Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Section 2 The Arab Empire. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 196–198) Creation of an Arab Empire Muhammad’s.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Section 2 The Arab Empire. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 196–198) Creation of an Arab Empire Muhammad’s."— Presentation transcript:

1 Section 2 The Arab Empire

2 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 196–198) Creation of an Arab Empire Muhammad’s death left his followers with a problem of succession.  He had no son, and his daughters could not lead in such a male-dominated society.  Some of Muhammad’s closest followers chose Abu Bakr, Muhammad’s father-in-law.  He was named caliph, or successor to Muhammad.

3 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Creation of an Arab Empire (cont.) Islam grew under Abu Bakr. Muslims expanded over Arabia and beyond.  To spread the movement, Abu Bakr took part in the “struggle in the way of God,” or jihad.  By 650, Egypt, the Byzantine province of Syria, and the Persian Empire were part of the Arab Empire. (pages 196–198)

4 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Arabs were fierce fighters led by brilliant generals.  Military courage was enhanced by the belief that a warrior killed in battle was assured a place in Paradise.  The first two caliphs to rule after Abu Bakr’s death were assassinated.  In 656, Muhammad’s son-in-law, Ali, became caliph, but he was also assassinated after ruling for five years. Creation of an Arab Empire (cont.) (pages 196–198)

5 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Arab administrators were tolerant in their conquered territories.  Some places retained local governments, and no one was forced to convert to Islam.  Those who did not convert were required to be loyal to Muslim rule and pay taxes. Creation of an Arab Empire (cont.) (pages 196–198)

6 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 198–199) In 661, the general Mu’awiyah became caliph.  The Umayyads He was a rival of Ali and was known for one major virtue: He used force only if necessary.  He made the office of caliph (caliphate) hereditary and began the Umayyad dynasty.  Since he had been governor of Syria, he moved the capital of the Arab Empire from Madinah to Damascus.

7 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Umayyads (cont.) At the beginning of the eighth century, Arabs conquered and converted the Berbers, a pastoral people who lived on the coast of North Africa.  Around 710, combined Arab and Berber forces occupied southern Spain.  By 725, most of Spain was a Muslim state.  In 732, Arab forces were defeated at the Battle of Tours in present-day France, bringing an end to Arab expansion in Europe. (pages 198–199)

8 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. In 717, Muslims attacked Constantinople, but their navy was defeated by the Byzantine Empire.  This created an uneasy frontier in southern Asia Minor between the Byzantine Empire and the Islamic world.  Arab power now extended east in Mesopotamia and Persia, north into central Asia, and into the southern and eastern Mediterranean parts of the old Roman Empire. The Umayyads (cont.) (pages 198–199)

9 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Internal struggles threatened the Umayyad Empire’s stability.  Local administrators favored Arabs, and revolts broke out.  The most important was led by Hussein, second son of Ali.  In 680, he battled against Umayyad rule.  Most of his followers defected, however, and he fought 10,000 soldiers with only 72 warriors. All died. The Umayyads (cont.) (pages 198–199)

10 This struggle caused Islam to split into two groups, the Shiite and the Sunni.  Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The former say the descendants of Ali are the rulers of Islam, and the latter claim that the descendants of the Umayyads are the true caliphs.  This split continues today.  Most Muslims are Sunnis, but much of Iraq and Iran consider themselves Shiites. The Umayyads (cont.) (pages 198–199)

11 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 199–201) Because of both favoritism toward Arabs and Umayyad corruption, resentment against Umayyad rule grew.  The Abbasid Dynasty In 750, Abu al-Abbas overthrew the Umayyad dynasty and founded the Abbasid dynasty, which lasted until 1258.

