Spread of Islam - History.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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Muhammad died in 632 and was succeeded by Abu Bakr, the father of Muhammad’s favorite wife, Aisha.
Abu Bakr was the first caliph ( khalifah, Arabic for “successor”) of Islam.
Like Muhammad, Abu Bakr was a member of the Quraysh clan.
While neither Abu Bakr nor any subsequent caliph claimed the role of prophet, they wereleaders of this new religious enterprise that was quickly becoming a political entity as well.
The first four caliphs, all of whom were selected by some form of council ofMuslims, would later be called al-Rashidun, the rightly guided caliphs.
The epithet “rightly guided” was coined by later Islamic scholars to signify that these caliphs were the truest and most virtuous followers of Muhammad’s teachings and examples.
While Muhammad was alive the governance of the new community of Islam had presented few problems.
Guidelines were provided by the revelations of the Qur'an, aswell as by Muhammad himself, as God’s prophet.
The early Muslim community, being ordered through divine guidance, was a theocracy.
With Muhammad gone,administrative matters that could not be settled by the Qur'an were resolved according to examples from the prophet’s life, as reflections of God’s will.
The rightlyguided caliphs came under harsh criticism from the early Muslim community any time they acted on their own judgment.
As time passed, disagreements over theseexamples, or over interpretations of the examples, increasingly caused division within Islam.
Another issue Muhammad’s successors struggled with was the evolving ethnicity and culture of Muslims.
In its earliest development Islam was intertwined with the Arabidentity.
In addition to the fact that Muhammad was an Arab and lived in an Arab environment, the Qur'an emphasized the fact that it was written in Arabic, and thatthis was the authentic revelation as it existed with God (43:3 and 12:2).
The earliest Muslims therefore felt proud of being Arabs, and of their new Arab religion.
AsIslam spread to non-Arab regions, the question of whether or not Islam was an Arab religion would become another source of friction in the decades after Muhammad’sdeath.
III THE ERA OF THE RIGHTLY GUIDED CALIPHS
Most of Abu Bakr’s short reign was spent putting down a series of local rebellions against Islamic rule, known as the Wars of Apostasy, or the Riddah wars.
Shortly after the news of Muhammad’s death reached them, many Arab tribes renounced their allegiance to Islam in favor of new, local prophets.
This was less a religious choicethan a political and economic one, since the tribes used this as an excuse to govern themselves and stop paying the zakat, or alms tax.
Abu Bakr took part in some ofthe fighting, but the main military leadership was provided by Khalid ibn al-Walid.
The Riddah wars established Medina’s authority over all of Arabia and the inclusion ofall of Arabia in the ummah, or community of Islam.
A Expansion
After the Riddah wars, Abu Bakr looked to extend Islamic territory northward, into present-day Iraq and Syria.
This area and the rest of the Fertile Crescent had been abattleground between the Byzantine Empire and the Sassanids of Persia for more than a century before the appearance of Islam.
Already forged into an army byparticipation in the Riddah wars, and inspired by their new religion and the opportunity for plunder, the Arab Muslims successfully fought both the Byzantines and theSassanids, whose forces were drained by years of warfare.
Abu Bakr’s forces captured territory in southern Iraq, threatening the major Persian cities on the Tigris andEuphrates rivers, and also began to push into Byzantine Syria.
Abu Bakr died late in August 634 and was succeeded as second caliph by Umar ibn al-Khuttab, or Umar I, father of Muhammad’s third wife.
An early convert to Islam,Umar had been instrumental in getting the Helpers in Medina to accept Abu Bakr as the first caliph.
Umar was also from a clan of the Quraysh tribe.
Umar took the titleof amir-al-mum-inin (Arabic for “commander of the believers”), indicating that Muslims were a nation in arms under their military commander.
Umar first sought to expand into Byzantine territory to the north.
In September 635 the Muslims captured Damascus, and almost a year later the Byzantine force underEmperor Heraclius was defeated, signaling the end of effective Byzantine rule in the Fertile Crescent.
Jerusalem, which would become the third most important Islamiccity after Medina and Mecca, was taken in 638.
To the northeast, Muslim forces achieved similar success against the Persian Sassanids in present-day Iraq.
The Sassanid king Yazdegerd III fought well, but despite hisvast resources his army was defeated at the Battle of Al Qādis īyah in February 637.
Ctesiphon, his capital on the Tigris, fell the same year.
The Muslims pushedeastward, and by 642 they had captured the region of Kh ūzest ān (Khuzistan) in present-day southwestern Iran.
Meanwhile, to the west, an army of Muslims under General Amr ibn-al-As had launched an attack against Egypt.
In November 641 Alexandria surrendered to theMuslims.
Umar established a garrison town near the head of the Nile River delta in the Roman city of Babylon.
This became Al Fustat, the first capital of Muslim Egyptand the precursor of Cairo.
B Islamic Institutions
Umar organized his empire as it grew.
As Muslims began to occupy and settle into populated areas of the Fertile Crescent, Umar created a new institution to ensure theprotection of both the soldiers and the conquered populace.
The soldiers, and eventually their families, would be housed in amsars (separate, militarized sections of old towns) or in new garrison towns.
In the newly conquered areas the Arabs were a minority and by being limited to the amsars, they kept their identity as Arabs andcould be more easily controlled by their leaders.
In Syria, which was more populated to start with, amsars were constructed in existing towns, while in Iraq, which wasless populated initially, new garrison towns such as Al Ba şrah and Al K ūfah were constructed.
Another of Umar’s institutions was the diwan, the official register of Muslim Arab soldiers, which would determine the distribution of fortune won in conquest.
The diwan listed the names of all the Muslims from the original centers of Medina and Mecca as well as those who participated as soldiers in the conquering armies, and theirdependents.
The hierarchy of the names in the diwan, and therefore the size of each person’s share of the plunder, was determined by chronological order ofacceptance of Islam, relationship to Muhammad, and service.
Included were Aisha and Muhammad’s other wives, Muhammad’s relatives, the Companions, the Helpers,and men who had fought in the battles of Badr and Uhud, the Riddah wars, and the conquests of the Fertile Crescent.
Moveable plunder, such as silver and gold, wasdivided among the troops on the spot.
Veterans would each receive an annual stipend, but some of the more prominent took their share of the spoils in the form ofland.
The caliph would receive one-fifth of the plunder, the same amount Muhammad had received to help the poor of the community, and another one-fifth sharewould be sent to Medina.
C Internal Dissension
Umar died in November 644.
He was succeeded by Uthman ibn Affan, the son-in-law of Muhammad.
Like Muhammad, Uthman belonged to the Quraysh tribe, howeverto a different clan, the Umayyads, who had been prominent in Mecca before Muhammad.
Under Uthman conquests slowed and the garrison towns experienced unrest.
Uthman, who represented the merchant class of Mecca, knew little of warfare and facedopposition from the military from the start.
With less plunder from conquest to go around, soldiers were upset by the amount of wealth that continued to be sent to thecaliph and his bureaucrats in Medina.
Increasingly, the only bond between the soldiers and their leaders was Islam.
In an effort to strengthen Islam, Uthman insisted on.
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