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8 Islam to the MamluksBrian Parkinson 8.1 CHRONOLOGY

632 – 661 CE Rashidun Caliphs 661 – 750 CE Umayyad Caliphate 750 – 1258 CE Abbasid Caliphate 909 – 1171 CE Fatimid Caliphate 1096 – 1487 CE Crusades 1171 – 1250 CE Ayubid Sultanate 1250 – 1517 CE Mamluk Sultanate

8.2 INTRODUCTION An inveterate adventurer and renowned intellectual, Ibn Khaldun was born into a family

of ascendant Andalusian Arabs who had immigrated to North Africa. There, present day Tunisia, he received a traditional Islamic education until his parents died from the plague. At the time of their deaths, he was just seventeen years old. On his own, the young and resourceful Ibn Khaldun exploited personal relationships to secure an administrative position at court and thus began a career as an itinerant statesman. Time and time again, Ibn Khaldun landed in prison for his role in conspiracies against various ruling dynasties, only to be released by their heirs. Envoys and grandees recognized his remarkable intelligence and the value of his council. His reputation preceded him, and many dignitaries openly entreated him to join their court. Serving various dynasties, Ibn Khaldun held many important offices, like diplomat, court advisor, and prime minister. But he eventually grew weary of the hazards of palace intrigue and sought instead a more reclusive lifestyle.

Ibn Khaldun retired to the safety of a Berber tribe in Algeria, where he composed al-Muqad- dimah, or Prolegomenon, an outstanding work of sociology and historiography. Published in 1377, he theorized in al-Muaqddimah that tribal ‘asabiyah, roughly translated as “social soli-

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darity,” is often accompanied by a novel religious ideology that helps a previously marginalized group of people, usually from the desert, rise up and conquer the city folk. Once ensconced in power, these desert peoples evolved into a grand civilization, but ‘asabiyah contained within it destructive elements that could precipitate their collapse. Known for this Cyclical Theory of History, Ibn Khaldun posited that, seduced by the wiles of urban culture, the dominant group would over time become soft and enter into a period of decay, until a new group of desert peoples conquered them, when the process would begin anew. This theory applies to the development of Islamic history discussed throughout this chapter.

8.3 QUESTIONS TO GUIDE YOUR READING

1. How does geography play a role in Islamic history?

2. Why were the concepts defined by muruwah so important to the early development of Islam?

3. What are the Five Pillars of Islam, and why are they important to the religion?

4. What were the five roles that the Prophet Muhammad played in Medina?

5. What factors led to the rapid expansion of Islam?

6. How did the Umayyads come to power following the Rashidun caliphs?

7. How do you account for the rise of the splits in the Islamic community, like the rise of the Kharijis and Shi‘a?

8. Describe the transition from the Umayyads to the ‘Abbasids. Compare and contrast the two caliphates.

9. The Fatimids marked the end to the High Caliphate. How did Egypt gain its autonomy from the ‘Abbasids? How did the Fatimids take over Egypt?

10. How did the Crusaders gain a foothold in the Middle East? What did it take for Salah al-Din to push them out?

11. What led to the establishment of the Mamluk Sultanate? How did the Mamluk Sultanate go into decline?

12. Does North African history move in cycles of birth, renewal, expansion and decadence? Ibn Khaldoun says that nomads come from the frontiers, desert, and periphery, settle down, and within 120 years, become decadent and collapse. Do you agree?

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8.4 KEY TERMS • ‘Abd Allah al-Mahdi • Abdul Malik • Abu al-‘Abbas al-Saffah, Caliph • Abu Bakr, Caliph • Ahmad Ibn Tulun • ‘A’isha • Al-Azhar • Al-Hakim • ‘Ali, Caliph • al-Ma’mun • Al-Mansur, Caliph • Al-Mu‘izz • Al-Muqaddimah • Alexios Komnenos, Emperor • Alids • Amsar • Ansar • Asabiyyah • Aybak • Battle of Ajnadayn • Battle of Badr • Battle of Karbala • Battle of Manzikert • Battle of Marj Rahit • Battle of Qadisiya • Battle of Siffin • Battle of the Camel • Battle of the Trench • Battle of Uhud • Battle of Yarmuk • Baybars

• Bayt al-Hikmah • Cyclical Theory of History • Hadith • Hajj • Harun al-Rashid, Caliph • Hijra • Husayn • Ibn Khaldun • ibn Zubayr • Isma‘ilis • Jihad • Jizya • Ka’ba • Kharanj • Kharijis • Majlis • Mamluks • Marwan, Caliph • Mawali • Mu‘awiya, Caliph • Mu‘tazila • Muhajirun • Muhammad ad-Darazi • Muruwah • People of the Book • Quran • Qutuz • Ramadan • Salah al-Din • Salat • Sawm

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8.5 GEOGRAPHY OF THE MIDDLE EAST Academics have not reached a consensus

on the geographical boundaries of the Middle East. However, for the purposes of this chapter, this region will encompass the broadly defined areas known as Persia, Mesopotamia, the Levant, Asia Minor, and the Arabian Peninsula. The Middle East straddles three continents, including Asia, Africa, and Europe. The geography of the area promoted cultural diffusion by facilitating the spread of peoples, ideas, and goods along overland and maritime trade routes. In an area generally characterized by its aridity, climate has influenced settle- ment patterns. Larger settlements are found in river valleys and well-watered areas along the littoral. In these areas, we see the development and spread of productive agriculture.

8.6 RISE OF ISLAM Legend traces the Arabs back to Isma‘il, the son of Abraham and his Egyptian maid, Haga, a

link that would later help to legitimize Islam by connecting it to the Hebrew tradition. In reality, Arabs inhabited the pre-Islamic Arabian Peninsula and shared socio-linguistic commonalities with such other Semitic-speaking peoples in the area as the Hebrews, Assyrians, Arameans, and even the Amhara of Ethiopia. Most of the population of Arabia prior to the rise of Islam resided in the south of the peninsula, in modern day Yemen, where they practiced terraced agriculture and herded ruminants in a relatively small area.

Farther to the north of Yemen, along the highland spine of western Arabia and up against the littoral of the Red Sea, was the Hijaz, a prominent cultural and economic region. Situated in this remote fastness was the dusty city of Mecca, the holiest place in the peninsula and the location

• Shahada • Shajar al-Durr • Sharia law • Sunna • The Battle of Ayn Jalut • The Battle of Hattin • Treaty of Hudaybiyyah

• ‘Umar, Caliph • ‘Umar II, Caliph • Umma • Urban II, Pope • ‘Uthman, Caliph • Yazid • Zakat

Map 8.1 | Map of the Middle East Author: User “TownDown” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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of the Ka‘ba, or “cube,” which contained many of the traditional Arabian religious images, including many Christian icons. So important was the Ka‘ba to the religion of poly- theistic tribes of Arabia that they negotiated a truce lasting one month every year that allowed for safe pil- grimage to the shrine.

The Hijaz was the most arable part of the Arabian Peninsula north of Yemen and distinguished by irrigated agriculture that supported fruit trees and essential grains. Local traders exported a range of Hijazi agricultural products to Syria in the north in return for imperative imports like textiles and olive oil so the region benefited from robust trade. Regional commerce depended on the security of trade, and piracy on the Red Sea threatened to disrupt business. Under these conditions, merchants diverted their trade overland. Many goods journeyed up the Red Sea Rift from Yemen on their way to the eastern Mediterranean. Caravans of camels carried these goods,

as well as Hijazi exports, to the Levant. Most of the caravans stopped in Mecca, the halfway point up the spine of the peninsula, thus their commerce brought much needed wealth and tax revenue to the city.

The Arabs first domesticated the camel, probably sometime between 3000 and 1000 BCE. Caravan operators eventually availed them- selves of these useful dromedaries because they were so adept at crossing the region’s massive deserts. Capable of drinking 100 liters of water in mere minutes, they could endure days of travel without needing to replenish themselves again. Moreover, camels instinctively remembered the locations

Map 8.2 | Map of the Hijaz Region of Arabia Author: User “TUBS” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

Figure 8.1 | The Mountains of the Hijaz Author: User “Salem1990” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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of important, life-sustaining oases. So important were these beasts of burden that the tribes that controlled the camels controlled the trade. And the Quraysh Tribe of Mecca commanded many of the camels in the Hijaz region; therefore, they commanded much of the trade.

Life in the Arabian Peninsula centered around the tribe, which usually consisted of a group of relatives who claimed a shared ancestry. Tribal traditions found meaning in the poetic concept of muruwah, which represented the notion of the ideal tribal man. This uniquely Arabian brand of chivalry focused on bravery, patience, persistence in revenge, generosity, hospitality, and protection of the poor and weak. In the absence of formal government, tribes offered physical security to its individual members. Tribes mitigated violence and theft through the shared understanding that retribution for such acts would follow swiftly. Tribes also organized to compete over increasingly

Map 8.3 | The Tribes of Arabia | Notice the Quraysh tribe of Mecca. Author: User “Slackerlwastudent” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

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scarce resources, as they had a responsibility to provide for the economic needs of their individu- al members. Nevertheless, tribal traditions had been breaking down prior to the rise of Islam; no longer were the dominant members of society adhering to the principles set forth in muruwah.

Into this evolving cultural milieu Muhammad (c.570 – 632) was born in the city of Mecca. Muhammad’s father, ‘Abdallah, was a member of the Hashimite Clan, a less prosperous branch of the Quraysh Tribe. ‘Abdullah died just prior to his son’s birth, and Muhammad’s mother passed away when he was just six years old. Orphaned at such a young age, his tribe intervened to ensure Muhammad’s survival. His uncle, Abu Thalib, the leader of the Hashimite Clan and an important member of the Quraysh Tribe, eventually took custody of the young boy. These early privations influenced Muhammad’s later desire to take care of those who could not care for themselves.

In his youth, Muhammad found employment in the regional caravan trade as a dependable herder and driver of camels. During this period, he cultivated a reputation of an empathetic and honest man, one who earned the respect of many Meccans. His upright character soon attracted the attention of a wealthy merchant known as Khadija who hired Muhammad to manage her caravans. Once Muhammad proved his reliability, Khadija, who was fifteen years older than Muhammad, proposed to him, and they married. This marriage afforded Muhammad a financial security that allowed him to begin meditating on religion in the abstract.

Muhammad had been concerned about the direction society had recently been taking and that the concepts defined by muruwah were no longer being upheld. He believed that some of the most influential members of society, namely the merchant elite of the Quraysh Tribe, were no longer respecting their traditional responsibilities to the weaker members of society because of their own greed. He thought that the People of the Book, specifically, Christians and Jews, might have a better answer for the ills afflicting Meccan society. Muhammad had contact with the Christians and Jews of the peninsula and even traveled to Christian Syria while working in the caravan trade. In this context, the Angel Gabriel appeared to Muhammad at a cave nearby to Mecca in 610, during the holy month of Ramadan. The Angel Gabriel instructed him to “recite,” and then he spoke the divine word of God. His revelations became the Quran.

At first, Muhammad displayed the very human reactions of fear and distrust to the apparition of the Angel Gabriel. He also expressed embarrassment because he did not want to be associated with the pagan diviners of the region. Fortunately, his wife Khadija had a cousin who was a hanif, someone who was neither a Christian nor a Jew, but who believed in a vague concept of a mono- theistic god. Her cousin trusted the veracity of Muhammad’s revelations. So with trepidation, Muhammad eventually accepted his role as God’s vehicle. His wife became the first convert to Islam, with Abu Thalib’s son ‘Ali converting soon afterwards.

8.6.1 The Religion of Islam

As a religion of the Abrahamic faith, Islam holds much in common with Judaism and Christianity. Islam grew out of the Judeo-Christian tradition, a link which helped to legitimize the new religion. In fact, Muslims believe in the same God, or Allah in Arabic, as the Jewish and Christian God. Although Muslims trust that the People of the Book had received the word of

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God, they believe that it had become distorted over time, so God sent the Angel Gabriel to deliver His word to Muhammad, the Seal of the Prophets, or Khatam an-Nabiyyin, for Muslims believe that he represented God’s final word to man. Muhammad never claimed to be founding a new religion, rather he served as the last in a long line of God’s messen- gers, beginning with the Hebrew prophets, and including Jesus. His revelations, therefore, represent the pure, unadulterated version of God’s message. The Prophet’s followers memorized the revelations and ul- timately recorded them in a book called the Quran. Together with the Quran, the Hadith, traditions of Muhammad used to illustrate a concept, and the Sunna, the teachings of the Prophet not found in the Quran, helped guide and inform Muslims on proper behavior. And with that knowledge came great responsibility, as God held His people to a high standard of behavior, based on their obedience, or submission to His will. In fact, the word Islam

means submission in Arabic, and a Muslim is one who submits (to God).

Derived from a Hadith, the Five Pillars of Islam are essential, oblig- atory actions that serve as the foun- dation of the faith. The first pillar, known as the witness, or shahada, is a profession of faith, in which believers declare that “There is no God but God, and Muhammad is His messenger.” Prayer, also called salat, is the second pillar of Islam. Islam expects faithful Muslims to pray five times a day, kneeling towards Mecca, at dawn, noon, afternoon, sunset, and evening. One should perform ritual ablutions prior to their prayers in order to approach God as being symbolically clean and

Figure 8.2 | The Birmingham Quran Manuscript | Dated among the oldest in the World. Author: Anonymous Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

Figure 8.3 | Pilgrimage to Mecca | Notice the prominently featured Ka‘ba. Author: User “BotMultichillT” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 2.0

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pure. The third pillar is almsgiving, or zakat in Arabic. Islam requires Muslims to contribute a proportion of their wealth to the upkeep of the Islamic community. This proportion, or tithe, accorded with the size of one’s wealth; therefore, the rich should expect to contribute more than the poor. Fasting, or sawm, is the fourth pillar of Islam and takes place during Ramadan, the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar. For the duration of Ramadan, believers consume neither food nor drink from dawn to dusk. This practice is meant to remind them of what it is like to be poor and go hungry. The fifth and final pillar of Islam is pilgrimage, or hajj. Islam expects all able-bodied Muslims to make a journey to Mecca at least once in their lifetime. All five pillars combine to unite the Islamic community.

8.7 THE EXPANSION OF ISLAM The Prophet Muhammad started publically preaching his strict brand of monotheism in the

year 613, by reciting the Quran, quickly convincing some of the commoners of Mecca to believe in him. Most of his early converts belonged to groups of people who had failed to achieve any significant social mobility, which, of course, included many of the poor. His followers memorized his recitations and message that called for the powerful to take care of the weak, a message that resonated with many of these economically and socially marginalized. Islam served as a binding force, replacing tribal solidarity, or ‘asabiyah.

Muhammad’s message challenged the Umayyad Clan’s leadership of society. The most powerful branch of the Quraysh Tribe, the Umayyads had been enriching themselves from the lucrative caravan trade while, at the same time, ignoring the privations of the needy. Prodding his tribal brethren, Muhammad had also spoken out against the traditional pagan gods. Tribal tradition dictated that the polytheistic Arabs of the peninsula worship their tribal gods; they also believed in jinns, or nature spirits. As custodians of the Ka‘ba, which contained all of these tradi- tional Arabian religious images, the Umayyad Clan augmented their income by collecting revenue from the traditional pilgrimage to Mecca.

The political implications were clear. The Muslims threatened to disrupt a delicate equilibri- um. The Prophet’s message jeopardized the social and economic standing of the elite members of society, who accused the Muslims of serving as agents of unwelcome change. Tensions grew, and conflict spilled into the streets of Mecca, dragging the two respective camps into the fray. The more that Muhammad’s followers grew in number, the more opposition they encountered from the Umayyad Clan. To avoid this conflict, some Muslims fled to the Kingdom of Aksum, located in Ethiopia, at this stage in the early history of Islam, where they received protection from Muhammad’s enemies under the Christian King Armah. Indeed, the first Muslims went by the name of muhajirun, meaning “emigrants,” for they would soon be forced to leave Mecca under pain of severe Umayyad persecution.

