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ISLAM » Presented by Carlos Abanto » InterAmerican Campus Sources • • • • • • • • • • • http://pizdaus.com/?sort=tag&tag=mohammed http://tjic.com/archive/islam_expansion_map.jpg http://www.schoyencollection.com/arabic.htm http://www.islamicity.com/Culture/Mosques/Asia/damascus http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/ZcDLt7ODHyzwKaeFfp8rKA http://dekita.org/smielt/forum/gameplay/magical-chairs/welcomegameplay-magical-chairs http://www.schillerinstitute.org/fid_97-01/013_andalusia http://www.spanishvillarental.ca/villacasalomaphotos.htm http://www2.ups.edu/physics/faculty/Spivey/Spain.htm http://travel.webshots.com/photo/1539987742051506574lwpTRd Lawrence Cunningham, John Reich. Culture and Values: A Survey of the Humanities. MUHAMMAD – – – – – – – – Founder of Islam Was born in Mecca. (570) Received revelations from angel Gabriel. He encountered opposition from the citizens of Mecca because of his insistence on the worship of one God. He flee the city in 622, year that Muslims mark as the beginning of their calendar: the HEGIRA. Years later he returned to Mecca where his religion was already in place and made a pagan shrine called the Qa’aba the focal point of his new religion. Pure Monotheism was the main belief, rejecting Christian’s Trinity of persons in God. He died in 632. The Sanctuary at Mecca Pillars of Islam • There is only one God and Muhammad is God’s messenger. • To pray five times a day pointing to the Qa’aba. • To donate a portion of the surplus of one’s wealth to charity. • Abstinence of all food and drink from sunrise to sunset during the holy month of Ramadan. • To make a pilgrimage to Mecca (called the Haj) at least once in a lifetime. Islam Expansion The Qur’an • It was written based on the revelations received by Muhammad. • Probably as long as the Christian New Testament. • It is divided into 114 chapters, called sûras. • It is organized with the first chapter containing a short prayer invoking the name of God followed the longest chapters starting at chapter two and the smallest(which has two lines only) at the end. • The language of this sacred text is Arabic, and cannot be translated into other languages because Muslims believe it came from divine dictation. • Shari’a is the Islamic law referred by those Muslim countries. This complex legal code was developed for jurists from the living stream of the sacred text and tradition. QUR’AN 10 lines in Naskhi script, in black, 1 line in gold thuluth script outlined in black, 2 lines in muhaqqaq script in black outlined with gold, 1 line in white Kufic script set within a gold panel with squares of gold interlace, gold rosettes between each verse, gold pearshaped device with floral motif. ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE • Mosque: a large covered space for faithful to pray, the community gathers there. The michrab indicates the direction of Mecca. • The Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem is an octagonal building capped by a golden dome, which sits on a heavy drum supported by four immense piers and twelve columns. The interior is decorated with mosaics. • The Great Mosque of Damascus which was built over a former Christian church. Interior decorated by Byzantine craftsmen with mosaics and depiction of palaces and flowing waters. Also the absence of human figures reflects early Islamic rejection of depicting the human figure. The Dome of the Rock Great Mosque of Damascus Interior of Mosque at Damascus ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE • The Great Mosque in Cordoba (Spain), finished in the tenth century after Muslims conquered Spain in the eight century. The interior is a vast angle of columns supporting Roman arches. Nearly 30,000 mosaic tessarae and workmen from Constantinople were used to decorate this place. Mosque of Córdoba • Interior of the Great Mosque of Córdoba, built A.C.E. 786-787 by ‘Adb alRahman I, and enlarged three times by his successors. ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE • The Alhambra is another beautiful palace complex located in Granada, Spain. The exterior has towers and walls. Actually consists of two palaces: Palace of the Myrtles,used for public occasions, and the Palace of the Lions,for private use. Water runs through small interior streams making evident in all parts of the palace its presence, as a result one gains a sense of connection to the outside thanks to the sound of water. Court of Myrtles Court of Lions ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE • The Taj Mahal located in Agra, India is one of the most fabled buildings in the world. Built in the seventeenth century in honor of Emperor Shah Jahan’s wife. The building is made from highly polished white marble. The central building is crowned with a great dome set on an octagonal building, which is framed by four slender minarets. Exterior decorations do little attempt to add any color beyond the whiteness from marble. Taj Mahal Islam culture and the West • Despite antagonisms between these two worlds there is a common exchange of goods and ideas. • Thanks to the House of Wisdom in Baghdad, Aristotle texts were preserved by translation into Arabic. When west scholars read Latin versions of Plato for example, these were translated from Arabic manuscripts. • Algebra derives from one of Al-Khwarizmi books’ title, who was a scholar at the House of Wisdom. Thanks to him we got the current notational system (replacing 125 for CXXV). West called Arabic’s “cifra”-cypher-, zero. • Al-Hazen did a great work in optics and the technology of making lenses. • West learned how to make windmills from Muslims. Many words come from Arabic sources including agricultural and geographical words like orange, sugar, alcohol, zenith.