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AP®︎ World History
The spread of Islam
Overview of the spread of Islam from the time of Muhammed to the Rashidun, Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates. Discussion of Muslim conquest and conversion.
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- Now, Sal repeatedly mentions about this being a, "Muslim conquest". As a clarification question, is this supposed to mean that the early Muslims were conquering territory for a kingdom, like Rome, Greece, and Persia in earlier times? Or, is it simply saying that people within the given areas gradually began to accept Islam more and more?(28 votes)
- Hi Evan, thanks for the question! Conquest is usually used in reference to the establishment of some type of political control. The spread of Islam was both a political and religious phenomenon, so sort of a combination of both - Muslim rulers gained control of these areas and some of their followers stayed with them, and some people who lived in these areas became Muslims, and Islam was also spread via trade beyond areas under Muslim control. Under the Rashidun caliphs and the Ummayad Caliphate until about 750, it makes sense to think about it in terms of a more unified Islamic empire. After that, there was more political fragmentation into multiple Muslim polities.
Hope that helps!(31 votes)
- So how was Muhammad successful with spreading Islamic faith?(4 votes)
- Hello!
The Watcher's answer is perfect but I just want to say that another reason for the spread of Islam is that, at this time, Arabia is really fragmented and Muhammad proposed a religion which is the Arabs'religion. In fact, Islam unified Arabia. Islam brought also hope (because Muhammad said to the Arabs that Allah will reward them if they believe in him) in a period of war. And, with the spread through trade and commerce( as the Watcher stated), this is why Islam spread so much and quickly.
PS: Sorry for my bad english...I hope that my answer can be understood in spide of that.(3 votes)
- Why were the caliphs successful in spreading Islam?(4 votes)
- You may have this backwards. It is not the Caliphs who were successful in spreading Islam, but the successful spread of Islam that led to the establishment of the Caliphate, making the Caliphs successful.(5 votes)
- How did the caliphate develop after the death of Muhammad?(3 votes)
- After the death of Muhammad (PBUH), his companion Abu Bakr became the Caliph because he was considered the closest and most knowledgable about Islam to the Muslims.
On his deathbed, Abu Bakr appointed his next Caliph and so generally Caliphs were chosen this way or chosen by the majority of the people.(4 votes)
- Can someone explain what a caliphate is(1 vote)
- he is the ruler- leader of the nation
caliphate in language means the one who comes next to lead- since the death of prophet Muhammad (PBUH) and leader came after him was cold caliphate till 1920 the last one was during the Ut man empire, until it was destroyed by the British / French colonization to the Muslim world.(3 votes)
- athow did Mohammed die? 0:13(2 votes)
- Muhammad died in Medina (after his pilgrimage in Mecca on March, 632) by a brief illness on June 8, 632.(1 vote)
- How did Islam come to be one of the most popular and influential religions in the world?(2 votes)
- Islam came to it's major role in the world (24% of world population are Muslims) by meeting the religious needs of people. In other places, religious needs are met by other religions. Islam did a better job than the religions that preceded it in the areas where it took root.(2 votes)
- who did the first four caliphs conquer?(1 vote)
- Well, the four caliphs conquered many areas through honesty and teachings of the prophet. They also conquered areas such as, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and Persain land from the Byzantian and Sassanian empire.(4 votes)
- Why is it only okay to fight back when someone is attacking you? What if someone is breaking into your house or something like that?(1 vote)
- If someone is breaking into your house you have to defend yourself, but if someone pushes you then you don't just go and beat them up.
Makes sense right?
Also if someone does hurt you ex. Breaks your arm then there are punishments but it is better to forgive them and is highly recommended in Islam.
