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Chapter 5, Lesson 2 The Spread of Islam It Matters Because: The religion of Islam continues to influence modern politics and society The Muslim Empire • When Muhammad died in 632, Muslims knew a strong leader would be required to keep the Islamic state united • Chose new leader called a caliph, or “successor” • Caliphate – a succession of caliphs similar to a dynasty • first four caliphs were relatives or close friends of Muhammad, known as the Rashidun Caliphate • Caliphs commanded military and spread Islam through war • Arab Empire included all of SW Asia and NE Africa The Umayyad Caliphate • Second Caliphate, ruled from Damascus, in Syria • Ruled from 661-750 • Expanded Empire deeper into Asia and across North Africa • Before Muhammad, Arab warriors were divided by tribes • Now united under Islam, they fought large armies and believed it was a religious duty to spread Islam • Muslim attacks were swift and fierce “People of the Book” • In the early days of the Empire, Arabs allowed Christians and Jews to practice their own religion • Jews and Christians were viewed as “People of the Book” – believe in one God and follow sacred writings • As time passed, many conquered people accepted Islam and learned the Arabic language • Today, the term “Arab” refers to an Arabic speaker, not strictly someone from Arabia Islamic Spain • Muslim warriors invaded Spain from Northern Africa • Cordoba became a major center of Islam • One Muslim leader, Ibn Rushd practiced law and medicine and wrote philosophy • Christians and Jews in Spain were mostly tolerated in Muslim Spain • Not all Muslims were tolerant; Moses Maimonides fled Spain, running from a hostile Muslim group Teaching & Trading • Islam spread through peaceful means as well • A group called Sufis converted many to Islam through teaching • Merchants in Southeast Asia taught and converted • Indonesia today has the largest population of Muslims of any nation • Some Muslims crossed Sahara and taught in West Africa Division and Growth • Many Muslims could not agree about who was the right successor to Muhammad • Two groups, Sunnis & Shiites disagree about who should succeed Muhammad • Sunnis believe Abu Bakr, Muhammad’s closest friend, should succeed Muhammad • Shiite Muslims believe Muhammad’s cousins Ali should succeed Muhammad • Most Muslims today are Sunnis • Shiites opposed Umayyad Caliphate, Sunnis supported it A New Dynasty • During the 700s, Shiites began to oppose Umayyad Caliphate • About 750, Shiites overthrew Umayyads and the Abbasid Caliphate rose to power • Abbasid Caliphate ruled for nearly 500 years • Abbasids made Baghdad the capital • Under Abbasids, Baghdad became the Arab world’s most powerful city The Empire Breaks • Abbasids grew a rich culture, but could not keep empire together • In 1055, Turks took Baghdad, ruler called himself “Sultan” – holder of power • In 1258, Mongols from central Asia invaded, burned Baghdad, ended Arab Empire The Ottoman Empire • In late 1200s, Ottoman Turks conquered much of Byzantine empire • 1453, Mehmed II (“the Conqueror”) took Constantinople, renamed it Istanbul • Suleiman I (“the Lawgiver”) was greatest Ottoman Sultan • Organized Ottoman law • Built schools and mosques throughout empire • Ottoman Empire finally ended in early 1900s