During this period, Muhammad’s wife Khadija died in 619. With her death, Muhammad lost his source of emotional support and fell into depression, thus enduring a personal crisis. That same year, the Prophet’s uncle Abu Thalib passed away. Already bereaved, Muhammad further suffered the loss of his personal protector in the Quraysh Tribe. Now cut off from the tribal leadership and accused

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of stirring sectarian tension, Muhammad was on his own and vulnerable to Umayyad harassment in Mecca.

While Muhammad en- dured harsh reprisals from the Umayyads for his pub- lic preaching, a conflict was boiling in Yathrib, later called Medina, a trade city locat- ed a few days to the north of Mecca. Some individuals from Medina had traveled to Mecca in 620, where they heard the Prophet preach and soon ad- opted Islam. Impressed by his reputation as an honest man, the leaders of Medina invited Muhammad to their city in 622 to act as a mediator of tribal in-

fighting over a shared oasis. As opposition in Mecca had become too intense for Muhammad and his followers to remain there, they migrated to Medina in 622, a seminal event known as the hijra that marks the first year of the Islamic calendar. The Prophet rapidly converted many of the city’s inhabi- tants to Islam. These new Muslims came to be identified as the ansar, meaning “helpers.” Together with the muhajirun, the ansar helped the Prophet institutionalize the religion of Islam and develop an umma, or community of believers, that would dominate the social and political life of Medina.

Muhammad assumed five different roles in Medina. First and foremost, he was the Prophet of Islam; therefore, he was the religious leader of the community. Second, he acted as the political leader of the umma. Because his followers agreed with him politically, they agreed with him religiously as well. Third, Muhammad served as a judicial leader, using the Quran as the basis of law. Fourth, the Prophet functioned as a legislator, working with the majlis, or council of elders, to enact laws. He therefore governed his capital, Medina, with no separation of church and state. Finally, Muhammad was a military leader who ensured that statehood would prevail for the Muslims.

A major concern of Muhammad’s leadership was to determine how the Muslims could con- tribute to the Medinan economy. He received a revelation during this period that suggested the Muslims should raid the caravans coming north out of Mecca. (Qur’an 22:39) In 624, the Medinans engaged a caravan of Meccans along a popular trade route bypassing Medina. In the ensuing Battle of Badr, named after a nearby oasis, 300 Muslims defeated nearly 1000 Meccans and seized their caravan. They considered their signal victory a sign from God that he was on their side. Their success enhanced Muhammad’s prestige and that of the Islamic community among the Arab tribes in the peninsula.

Figure 8.4 | The Quba Mosque of Medina | The oldest mosque in Islam. Author: User “Abderlrhman 1990” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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Unwilling to cede control of the lucrative caravan trade to the upstart Muslims of Medina, the Umayyads confronted the Muslims in 625 in the Battle of Uhud, which referred to a local mountain. Foot soldiers in the vanguard of the Muslim forces led their defense. Meanwhile, a group of ambitious archers, ignoring the Prophet’s command to remain stationary, joined the battle. Their imprudent action let the Meccan cavalry strike the unprotected flank of Muhammad’s warriors. The Meccans failed to capitalize on their victory, however, and were unable to take Medina, a failure that leads some historians to consider the battle an ultimate success for the Muslims.

In 627, the Umayyads of Mecca and the Muslims of Medina met in a final confrontation in what became known as the Battle of the Trench, or khandaq in Arabic; this battle ended in another triumph for the Muslims. In preparation for a foreseeable Umayyad attack, a Persian engineer named Salman had suggested that the Medinans build defensive works around the city. So the Muslims survived the Meccan assault by entrenching themselves behind a near-impregnable barrier. In 628, the Umayyads finally realized that they were unable to vanquish the Muslims so sent a delega- tion of Meccans to sue for peace. The resulting Treaty of Hudaybiyyah symbolized their desire to extricate themselves from a losing situation, as Mecca ultimately compromised so their merchant elite would not lose any more trade to the Medinans. The treaty provided for an official tolerance of Islam and for the Muslims to return to Mecca the following year, free from persecution.

In 630, two years before his death, the Prophet Muhammad advanced on the city of Mecca with an army of some 10,000 Muslims. Encountering only limited re- sistance, the army of Muslims took control of the city, an act that symbolized the idea of Islamic expansion. Muhammad cleansed the Ka’ba of its purported 360 religious images and dedicated it to God. The prestige of the Muslims extended with their victory over the Meccans. As tribes learned of this triumph, they soon followed the lead of the winners, both politically and re-

Map 8.4 | Map of the Battle of Badr Author: User “Vedantm” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

Map 8.5 | Map of the Battle of Uhud Author: User “Warda99” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 1.0

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ligiously, sending delegations to forge alliances with the Prophet. By the time that Muhammad passed away, most of Arabia had converted to Islam. The religion provided the Muslims of the peninsula with a new ‘asabiyah, or social solidarity, endowing the movement with a unity of purpose.

In the absence of the Prophet, Muslim leaders had to develop a body of law to deal with important legal questions. Over time, Sharia law became a legal system in which Islamic principles provided an accepted means to regulate all features of daily life, including, but not limited to, economics, politics, family life, and society. Sharia law is based on the Quran, Hadith, precedent, and in- terpretation. In fact, the capacity for various interpretations of the law has led to the development of several schools of Islamic jurisprudence.

8.8 THE RASHIDUN CALIPHS Muhammad did not formally appoint a successor, or khalifa in Arabic, and no clear re-

placement arose to lead the Muslim community forward at the time of his death. In fact, the umma divided into three groups, with each willing to appoint their own successor to the Prophet. Emerging as a vocal leader at this critical juncture, ‘Umar, one of Muhammad’s closest compan- ions, convinced the majlis, or elders of the community, to elect Abu Bakr by consensus as a compromise candidate. Abu Bakr had been Muhammad’s closest friend; Muhammad’s marriage of political alliance to ‘A’isha, Abu Bakr’s daughter, further solidified their relationship.

The election of Abu Bakr (632 – 634) brought much-needed stability and an almost democratic form of government to Islam. As caliph, Abu Bakr held together the converts to Islam by deploying the forces at his disposal, thus cementing his authority among the Arabian tribes. He prevented any rebellious Muslim tribes from reverting to the worship of their traditional tribal gods, as they were wont to do. Abu Bakr died in 634, two years after the Prophet Muhammad had died.

The majlis chose ‘Umar (634 – 644), a close friend of Abu Bakr, to be the next caliph. ‘Umar had been the military power behind Abu Bakr. A dynamic and uncompromising leader, ‘Umar rec- ognized the necessity of expansion northward to achieve various ends. First, he sought to subdue the security threat of raiding nomads, many of which remained a law unto themselves. Second,

Map 8.6 | Map of the Battle of the Trench Author: User “Bless sins” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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in his struggle to contain discontent, he used the cohesive element of jihad to unite the Muslim community against unbelievers and expand God’s dominion. (The Arabic term of jihad actually refers to a “struggle,” usually against spiritual impurity, often known as “greater jihad,” and is as- sociated with fulfilling God’s objectives here on earth. The “lesser jihad,” alternatively, is a physical struggle against the unbelievers of the Dar al-Harb, or Abode of War, until it is absorbed into the Dar al-Islam, or Abode of Islam, where believers were free to practice their faith as members of the predominant faith. Of note is the fact that Muhammad did not consider jihad important enough to make one of the pillars of Islam.) Third, ‘Umar understood the importance of plunder for the nascent caliphate. Troops received four-fifths of the loot from conquest; the remainder of the revenue went to him to be dispersed amongst the neediest members in the Islamic community.

‘Umar directed the full might of Islam northward against the Eastern Roman Empire, sometimes referred to as the Byzantine Empire. In 634, their first en- counter took place in southern Palestine. The ensuing Battle of Ajnadayn was a decisive victory for the Muslims and a major loss for Emperor Heraclius. Two years later, an outnumbered Muslim army defeated the Eastern Roman Empire yet again at the Battle of Yarmouk, located on the eponymous river, some- where between Damascus and Jerusalem. In both instances, the Byzantines relied on their slow, heavy cavalry, whereas the Arabs capitalized on their light armor and their supe- rior mobility. The Muslims realized that they could not just charge the East Roman lines; they showed their tac- tical superiority by flanking the Byzantines and executing a successful rearguard ac- tion instead. These victories opened up greater Syria to Muslim conquest. Antioch, Aleppo, and Jerusalem fell to

Map 8.7 | Map of Muslim and Byzantine Troop Movements, 635-636 CE Author: User “Magnus Manske” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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the Muslims not long thereafter. ‘Umar appointed Mu‘awiya, a member of the Meccan Umayyad aristocracy to govern Syria at his behest.

Once he dealt with the increasingly vulnerable Byzantines in the Levant, ‘Umar directed his army to the east against the Sasanian Empire of Persia. In 636, fighting along the banks of the Euphrates River, a smaller Arab force triumphed over the Persians, at the Battle of Qadisiya. After succes- sive days of exhaustive combat, the Muslims took advantage of environmental conditions and their light cavalry’s mobility when they chased a dust storm and took the Sasanids by surprise.

To save their empire, the Persians mounted a failed counterattack. In 642, Umar’s army even- tually defeated the forces of the Sasanian Emperor Yazdagird III at the Battle of Nahavand, situated deep in Iran’s Zagros Mountains. Yazdagird fled to the east as a fugitive, and, in 651, met his death at the hands of a local miller who killed the emperor in order to rob him of his belongings.

In 639, General ‘Amr petitioned ‘Umar for permission to invade Egypt and eventually persuaded the caliph that he could easily take Egypt so gained his reluctant consent. In 641, he received a message from ‘Umar recalling his forces. The general ignored the order and seized Egypt with just a few hundred soldiers. With promises of toleration, ‘Amr convinced the Egyptian Coptic majority to

Map 8.8 | Map of the Muslim Conquest of Egypt, 639-641 CE Author: User “Magnus Manske” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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side with him against the Greek Orthodox ruling minority, whose Patriarch Cyrus had been actively persecuting the Copts as followers of a Christian heresy that failed to recognize the Holy Trinity.

Clearly outnumbered Muslim armies thus successfully defeated two long-standing empires in the span of just a few decades. Several explanations help us understand the rapid expansion of Islam during this period. One concept, termed the vacuum theory, posits that the Byzantine and Persian empires had been severely weakened from near-continuous fighting, dating back decades prior to the rise of Islam, so they both suffered from the fatigue of war. Islam, therefore, occupied the vacuum of political power resulting from the collapse of these two exhausted empires.

The success of Muslim military strategy offers a second explanation. While Byzantine forces adopted a defensive stance on the battlefield, the Arabs employed more aggressive tactics, making use of their mobile light cavalry against their enemies’ heavily armored armies. Once victorious, the Arabs populated garrison cities on the frontier, called amsar, with Muslims. These military settlements provided security, served as logistical loci, and discouraged Muslim troops from mingling with the locals. The caliphs thereby prevented their warriors being assimilated into the communities of the conquered while also preventing soldiers from disturbing the peace. Fustat in Egypt, as well as Kufa and Basra in Iraq, were the largest of the amsar. From bases like these, the Arabs could expand and consolidate their hold over the frontier.

Religion also provided an impetus for the expansion of Islam. Fearing that internal tribal divisions threatened the early Islamic state, ‘Umar united the Muslims through their common Islamic theology and faced them against a common enemy. Dedicated to the expansion of Islam, Muslims used the concept of jihad as a way to unify the umma, or Islamic community, against a foreign foe. Faith motivated the troops, who were zealous and determined to fight.

Simple economics also served as a primary motivating factor in the expansion of Islam. For one, Muslim rulers applied the jizya, an annual tax levied on non-Muslims, to newly-conquered lands. The money derived from conquest functioned as a driving force in the growth of the caliphate. With the expectation of material reward, soldiers could earn money for their service. While the practice of dividing the spoils of war amongst the soldiers continued under ‘Umar, he also started offering salaries to his troops, determining salaries according to the length of service.

The Muslims further exploited the internal divisions of targeted societies, as exempli- fied in Egypt, where the Coptic Christian majority, together with a large Jewish minority in Alexandria, had suffered under the rule of an oppressive Greek Orthodox Christian minority but gained autonomy and toleration within an Islamic state. And in Syria, another mono- physite Christian minority called the Syrian Orthodox Church, or Jacobites, collaborated with the Muslims and hastened the collapse of the Byzantines. All these factors led the early Islamic state to expand exponentially.

In 644, an Iranian captive from the Persian campaign stabbed ‘Umar to death. His successor, ‘Uthman (644 – 656), was an elderly man from the Umayyad Clan who won a contentious election over ‘Ali. ‘Ali possessed all of the ‘Alid bona fides. ‘Ali was not only son of Muhammad’s early protector, Abu Thalib; he was also the Prophet’s cousin and son-in-law. He had married Muhammad’s daughter Fatima; together, they had two sons, Hasan and Husayn. ‘Ali had also earned a well-deserved reputation as a virtuous Muslim. One of the first converts to Islam, he had

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Figure 8.5 | Family Tree of the Prophet Muhammad Author: User “Basilio” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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journeyed with Muhammad on most of his expeditions and fought against the Meccans. Finally, ‘Ali also served as a valued advisor to the early caliphs on questions of dogma.

Two factions formed in the wake of questions over ‘Uthman’s succession, thus initiating the development of a division within Islam. One faction was a group of ‘Alids who believed that ‘Ali should inherit the mantle of Islam and referred to traditions suggesting that Muhammad had pro- claimed to the faithful that ‘Ali should be his successor. The amsar followed the ‘Alids and later adopted the Shi‘a appellation. The other faction, the Umayyads contended that the method of appointing successors should be by consensus, as was done with the first caliphs. Mostly based in Mecca, they later identified as Sunnis. Over time, these factional differences became increasingly difficult to bridge.

Although ‘Uthman, one of the Prophet’s first converts, was a pious Muslim, he was a corrupt ad- ministrator. He displayed nepotistic tendencies that gave precedence to the Meccan elite, a practice that diverged from ‘Umar’s policies of favoring soldiers who had been the first to respond to the call to action. ‘Umar’s beneficiaries had usually originated from lesser tribes, those too weak to constitute a coherent threat to the establishment; by contrast, ‘Uthman’s appointees were members of the Meccan elite who generally pursued policies benefiting the Umayyad merchants of Mecca.

Government also began to disintegrate under ‘Uthman’s rule, as opposition and instability plagued his tenure as caliph. He managed to offend three separate groups of Muslims. The first of these were the older, pious Muslims, who hailed from Medina. They resented how the hated Umayyads had taken over the same umma that they had previously persecuted and had once tried to destroy. Second were the Quran reciters. When ‘Uthman commissioned and authorized a single official version of the holy text, an act for which he received many accolades, the Quran reciters lost the opportunity for gainful employment. Third were a disgruntled contingent of ‘Alids who called for ‘Uthman to resign and advocated the election of ‘Ali. Their discontent culminated in 656, when resentful devotees of ‘Ali from Egypt broke into ‘Uthman’s home in Medina and assassinated him, purportedly while he was reading the Quran. They then hastily arranged for the election of ‘Ali as ‘Uthman’s successor.

Thrice rejected by the majlis in favor of the first three caliphs, ‘Ali (656 – 661) reluctantly accepted the position of leader of the Islamic community. His selection represented a victory for the faction of legitimists disappointed in the earlier choice of ‘Uthman. ‘Ali assumed the role of caliph amid high expectations, for he was a pious and generous man. Yet the caliphate suffered under his rule. During this time of instability, he constantly had to suppress revolts. For example, tensions between the supporters of ‘Ali and the family of ‘Uthman eventually erupted into the first civil war in Islam. In 656, at the Battle of the Camel, ‘Ali engaged the combined forces of the Prophet’s favored wife, ‘A’isha, and her associates, Talha and Zubayr, who were both relatives of ‘Uthman. Because ‘Ali had failed to bring the dead caliph’s assassins to justice; these three together demanded satisfaction for his death.