Hope this helps you to have a better understanding of Islam.(1 vote)
- Just a question, I've often heard about the Umayyad Tax Policy (taxing non-muslims more than muslims, as touched on by Sal at) as a motive for conversion during the Umayyad Dynasty, and how the Umayyads needed large populations of non-Muslims to fuel their treasury. Was this another possible motive for conversion, or was its importance glorified by European scholars? 6:57(2 votes)
- You make a good point and ask a cogent question. Was the phenomenon of "taxation of unbelievers for the national treasury" actually a significant part of the dynasty's income? Could it be a "remission of taxation for conversion" instead? Either way, did it happen a lot, or did Europeans just seize upon it as another way to disrespect Muslims?(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] Other
videos we have talked about the early history of Islam, which really revolves
around the life of Mohammed. Mohammed, as we talked about,
was born roughly in 570 and dies in 632. On this timeline here, the
white period is before, according to Muslim traditions, that he started having
the revelations from God, and the brown period is when
he's having these revelations and he's starting to be the leader of this nascent Muslim community. Now what we see here in this dark brown is what was in control
of this Muslim community at the time of Mohammed's death. You see even by that
period they had control of a good chunk of the Arabian Peninsula. What's particularly surprising is how fast Islam spread shortly after that. The next period, after Mohammed dies, the leadership of the
community, of the ummah, goes to the kalifs, and
this actually becomes a contentious issue that we'll talk about in other videos. It's the seed of the eventual schism between the Sunis and the Shias. But this next period, the Rashidun, or the Rightly Guided Kalifs, kalif means successors,
essentially successors to Mohammed, under these four kalifs,
you see Islam spread from as far west as Tunesia and Egypt, all the way through Persia. Keep in mind, this is spreading, overtaking, conquering,
what used to be controlled by very powerful empires, the Byzantine Empire,
or Eastern Roman Empire, taking territory from them here, and then Sasanid Persia,
taking territory from them. This is less than 30 years. Then it spreads even more. During the next caliphate,
which is now dynastic, the Umayyad Caliphate, by
the end of that at 750 CE, you see Islam has now spread or conquered from modern-day Spain and Portugal, all the way to modern-day
India and Pakistan. We could continue this narrative, and we will continue to talk
about it in future videos. But what's really
interesting is to think about how and why it was able
to spread this rapidly. There's few instances in history where we see this type of
an empire form this quickly. To get some context on
that, we have this text here from the American
historian Ira Lapidus' book Islamic Societies to
the Nineteenth Century. Ira Lapidus writes,
"The expansion of Islam "involved different factors
in different regions. "In North Africa, Anatolia,
the Balkans, and India," so these are regions that we
aren't showing on this map, those happened later on
outside of the period depicted in this map, "it was carried out by nomadic
Arab or Turkish conquerors." That is a similar form, method
that we're talking about though in this map. "In the Indian Ocean and West Africa, "it spread by peaceful
contacts among merchants "or through the preaching of missionaries. "In some cases, the diffusion of Islam "depended on its adoption
by local ruling families. "In others, it appealed to
urban classes of the population, "or tribal communities. "The question of why
people convert to Islam "has always generated intense feeling. "Earlier generations of European scholars "believed that conversion to Islam "were made by the point of the sword, "and that conquered people's
were given the choice "of conversion or death." So according to Ira Lapidus,
these early European scholars viewed it analogous to things
like the Spanish Inquisition, or some aspects of the Crusades, or some of what we saw in the New World with the conquistadors, where
it really was convert or die. But according to Lapidus, "It is now apparent that
conversion by force, "while not unknown in Muslim countries," so there was some forced conversion, but according to Lapidus
was, in fact, rare, "Muslim conquerors
ordinarily wished to dominate "rather than convert, and most conversions "to Islam were voluntary. "In most cases, worldly
and spiritual motives "for conversion blended together." Other sources I've looked
at do hint at these early caliphates weren't that
interested in conversion. They were clearly Muslim, and
they were also Arab dominated, and they liked having this
elite Arab Muslim ruling class and they weren't that interested in spreading their religion. Only when we get into
the Abbasid Caliphate, where it becomes more multicultural and more Muslim and less Arab focused, that you start to have
more and more conversions. The sources I've seen have, by the end of the Omayyad dynasty, only about 10%-30% of the conquered people convert to Islam, but much more convert during what's often referred to as the Golden Age of Islam, when Islam is collecting the works of the ancient Greeks, and
the Chinese, and the Hindus, and getting scholars
from all around the world under the Abbasid dynasty. Now, when Lapidus talks
about in most cases worldly and spiritual motives for
conversion blended together, he's referring to these ideas that maybe for some people it just appealed to them. You have to remember,
people weren't going from being independent to being
subjugated in most cases. Even before the conquest of Islam, they were probably subjugated by a king or part of an empire
like the Byzantine Empire or the Persian Empire. So they're really switching
from one conqueror to another, and oftentimes people are hopeful that the new conqueror might
