Key points about Medieval Islamic civilisations
- The Medieval Islamic Empire was a collection of regions in which Islam was practised.
- From the mid-600s, the Islamic Empire spread throughout the Middle East, west across North Africa and Spain, and east as far as present-day India.
- At first the empire was ruled by one caliphThe successor or deputy of the Prophet, and actual or titular leader of the Islamic community., but after a few centuries it split into regional states as local rulers asserted their own independence. The most powerful early dynasties were the Umayyads in Damascus followed by the Abbasids in Baghdad.
- The Islamic Empire flourished with trade, invention and innovation.
Video about Medieval Islamic civilisations
How did Islam begin?
In the year 610, a successful merchantA trader. called Muhammad reported hearing voices that recited passages to him, which he later recognised as revelations from God. Muhammad shared them with his wife and close friends, and gradually attracted a small group of followers from his home town of Mecca who began to practise a new religion. This new religion became known as Islam. People who practise Islam are called Muslims.
However, powerful people in Mecca felt threatened by Muhammad鈥檚 popularity and his declarationsA formal announcement. that there was only one God, and they opposed him. He took his followers to Medina in 622, where he built an Islamic community around the mosqueA Muslim place of worship. they constructed there.
Muhammad taught his followers to worship the one God from whom he received the revelations. They were to lead simple lives based on their religious beliefs and observances, and help those in need. The main religious observances later became known as the Five Pillars of Islam. Find out more on the key facts about Islam in this religious studies guide.
They are:
- Shahadah 鈥 the declaration there is no god but God, Allah, and Muhammad is his Messenger
- Salat 鈥 set prayers to be performed five times a day
- Zakat 鈥 giving a proportion of your wealth to the poor
- Sawm 鈥 fasting during the holy month of Ramadan
- Hajj 鈥 an annual pilgrimage to the Kaaba in the holy city of Mecca
Before long, Muhammad had gained so many followers that he was able to return to Mecca and conquer the city. The people of the surrounding areas soon became Muslims, and rulers and tribes from other areas of the Arabian PeninsulaAn area in the Middle East that consists of modern-day Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. gradually accepted Islam.
How did Islam spread during Muhammad鈥檚 life?
The new faith of Islam acted as a call to all Arabs in the region to unite as one community and to work towards justice in society and a fair sharing of wealth.
In the eighth year of his migration to Medina, Muhammad had gained so many followers that he was able to return to Mecca at the head of a large army and conquer the city. From this time on he was accepted as the true final Prophet of God and Mecca became the centre of the Muslim world.
The people of the surrounding tribes became Muslims, and rulers and tribes from other areas of the Arabian Peninsula gradually accepted Islam. By the time of his death, Muhammad was accepted as the leader of most of the Arabian Peninsula.
Growth of the Islamic Empires, 632-1258
By Prophet Muhammad鈥檚 death in 632, Islam had spread widely across the Arabian Peninsula. He was succeeded by four 鈥榬ightly guided caliphThe successor or deputy of the Prophet, and actual or titular leader of the Islamic community.鈥, who had been among his companions.
Caliph | Period of rule | Fact |
---|---|---|
Abu Bakr | 632 鈥 634 | A close friend and father-in-law to Muhammad. He ensured the community remained united. |
Umar | 634 鈥 644 | Islam spread far outside the Arabian Peninsula during this time; he conquered present-day Iran and Iraq. |
Uthman | 644 鈥 656 | There was further expansion of the empire under his leadership, and the revelations received by Muhammad were gathered into the 蚕耻谤鈥檃苍The holy book of Islam.. |
Ali | 656 鈥 661 | Divisions between Muslims in the empire arose during his rule. |
In 661 Ali was killed, which led to the rise of the UmayyadsThe ruling dynasty of the Islamic Empire from 661 until 750, with their capital at Damascus. dynastyA series of rulers who are all from the same family.. They ruled the Islamic Empire until 750 from their capital at Damascus in Syria and oversaw further expansion as far west as Spain and as far east as India.
In 750, the AbbasidsThe ruling dynasty of the Islamic Empire from 750 to 1258, with their capital at Baghdad. seized power from the Umayyads and built a new capital, Baghdad, on the River Tigris in Iraq in 762.
Under Abbasid rule, Islamic culture developed and scientific research flourished. Many subjectsThe people who are ruled over by an empire. who had been followers of other faiths convertTo adopt a new religion. Some people use 鈥榬evert鈥 instead. to Islam. This period is sometimes called the Golden Age of Islam, as Arab learning in the sciences and arts reached new heights, whilst the splendidly decorated buildings in Baghdad and other cities became the envy of travellers.
Abbasid rule
What was Baghdad like under Abbasid rule?