The conspirators challenged ‘Ali near the garrison city of Basra, in southern Iraq, before he had the chance to move the caliphate from Medina to the sympathetic military settlement of Kufa. A first, diplomacy seemed to prevail, as ‘Ali sought to avoid bloodshed by negotiating. He succeeded in convincing the three to lay down their arms; however, a group later known as

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Kharijis conspired to undermine their reconciliation and set fire to the tents in both camps in the dead of the night. Pandemonium ensued. Because of this single impetuous action, both parties thought the other side had flouted the agreement, committing a violation of trust. During the ensuing battle, ‘A’isha was pushed into the middle of the fray on the back of a camel, as was Arab custom. The supporters who rallied to her side were cut down, and ‘Ali emerged victorious from a very bloody battle. The repercussions of his victory reverberated across the Islamic world, as older Muslim men castigated ‘A’isha for her part in the conflict and suggested that women should not play a role in public life.

This threat was not the only one ‘Ali faced, for he also had to contend with Mu‘awiya, ‘Uthman’s cousin and former governor of Syria. Conspicuously absent from ‘Ali’s new administration, Mu‘awiya refused to pay homage to ‘Ali and asserted his own independence in Syria. He also echoed the accusations of ‘A’isha, Talha, and Zubayr, as members

of Mu‘awiya’s Umayyad Clan had expressed dismay about the quick election of ‘Ali, and questions still lingered over the new caliph’s part in ‘Uthman’s death. ‘Ali’s failure to act against ‘Uthman’s assassins proved his culpability, Mu‘awiya and the Umayyads, and Mu‘awiya asserted the tradi- tional Arab custom of exacting revenge on one’s enemies.

His conflict with ‘Ali culminated in 657 when they met at the Battle of Siffin, on the Euphrates River in northern Syria. After months of clashes, ‘Ali agreed to arbitration with Mu‘awiya. Still preferring negotiation over bloodshed, ‘Ali had been of the opinion that Muslims should never take up arms against fellow Muslims. His willingness to negotiate with Mu‘awiya, however, caused some of Ali’s own soldiers to defect and adopt the appellation of Kharijis, from kharaja, meaning “to depart.” The first sect in Islam, they departed from Ali because they believed that “judgement belongs to God alone” (Quran 6:57); they saw ‘Ali’s willingness to negotiate with Mu‘awiya as somehow reducing the role of God in determining a successor. In lieu of arbitration, they thought that God would determine the rightful successor by influencing the outcome on the field of battle.

Figure 8.6 | ‘Ali and ‘A’isha at the Battle of the Camel Author: Unknown Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

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8.9 THE UMAYYAD CALIPHATE In 661, ‘Ali suffered the same fate as his predecessor when a Khariji stabbed him to death.

And, just like with ‘Uthman, the murder of ‘Ali took place during prayers. ‘Ali’s death represented a deep loss for his followers, who saw him as an advocate of an egalitarian version of Islam and a believer in a just and righteous government. His martyrdom came to be regarded as a sacrifice in the service of God and prompted his supporters to pattern themselves after their champion, who, they insisted, had developed spiritual gifts that remained virtually unattainable for others.

The ‘Alids encouraged ‘Ali’s oldest son, Hasan, to succeed his father; however, Mu‘awiya threatened the Prophet’s grandson with continued warfare and convinced him to renounce his claim to the caliphate. Mu‘awiya promised Hasan that he would not appoint an heir so that election of future caliphs would return to the majlis. Handsomely compensated by Mu‘awiya, Hassan subsequently retired to Mecca and took up religion. He remained there until his death in

Figure 8.7 | Battle of Siffin, from Balami’s Tarikhnama Author: Bal’ami Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

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669. With this major obstacle removed, Mu‘awiya became the fifth caliph, ending the period of the four rightly guided caliphs, also known as the Rashidun Caliphate.

Mu‘awiya (661 – 680) founded the Umayyad Caliphate; the tribal ‘asabiyah of his Umayyad Clan contributed to their ascendance. And once ensconced in power, the Umayyad Caliphate ended the election of caliphs by consensus and established instead a hereditary principle of suc- cession. Mu‘awiya established the caliphate to Damascus, where he previously served as ‘Uthman’s governor. In Syria, Mu‘awiya reformed the bureaucracy by eventually centralizing it. Unable to rely on the Arab tribal system or peninsula traditions to administer to an ever expanding empire, he depended on related Greek merchant families for administrators and adopted the existing admin- istrative machinery of Byzantines, including their imperial customs and bureaucratic practices.

Mu‘awiya had received much recognition for his unfaltering determination to seek retribution for ‘Uthman’s death; however, he had squandered much of that good will in harassing ‘Ali. As anti-Umayyad sentiment increased, the rift that existed between the Sunnis and Shi‘a continued to expand, for recalcitrant ‘Alids continued to harbor resentment against the Umayyads. They remembered when the ruling aristocracy of Mecca had opposed Muhammad and the Muslim community. In fact, Mu‘awiya himself had fought against Muhammad until the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah, only to reverse course, convert to Islam, and become the Prophet’s secretary.

Map 8.9 | Map of The Umayyad Caliphate at its Greatest Extent Author: User “Gabagool” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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Unlike the two caliphs who preceded him, Mu‘awiya died peacefully in bed. Prior to his death, he designated his son Yazid (680 – 683) as his successor, thus violating his agreement with Hasan. Most notable for his well-deserved reputation as a fierce fighter, Yazid was also known for generally dissolute behavior that offended the religious sensibilities of many pious Muslims. Once ensconced as caliph, Yazid failed to secure an oath of allegiance from Husayn, brother of Hasan, one of the most important of Muslim leaders. Their rivalry escalated into a full-scale civil war.

A direct descendent of the Prophet Muhammad and the younger son of the Caliph ‘Ali, Husayn rejected the deal that his brother had negotiated, instead pursuing his own claim to the rightful leadership of the Islamic community. His ‘Alid supporters loathed the Umayyads and believed that the caliph must be closely related to the Prophet. Husayn’s refusal to recognize Yazid as the next caliph and their subsequent conflict culminated in 680 at the Battle of Karbala, located to the west of present day Baghdad. Yazid dis- patched a military detachment to Iraq and over- whelmed Husayn’s small band of armed followers so that many of Husayn’s own men deserted him

in his hour of need. The Shi‘a perceived this seminal event as a turning point in their history. Much like the loss of ‘Ali, the death of Husayn shocked the incipient Shi‘a community, many of

whom suffered from intense guilt for failing to assist his little band. Increasing numbers of Shi‘a became profoundly affected by his martyrdom, interpreting it as a sacrifice in the best interests of their community; over time, a passion narrative developed that commemorated his last hours. Through this commemoration of the Battle of Karbala on Ashura, the tenth day of the month of Muharram, they remember the terrible suffering and his untimely death and strive to experience an existential intimacy with their martyr.

Yazid had inherited an empire punctuated by civil war and rebellion. Another principle figure among those in revolt was ibn Zubayr, grandson of Caliph Abu Bakr. Following the death of Mu‘awiya, Ibn Zubayr had sworn allegiance to Husayn. He remained in Mecca, where he stood in op- position to the Umayyads. The general unpopularity of the Umayyads advanced his cause, and many Muslims considered him the rightful caliph. Indeed, much of his support came from Muslims who rejected the idea of hereditary succession and sought a return to the election of caliphs by consensus.

Figure 8.8 | Hasan fought at the Battle of Siffin, from Bal’ami’s Tarikhnama Author: Bal’ami Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

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Yazid invaded the Hijaz in order to put an end to ibn Zubayr’s rebellion, but the caliph’s abrupt death in 683 halted the campaign. Marwan (684 – 685) followed his cousin Yazid but was not universally recognized as caliph, for many considered ibn Zubayr the legitimate successor. To garner support, Marwan exploited latent tribal animosities that existed between his Kalb Tribe, also known as the Yemen, and the Qays Tribe, who supported ibn Zubayr. At the Battle of Marj Rahit in 684, Marwan’s Kalb forces defeated the Qays, allowing him to consolidate Umayyad control over Syria and Egypt, thus shrinking ibn Zubayr’s rule down to Iraq and the Hijaz. Not until 691 did Abdul Malik (685 – 705), heir to Marwan, recover Iraq from ibn Zubayr. In the process, he also had to pacify Khariji and Shi‘a areas. Abdul Malik then dispatched

Figure 8.9 | Artistic commemoration of the martyrdom of Imam Husayn at the Battle of Karbala | The focus of the painting is on Husayn’s half-brother ‘Abbas on a white horse. Author: Abbas Al-Musavo Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

Figure 8.10 | The Mourning of Muharram in Iran Author: Payam Moein Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 4.0

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General Hajjaj to the Hijaz. A brutal military leader, Hajjaj laid siege to the holy city of Mecca in 692 in order to secure the submis- sion of ibn Zubayr’s men. He then beheaded ibn Zubayr and crucified his body. Abdul Malik rewarded the brutal general for his loyal service with the governorship of Iraq, where his ruthless reputation persisted.

Once he had assumed the throne, Abdul Malik promoted the Arabization of the caliphate. He rejected the use of Greek, Persian, Coptic, or Aramaic in govern- ment, decreeing that all bureaucracy had to be only in Arabic. Non-Arab adminis- trators had to learn Arabic in order to keep their government jobs. Their integration did not lead to the complete Arabization of Umayyad society that Abdul Malik envi- sioned, however, and the spread of Arabic was not as great as the spread of Islam.

Many Muslims continued to speak Berber, Turkish, Kurdish, and Persian. Although a separate process, Arabization only accompanied Islamization.

Abdul Malik also sought to Islamize the caliphate. First, he discontinued the earlier Byzantine coinage and created the first Islamic currency. Then he institut- ed a tax code based on the principles of Islam. Caliphs levied an additional tax on non-Muslims, known as the jizya, as was customary in Islam. Christians and Jews in conquered lands also paid a property tax called kharaj. By converting to Islam, one could avoid paying the jizya and kharaj altogether. Most important for ordinary citizens was the fact that Muslims bore lower tax rates than non-Muslims. As one could imagine, the thrust for conversion became primarily economic. Although the process of Islamization was relatively peaceful and gradual, Islam did become the dominant religion of the region. And the parallel processes of Arabization and Islamization helped to reestablish centralized rule after the second civil war.

Figure 8.11 | Abdul Malik on One of the New Coins Author: World Imaging Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

Figure 8.12 | Early Ottoman Jizya Document Author: World Imaging Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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Not all of Abdul Malik’s reforms adhered to the egalitarian principles set forth in Islam. Arab tribal elites did not want to recognize the mawali, non-Arab Muslims, as social equals, so did not afford them the same rights as Arab Muslims. However, the emerging power and influence of the mawali was apparent. They had become the intellectual elite of society and were the bu- reaucrats and commercial leaders of the umma. Nevertheless, they faced social discrimination. For example, Umayyad caliphs taxed the mawali as if they were non-Muslims. This inequitable practice became a social problem for the Umayyads, for it stood in stark relief against the values of justice and equality that had originally compelled them to convert.

An extremely devout and pious man, the Caliph ‘Umar II (r. 717 – 720) upended the Umayyad moral order. He considered it immoral to show prejudice against the mawali and to favor the Arabs, so he attempted to resolve the lingering hostilities of the mawali by advocating the equality of all Muslims. ‘Umar II declared an end to the practice of taxing the mawali like the Christians and Jews. His advisors warned him against this change because it precipitated numerous conver- sions of non-Muslims, so he decreased military expenditures to compensate for an expected drop in revenue. His reforms might have ended the official discrimination against the mawali, but they alienated the Umayyad privileged class, who paid a servant to poison ‘Umar II to death in 720.

8.10 THE ‘ABBASID CALIPHATE For many Muslims, ‘Umar II’s reforms had come too late. The Umayyads had already managed

to alienate three important groups of Muslims, Kharijis, the mawali, and the Shi‘a, whose combined power and influence were coopted by the ‘Abbasids and threatened the internal security of the caliphate. Kharijis eschewed disputes over lineage and advocated a more egalitarian brand of Islam than the Sunni Umayyads. They believed that any Muslim could be the rightful heir to the mantle of the Prophet, so long as that person rigorously adhered to the examples set forth in the Sunna. Kharijis thought that caliphs who diverged from the Prophet’s example should be overthrown, as evidenced by their assassination of the Caliph ‘Ali. Second, Umayyad authorities had enacted punitive measures against the mawali, mostly Persians, but also Kurds and Turks. They treated them like second-class citizens, no different than the People of the Book. Finally, it angered most of the Shi‘a that

Map 8.10 | The ‘Abbasid Caliphate at its Greatest Extent, c. 850 CE Author: User “Gabagool” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY 3.0

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the Umayyads could not trace their ancestry to the Prophet Muhammad. They also blamed the Umayyads for the death of their martyr Husayn. The ‘Abbasids collaborated with these disaffected groups to incite unrest and rebellion. They particularly cultivated Shi‘a anti-Umayyad sentiment, emphasizing their own connection to the Prophet; indeed, the ‘Abbasids traced their ancestry to Muhammad’s uncle ‘Abbas and the Hashimite Clan. They also vaguely promised to adopt Shi‘a Islam once in power. Together, these three groups formed a constituency that campaigned on behalf of the ‘Abbasids.

A secretive family, ‘Abbasids bided their time until the opportune moment to rebel against the Umayyad Caliphate. In 743, the ‘Abbasids began their revolution in remote Khorasan, a region in eastern Persia, just as the Umayyads were contending with not only revolts but also the inoppor- tune death of the Caliph Hisham. In that moment of Umayyad disorder, the ‘Abbasids dispatched Abu Muslim, a Persian general, to Khorasan to start the revolution. Abu Muslim’s early victories against the Umayyads allowed Abu al-‘Abbas, leader of the ‘Abbasid dynasty, to enter the sym- pathetic city of Kufa in 748. Together, Abu Muslim and Abu al-‘Abbas, who adopted the honorific of as-Saffah, or “the generous,” confronted the Umayyad Caliph Marwan II in 750, at the Battle of the Zab, in modern day Iraq. Sensing defeat, Marwan II fled, but his pursuers eventually caught and killed him in Egypt. As-Saffah captured the Umayyad capital of Damascus shortly thereafter. The ‘Abbasids attempted to eliminate the entire house of the Umayyads so that not one remained

Figure 8.13 | Abu al-‘Abbas al-Saffah is proclaimed the first ‘Abbasid Caliph, from Balami’s Tarikhnama Author: Bal’ami Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

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to come forth and rise up against them, but one, ‘Abd al-Rahman, escaped eminent death and fled to Egypt. The only member of the family to abscond from certain demise, ‘Abd al-Rahman fled across North Africa to Spain, where he recreated a Spanish Muslim dynasty in a parallel fashion to the Umayyad dynasty in Syria. Under the Umayyads, Spain became the wealthiest and most developed part of Europe (see Chapter Seven). In fact, it was through Islamic Spain that ancient Greek learning entered Europe.

The change from the Umayyad’s Arab tribal aristocracy to a more egalitarian government, one based on the doctrines of Islam, under the ‘Abbasids, corresponds to Ibn Khaldun’s Cyclical Theory of History. The ‘Abbasids officially advocated Sunni orthodoxy and severed their relationship of convenience with the Shi‘a. They even went so far as to assassinate many Shi‘a leaders, whom they regarded as potential threats to their rule. To escape ‘Abbasid persecution and find safety and security, many Shi‘a scattered to the edges of the empire. While the Shi‘a might have been disappointed with the ‘Abbasids for refusing to advocate Shi‘a Islam, most Muslims welcomed the ‘Abbasid’s arrival. They had justified their revolt against the corrupt Umayyads because the latter had digressed from the core principles of Islam. As standard bearers of the Prophet’s own family, the ‘Abbasids were publicly pious, even digging wells and providing protection along hajj routes.

Caliph al-Mansur (754 – 775) abandoned the Umayyad capital of Damascus and moved the caliphate close to the old Persian capital of Ctesiphon. Construction of the new city of Baghdad began in 762. Situated at the confluence of the Tigris and Diyala rivers, it boasted a prime location that provided access to the sea with enough distance from the coast to offer safety from pirates. Modeled after circular Persian cities, Baghdad rapidly escaped its confines and expanded into its environs. Quickly eclipsing Chang’an, it became the largest city in the world, with over half a million inhabitants. In effect, Baghdad became a public works project, employing 100,000 citizens and stimulating the economy. Al-Mansur’s newly-founded city proudly displayed lavish ‘Abbasid family residences and grandiose public buildings. It even had working sewers, which dumped raw sewage into the nearby canals and rivers.

