Timeline Islam
Timeline Islam
Timeline Islam
variety of cultures, made up of polities and countries from North Africa to the
western periphery of the Pacific Ocean, and from Central Asia to sub-Saharan
Africa.
The vast and sweeping Islamic Empire was created during the 7th and 8th
centuries CE, reaching a unity through a series of conquests with its neighbors.
That initial unity disintegrated during the 9th and 10th centuries, but was
reborn and revitalized again and again for more than a thousand years.
Throughout the period, Islamic states rose and fell in constant transformation,
absorbing and embracing other cultures and peoples, building great cities and
establishing and maintaining a vast trade network. At the same time, the
empire ushered in great advances in philosophy, science, law, medicine, art,
architecture, engineering, and technology.
A central element of the Islamic empire is the Islamic religion. Varying widely
in practice and politics, each of branches and sects of the Islamic religion
today espouses monotheism. In some respects, the Islamic religion could be
viewed as a reform movement arising from monotheistic Judaism and
Christianity. The Islamic empire reflects that rich amalgamation.
Background
In 622 CE, the Byzantine Empire was expanding out of Constantinople
(modern-day Istanbul), led by the Byzantine emperor Heraclius (d. 641).
Heraclius launched several campaigns against the Sasanians, who had been
occupying much of the Middle East, including Damascus and Jerusalem, for
nearly a decade. Heraclius' war was nothing less than a crusade, intended to
drive out the Sasanians and restore Christian rule to the Holy Land.
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The following timeline tracks the movements of the major power center of the
Islamic empire in Arabia and the Middle East. There were and are caliphates
in Africa, Europe, Central Asia, and Southeast Asia that have their own
separate but aligned histories that are not addressed here.
In 622, Muhammad was forced out of Mecca and began his hegira, moving his
community of followers to Medina (also in Saudi Arabia.) There he was
welcomed by the local followers, purchased a plot of land and built a modest
mosque with adjoining apartments for him to live in.
In 632, Muhammad died and was buried in his mosque at Medina, today still
an important shrine in Islam.
The first caliph was Abu Bakr ibn Abi Quhafa. He was selected after some
contentious debate within the community. Each of the subsequent rulers was
also chosen according to merit and after strenuous debate; that selection took
place after the first and subsequent caliphs were murdered.
The Umayyads ruled when the Arab Muslim conquest of former Byzantine and
Sasanid territories were taking effect, and Islam emerged as the major religion
and culture of the region. The new society, with its capital moved from Mecca
to Damascus in Syria, had included both Islamic and Arabic identities. That
dual identity developed in spite of the Umayyads, who wanted to segregate out
the Arabs as the elite ruling class.
Under Umayyad control, the civilization expanded from a group of loosely and
weakly-held societies in Libya and parts of eastern Iran to a centrally-
controlled caliphate stretching from central Asia to the Atlantic Ocean.
The 'Abbasids began the tradition of the use of honorifics (al-) attached to
their names, to denote their links to Allah. They continued the use as well,
using God's Caliph and Commander of the Faithful as titles for their leaders,
but also adopted the title al-Imam.
The Persian culture (political, literary, and personnel) became fully integrated
into 'Abbasid society. They successfully consolidated and strengthened their
control over their lands. Baghdad became the economic, cultural, and
intellectual capital of the Muslim world.
Under the first two centuries of 'Abbasid rule, the Islamic empire officially
became a new multicultural society, composed of Aramaic speakers, Christians
and Jews, Persian-speakers, and Arabs concentrated in the cities.
In 945, the 'Abbasid caliph al-Mustakfi was deposed by a Buyid caliph, and
the Seljuks, a dynasty of Turkish Sunni Muslims, ruled the empire from 1055–
1194, after which the empire returned to 'Abbasid control. In 1258, Mongols
sacked Baghdad, putting an end to the 'Abbasid presence in the empire.