Baghdad was known as the Round City. It was built as a circle with the impressive Caliph鈥檚 Palace at its centre. The palace had a green dome so that it could be seen by travellers approaching the city. Tens of thousands of people were employed in building the city, which soon became the world鈥檚 largest city. It became a great trading centre with many of its people making the textiles, leather, and paper that were sold and sent across the world. Many worked at the city鈥檚 bazaarA market in the Islamic world or on the trade caravanA line of camels carrying people and goods for trade or pilgrimage. Others worked on farms outside the city.
The decline of Abbasid rule over time
- By the mid-800s, the lands under Abbasid rule were so vast they were difficult to be ruled by a single ruler from one capital. Regional governors and religious groups competed for power.
- In the 1000s, the SeljuksMuslim rulers of Turkic origin from Central Asia who ruled parts of the Islamic world in the 11th and 12th centuries. took lands from the Abbasids and defeated the Byzantine EmpireThe successor to the old Roman empire, with its capital at Constantinople. army to conquer Anatolia, present-day Turkey.
- In 1258, the Mongol armies from the East destroyed Baghdad and ended Abbasid rule.
Activity - Put the events in order
Trade and travel during the Abbasid period
Islamic merchants travelled as far as South Africa, China and Russia to trade in goods such as:
- silk
- spices
- precious metals
- carpets
- glassware
- pottery
Thousands of Arab coins have been dug up by archaeologists in Sweden and elsewhere, showing the extent of Arab trade with Vikings and others.
Islamic astronomers and merchants improved the astrolabeAn instrument used to find directions. Muslims used it to find the direction of the Kaaba in Mecca, which they face when they pray., which was a navigation instrument that allowed travellers to find their way and to find the direction of Mecca for prayer. It also helped sailors to travel more accurately as they could use it to identify the position of the sun and stars to work out faster routes to their destinations.
Islamic teachings and culture spread across the world along the trade routes. By the 1300s, many people converted to Islam in southern India, Indonesia and Malaysia.
Learning in the Islamic world
Muslim scholars collected and translated books from across the known world. In Baghdad, the Abbasid caliph created a centre of learning which was known as the House of Wisdom, or the Grand Library of Baghdad. The Islamic Empire was a time of great innovation, especially in maths, science, and medicine.
Maths and science
Arab mathematicians helped to popularise the Indian number system, with its symbol for zero, and invented algebra. The word 鈥榓lgorithm鈥 is derived from the name of the Persian mathematician al-Khwarizmi. The Arab number system was much simpler to use than Roman numbers, and was adopted in Europe, together with many other Arab scientific and philosophical discoveries. Another mathematician, Ibn al-Haytham, invented a camera that helped explain how the eye sees.
Medicine
Some of the earliest and most advanced hospitals were built in Baghdad, Isfahan and Cairo in the early Islamic centuries. The doctors were highly skilled and worked hard to thoroughly understand diseases, injuries and treatments. Many Muslim doctors published influential works on medicine, for example:
- Al-Razi made important discoveries about smallpox and is the first known writer of a book about children鈥檚 diseases.
- Al-Zahrawi designed new surgical tools and wrote a textbook that was used by surgeons for hundreds of years.
- Ibn Sina completed a huge medical encyclopaedia in 1025, which was still in use in European medical schools in the 1600s.
- Ibn Nafis wrote about the circulation of the blood in the 1200s, long before it was understood by doctors in the West.
Hygiene
Hygiene and cleanliness are very important in Islam. Many Islamic cities had sewage systems and public baths, at a time when these were neglected in Europe. Engineers designed and built dams and irrigationA man-made water supply to water crops. channels to bring clean water to towns, for people to drink and to water crops.
Why were there developments in the Islamic Empire at a time when Europe wasn鈥檛 usually open to new ideas?
The Abbasid caliphs encouraged learning in every area. Thanks to the taxes they collected across their vast empire, they possessed incredible wealth. They paid bilingual scholars in Baghdad (many of them Christians) to translate books from ancient Greek. The Arabs developed this knowledge at a time when it had been lost in Europe, due to the fall of the Roman Empire.
Libraries, universities, hospitals and schools, known as madrasas, were built across the Islamic world, and Muslims learned how to make paper from the Chinese.鈥嬧
The 蚕耻谤鈥檃苍The holy book of Islam. also encouraged learning. Caring for the sick and keeping clean were religious duties, which increased the motivation to develop medicine, hospitals and safer hygiene.
Islamic design
Huge palaces and mosques were the envy of travellers from across the world. Mosque design influenced gothic architecture in Europe, particularly the pointed arch.
Islam discourages depictions of the human body, so instead Muslim artists used abstract geometrical patterns and calligraphyDecorative handwriting., especially verses from the 蚕耻谤鈥檃苍, to decorate textiles, ceramics, mosques and books, mostly the 蚕耻谤鈥檃苍 itself.
The technique of lustre-glazing, which added a shiny glaze to pottery, was invented in Iraq in the 9th century. It spread across the Islamic world and became fashionable across Europe. These early Islamic art forms remain popular today across the Islamic world and beyond.
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