Prominently featured in One Thousand and One Nights, Harun al-Rashid (789 – 809) represented the climax of ‘Abbasid rulers; as such, he improved upon the work his predecessors had begun. For example, Harun furthered Baghdad’s development into a major economic center by encouraging trade along the Silk Road and through the waters of the Indian Ocean. He also made marginal agricultural land more productive, taking advantage of technological advances in irrigation to cultivate borrowed crops like rice, cotton, and sugar from India, as well as citrus fruits from China.

Harun al-Rashid’s reign coincided with the so-called Golden Age of Islam when Baghdad developed into a preeminent city of scholarship. He began construction of the Bayt al-Hikmah (House of Wisdom), the foremost intellectual center in the Islamic world. The complex boasted of several schools, astronomical observatories, and even a giant library, where scholars translated scientific and philosophical works from neighboring civilizations, including works from Persian, Hindi, Chinese, and Greek.

As a result of this move from Damascus to Baghdad, Persia increasingly influenced the Islamic world, with a synthesis of Arab and Persian culture beginning under the ‘Abbasids. For instance,

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the Persian Sibawayah (d. c. 793) responded to the need for non-Arab Muslims to understand the Quran by systematizing the first Arabic grammar, titled al-Kitab. The greatest poet of the period, Abu Nuwas (d. c. 813), was of mixed parentage, Arab and Iranian. The avant-garde themes of his poems often emphasized dissolute behavior. Although ibn Ishaq (d.768), a historian of sorts, was born in Medina, he relocated to Baghdad, where he too came under the influence of Persian culture. At the behest of Caliph al-Mansur, he composed the first authoritative biography of the Prophet Muhammad. Another important Persian scholar, al-Tabari (d. 923) wrote the History of Prophets and Kings, a great resource on early Islamic history.

Inheritors of Sasanian court traditions that emphasized ceremony, the ‘Abbasids slowly distanced themselves from their subjects. The harem embodied this spatial separation. A forbidden place, the caliph’s family made the harem their personal residence. Caliphs controlled the empire through family, solidifying political alliances by marrying many powerful women.

Map 8.11 | Map of Baghdad between 767 and 912 CE Author: William Muir Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY 3.0

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The harem bestowed power to women, and they played an important role in influencing ‘Abbasid politics, particularly in terms of questions over succes- sion. In the late ‘Abbasid period, various women selected and trained the successors. Young men who were to rule resided in the harem, and much scheming over which son the caliph preferred occurred there. The mother of the caliph, however, dominated internal politics of the space. Harun’s mother played a significant role in his reign, for example. The second most powerful woman in the household was the mother of

the heir apparent. She could be any woman, even a concubine, for young, beautiful women were highly sought after at a time when the harem became more important under the ‘Abbasids.

Riven apart by palace intrigue, the ‘Abbasid Caliphate eventually succumbed to internecine warfare. In fact, Harun al-Rashid himself divided the caliphate when he designated his eldest son, al-Amin, as his heir, for he had already bequeathed the province of Khorasan to his younger son, al-Ma’mun. Upon their father’s death in 809, al-Amin demanded his brother’s territory and obeisance. Of course, al-Ma’mun refused, and a catastrophic civil war ensued. In 812, al- Ma’mun’s army, under the command of his Persian general, Tahir, laid siege to Baghdad. Tahir caught al-Amin attempting to escape from the city and decapitated him. Al-Ma’mun succeeded his brother as caliph, but remained in Merv, his former capital. He ultimately relocated to Baghdad in 819, by which time, years of sporadic violence and lawlessness had severely damaged the city.

Al-Ma’mun (r.813 – 833) continued his father’s tradition of sponsoring scholarship. He completed the Bayt al-Hikmah that his father had begun. He also expressed a love for philo- sophical and theological debate and encouraged the Islamic doctrine known as the Mu‘tazila, a rationalist formulation of Islam that stressed free will over divine predestination. Influenced by Aristotelian thought, the Mu‘tazila attempted to solve the theological question of evil. It asserted that human reason alone could inform proper behavior. Condemned as a heresy for incorporat- ing extra Islamic patterns of thought into their belief system, many Muslims concluded that the Mu‘tazila’s rationalism exceeded the holy doctrines of Islam.

The ‘Abbasids began their long, slow decline under al-Ma’mun, who was the first caliph to confer greater freedom upon his emirs, or provincial governors, initiating a process of decen- tralization that eventually unleashed uncontrollable centrifugal forces. This process began when

Figure 8.14 | John the Grammarian as Ambassador Before Theophilos and Mamun | The Embassy of John the Grammarian in 829, between the Byzantine emperor Theophilos on the right and the Abbasid caliph al-Ma’mun on the left. Author: Unknown Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

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al-Ma’mun first awarded his general Tahir with the governorship of Khorasan, where Tahir raised his own revenue and directed his own affairs. The Tahirid dynasty dominated the politics of the region, resisting Abbasid attempts to restrain them. From Khorasan, Tahir’s family represented an existential threat to the caliphate.

Internal problems continued under al-Mu‘tasim (833 – 842), the successor to al-Ma’mun, who replaced undependable tribal armies with mamluks. The mamluks played an increasingly important role in the fate of the caliphate. They were part of an elite slave system that imported young boys from various backgrounds, though usually Turkic, and trained them in the military arts. Because the enslavement of Muslims was not permitted in Islam, caliphs obtained slaves by raiding outside of the Islamic world or by trading for them. Indoctrinated at a young age, mamluks remained loyal to their leaders, serving as their personal bodyguard. Once emancipated, however, they entered into a contractual relationship with their former masters and benefited from certain property and marriage rights. Although often portrayed as slaves in the popular imagination, mamluks actually formed a proud caste of soldiers who considered themselves superior to the rest of society. As the elite bodyguards to the caliph, they supplanted the tradi- tional ethnic hierarchy of the ‘Abbasids, a shift which led to much class conflict often resulting in unrest and civil distur- bances. In order to remove the mamluks from the volatile situation in Baghdad, the caliph moved the capital to Samarra, some 60 miles to the north, a measure that only delayed the inevitable, as subse- quent caliphs could not control the rising tensions that resulted in social instability and contributed to the decentralization and fragmentation of the empire.

The transition from tribal armies to mamluks had profound repercussions for the ‘Abbasids. Mamluks like Ahmad ibn Tulun (835 – 884), a slave from Circassia, most exemplified this pattern of decentralization and fragmentation that had disastrous consequences for the ‘Abbasid Caliphate. He had been sent by the ‘Abbasids to Egypt in order to restruc- ture and strengthen it on their behalf. An intellectual and religious person, ibn Tulun founded schools, hospitals, and mosques in Egypt, the most famous being

Figure 8.15 | Mamluk Lancers on Horseback Author: Nick Michael Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

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the eponymous ibn Tulun Mosque. However, he saw weakness back in Baghdad, as the ‘Abbasids suffered from instability, including palace intrigue, disorderly mamluks, and revolts like the Zanj Rebellion, a slave rebellion that threatened the fate of the caliphate. The ‘Abbasids could not control ibn Tulun, and, as the caliphate broke down, he managed to secure almost complete autonomy from Baghdad. By the end of his reign, he was so independent that he kept his own tax revenue and raised his own mamluk army, for he, too, depended militarily and politically on his loyal mamluks to stay in power.

Ibn Tulun’s autonomy in Egypt portended the decline of the ‘Abbasids, whose real authority came to an end in 945. The Buyids, an Iranian dynasty, overthrew the ‘Abbasids and relegated them to the status of mere religious figureheads; the caliphate continued in name only. Following the collapse of the Abbasids, the centralization and political unity of the lands formerly under their control broke down; however, economic, cultural, and religious unity remained.

8.11 THE FATIMID CALIPHATE While Egypt grew increasingly independent of Baghdad under the Tulunids, the rule of the

‘Abbasids over their broad empire generally declined. From this vacuum of power, the Fatimids (910 – 1171) emerged. Members of the Isma‘ili sect of Shi‘a Islam, the Fatimids traced their genealogy

Figure 8.16 | The Ibn Tulun Mosque, Cairo, Egypt Author: Berthol Werner Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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to the relationship between Fatima, the Prophet’s daughter, and ‘Ali. Isma‘ilis believe that the divinely ordained spiritual leadership of the Islamic community, or caliphate, descended from ‘Ali down to Isma‘il, the son of Jafar al-Sadiq. They refused to recognize the legiti- macy of the ‘Abbasids and sought to convert the masses of Sunnis to their own schismatic brand of Islam. To do so, Isma‘ili missionaries spread out to the far flung fringes of the empire and preached a religious rev- olution. These emissaries achieved their greatest success in the North African Maghreb.

‘Abd Allah al-Mahdi, founder of the Fatimids, proclaimed himself the mahdi, the precursor to the final judgement, representing an ideology that compelled people to change. Hounded by ‘Abbasid agents of persecution who sought to uphold Sunni orthodoxy, he fled from his family’s homeland in Syria and, disguised as an ordinary merchant, traveled westward through the Maghreb to Sijilmasa, where he went into hiding. In 909, local Isma‘ili missionaries rescued him from Sijilmasa. By 920, he had consolidated power and made his capital at Mahdiya, located in present day Tunisia. As the mahdi and a catalyst for change, he converted tribal troops and inspired them to fight on his behalf. ‘Abd Allah al-Mahdi endowed the Fatimids with a new ‘asabiyah, providing them with the unity of purpose necessary to defeat the ‘Abbasids in North Africa. Within forty years, ‘Abd Allah al-Mahdi had conquered the whole of Northwest Africa. He aimed his expansion at Egypt but failed to seize it. His grandson, al-Mu‘izz, however, succeeded in this aim.

Al-Mu‘izz (953 – 975) used a combination of mamluk and tribal armies to capture Egypt in 969. Rather than contend with older, possibly rebellious cities like Alexandria, al-Mu‘izz founded Cairo, the City of the Conqueror. He developed Cairo into the preeminent cultural and economic center of the Islamic world, taking over from a Baghdad in decline. Al-Mu‘izz estab- lished al-Azhar, the largest and most famous mosque in Egypt, which also served as a religious center that focused on the theological development of Shi‘a Islam. Once in power, the Fatimids changed the official state religion of Egypt from Sunni orthodoxy to Shi‘a heterodoxy, though the majority of the population in Egypt remained Sunni Muslims.

Al-Hakim (991 – 1021) ascended to the throne of his father, al-‘Aziz, at the age of eleven. As a young man, he quickly displayed a pattern of unpredictable behavior. Just four years after taking command of the empire, he had his regent, the eunuch Barjawan, murdered. Additionally, al-Hakim earned a place in infamy by targeting Christians and Jews, worsening the generally amiable relations with the People of the Book that the Fatimids had previously enjoyed. For

Map 8.12 | Map of the Fatimid Caliphate, 969 CE Author: User “Gabagool” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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instance, in 1004, al-Hakim prohibited Christians from celebrating Epiphany and Easter. He also forbad the use of wine, a prohibition which caused religious difficulties for Christians and Jews alike. In 1005, al-Hakim decreed the Law of Differentiation, requiring all of the People of the Book to prominently display religious icons indicating their particular religious adherence. In 1009, he became infuriated by some of the Orthodox Church’s religious practices and conse- quently razed the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in response. A few years later, he ordered the destruc- tion of thousands of churches and synagogues in Palestine. Al-Hakim even made Western pilgrim- age to the Holy Land difficult. During this period, pilgrimages to Palestine had been increasing, and many pilgrims returned home complaining of Muslim treatment of Christians in the Holy Land. His behavior towards Christians elicited a strong Western reaction, for Europeans used his conduct as a way to encourage support for the Crusades.

Around the year 1010, Muhammad ad- Darazi, an Isma‘ili preacher, began teaching that al-Hakim was a manifestation of God. Ad-Darazi believed that universal rationality was made incarnate in the person of Adam and then passed down through the prophets to the family of ‘Ali and his descendants, including the Fatimids. His doctrines eventually spread to the Levant, where these ideas found reception amongst the Druze, a cognate of Darazi, although they viewed Ad-Darazi as a heretic. A follower of Isma‘ilism, al-Hakim did not want to be associated with ad-Darazi and his teachings, so he had the preacher executed in 1018.

Al-Hakim continued his tendency to display erratic behavior when he walked out into the desert in 1021 and never returned. While his disappear- ance has remained a mystery for the ages, those who worshiped the caliph believe that he went into Occultation, later to return as the messianic mahdi.

Figure 8.17 | The Al-Azhar Author: User “Buyoof” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

Figure 8.18 | Al-Hakim Author: Al-Ahram Source: Wikimedia Commons License: Public Domain

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8.12 THE CRUSADES In 1071, the Great Seljuq Empire, under the leadership of Alp Arslan, defeated the

Byzantines at the Battle of Manzikert, near Lake Van, taking the Eastern Roman Emperor, Romanus I, prisoner in the process. This defeat was crushing for the Byzantines, allowing waves of Turkmen ghazis, or raiders, to press deep into the heartland of Anatolia, eventually establishing the Sultanate of Rum, with its capital at Nicaea. A series of weak emperors succeeded Romanus I with Alexios Komnenos (1081 – 1108) eventually ascending to the throne ten years later. As the new emperor, he made peace with the Seljuqs of Rum, and the two states eventually adopted cordial relations. They began to trade with each other and even lent one another military support when needed. Alexius needed this military support in order to secure his borders from groups of Turkic marauders. To that end, he appealed to Pope Urban II (1088 – 1099) for help recruit- ing mercenary soldiers, namely Frankish knights. An effective cavalry, the Frankish knights had earned an impressive reputation for how they acquitted themselves on the battlefield.

Meanwhile, European leaders had been searching for creative ways of expelling society’s trou- blemakers and were not averse to sending their soldiers abroad, for the region was suffering from overpopulation and endemic violence. They believed that it was better for the martial groups in their society to fight against the Muslims than amongst themselves. In this way, the Crusades externalized continental violence and promoted European peace.

In 1095, Urban II launched the first crusade from Clermont, a city in southern France. He had benefited from recent church reforms, renewed religious fervor, and a concomitant increase in papal power. While traveling through France, he made an argument for the recovery of the Holy Land: because it belonged to Jesus, it should be controlled by his followers. He also appealed to the greatness of the Franks, promising potential pilgrims a land flowing with milk, honey, and riches. And he offered them well-designed spiritual rewards. For example, salvation applied to those who died on campaign, and anyone who invested in a crusade secured themselves a place in heaven.

The Crusades started in 1096 and were part of a larger process whereby Muslims ceded territory to non-Muslims, sometimes permanently. Provoked by al-Hakim’s treatment of Christians in the Holy Land, as well as the Turkic invasion of Anatolia, Europeans commenced several centuries’ worth of armed crusades against the Muslim states of the eastern Mediterranean and North Africa. Save for the first crusade, in which the Christians established the Crusader states of Edessa, Antioch, Tripoli, and the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, all of their campaigns ended in disaster. In fact, they were either looting expeditions or responses to the loss of Crusader states to Muslims. The success that the Latin knights did enjoy related to not only the political fragmentation of the Seljuqs in the eastern Mediterranean, but also the general disinterest of the Fatimid Caliphate in Egypt, which had been dealing with both the repercussions of a religious schism and the con- sequences of famine and plague. Slow to respond to the challenge posed by the Christians, the Fatimids watched the Crusaders from afar with indifference.