12 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Abbasid Dynasty (cont.) In 762 the Abbasids built a new capital at Baghdad, on the Tigris River.  This location took advantage of river and caravan traffic.  This move eastward increased Persian influence and created a new outlook.  Not warriors, but judges, merchants, and government officials were the heroes.  Also, all Muslims, Arab or not, could now hold both civil and military offices. (pages 199–201)

13 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The ninth-century Abbasid dynasty thrived.  The reign of Harun al-Rashid is considered the dynasty’s golden age.  He was known for his charity and patronage of the arts.  His son al-Ma’mun was a great patron of learning.  He supported astronomical investigations and created a foundation for translating Greek works. The Abbasid Dynasty (cont.) (pages 199–201)

14 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. This time also saw economic prosperity.  Baghdad became the center of a huge trade empire extending into Asia, Africa, and Europe.  Under the Abbasids, the caliph became more regal and the bureaucracy more complex.  A council headed by a prime minister, or vizier, advised the caliph.  During council meetings, the caliph sat behind a screen and whispered his orders to the vizier. The Abbasid Dynasty (cont.) (pages 199–201)

15 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Abbasid Empire had problems.  It experienced much fighting over succession to the caliphate.  Harun al-Rashid’s two sons almost destroyed Baghdad when they fought to succeed him.  Vast wealth led to financial corruption, and a shortage of qualified Arabs to fill key government positions enabled non-Arabs, such as Persians and Turks, to become a dominant force in the military and bureaucracy.  This aided disintegration. The Abbasid Dynasty (cont.) (pages 199–201)

16 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Finally, the rulers of the provinces began to break from the central government.  Spain established its own caliphate.  Morocco became independent, and in 973 Egypt established a dynasty under the Fatimids, with its capital at Cairo. The Abbasid Dynasty (cont.) (pages 199–201)

17 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 201–202) The Seljuk Turks and The Crusades The dynasty played a major role in trade because of its position in the Nile delta.  They created a strong army by hiring non- native soldiers.  One group was the Seljuk Turks. The Fatimid dynasty soon became the center of Islamic civilization. 

18 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Seljuk Turks and The Crusades (cont.) The Seljuk Turks were a nomadic people from central Asia.  They had converted to Islam and prospered as soldiers for the Abbasid caliphate.  By the eleventh century they had taken over the eastern part of the Abbasid Empire.  In 1055 a Turkish leader captured Baghdad and took over the empire.  His title was sultan, “holder of power.” (pages 201–202)

19 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Seljuk Turks held the political and military power in the Abbasid Empire.  In 1071 the Byzantines challenged the Turks, who defeated them.  The Turks took over the Anatolian Peninsula.  The Byzantine Empire turned to the West for help. The Seljuk Turks and The Crusades (cont.) (pages 201–202)

20 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Byzantine emperor Alexius I asked the Christian states of Europe for help against the Turks.  Many Europeans agreed, and a series of crusades began in 1096.  At first the crusaders put the Muslims on the defensive.  In 1169, however, Saladin took control of Egypt, ending the Fatimid dynasty.  He also took the offensive, and in 1187 Saladin’s army destroyed the Christian forces in the kingdom of Jerusalem. The Seljuk Turks and The Crusades (cont.) (pages 201–202)

21 The chief effect of the Crusades was to breed centuries of mistrust between Muslims and Christians. The following 12 slides are from chapter 9 section 4 to give us some further insight of the crusades. The Seljuk Turks and The Crusades (cont.) (pages 201–202)

22 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Byzantine Empire was also troubled by a growing split between the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church.  The Eastern Church would not accept the pope as the head of the Christian faith.  In 1054 Pope Leo IX and Patriarch Michael Cerularius excommunicated each other.  This created a schism, or separation, between these two branches of Christianity.  The schism has not completely healed even today. New Heights and New Problems (cont.) (pages 305–306)

23 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The empire was threatened from abroad as well.  The Seljuk Turks, who moved into Asia Minor, were the greatest threat.  Asia Minor was the empire’s chief source of food and workers.  In 1071 a Turkish army defeated Byzantine forces at Manzikert.  Emperor Alexius I turned to Europe for help. New Heights and New Problems (cont.) (pages 305–306)

24 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 306–308) From the eleventh to the thirteenth centuries, European Christians went on a series of military campaigns to regain the Holy Land from the Muslims, regarded as infidels (nonbelievers).  The Crusades These expeditions are known as the Crusades.  They started when Pope Urban II agreed to Alexius I’s request.  Among other reasons, the pope wanted to provide papal leadership for a great cause.