be better than the last. Oftentimes they're proven wrong. Sometimes it might actually be the case. There might have been some support that allowed it to spread this quickly. There's also worldly motives. If there's a Muslim ruling class, and if you want to be associated
with that ruling class, that might be a worldly motivation in order to actually convert. Now the other thing that we do know about these early Muslim empires, and many of the Muslim empires, is they did have this
notion of dhimmi status. Dhimmi is referring to the
idea of protected persons. It's often referred to
as people of the book, but it included Jews,
Christians, that Islam, according to Islamic tradition follows in the same tradition of. But then when you eventually
have Muslim conquest of India included Hindus and Buddists as well, and it also included Zoroastrians, who the early Muslims
considered to be monotheistic. The idea of dhimmi status is that they would have protected rights, they would have the same
property contract rights, but different political rights. The Muslim ruling class definitely had better political rights. They would pay a different tax than what the Muslims actually paid. Now in order to get context
from a religious point of view, you can look at some of the
religious texts of Islam, especially the Koran, and even the Hadith, which are the secondhand accounts of the life and practices of Mohammed. There you get an interesting perspective. On the side of religious tolerance, you have excerpts like this. "There shall be no compulsion "in acceptance of the religion." "Unto you your religion
and unto my religion." From and ethnic point of view, there also seems to be a
sense of nonsuperiority of one ethnicity over another. "Indeed, there is no superiority "of an Arab over a non-Arab,
nor of a non-Arab over an Arab, "nor or a white over a black,
nor a black over a white, "except by piety towards God." This is from Mohammed's farewell sermon. This is given by the Hadith, The Life and Sayings of Mohammed. Now on the other hand,
there definitely are more militant portions of the Koran. One of the most quoted
excerpts is this one. "And fight in the way of
God those who fight you, "but transgress not the limits. "Truly God likes not the transgressors. "And kill them wherever you overtake them "and expel them from wherever
they have expelled you, "and persecution is worse than killing. "And do not fight them
at the sacred mosque "until they fight you there. "But if they fight you, then kill them. "Such is the recompense
of the disbelievers. "And if they cease, then indeed "God is forgiving and merciful. "Fight them until there is no persecution "and until worship is
acknowledged to be for God. "But if they cease, then there is to be "no aggression except
against the oppressors." So a critical view of this is saying, look, this is clearly
advocating to kill other people, and fight those who are
considered to be disbelievers. That's clearly a critical view of this. You will not see this type
of language, for example, in more pacifist notions
of, say, the Gospels. It's definitely not the
modern notion that we have of passive resistance,
or peaceful resistance, and the notion of a Gandhi
or a Martin Luther King. Now those who would defend or see a little bit more nuance here, would say, look, you've got to, this is not talking about
killing disbelievers arbitrarily. This is talking about killing
those who are persecuting you. They would say, look, this
revelation is believed, according to Islamic tradition, to have come down when the Muslims were actively being persecuted
by Mohammed's tribe, the Quraysh. They were in Medina. They were essentially in exile. They were in fear for their
lives, Mohammed's own life. The Quraysh had attempted to kill him. They were torturing and killing that early Muslim community. In that context they're saying, "And fight the way of
God those who fight you." So it's really out of defense, trying not to be persecuted. "But transgress not the limits." Even there there are rules of law here, or rules of engagement. "And kill them wherever you overtake them "and expel them from wherever
they have expelled you, "and persecution is worse than killing." So this is creating a moral hierarchy that is very debatable,
especially in modern times. Is persecution worse than killing? "And do not fight them
at the sacred mosque." This really seems to be
referring to the Quraysh, because remember they're fighting over this notion of what even should
happen at the sacred mosque. "Until they fight you there. "But if they fight you, then kill them. "Such is the recompense
for the disbelievers. "And if they cease, then indeed God "is forgiving and merciful." So to some degree, those who would see the nuance in this passage,
they say, hey look, this is talking about killing
those who persecute you, but it actually seems to be a
little bit more conciliatory. Remember, the Koran is,
according to Islamic tradition, built on the traditions
of the Old Testament and on Christian traditions. Especially relative to the Old Testament, which tends to be much more absolute when someone is disliked by God, whole cities or peoples
are destroyed or killed, or God might command his
prophets and the leadership to kill other people just because they disbelieve God in the Old Testament. People who would defend this
passage or see nuance here says, look, this is about being persecuted and fighting persecution,
and if those persecutors stop then don't seek revenge. "And if they cease then indeed God "is forgiving and merciful. "And there is to be no aggression "except against the oppressors." I'll leave it to you to decide. I encourage you to look up
your own primary resources. Look up different translations. One of the tricky things
of not just the Koran, but including the Bible, which is believed to first be written in Aramaic, or the Old Testament, the
Torah, written in Hebrew, is that the translation itself can also give you various nuance. But make your own decisions about what you think is, or your own judgments of what we've talked about in this video.