The Muslim counterattack eventually came under the direction of Salah al-Din (Saladin) (d. 1193), a unifier of various Muslim factions in the eastern Mediterranean. An ethnic Kurd, he hailed

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from a family of soldiers of fortune in the employ of the Zengid Dynasty’s Nur al-Din, a vassal of the Seljuq Turks. Salah al-Din set off in his twenties to fight battles for his uncle, Shirkuh, a Zengid general. A dynamic leader and tactician, he helped his uncle dispatch with the Fatimid opposition in Egypt and solidified Nur al-Din’s rule there. His uncle dying soon thereafter, Salah al-Din eventually became the vizier, or senior minister, to Nur al-Din in 1169. For five years, Salah al-Din ruled Egypt on behalf of Nur al-Din. Then Nur al-Din died in Damascus in 1174, leaving no clear successor.

8.12.1 The Ayyubid Sultanate

In the absence of a formal heir to Nur al-Din, Salah al-Din established the Ayyubid Dynasty (1171 – 1260), named after his father, Ayyub, a provincial governor for the Zengid Dynasty, a family of Oghuz Turks who served as vassals of the Seljuq Empire. Once in power, Salah al-Din estab- lished a Sunni government and insisted that the mosque of al-Azhar preach his brand of Islam. He used the concept of jihad to unify the Middle East under the banner of Islam in order to defeat the

Map 8.13 | Map of The Ayyubid Sultanate, 1193 CE Author: User “Ro4444” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 4.0

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Christians, but he did not principally direct jihad towards them. A champion of Sunni Islam, he believed that his religion was being threatened mainly from within by the Shi‘a. Like most of their predecessors, the Ayyubids also benefited from tribal ‘asabiyah, or dynastic consensus. Ayyubid ‘asabiyah included a Kurdish heritage, as well as a strong desire to return to Sunni orthodoxy. It was as champions of Sunni Islam that they purposely recruited leading Muslim scholars from abroad, ultimately culminating in Egypt becoming the preeminent state in the Islamic world.

Initially, Salah al-Din displayed no particular interest in the Crusader states. He had clashed with the Crusaders, and King Baldwin IV of Jerusalem; also, Raynald de Chântillon even had handed him a rare defeat at the Battle of Montgisard in 1177. But the Crusaders ultimately brokered an armistice with Salah al-Din. Eventually, Raynald broke their truce when he started attacking Muslim pilgrims and trade caravans in the 1180s. Ensuing skirmishes between the forces of Salah al-Din and Guy de Lusignan, the new King of Jerusalem, presaged a forthcoming battle. In 1187, the two sides met near Tiberias, in modern day Israel. Salah al-Din intentionally attacked the fortress of Tiberius in order to lure the Crusaders away from their well-watered stronghold. His plan worked, and the Christians quickly ran out of water. On the night before the battle, Salah al-Din set brush fires to exacerbate their thirst. He coerced the parched Latin Knights down through the Horns of Hattin towards the cool waters of Lake Tiberius. Salah al-Din bottlenecked the Crusader forces, with the double hill of Hattin acting as a choke point.

Map 8.14 | Map of the Battle of Hattin Author: User “Benherz” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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The Battle of Hattin represented a smashing victory for Salah al-Din and a major loss for the Crusaders. Tradition dictated that Salah al-Din hold most of the leaders for ransom. Unlike the Crusaders, he treated the defenders of cities with understanding. He showed tolerance of minorities, and even established a committee to partition Jerusalem amongst all the interested religious groups. In this way, he proved his moral superiority to the Crusaders.

With most of their important leaders either killed in battle or captured, no unified Christian leadership remained to fight against Salah al-Din. Deprived of the backbone of their organization, the Crusaders were left with only a few defenseless fortresses along the coast. Salah al-Din pressed his advantage. Increasingly isolated and relying on ever dwindling numbers of Latin Christians willing to remain permanently in the Holy Land, the Latin Crusaders were eventually expelled from the region in 1291.

Although Salah al-Din had maintained direct control over Egypt, he intentionally distributed control over wide swaths of the empire to loyal vassals and family members, whose governance became increasingly autonomous from Cairo. Salah al-Din’s sons and grandsons, who did not have the same ability as their forefather, had trouble managing an increasingly decentralized empire. Widespread mamluk factionalism and family disputes over the control of territory contributed to the weakening of the sultanate. In this vacuum of power, the mamluks came to the fore.

8.13 THE MAMLUK SULTANATE The year was 1249, and Louis IX’s seventh crusade had just gotten underway when as-Salih,

the last Ayyubid ruler, took to his deathbed. Under the eminent threat of a Crusader invasion, as-Salih’s wife, Shajar al-Durr, a Turkish concubine, agreed to take over the reins of govern- ment until her son, Turanshah, could assert himself. But he had never truly gained the trust of his father, and a cabal of mamluks loyal to as-Salih murdered Turanshah. They then raised Shajar al-Durr to the throne. Her rule resulted in much controversy and suffered from many internal problems. According to tradition, she sought recognition as sultana from the figurehead ‘Abbasid Caliph, but he refused to pay homage to her. The mamluks responded by installing into power one of their own, a certain Aybak. He married Shajar al-Durr, and she abdicated the throne. The most powerful mamluk in Egypt, Aybak placated some of the opposition to Shajar al-Durr’s rule and also dealt with Louis IX’s crusade to Egypt. While mamluks did not possess a tribal ‘asabiyah in the traditional sense, they did constitute a proud caste of elite warriors who had an exaggerated sense of group solidarity. As a social group, their former status as slaves provided them with enough group cohesion to overthrow the Ayyubids.

Shajar al-Durr remained unsatisfied in her new role, however. In fact, she saw herself as another Cleopatra and wanted to rule in her own right. She also feared the consequences of Aybak’s potential marriage alliance with the daughter of the Ayyubid Emir of Mosul. In 1257, Shajar al-Durr had Aybak strangled and claimed that he had died a natural death. However, Qutuz, a leading mamluk, did not believe her story. Under duress, her servants confessed to the murder. Qutuz arrested Shajar al-Durr and imprisoned her in the Red Tower. Not long thereafter, Aybak’s fifteen year old son, al-Mansur ‘Ali, had Shajar al-Durr stripped and beaten to death. He

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reigned as sultan for two years until Qutuz deposed him, as he thought the sultanate needed a strong and capable ruler to deal with the looming Mongol threat.

The Mamluk Sultanate appeared to be on a collision course with Hulagu’s Ilkhanate, one of Mongol Empire’s four khanates, whose forces were advancing through the Mamluk-held Levant. Then in the summer of 1260, the Great Khan Möngke died and Hulagu returned home with the bulk of his forces to participate in the required khuriltai, or Mongol assembly, perhaps expecting

Map 8.15 | Map of the Mamluk Sultanate, 1317 CE Author: User “Ro4444” Source: Wikimedia Commons License: CC BY-SA 4.0

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to be elected the next Great Khan. Hulagu left his general Kitbuqa behind with a smaller army to fight the Mamluks. In July of that year, a confrontation took place at Ayn Jalut, near Lake Tiberias. During the ensuing battle, the Mamluk General Baybars drew out the Mongols with a feigned retreat. Hiding behind a hill, Aybak’s mamluk heavy cavalrymen ambushed the unsus- pecting Mongols and defeated them in close combat, securing a rare victory over the Mongols. The Mamluks captured and executed Kitbuqa, and forced the remnants of the Mongol forces to retreat.

Just days after their signal victory over the Mongols, Baybars (1260 – 1277) murdered Qutuz, continuing a pattern of rule in which only the strongest Mamluk rulers could survive. Too clever to be deposed, Baybars developed a strong military oligarchy that rested on the iqta‘ system, a cen- tralized system of land tenure based on money that, by the thirteenth century, had been perfected in Egypt. Under the iqta‘ system, individual mamluks received a percentage of profit from the sale of crops for their upkeep. Baybars owned all of the land, so mamluks only received the right to collect taxes from the land, a right akin to usufruct in feudal Europe.

Baybars relocated the ‘Abbasid Caliph from Baghdad to Cairo in order to present a veneer of legitimacy to mamluk rule. Since the Ptolemys, Egypt had been ruled by foreigners. In fact, the only impact native-born Egyptians had was in religion. The Mamluk Sultanate practiced Sunni Islam and emphasized Sufism. Sufis believed that traditional, orthodox Islam lacked compassion, and their Sufism helped conversion efforts because of its emphasis on love and making a closer connection to God, as opposed to a strict adherence to the dictates of the Quran. Sufis desired something more from religion and emphasized integrating the reality of God into man. Sufis thought that they could achieve a union with God based on love, a notion that contrasted sharply with the general perception of orthodox Islam which denied believers a direct experience to God because Muhammad represented the Seal of the Prophets and all understanding of God came through the prophet. They set up new religious schools to pass on this Sufism. These madrasa consisted of a complex, with a mosque, school, hospital, and water supply for each community.

The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries witnessed the decline of the Mamluk Empire. Several internal and external factors help explain their decline. Domestically, the Black Death ravaged Egypt for years. In fact, it continued in North Africa longer than it did in Europe. This plague caused economic disruption in the sultanate. With fewer people available, labor, or human capital, became much more expensive. Further, plague-related inflation destabilized the economy, as the value of goods and services also rose. The mamluks responded to inflationary pressures by increasing taxes, but their revenue from those taxes actually decreased. This decrease made it difficult for the mamluks to maintain their irrigation networks and, without irrigation, agricultural productivity decreased.

Externally, plague was not the only cause of inflation. Columbus’s discovery of the New World began a process in which gold began filtering through Europe and into North Africa. Egypt’s weak economy could not absorb this massive influx of money, thus causing more inflation. New trade routes, like the one pioneered by Vasco de Gama, offered Europeans direct sea routes to Asia. No longer was Egypt the middleman for long-distance trade between Europe and Asia, thereby losing out on valuable revenue from tariffs. The profits from commerce transferred to the ascending states of Portugal and Spain. The decline of the Mamluks set the stage for the rise of the Ottomans.

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8.14 CONCLUSION A contemporary historian who served the Mamluk Sultanate, Ibn Khaldun astutely recognized

the applicability of his Cyclical Theory of History to the evolution of Islamic history during the period covered in this chapter. By the eighth century, Islam became the predominant social and political unifier of the Middle East. And for the next nine hundred years, various caliphates used family and religion as tools to rule the region. However, these caliphates faced religiously-inspired revolts that challenged their authority. Quelling these revolts weakened the regimes, often leading to greater decentralization and the fragmentation of empires. Into these vacuums of power, new families armed with tribal ‘asabiyah and a novel religious ideology came forth to supplant a once dominant group who had succumbed to the wiles of civilization and whose influence gradually waned in the face of insurgent desert peoples.

8.15 WORKS CONSULTED AND FURTHER READING Berkey, Jonathan P., The Formation of Islam: Religion and Society in the Near East 600 – 800. Cambridge:

Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Donner, Fred, The Early Islamic Conquests. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981.

Esposito, John L., Islam: The Straight Path. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.

Halm, Heinz, The Empire of the Mahdi: The rise of the Fatimids. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1997.

Lassner, Jacob, The Shaping of Abbasid Rule. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1980.

Kennedy, Hugh, The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates: The Islamic Near East from the Sixth to the Eleventh Century. London: Longman, 2004.

Lewis, Bernard, The Arabs in History. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993.

Momen, Moojan, An Introduction to Shi‘I Islam. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1985.

Powell, James M., ed. Muslims Under Latin Rule, 1100 – 1300. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1990.

Watt, W. Mongomery, Muhammad: Prophet and Statesman. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1974.

8.16 LINKS TO PRIMARY SOURCES Ancient Accounts of Arabia 430 BCE – 550 CE

https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/arabia1.asp

Ibn Ishaq (d. c. 773 CE): Selections from the Life of Muhammad https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/muhammadi-sira.asp

The Prophet Muhammad: Last Sermon https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/muhm-sermon.asp

Muhammad Speaks of Allah http://www.mircea-eliade.com/from-primitives-to-zen/040.html

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Muhammad’s Call http://www.mircea-eliade.com/from-primitives-to-zen/231.html

Muhammad is the Messenger of God http://www.mircea-eliade.com/from-primitives-to-zen/232.html

Muhammad Proclaims the Prescriptions of Islam http://www.mircea-eliade.com/from-primitives-to-zen/122.html

The Sunnah, (traditions of the Prophet Muhammad), excerpts https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/sunnah-horne.asp

Abu Hamid al-Ghazali (1058 – 1111 CE): The Remembrance of Death and the Afterlife https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/alghazali.asp

The Battle of Badr, 624 CE http://web.archive.org/web/19980119194508/http://www.islaam.com/ilm/battleof.htm

Al-Baladhuri: The Battle of The Yarmuk (636 CE) and After https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/yarmuk.asp

Accounts of the Arab Conquest of Egypt, 642 CE https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/642Egypt-conq2.asp

Yakut: Baghdad under the Abbasids, c. 1000 CE https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1000baghdad.asp

Abul Hasan Ali Al-Masu’di (Masoudi) (c. 895? – 957 CE): The Book of Golden Meadows, c. 940 CE https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/masoudi.asp

The Seven Voyages of Sinbad the Sailor story from the Thousand and One Nights http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/lang1k1/tale15.htm

Ibn Rushd (Averroës) (1126 – 1198 CE): Religion & Philosophy, c. 1190 CE. https://legacy.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1190averroes.asp

Firdausi: The Epic of Kings, c. 1000 CE http://classics.mit.edu/Ferdowsi/kings.html

Sa’di (1184 – 1292 CE): Gulistan, 1258 CE http://classics.mit.edu/Sadi/gulistan.html

Units/Unit 6/Islam to the Mamluks Primary Sources.html

Islam to the Mamluks Primary Sources

The Qur'an and the Pact of Umar

Shortly after Muhammad’s death, his successors drew up a record of his pronouncements, which became known as the Qur’an and are regarded as the foundational text of the Muslim religion. Most Muslims today believe that the Qur’an is the eternal word of God that has existed from before the universe was created and that what Muhammad had recited had existed eternally in the mind of God. We are referring to it as the interpretation of the Qur’an because most Muslims believe that the Qur’an is only scripture in the Arabic language. Any translations are considered to be interpretations.

Muhammad not only founded a new religion, he also founded a new state. His successors had to figure out how to draw up a way of understanding Muhammad’s revelations and also how to run a society based on what God had revealed through the Prophet Muhammad.

Selections from the Qur'an and the Pact of Umar are including on the following pages. Click the forward navigation button to begin reading. 

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Units/Unit 6/Pact of Umar.jpg

Units/Unit 6/Qur'an Selections.pdf

88 The Collapse of Roman Unity and the Emergence of Three Successor Civilizations

632, his closest friend (and father-in-law), Abu Bakr, assumed the title and office of caliph (deputy, or successor, of the Prophet), thereby accepting leadership over the family of Islam. Thanks to Abu Bakr's efforts at destroying secessionist ele- ments, Islam remained a unified community under his stewardship (632-634), ready to explode out of its homeland, which it did under the second caliph, 'Umar (r. 634-644). Within a century, Muslim territory reached from the Pyrenees and Atlantic coast in Spain to the Indus Valley of India and China's far western bor- ders.

Originally, the Arabs considered Islam their special revelation and had no in- tention of sharing the faith with their non-Arab subjects, but several factors com- bined to attract large numbers of non-Arab converts. These included Islam's uncompromising monotheism and the straightforwardness of its other central doctrines; the psychic and social security offered by membership in a totally inte- grated Muslim community, where one's entire life is subject to God's Word; and the desire to escape the second-class status of Islam's non-Muslim subjects. When the Abbasid caliphs (750-1258) established their court at Baghdad on the Tigris in 762, they claimed dominion over a multiethnic community bound together by one of the most attractive and fastest growing religions in the history of human- ity. The culture of this world community, which Muslims call Dar at-Islam (the House of Submission), was a combination of many elements, of which the most important were Arabic, Persian, and Hellenistic.·

The documents that follow illustrate some of the striking ties between Islam and its Judaic and Christian sibling faiths as well as some of the ways in which early Islamic society interacted with these other monotheistic cultures.