25 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Crusades (cont.) At the Council of Clermont in 1095, Pope Urban II urged Christians to take up arms in a holy war.  Warriors from western Europe, especially France, joined up.  Some were moved by the cause; others were moved by adventure, the prospect of fighting, and an opportunity to gain territory, riches, or even a title. (pages 306–308)

26 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The First Crusade had an army of several thousand cavalry and ten thousand infantry.  The crusaders went down the Palestinian coast and reached Jerusalem in 1099.  They took the city and massacred thousand of inhabitants. The Crusades (cont.) (pages 306–308)

27 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The victors formed four Latin crusader states, which were surrounded by Muslims.  These kingdoms depended on supplies from Europe coming through Italian cities.  Genoa, Pisa, and especially Venice grew rich and powerful. The Crusades (cont.) (pages 306–308)

28 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. By the 1140s, the Muslims began to strike back.  When one of the Latin states fell, the monastic leader Saint Bernard of Clairvaux attained the help of King Louis VII of France and Emperor Conrad III of Germany in a Second Crusade.  It failed entirely. The Crusades (cont.) (pages 306–308)

29 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. In 1187, Jerusalem fell to the Muslims under Saladin.  Three Christian rulers then agreed to lead a Third Crusade: Emperor Frederick Barbarossa of Germany; Richard I (Richard the Lionhearted) of England; and Philip II Augustus of France.  The Crusade was not successful.  Frederick drowned in a local river, Philip went home, and Richard negotiated an agreement with Saladin allowing Christian pilgrims access to Jerusalem. The Crusades (cont.) (pages 306–308)

30 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. About six years after Saladin’s death in 1193, Pope Innocent III started a Fourth Crusade.  The Venetian leaders of the Fourth Crusade, however, used this situation to weaken their largest commercial competitor, the Byzantine Empire.  The crusaders sacked Constantinople in 1204. The Crusades (cont.) (pages 306–308)

31 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. A Byzantine army recaptured the city in 1261, but the empire was never again a great power.  The shrunken empire continued for another 190 years until the Ottoman Turks conquered it in 1453. The Crusades (cont.) (pages 306–308)

32 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. As a final gasp of the Crusades, there were two “children’s crusades.”  In 1212, a German youth named Nicholas of Cologne brought thousands of children to the pope, saying that God had inspired him to lead the children to the Holy Land.  The pope sent them home.  At about the same time, a group of twenty thousand French children sailed for the Holy Land.  Two ships went down at sea, and the remainder of the children were sold into slavery on reaching North Africa. The Crusades (cont.) (pages 306–308)

33 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Historians disagree on the effects of the Crusades.  Certainly they benefited some Italian cities economically, but the states probably would have grown economically anyway.  One unhappy effect was that the first widespread European attacks on the Jews began during the Crusades.  Perhaps the greatest impact of the Crusades was political.  The eventually helped to break down feudalism, which led to strong nation- states. The Crusades (cont.) (pages 306–308)

34 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (page 202) The Mongols were a pastoral people who came out of the Gobi in the early thirteenth century and took control of much of the known world.  The Mongols They were highly destructive conquerors whose goal was to create such terror that people would not fight back.  In 1258, the Mongols seized Persia and Mesopotamia.  Their leader Hülegü hated Islam.  He destroyed Baghdad, including its mosques, and the Abbasid caliphate ended.

35 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The Mongols (cont.) The Mongols advanced as far as the Red Sea, but they failed to conquer Egypt, in part because of the resistance from the Mamluks.  The Mamluks were Turkish slave-soldiers who had seized power after overthrowing the administration Saladin set up. (page 202)

36 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Mongol rulers began to convert to Islam, and they intermarried with local peoples.  They also began to rebuild some cities.  By the fourteenth century, the Mongol Empire split into separate kingdoms, and the Islamic Empire begun in the seventh and eighth centuries ended.  Because the Mongols had destroyed Baghdad, Cairo became the center of Islamic civilization. The Mongols (cont.) (page 202)


Download ppt "Section 2 The Arab Empire. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. (pages 196–198) Creation of an Arab Empire Muhammad’s."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google