic as official language Distinctive Muslim coinage; new order Accused of nepotism; appointed power positions to family Assassinated in 656
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Refused to punish the soldiers that killed Uthman Umayyads reject Ali’s claim to the throne Warfare erupts; Ali’s experience gives him the upper hand Battle of Siffin; accepts mediation Mu’awiya (Uthman’s cousin) proclaimed caliph in Jerusalem Ali was assassinated a year later
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Sunnis backed the Ummayad Shi’a were supporters of Ali Over the years differences have compounded
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Mu’awiya switched capital to Damascus (Syria) Reached from Spain to central Asia (biggest since the Romans) ‘Arab conquest state’ Muslim Arabs only taxed for charity Muslim warrior elite kept isolate Intermarriage meant a loss of taxes
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Mawali Still had to pay taxes; Received no share of the ‘booty’ Couldn’t get good gov’t positions; Not members but ‘clients’ Frustrated by the royal elaborate caliphal court The hajib, or chamberlain, resisted access to the caliph, who now received visitors seated on a throne surrounded by bodyguards
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Royal harems ‘aloof’ in their pleasure gardens and marble palaces Soldiers in Iran began to resent orders from Damascus Marched under the banner of ‘al-Abbas’, Muhammad’s uncle in 747 Shi’a and Mawali all help in the defeat Umayyad are slaughtered (p 253)
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New capital in Iraq Gradually became more ‘Sunni’ although Shi’a continued to support them. Why? Bureacrats, servents and slaves Wazir – chief administrator, royal executioner Integration of new converts; mass conversions Growth of merchant class, urban expansion, dhows, guilds, slaves often rose to power
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Priceless works of Plato, Aristotle, Galen, Hippocrates, Ptolemy and Euclid were saved and written in Arabic Material was spread throughout the empire Made the Scientific Revolution possible Read p 258 – Global Connections
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