The Children of the House of lmran vvv

Muhammad was a teacher who spoke rather than wrote his message, and as long as the Prophet was alive, there was no compelling reason to set his words down in some definitive form. However, following Muhammad's sudden death in 632, Caliph Abu Bakr (r. 632-634) ordered one of the Prophet's companions, Zayd ibn Thabit, to collect from both oral and written sources all of Muhammad's inspired utterances. Subsequently, Caliph Uthman (r. 644-656) promulgated an official collection of these revelations and ordered all other versions destroyed. The sa- cred text that resulted from this work is known as the Qur'an (the Recitations), which Muslims believe contains, word for word, absolutely everything that God revealed to Muhammad and nothing else. As the full and final revelation of God, the Qur'an encompasses all that any human needs to know. Its verses, each a poetically perfect proclamation from Heaven, are both doctrine and law, govern- ing essentially every aspect of a Muslim's life.

Islam without the Qur'an is unimaginable, insofar as it quickly became and remains the basis of every pious Muslim's education. As Islam spread beyond Arab ethnic boundaries, Muslims all over the world learned Arabic in order to

andrew.reeves1
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andrew.reeves1
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Chapter 3 Byzantium and Islam 89

study and recite (usually from memory) the sacred sttrahs (chapters) of this holy book. Because of the centrality of the Qur'an, Arabic literacy became the hall- mark of Muslims from sub-Saharan West Africa to Southeast Asia. As far as Eu- rope was concerned, Arabic language and culture had a profound impact on the evolution of Spanish and Portuguese cultures following the Muslim conquest of most of the Iberian Peninsula in the ea~hth century. '-7 &:J )

The following excerpts come frdl::fftfie~an's one hundred four- teen surahs. Known as "The House of Imran," it deals with the connections be- tween Islam and the faiths of Judaism and Christianity.

QUESTIONS FOR ANALYSIS

1. What evidence is tqere that Muhammad was experiencing difficulty converting Jewish and Christian Arabs?

2. How does the Qur'an portray Jews and Christians? What is Islam's relation- ship with these two faiths?

3. Do you see any parallels between this text and that of the Bible's Jewish and Christian Testaments? What do you infer from your answer?

4. What basic Muslim beliefs are reflected in this excerpt? 5. How does Islam differ from Judaism and Christianity? 6. How are Muslims to deal with nonbelievers? With those who attack them?

God there is no god but He, the Living, the Everlasting.

He has sent down upon thee the Book with the truth, confirming what was before it, and He sent down the Torah 1 and the GospeF aforetime, as guidance to the people,

and He sent down the Salvation.

As for those who disbelieve in God's signs, for them awaits a terrible chastisement; God is

All-mighty, Vengeful.

From God nothing whatever is hidden in heaven and earth. It is He who forms you in the womb as He will. There is no god but

He, the All-mighty, the All-wise.

1"The Law," the first five books of the Tcmakh (the Jewish Bible or, as Christians know it, the Old Testament), ir is the basis of Judaic religion and life. 2The Christian New Testament. 3All three books of revelation: the Qur'an; the Gospels;' and the Torah.

It is He who sent down upon thee the Book,3

wherein are verses clear that are the Essence of the Book ....

Our Lord, make not our hearts to swerve after that Thou hast guided us; and give us

mercy from Thee; Thou art the Giver.

Our Lord, it is Thou that shall gather mankind for a day whereon is no doubt;

verily God will not fail the tryst. 4 .•.

The true religion with God is Islam.

Those who were given the Book5 were not at variance

except after the knowledge came to them, being insolent one to another.6 And whoso

4God's covenant, or pact, with humanity. 'Jews and Christians who respectively received from God the Torah and the Gospels. 6Through sheer insolence, especially toward one another, Jews and Christians strayed from the path of God's revela- tion.

90 The Collapse of Roman Unity and the Emergence of Three Successor Civilizations

disbelieves in God's signs, God is swift at the reckoning.

So if they dispute with thee, say: 'I have surrendered my will to God, and whosoever

follows me.' And say to those who have been given the

Book7

and to the common folk: 'Have you surren- dered?'

If they have surrendered, they are right guided;

but if they turn their backs, thine it is only to deliver the Message; and God

sees His servants.8

Those who disbelieve in the signs of God and slay the Prophets without right, and slay such men as bid to justice - do thou give them the good tidings of

a painful chastisement; their works have failed in this world and the

next; they have no helpers.

Hast thou not regarded those who were given a portion of the Book, being called to the Book of God, that it might decide between them, and then a party of them turned away,

swerving aside? That, because they said, 'The Fire shall not touch us, except for a number of days'; and the lies they forged have deluded them

in their religion. But how will it be, when We9 gather them for a day whereon is no doubt, and every soul shall be paid in full what it has earned, and

they shall not be wronged?

Say: '0 God, Master of the Kingdom, Thou givest the Kingdom to whom Thou wilt, and seizest the kingdom from whom Thou

wilt,

'Jews and Christians. 8God knows who are His submissive servants. 9God. 10Muhammad.

Thou exaltest whom Thou wilt, and Thou abasest whom Thou wilt; in Thy hand is the good; Thou art powerful

over everything. Thou makest the night to enter into the day and Thou makest the day to enter into the

night, Thou bringest forth the living from the dead and Thou bringest forth the dead from the

living, and Thou providest whomsoever Thou wilt

without reckoning.' ...

Say: 'If you love God, follow me, and God will love you, and forgive you your sins; God is All-forgiving, All-compassionate.' Say: 'Obey God, and the Messenger.' 10 But if they turn their backs, God loves not

the unbelievers.

God chose Adam and Noah and the House of Abraham and the House of Imran 11

above all beings, the seed of one another; God hears, and knows.

When the wife ofimran12

said, 'Lord, I have vowed to Thee, in dedication, what is within my womb. Receive Thou this from me; Thou hearest, and knowest.' And when she gave birth to her she said, 'Lord, I have given birth to her, a female.' (And God knew very well what she had given birth to; the male is not as the female.) 'And I have named her Mary, and commend her to Thee with her seed, to protect them

11Islam reveres the memory of two men named Imran: the father of Moses and Aaron and the father of Mary, mother of Jesus. The term the Hol!Se of lmran seems to refer to the family of the former. 12Th is clearly is the second Imran, the father of Mary.

from the accursed Satan.' Her Lord received the child with gracious favor ....

When the angels said, 'Mary, God gives thee good tidings of a Word 13 from Him whose name is Messiah, 14

Jesus, son of Mary; high honored shall he be in this world and the next, near stationed to God. He shali speak to men in the cradle, and of age, and righteous he shall be.' 'Lord,' said Mary, 'how shall I have a son seeing no mortal has touched me?' 15 Even so, God said, 'God creates what He will.

When He decrees a thing He does bur say to it "Be,'' and it is. And He will teach him the Book, the Wisdom, the Torah, the Gospel, to be a Messenger to the Children of Israel saying, "I have come to you with a sign from your Lord. I will create for you out of clay as the likeness of a bird; then I will breathe into it, and it will be a bird, 16 by the leave of God. I will also heal

13Logos in Greek; it is a term used by Christians to describe Jesus Christ, the Living Word of God. Christians believe that the Logos is co-eternal and co-divine with God the Father and God. the Holy Spirit.' 14Hebrew for "the Anointed One"; Christos in Greek. 15She is a virgin. Compare this with the Gospel of Luke, 1:26-38.

Chapter 3 Byzantium and Islam 91

the blind and the leper, and bring to life the dead, by the leave of God. I will inform you too of what things you eat, and what you treasure up in your houses. Surely in that is a sign for you, if you are believers. Likewise confirming the truth of the Torah that is before me, and to make lawful to you certain things that before were forbidden unto you. I have come to you with a sign from your Lord; so fear you God, and obey you me. Surely God is my Lord and your Lord; so serve Him. This is a straight path".'

And when Jesus perceived their unbelief, he said, 'Who will be my helpers unto God?' The Apostles* said, 'We will be helpers of God; we believe in God; witness thou our submission. Lord, we believe in that Thou hast sent down, and we follow the Messenger. Inscribe us therefore with those who bear witness.'

And they devised, and God devised, and God is the best of devisers ....

16An echo of the so-called Infancy Gospel, 15:6, ascribed to the Apostle James the Less. This uncanonical, second-cen- tury collection of tales relating to Jesus' miracle-filled boy- hood was well-known in the Christian communities of the eastern Mediterranean and Red Sea areas.

92 The Collapse of Roman Unity and the Emergence of Three Successor Civilizations

This We recite to thee of signs and wise remembrance. Truly, the likeness of Jesus, in God's sight, is as Adam's likeness; He created him of dust, then said He unto him, 'Be,' and he was. 17

The truth is of God; be not of the doubters. And whoso disputes with thee concerning him, after the knowledge that has come to thee, say: 'Come now, let us call our sons and your sons, our wives and your wives, our selves and your selves, then let us humbly pray and so lay God's curse upon the ones who lie.' This is the true story. There is no god but God, and assuredly God is the All-mighty, the All-wise. And if they turn their backs, assuredly God knows the workers of corruption.

Say: 'People of the Book! Come now to a word common between us and you, that we serve none but God, and that we associate not aught with Him, 18 and do not some of us take others as Lords, apart from God.' And if they turn their backs, say: 'Bear witness that

we are Muslims.'

People of the Book! Why do you dispute concerning Abraham? The Torah was not sent down, neither the Gospel, but after him. 19

What, have you no reason?

17Jesus was one of God's creatures; he is not divine. 18God has no divine associates; there is only one God. 19The Torah and the Gospels and, therefore,Jews and Chris- tians postdate Abraham, the father of all Arabs and Jews. 20Muhammad.

Ha, you are the ones who dispute on what you know; why then dispute you touching a matter of which you know not anything? God knows,

and you know not. No; Abraham in truth was not a Jew, neither a Christian; but he was a Muslim and one pure of faith; certainly he was never

of the idolaters. Surely the people standing closest to Abraham are those who followed him, and this

Prophet,20

and those who believe; and God is the Protector of the believers.

There is a party of the People of the Book yearn to make you go astray; yet none they make to stray, except themselves, but

they are not aware. People of the Book! Why do you disbelieve in God's signs, which you yourselves witness? People of the Book! Why do you confound the truth with vanity, and conceal the truth

and that wittingly? ...

Say: 'We believe in God, and that which has been sent

down on us, and sent down on Abraham and Ishmael,21

Isaac22 and Jacob, and the Tribes,23 and in that which was

given to Moses and Jesus, and the Prophets, of their

Lord; we make no division between any of them, and

to Him we surrender.' Whoso desires another religion than Islam,

it shall not be accepted of him; in the next world

he shall be among the losers.

21Abraham's elder son, from whom the Arabs (and, by spiri- tual extension, all Muslims) claim descent. "Abraham's younger son, from whom the Hebrews are de- scended. 21The twelve tribes of Israel.

Units/Unit 6/Pact of Umar.pdf

94 The Collapse of Roman Unity and the Emergence of Three Successor Civilizations

5. What was the purpose of this pact? 6. How would you characterize the dhimma and the status of the dhimmis? 7. Large numbers of Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians, and oth~rs in the regions

conquered by Islam ultimately converted to Islam. Does :this pact provide any evidence of o~e reason for some of the conversions? If so, what?

In the name of God, the Merciful, rhe Compas- sionate!

This is a writing to 'Um~r from the Christians of such and such a city. When you1 marched against us/ we asked of you protection for our- selves, our posterity, our possessions, and our co- religionists; and we made this stipulation with you, that we will not erect in our city or the sub- urbs any ne~ monastery,* church, cell or hermit- age;3 that we will not repair any of such buildings that may fall into ruins; or renew those that may be situated in the Muslim quarters of the town; that we will not refuse the Muslims entry into our churches eirher by night or by day; that we will open the gates wide to passengers and trav- elers; that we will receive any Muslim traveler into our houses and give him food and lodgipg for three nights; that we will not harbor any spy in our churches or houses, or conceal any enemy of the Muslims. 4

That we will not teach our children the Qur'an; that we will not make a show of the Christi<in religion nor invite any one to embrace it; that we will not prevent any of our kinsmen from embracing Islam, if they so desire. That we will honor the Muslims and rise up in our assemblies when they wish to take their seats; that we will not imitate them in our dress, either in the cap, turban, sandals, or parting of the hair; that we

1Muslims. 2The Christians of Syria. ~The dwelling of a Christian hermit, or monk: See sources 17 and 18 in Chapter 4. 4Several of these ordinances were taken directly from ear~ lier imperial Roman laws regarding non-Christians. 5Muslims greet one e,nother with certain qur'anic verses and simHar affirmations of their fairh. 6Muslims are forbidden to drink wine.

will not make u~e of their expressions of speech,5

nor adopt their surnames; that we will not ride on saddles, or gird on swords, or take to our- selves arms or wear them, or engrave Arabic in- scriptions on our rifigs; that we will not sell wine;6 that we will shave the front of our heads; that we witl keep to our own style of dress, wher- ever we may be; that we will wear belts round our waists. 7

That we will not display the cross upon our churches or display our crosses or our sacred books in the streets of the Muslims, or in their mark~t-places; that we will strike the clappers ill our churches lightly;8 that we will not recite our ~ervices in a loud voice when a Muslim is present; that we will not carry palm-branches9

or our images10 in procession in the streets; that at the burial of our dead we will nor chanr loudly or carry lighted candles in the streets of the Muslims or their market-places; that we will not ~ake any slaves that have already been in the pos- session of Muslims, nor spy into their houses; and that we will not strike any Muslims.

All rhis we promise to observe, on behalf of ourselves and our co-religionists, and receive pro- tection from you .in exchange; and if we violate any of the conditions of this agreement, then we forfei:t your protection and you ar~ at liberty to treat us as enemies and rebels.

7Dhimmis wore leather or cord belts; Muslims wore silk and other types of doth belrs. 8ChriStian chbrches could not ring bells; the faithful were summoned co prayer by wooden clappers. 900 Palm Sunday, the Sunday that precedes Easter. This public process.iOn commemorates- Jesus' triumphal entry it'! to Jerusalem. lOJslarrl has traditionally looked upon the use of sacred im- ages as idolatry.

Units/Unit 6/Islamic Law.html

Islamic Law

In your book you’ve encountered the account both of Muhammad’s appearance as the Prophet and the foundation of an empire and the compilation of the Qur’an by the caliphs. We’re now going to listen to an episode of In Our Time discussing the principles of sharia, the divine law.

You can either listen to the episode at your computer or download it to listen to on your phone, iPod, or similar device. You can also click here for a text transcript of the episode. 

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Units/Unit 6/Islamic Law transcript.pdf

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time

“Islamic Law and its Origins”

Announcer: We continue our evocative account of women’s experiences during the Second World War in three quarters of an hour, but first on BBC Radio 4 here’s Melvyn Bragg with In Our Time.

Melvyn Bragg: Hello, in the early seventh century, a new religion emerged in the Arabian Peninsula. This was Islam. Its spiritual leader was the prophet Muhammad, who by the time of his death in 632 had succeeded in uniting the tribes of Arabia in a single political and religious community. Within a century, this community had become larger still and dynamic, with Muslim territories ranging as far west as the Atlantic seaboard of Africa and far east as Iran. Islam brought with it not just new religious practices, but its own legal system.

Islamic law was rooted in the revelation of the prophet as recorded in the holy text of the Qur’an. But over the following 200 years it continued to evolve into a complex and nuanced system, a system also known as sharia. With me to discuss Islamic law and its origins are Hugh Kennedy, professor of Arabic at the School of African and Oriental Studies in London, Robin Gleave, professor of Arabic Studies at the University of Exeter, and Mona Siddiqui, professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Glasgow. Hugh Kennedy, before we get to the law, let’s get to the origins of Islam itself. Will you just give us some background there?

Hugh Kennedy: Islam emerges in the early decades of the seventh century. It emerges in the urban environment of Mecca and Medina in the Hejaz in what is now western Saudi Arabia. And the Prophet established himself, the Prophet Muhammad established himself as effectively not just as the prophet of God but also the secular leader of the growing Muslim community in Medina. And in the years that followed his death, the Arab Muslim armies spread out and conquered the whole of the near east and pushed on west into North Africa and east into Iran and what is now southern Pakistan and Central Asia. And so in a very short period of time, what had started off as a very small theocratic state, if you like, a prophet-led state in Medina had become an enormous empire whose rulers controlled lands where the inhabitants were many different religions and different languages and so on.

Melvyn Bragg: Can I go back and just have a few more remarks about Muhammad himself? You tell us— he was in trade, he was in law, and so on, he was a military leader—a bit more about him.

Hugh Kennedy: Yes, his career falls into two distinct halves. The first part of his life he was a prophet of God in Medina--in Mecca, excuse me, who believed that he had a direct revelation from God.

Melvyn Bragg: But before that he had a career, as it were.

Hugh Kennedy: Before that, he was a merchant, we are told, and, because Mecca was a commercial center as well as the center of an ancient shrine, he had traveled almost certainly to Syria and he was a man of the world, in fact he had quite a lot of experience of, as it were, politics in the world beyond Mecca.

Melvyn Bragg: So he was about forty when he made this retreat?

Hugh Kennedy: Yes, he made his retreat, he began to hear the word of God, he began to preach the word of God in Mecca, and he began to make himself extremely unpopular, because, amongst other things, he attacked selfishness, he attacked the hoarding of wealth, he attacked the rich for not looking after the poor. He made himself extremely unpopular and he eventually left Mecca in the year 622, he made what’s called the hegira, the migration to Medina, which is about 200 miles away, at the invitation of the people of Medina who wanted him to act as an arbitrator for the people of Medina and he slowly became ruler of the oasis of Medina. Right at the end of his life, he was able to, really, arrange a compromise after years of struggle, a compromise with the people of Mecca and so at the time of his death Mecca and Medina jointly were at the nucleus of a burgeoning, expanding state.

Melvyn Bragg: Just one more strand, and briefly: he also had great talent, certainly, as a military leader, which is an exceptional combination of talents in one way or another.

Hugh Kennedy: Yes, he certainly distinguished himself as a military leader.

Melvyn Bragg: Setting off a dynamic of expansion which is extraordinary.

Hugh Kennedy: Yes, but the real expansion comes in the years immediately after his death.

Melvyn Bragg: Can you just tell us briefly some of the varieties of cultures he would have been surrounded by as a man in his thirties, forties, and early fifties?

Hugh Kennedy: Mecca was a center of a pagan cult which had a number of different well-established gods, but there were in the surrounding area, there were Christian populations, and in Medina especially there were Jewish populations, so he would have come into contact with the older monotheistic religions in the course of his life.

Melvyn Bragg: Robert Gleave, what sort of legal system, if any, existed in the pre-Isl;amic Arabia, before 630 or 640?

Robert Gleave: Well, our sources on this are few, and we do have some inscriptions and some records in poetry and clearly there was a legal system. Whether there was a unified legal system across the whole of Arabia is doubtful. Different tribal groupings had different legal traditions, and certainly from the Muslim sources that we have from the early period, we have descriptions of the pre-Islamic legal environment in which Muhammad operated, and, this period before Muhammad is called the jahiliyya, which can be translated as the “period of ignorance,” before people became aware of the truth of Islam, and that’s a Muslim description. And the tendency is to describe the pre-Islamic period as slightly barbaric and the Islamic period as progressive.

Melvyn Bragg: Was it based on Bedouin traditions or was it based on the laws of Hammurabi, eye for eye, tooth for tooth?

Robert Gleave: No, it was primarily a tribal law: Different tribes had different laws. There was a high emphasis, there was a strong emphasis on honor, on tribal honor, and there was a compensation culture in terms of crimes, for example, committed by one member of a tribe against another, which required retaliation, and sometimes controlled retaliation and sometimes uncontrolled retaliation. In terms of family law, there was clearly customary practices which had some sort of legal, some sort of character of the law, and the difference between custom and law in this early period is really difficult to draw the line—

Melvyn Bragg: I’m not getting anything specific yet.

Robert Gleave: Oh, yes, well, if you want a specific example, for example, a woman had very little say in whom she married, mainly the guardian, her guardian contracted her in marriage with a man. One of the things which Islam came to change, at least the Qur’an gives evidence of the fact that women should receive an opportunity to choose their husband. And also the payment of the dower, for example, which was made by the husband to the guardian of the woman, normally the father, was now to be the woman’s property. So the Qur’an brings with it a set of legal ideas which sometimes reform, sometimes reject the laws which existed in the pre-Islamic period.

Melvyn Bragg: What, how was Muhammad getting people to join him? Presumably they followed different gods, different religions, different tribal customs. What was he saying that was so attractive? Hugh has mentioned at the beginning that it was unpopular and he was unpopular and so on, but he very quickly won people over and very quickly established himself, so what was he saying?

Robert Gleave: In the early period he wasn’t [chuckle] very successful in acquiring converts; he didn’t acquire converts—

Melvyn Bragg: But still, he didn’t start going till his mid-forties, he died in his mid-sixties, and already he’d got a powerful force in play; it was quite a short time.

Robert Gleave: I think there are two elements, really. There is his personal role as an arbiter between conflicting tribal groupings, his ability to act as an honest broker between different groups and to deliver justice. This was certainly part of the description of Muhammad’s role when he was in Medina after 622, after his move to Medina. And that’s when really he managed to gain converts in significant numbers— after 622. And his role as an arbiter, someone who acts with justice is important, but also his message was of a God of justice who doesn’t ignore the poor, who stands up for the rights of the oppressed, and who challenges the systems of religious belief and the wealth that comes with the religions of the pre- Islamic period in Arabia—he challenged that in such a way which was obviously appealing to a large number of people and that success, in a sense, was partly down to the message as well as the man himself.

Melvyn Bragg: And can we just go on a little bit more about the message? Because however you say it took a long time, he goes to Medina in 622, sets up a new, finds a new opportunity to set up his religion the way he wanted it, and ten years later he’s dead, but in that ten years, he has established the core of what became and remains a massive world religion. It was a massive empire, and so I’ve still not quite

got what essential thing it was. Let’s say Christianity: One of the things Christ promised: I can give you eternal life, that’s what I bring you, which nobody else is offering in the way that I am. Was there anything like that with Muhammad?

Robert Gleave: There was. To an extent many of his converts, you could say, were “converts of convenience,” in that they saw him developing as a military leader and as a statesman and they saw which way the tide was turning and they made the pledge of allegiance to him on that basis, and after his death there was a series of rebellions of people who said, “We had a deal with Muhammad, we don’t have a deal with Islam,” and so in this period of time, the idea of a key idea which converts all of the tribes of the Arabian Peninsula isn’t quite fully formed. But certainly one of the appeals of his message was this notion of a state which was moral, which was just, and which was ruled by a moral and just man.

Melvyn Bragg: Thank you very much. Mona, Mona Siddiqui, we tend to think of laws as being hard and fast rules. Is that how the Muslims would have seen the law in the formative years of Islam, in those early years, in the time of Muhammad and just afterwards?

Mona Siddiqui: I think the very word “law” itself when we talk about Islamic law can be quite misleading because we do tend to see law as something that is transposed on society in order to regulate society, but I think when you come to the formative years of Islamic law, what we’re looking at—And I think I need to make a reference to the present day here, which is that when Muslims talk about sharia, they mean Islamic law. But the early formative period of Islamic law was about uncovering the sharia, which was contained in the Qur’an and which could be contained in the Prophet’s words and lifestyle, and—

Melvyn Bragg : Can you just tell everybody what precisely the Qur’an is, the core of the Qur’an?

Mona Siddiqui: The core of the Qur’an is the revelations that were given to the Prophet Muhammad during his lifetime from the age of forty onwards until his death.

Melvyn Bragg: And these were written down?

Mona Siddiqui: These were written down. There’s a lot of controversy as to how they were written down, when they were written down, and what we have is the full body of the full corpus of the Qur’an as we see it today, and contemporary scholarship is debating not just the formative compilation of the Qur’an, but also how the Qur’an itself came to be in the book form that we have it.

Melvyn Bragg: One thing that’s interesting: there’s a great doubt as to whether this stuff existed at the time that Muhammad was alive, but carbon dating seems to prove that it was.

Mona Siddiqui: Absolutely, I mean, there are, most scholars will defend that there are inscriptions, that there are verses on papyri, there are verses that are scattered around that form the basis of the compilation of the Qur’an, and that traditional scholarship has maintained that the full corpus of the Qur’an as we have it was written down some twenty years after the Prophet’s death. Now that is disputed by a lot of scholars as well, and in a way the Qur’an scholarship itself has gone in two different directions: those who are more interested in the formation of the Qur’an itself, how it came to be, and those who are more interested in the contents of what the Qur’an actually says.

Melvyn Bragg: As this is the core of it, the Qur’an, and the most important, these are the words of the Prophet written down and the Prophet was guided, he claimed, he said, by God, this is the source, this is the core of it: How much legal advice does it contain? And can you give us some examples of the legal advice the Qur’an—

Mona Siddiqui: I think we need to clear, or clarify here that the Qur’an for Muslims themselves is not what the Prophet said, but what the Prophet was revealed, and that’s what’s written in the Qur’an.

Melvyn Bragg: Right.

Mona Siddiqui: What the Prophet said is contained in the other corpus of scriptural literature, which is the Hadith, so those two are distinct pieces of literature, pieces of scripture. But the Qur’an itself, for many Muslims, the Qur’an would be seen not as a text of systematic theology—it’s not like the Bible, and it’s not even a biography of the Prophet—but what it is is a fairly short piece of work, which not only has legalistic type of verses, but also it’s, all of the Qur’an is tied by two primary themes, and I think the primary theme is the message of God’s unity, the oneness of God, and that this message, which has been given to Muhammad himself, is not new from the messages that were given to the Jews and Christians, however one understands these Jews and Christians, that these people were also given the message of one God who sends prophets and messengers to communities to lead them to the right path. That probably is the underlying message. Now, the way the Qur’an deals with this is not through lots and lots of narratives about different prophets, but actually about anecdotal evidence and allusions to past stories to confirm that this message is the same as previous messages and all these previous prophets, whether they were Moses, or Noah, or all the other, the Biblical prophets—

Melvyn Bragg: Or Christ?

Mona Siddiqui: Or Jesus himself, absolutely—were given the same message. Now, when it comes to Jews and Christians, there are differences of opinion as to how the Qur’an deals with them, but there is this message, there is this sense that the Qur’an itself is a continuation.

Melvyn Bragg: But I want to keep, I want to concentrate on the legal side, now. We must concentrate on that, since we’re talking about Islamic law. Can you just tell us, in the Qur’an itself, in the revelation, give us some idea of the laws that we find.

Mona Siddiqui: Most people will argue that the socio-legal verses in the Qur’an are actually quite small in comparison to the text.

Melvyn Bragg: But what were they?

Mona Siddiqui: Well, they will deal with everything. They will deal with things to do with marriage, to do with divorce, and some of them are quite intricate, actually, in detail. Also to do with the punishments of those things that came to be considered crimes against God, so you have—

Melvyn Bragg: Alcohol.

Mona Siddiqui: So you have punishments for alcohol, or theft, or armed robbery, and the whole issue of apostasy as well, though there is no particular, there is no punishment in the Qur’an for that. But then also you have verses that are not legal, but point to a kind of, the right way to be: how one’s treats one’s partner, how one treats one’s children, how children should treat their parents. So many of these verses, although not legal in the sense that we understand law, which is about rules and prescriptions, came to embody the basis of Islamic law.

Melvyn Bragg: Hugh Kennedy, Muhammad died in 632. What happened to Islam and the Qur’an after his death?

Hugh Kennedy: Well, the Islamic community expanded enormously, as I was saying earlier, to become a huge empire rather than just a little local state, and, inevitably, of course, it needed to have rules and regulations and so on for managing this huge area, and this is part of the basis of Islamic law, but something that Mona was saying, of course, is that the Qur’an is not a legal textbook, it’s a wonderful inspirational text; it doesn’t systematically go through all the things people need to know. So in the years after the Prophet’s death, Muslims had to try to work out how to translate the prophetic inspiration and to solve everyday problems. And I think Islamic law emerges in the context of this expanding state, a multi-cultural, multi-religious expanding state, and Muslims of the first and second generation asking: What does a good Muslim do? How do I be a good Muslim? And then you have to work on from there, saying, well who knows, who do I ask, and how do these people know, and so I’d set Islamic law against the background of the expansion of the Muslim state, but asking questions about what do we do now.

Melvyn Bragg: I want to come back to that in a minute. I just want to ask Robert Gleave first: But Islam is spreading very quickly. It’s coming up against other legal systems, other religions, but let’s try to stick to legal systems. What’s it doing with those legal systems? Does it abolish them? Does…? You tell me.

Robert Gleave: Well, the official Muslim narrative is that Islamic law pronounces the invalidity of other legal systems for the Muslim population and exclusively claims the right of the sharia as the way in which the Muslim community should be organized. Other legal systems, Jewish law or other legal systems which existed may be preserved within the community specifically related to that legal system, but for the general population of Muslims, Islamic law trumps, if you like, the other legal systems which exist, and when we look at it historically, we find certain elements of other legal systems which were, you could say, “Islamized” and brought into Islam.

Melvyn Bragg: For instance…?

Robert Gleave: For example, a system of tax laws, for example, which clearly… a comprehensive tax system was not present in the Arabian Peninsula in the time of the Prophet Muhammad, but, as you’ve got a growing empire, you need a tax system in order to collect revenue and the maintenance of the state and some of the taxes which existed within these conquered areas clearly continued under a new name, and were Islamized and were sometimes attributed to the Prophet himself, so they were sort of “back projected” to the Prophet himself in order to give the current system a level of religious legitimacy.

Melvyn Bragg: What’s, what’s happening? I’m not quite clear about this, that they’re going into different territories, as Hugh as said, with enormous speed, whichever way you look at it. Are they allowing other systems to continue in parallel to their own as long as the respect of the state is given to them, or are they saying no, your system is out of it now, you follow our system of law?

Mona Siddiqui: If you, if we look at this particular point in relation to particular communities, which are the Jewish and Christian communities, and when you look at Islamic law broadly, you’ll see that Islamic law pertains first and foremost to Muslims in Muslim countries, not to non-Muslims in Muslim countries, as long as they abide by what the government of the state of that particular country says, so they’re paying their taxes, they’re abiding by the laws and regulations. But in issues of personal piety, on personal law of divorce, inheritance, marriage, those laws would not pertain to different religious groups or different groups who’re non-Islamic. But I think it’s also important, just going back to what Hugh was saying, in the development of Islamic law that we have to understand that the person of Muhammad himself and how Muhammad came to be seen as someone who embodied the normative way of how a Muslim should live was itself disputed in the eighth and ninth century, and so therefore it wasn’t taken for granted that what Muhammad said should and could and must be the basis of law till after a great deal of dispute within the early juristic tradition. Because you had the Qur’an—

Melvyn Bragg: Let’s keep reminding ourselves, the Qur’an is…

Mona Siddiqui: The Qur’an is the Word of God, simply put.

Melvyn Bragg: The divine revelation.

Mona Siddiqui: Yes, absolutely.

Melvyn Bragg: There’s three pillars of this. First is the Qur’an, and then there’s the scholars, but we’ll get onto the scholars in a minute.

Mona Siddiqui: But Muhammad himself remains such a significant figure and it was much later—really, we’re talking about the ninth century—when there was some consensus that was emerging that no, actually, Hadith, that is what the Prophet said, had to be a basis for Islamic law and therefor Islamic law could be legitimized by prophetic Hadith, what the Prophet said. So, Muhammad himself becomes a key figure, not just as a prophet, or as a statesman, or as a military person, but somebody who showed the Law, somebody who showed how to live as a proper human being, and so therefore you can imagine that the whole discipline of Hadith—What did Muhammad say? When did he say it? Who did he say it to? Was it valid? Was it weak? Did he really say this?—this whole discipline became enormous because you had to know with some element of certainty or conviction, even though that’s disputed, that Muhammad actually said things. And then of course the other thing to this is that just because he said something or did something does that mean it should be part of Islamic legal tradition?

Melvyn Bragg: So I’m trying to get it clear. We’ve got the Qur’an, which is the revelation of God to Muhammad. We’ve got what Muhammad said in his lifetime, which is, let’s call that a second area.

Mona Siddiqui: Absolutely.

Melvyn Bragg: And a third is when the scholars get working on this, and as you’ve indicated, Mona, start interpreting it and moving, these are three, this is what we’re dealing with in the first two centuries, and by 900 it’s getting to a sort of settlement. Robert Gleave, before we go onto that, and before we go into more specific things about Islamic law (which I’d like to get to), there’s another important principle, and that’s reasoning by analogy, which comes into it when the scholars get hold of it. Can you explain what that is?

Robert Gleave: Well, we have the rules that were contained in the Qur’an, and in the corpus of literature which recorded the Prophet’s statements, the Hadith literature, which together were taken as indicators of something called his sunna, or his way of behavior. The rules within those two groups were clearly not enough to cover all of the areas of human life from the societal level down to the personal level. They weren’t enough. New cases came up, new experiences of the Muslim community required laws which weren’t contained in those documents or those sources, and consequently a series of procedures whereby the limited rules within the texts were able to be expanded to cover novel cases. So the classic example which is always given by the legal theorists is the case of wine drinking, which is grape wine is prohibited within the Qur’an. The consumption of grape wine is prohibited within the Qur’an, but what about other types of alcoholic and intoxicating beverages? Are they prohibited as well when the Qur’an only specifically mentions grape wine? And the analogical process was a means whereby the jurists, the scholars recognized the cause, the reason for God prohibiting grape wine. They speculated about this and sometimes found statements of the Prophet who said it’s the intoxicating quality of wine which prohibits it.

Melvyn Bragg: Why’s that? Why did they find…?

Robert Gleave: Well, the rationale, if you like, the reason for the reason of the prohibition of wine is because it is viewed as something which affects behavior in a negative way and can lead to the ignoring religious duties which an individual is supposed to carry out, so there is a danger in consuming wine which can prevent full moral religious life. But the key point is that it’s prohibited because it’s intoxicating, and by analogy, they apply that to other cases of intoxicating liquids, such as, the classic example is date wine, which is slightly weaker than grape wine. Is this prohibited or not? And the general regulation, the general rule which emerged was that all intoxicating liquids, all intoxicating beverages are forbidden.

Melvyn Bragg: And then it goes into drugs as well.

Robert Gleave: And then later on, of course, there is an encounter with coffee and with other things which could be intoxicating. Are they forbidden or are they not forbidden?

Melvyn Bragg: Hugh Kennedy, two questions. Briefly, first of all: was there a system of enforcement of these laws and what was it?

Hugh Kennedy: We must distinguish [cough], excuse me, we must distinguish two things: How the law emerges and how it’s enforced are different processes, and there becomes a way of enforcing law in certain areas, but a lot of Muslim law is connected with what we would think of as religious practice,

and not with criminal activity. In fact, traditional Islamic law has very little to say about criminal law. It’s about inheritance law, it’s about public or—

Melvyn Bragg: Parents can’t leave everything just to their eldest son, it has to be spread around to their family.

Hugh Kennedy: Yes, exactly. So it’s enforced by appeal to the court of the qadi. The qadi emerges very early in Islamic history as the arbitrator and decider.

Melvyn Bragg: Who’s the qadi?

Hugh Kennedy: Qadis were appointed by the government as local judges, basically. They didn’t make the law, however. The law is made by God, but it’s described and investigated by the learned people, the jurisprudents is one term that is used, the people you ask about the law, who are in a sense academics, not judges.

Melvyn Bragg: Mona, can I ask you about this jurist called Shafi’i, who—I hope I’m pronouncing this properly—who seems to bring it all together in the ninth century and was mobbed and died soon after for his pains, but he seems to have set, brought the thing together, the whole thing together, can you just, is it possible to encapsulate what he did?

Mona Siddiqui: In a way, if I could tie what Hugh just said and what Robert just said, Hugh said the law is made by God and that’s exactly the problem with Islamic law is that it’s not made by God—there may be a very skeletal paradigm in the Qur’an itself or in the Hadith, but actually the work of jurisprudence is a human endeavor and all the time what they’re trying to do is to discover, to uncover what God has said. What is man’s obedience to God? How does it look like in practical piety: where we pray, where we dress, everything else? And that’s why the Hadith and that’s why Shafi’i becomes so important, because by the eighth century, towards the middle of the eighth century, people were using the word sunna and saying “What does this mean?” because sunna literally meant “the way of a people” or the normative practice of a people. What Shafi’i did in the ninth century was to actually articulate—and I’ll try and keep this very simple—that sunna had to refer to the totality of the Prophet’s life. Sunna wasn’t just a normative practice of a particular geographical area, whether it was Medina or Kufa. Sunna had to incorporate, the Hadith had to be part of Islamic law and that only Hadith that could be verified going back to the Prophet or his companions could be part of Islamic law. So in a way what he did was to take away from the kind of normative practice, the traditional practice of a particular area and how they practiced their own laws, and say that prophetic Hadith had to be the second fundamental pillar of Islamic law.

Melvyn Bragg: Hugh.

Hugh Kennedy: Yes, this is very important, because the traditions, the Hadith that come from the Prophet become fundamental—

Melvyn Bragg: The Hadith are what he said.

Hugh Kennedy: What he said, what he is reported to have said, and to a lesser extent what he did.

Melvyn Bragg: What he said and not what God revealed to him?

Hugh Kennedy: Yes, that becomes, in Shafi’i’s discussion, the fundamental basis of law as well as the Qur’an, so you have to know what these traditions say. And an enormous number of traditions emerge, and some of them all the early Muslims recognized, a certain number of traditions are made up, and a certain number are genuine. How to distinguish between the genuine and the fabricated becomes a major intellectual endeavor, and a whole critical mechanism is developed because it’s very important to know what the Hadith actually said for the purposes of true religion. And so what this does is that deciding that what Islamic law is is not a question of what judges decide, it’s a question of what the scholars of traditions find in the corpus of the traditions of the Prophet. It’s a, if you like, it’s a literary- historical excavation rather than deciding on the basis of equity and so on. There is this reasoning by analogy and so on, but in Shafi’i’s scheme and generally in Sunni Islam, this takes very much second place to working out what the traditions of the Prophet are.

Melvyn Bragg: Can we just conclude this section, then, Robert, briskly by saying about when from Shafi’i and the idea of the four separate schools of Islamic law spring up, there’s a settlement there and we can now go on to talk about specifics, there’s a feeling of settlement, there’s a feeling that they—

Robert Gleave: Well, the force of Shafi’i’s argument was almost irresistible for the rest of the Muslim community. Once during the early period there had been a dispute about whether the sunna of the Prophet was the most important sunna or whether the sunna of this community or that community or this particular figure was more important and do we do things because we’ve always done them this way or do they have to be traced back to the Prophet Muhammad. The force of Shafi’i’s argument was irresistible. All of the law that you want that we proclaim, that we live by should be traced back to the actions of the Prophet Muhammad or the Qur’an and if they can’t be traced back to the actions of the Prophet or the Qur’an, then they must be inferred or deduced from those sources in a sound way, we don’t just do things because we’ve always seen them. And all of the other jurists who were operating at the time in different areas of the Muslim world began to see the force of this argument and realize that if you’re going to deny it, you’re basically going to deny the importance of the Prophet Muhammad and gradually Shafi’i’s idea becomes the orthodoxy, if you like, of the Muslim world.

Melvyn Bragg: Now, I know it’s very difficult to separate religious law from the rest of the law—maybe it’s impossible—but I would very much like to get down to some specifics of Islamic law as to what it says that you have to do and is enforceable and enforced. So can we try and concentrate on that for the rest of the program? Mona, an important aspect, let’s take, we’ve got some rough idea of the way these three things came together, and let’s talk about the law with regard to the family and marriage and divorce. Can you just go for the specifics there, please?

Mona Siddiqui: Just to add a caveat there, you talk about forcing and enforcing, but remember that this is jurisprudence that we’re talking about. In these years we’re talking largely about juristic texts, which were not concerned so much with enforcements, but what might be the right behavior, and that’s why jurists with a lot of humility often added, “And God knows best, but this is our opinion,” or “This is the

opinion of our learned scholars.” Family law, in terms of, the law books are divided into their legal entries, so family law would come under different headings: the law of marriage, the law of divorce, the law of inheritance, etc. etc. and we have to bear in mind that we’re talking about a time when law was oral in nature, largely oral, and contracts—and marriage was a contract—this was a contract that was oral in nature, that didn’t need to be written down, and that was primarily seen as analogous to the law of sale. I mean, people might dispute that, but a lot of the vocabulary of the law of marriage was analogous to the law of sale. And what it basically meant—

Melvyn Bragg: Sale?

Mona Siddiqui: The law of sale, yeah. Which meant that you, two people came to consent to a marriage, but what’s actually happening in contractual terms was that a payment was being made to the bride and she was now becoming sexually accessible to a man. The notion of nikah or tazwij or the implication of some kind of marital union was really about legitimizing sexual intercourse. That’s what marriage was. And so therefore there’s no narrative about the beauty of marriage or that marriage should be based on love or romance. The lawyers aren’t interested in that. They’re interested in duties and obligations of each party. And that’s how, and that’s where you have the beginnings of the law of marriage.

Melvyn Bragg: And what about divorce?

Mona Siddiqui: Divorce is exactly the same. There’s no stigma attached to it in the juristic texts. This is… the Qur’an is speaking to an audience where marriage is already an institution in some ways. People know that marriage... people marry, people also divorce.

Melvyn Bragg: Are we talking about monogamy or polygamy, what are we talking about?

Mona Siddiqui: We’re talking about both monogamy and polygamy. But it also recognizes divorce, and divorce is seen as very much a rupture of a contract, so of course it would be better not to divorce, it would be better for social flourishing, for human flourishing that people stay in families and have children, etc., but the divorce was an inevitable consequence of a marriage that might be unhappy or that might not be fruitful, and so therefore there were rules and regulations for divorce as well.

Melvyn Bragg: What were they?

Mona Siddiqui: Divorce is slightly odd, because the classical formulation of divorce is that a man must divorce his woman and orally proclaim that he intends to divorce her over—this is very complex—but over three periods, so three months should pass by, and the reason three months is given is that in that time there may be possibility the two may reunite. However, it came to be translated almost unanimously by many scholars as just pronouncing a divorce three times, and then the woman becomes divorced.

Melvyn Bragg: Could the woman get a divorce?

Mona Siddiqui: The woman can get different types of separation, and divorce is one word that can encapsulate so many different types of separation, but the exact translation equivalence in the Arabic would be a man pronounces a divorce, but a woman is entitled all forms of other separation as well.

Melvyn Bragg: Hugh Kennedy, to what extent is this a criminal code, and again, could you give us some examples, some lurid examples that drift to the West, for example?

Hugh Kennedy: Traditional Islamic law is very little concerned with criminal law. Nor is--

Melvyn Bragg: Is it to some extent, and what is that?

Hugh Kennedy: It is to some extent. There comes a consensus about punishments for adultery, punishments for theft, and so on, but in terms of what the lawyers are talking about, these are quite marginal. They’re much more interested—

Melvyn Bragg: But they’re quite dramatic, aren’t they?

Hugh Kennedy: Um, yes, they can be quite dramatic, certainly, I mean, in terms of floggings, in terms of executions of one sort of another, and amputations of the hand for theft and so on, but as I said in terms of the intellectual debate, this is not really what lies at the center of it. Perhaps I could just give you an illustration about the sort of problems that Muslim lawyers do talk about, and that is about the drinking of alcohol. If you’re sitting in your house and you become aware that your next door neighbor is drinking alcohol, what should you do about it? Now, the lawyers don’t talk about how, oh, you should go to the police and have the place raided, because the state is not a player here. The question is should you go into your neighbor’s house and berate him and smash his wine jars or should you not? And there’s one body of opinion which says yes, you should because he’s violating Muslim norms. But then you come up against an equally important Muslim norm, which is that the house is sacred in a sense; it is wrong to go into another person’s house, because you might find his women in a state of undress and it’s his private property and so on. And so the consensus of law is that you shouldn’t take direct action to smash up the wine jars. You should remonstrate with him in the street, for sure, but there is a balance of obligations here: the obligation of public enforcement against the obligation of privacy.

Robert Gleave: And the other thing to bear in mind is that the dramatic punishments that one finds stipulated within the Qur’an, in the juristic literature, in the legal literature are given an enormously high evidential bar. For example, the punishment for adultery is severe: stoning to death if you’re a married person engaged in adultery. But the evidentiary bar, the evidence which is required in order to carry out that punishment is four people who actually see the act happening and witness it, and this is a highly unlikely circumstance to take place. And the jurists, I believe, the jurists are building in a whole series of caveats. They have a rule which they can’t get rid of, but they’re building in all sorts of caveats, because they don’t, they recognize the dramatic and almost barbaric nature of the punishment for adultery of stoning to death, so they build in a very high evidentiary bar, which means that, in effect, the punishment becomes theoretical for them. It becomes a theoretical punishment, and the same is true for nearly all of these dramatic punishments: the amputation of the hand for theft, and the lashings for alcohol, they are, as Hugh has just been laying out, these are, well, in order for these punishments to be

carried out, the jurists devised a system whereby they would only be carried out in extreme circumstances and with a wealth of undeniable evidence.

Mona Siddiqui: Mona, briefly I’m afraid, can you just tell us something of the institutions of classical sharia? We’ve heard the codes, how is it put forward in practice or put into practice?

Mona Siddiqui: It’s very difficult to know exactly the kind of beginnings of when law became institutionalized and in what form that reflected itself. People have talked about even the schools of law, the madhahib, as being something that is, that took on a later stage, and that actually what was really happening was that people who followed a certain school had just actually attributed the name of that person or the person who founded that school—

Melvyn Bragg: But what were they?

Mona Siddiqui: The four schools themselves—

Melvyn Bragg: No, I mean what were the institutions?

Mona Siddiqui: Well, the courts are where the law is put into practice, that’s not an institution. But where actually you could learn the law, where you could teach the law, that’s actually quite difficult to ascertain, and some have argued they might be analogous to the Latin Christendom guild kind of institutions: colleges of higher learning. But again, that is much later, and it’s very difficult to process, actually. The formative period: how did that translate from people aspiring to become devotees or disciples of formal jurists into institutional practice?

Melvyn Bragg: Hugh, was there a sort of permanent, is there a permanent feeling about the law by about the tenth century? Has it changed much since then?

Hugh Kennedy: Yes, it becomes established in a—

Melvyn Bragg: Has it changed much over the last thousand years?

Hugh Kennedy: No, but what has changed is people’s attitudes to it, and particularly the role of the state as an enforcer of law, which is almost non-existent amongst the early jurists, becomes much more important in later years and particularly from the Wahhabi period in the eighteenth century onwards. So what starts off as a much more personal and religious law has, in some cases, been seen as a state law which should be enforced by state mechanisms, but in most areas that’s quite a modern development. And we know very little about what goes on in early times, but I’d just like to finish up, perhaps, with a following on of something that Rob just said, that in the whole of my reading of Islamic history I have never found any example of stoning to death for adultery being recorded in any historical text. Maybe I just haven’t read enough, but that’s the position.

Melvyn Bragg: I doubt that. Thank you very much Mona Siddiqui, Hugh Kennedy, and Robert Gleave. Next week, we’ll be talking about Robert Burton’s book on the anatomy of melancholy. Dr. Johnson said it was the only book he would get out of bed two hours early to read. Thanks for listening.

Announcer: In Our Time with Melvyn Bragg is produced by Thomas Morris, and there’s lots more on the website. You can add your comments to the debate page, sign up for Melvyn’s weekly newsletter, listen to previous programs, and get the podcast. Just go to bbc.co.uk/radio4 and follow the links to In Our Time.

Table of Contents.html

 
Surv World History/Civiliz I Section 08G Fall 2018 CO - Islam to the Mamluks

1. Chapter 8: Islam to the Mamluks

2. Islam to the Mamluks Primary Sources

3. Qur'an Selections

4. Pact of Umar

5. Islamic Law