Islam Origin and History Lecture PDF
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This lecture provides an overview of Islam's origins and history, covering key figures like the Prophet Muhammad and events such as the early Islamic expansion. It details the founding of Islam and the key figures involved. It also references the importance of the holy sites, such as the Kaaba.
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ISLAM Origin and History Lecture Subjective Perspective ▪ Islam has a founding figure: The Prophet Muhammad (570 - 632 CE) ▪ Muhammad lived around Mecca in the Arabian Peninsula. ▪ He worked in a trading caravan that his father owned. ▪ He often travelled through villages controlled by Jews and C...
ISLAM Origin and History Lecture Subjective Perspective ▪ Islam has a founding figure: The Prophet Muhammad (570 - 632 CE) ▪ Muhammad lived around Mecca in the Arabian Peninsula. ▪ He worked in a trading caravan that his father owned. ▪ He often travelled through villages controlled by Jews and Christians (and also pagans). ▪ There were numerous communities of Jews, Christians, and pagans (polytheists) living in the Arabian peninsula. ▪ Mecca contained a well-known pagan shrine that people often visited on pilgrimage. ▪ Muhammad’s family was pagan. ▪ Muhammad was said to be illiterate. This means he couldn’t read or write. Map of the Arabian Peninsula This is a map of important sites on and around the Arabian Peninsula from approximately 600 CE. Muhammad is visited by Gabriel ▪ In 610 CE Muhammad is visiting a cave near Mecca. ▪ The angel Gabriel visits him and tells Muhammad that Allah has a message for him. ▪ Gabriel is the same angel that visits Mary to tell her about Jesus. ▪ Typically, this angel’s name is spelled Jibril in English from the Arabic. ▪ Allah wants to give him a new message to bring to the people of the world. ▪ Allah is the Arabic name for God. ▪ Gabriel tells Muhammad that earlier messages of Allah have been corrupted for various reasons. ▪ Allah wants Muhammad to memorize the message word-for-word. ▪ This is to avoid any possible corruption or confusion. ▪ Gabriel gives this message to Muhammad in Arabic (a Semitic language). ▪ This is the language that Muhammad speaks so it is obvious why this language was used. Muhammad receives further messages ▪ Between 610 - 630 CE Muhammad is given many more messages from Allah through Gabriel. ▪ They are not always in the same cave, or even around Mecca. ▪ Muhammad receives some messages while living in Medina. ▪ Muhammad can’t write so these messages are not written down. ▪ Instead, the messages are all memorized by Muhammad. ▪ Muhammad tells these messages to others. ▪ He begins to gain followers. The first of which is his wife. ▪ These messages are later written down by others near the end of Muhammad’s life or just after his death. ▪ These written messages become the Qur’an. ▪ The Qur’an is the sacred holy book of Islam. ▪ It is the literal word of Allah. ▪ There are 114 different messages in Qur’an called suras. Objective Perspective ▪ Muhammad did live and founded Islam. ▪ However, we obviously cannot confirm his meetings with Gabriel. ▪ There is also some suspicion that he was not fully illiterate as is claimed. ▪ A man who ran his father’s trade caravan would likely known how to record business transactions and keep inventory. ▪ This required some minimal writing and reading abilities. ▪ However, it seems likely that he could not read or write at a high enough level to write full prose or create works of literature. ▪ Also note that he often came into contact with Jews and Christians in his travels. ▪ Here are the things we do know about his life. ▪ In 622 CE, Muhammad had a decent following around and in Mecca. ▪ However, many of the people living in Mecca are still pagan and it still holds a pagan shrine. Medina and Mecca ▪ He is forced to move from Mecca to Medina where his followers and teachings were more readily accepted. ▪ This is called the Hegira (flight). ▪ In just a few short years he gains many new followers. ▪ They number in the 10’s of thousands. ▪ In 628 CE Muhammad attempts to return to Mecca with several thousand followers. ▪ He had received the message from Allah that commanded the Hajj. ▪ Mecca refuses entry but a truce is signed. ▪ Muhammad returns to Medina. ▪ However, the truce is quickly broken. ▪ At the end of 629 CE Muhammad attacks Mecca with thousands of followers. ▪ Mecca surrenders to Muhammad without much bloodshed. Cleansing of the Ka’ba ▪ Muhammad cleanses the Ka’ba (pagan shrine) of its idols. ▪ Muhammad claims that the Ka’ba (former pagan shrine) was originally an alter built by Abraham (Ibraham). ▪ The alter was built in order to sacrifice Ishmael. ▪ There was a large stone at the center, and this was the alter of Abraham according to Muhammad. ▪ The claim in Islam was that the Ka’ba was originally monotheistic but was defiled by pagan worship. ▪ This is why it is a “cleansing” because it removes the pagan idols from a site of monotheistic worship. ▪ The objective perspective would claim that the Ka’ba was always a site of pagan worship from deep pre-historic times and did not become monotheistic until Muhammad. Ka’ba Today This is a picture of the Ka’ba at the Grand Mosque in Mecca. The Ka’ba itself is the building at the center of the mosque. It is covered in a black silk shroud that has been pulled up here to reveal the stone structure underneath at the bottom. Muhammad’s Death ▪ Ka’ba is considered the holiest site in all of Islam. ▪ Muhammad now controls Mecca and Medina and has about 50,000 followers. ▪ Muhammad dies in 632 CE after a short illness. ▪ He is buried in Medina. ▪ Today his burial site is called the Green Dome and is the second holiest site in Islam. ▪ The Green Dome has three tombs and a spot for a fourth. ▪ After his death there is a fight for political power. ▪ This begins the period of the Rightly Guided Caliphs. Green Dome in Medina The Green Dome contains the tomb of Muhammad, Abu Bakr, and Umar. It has a fourth tomb ready for Jesus, when he dies. Rightly Guided Caliphs ▪ A caliph is a leader in Islam. There are four of these leaders. ▪ Abu Bakr (632-640 CE) is the first Caliph. ▪ Under his rule Islam continues its expansion both in numbers and in territory. ▪ Umar is the second caliph (640-644 CE). ▪ He expands the territory of Islam further north into Iraq/Iran. ▪ He completes the task of having the messages of Allah given to Muhammad written down. ▪ Thus, just 12 years after the death of Muhammad, all the elements of the Qur’an are now in place. ▪ Uthman (644-656 CE). ▪ He finalizes the structure of the Qur’an. ▪ He also continues the expansion of Islam. ▪ He is assassinated but we are not sure by who? ▪ Ali (son-in-law of Muhammad) becomes the fourth caliph (656–661 CE). ▪ He is married to Fatimah (daughter of Muhammad). ▪ Shia is the form of Islam that believes that Ali should have always been the successor of Muhammad. ▪ Sunni Islam is the version of Islam that agrees the four caliphs were all legitimate and this is why they are the Rightly Guided Caliphs. ▪ Ali continues the expansion of Islam. Ali is also killed. Map of early Islamic Expansion This is a map shows the Muslim controlled areas during the Rightly Guided Caliph period. Later Dynasties in Islam ▪ Umayyad Dynasty (661-750 CE). ▪ Several Caliphs during this period and the family is related to Ali. ▪ Move the political capital to Damascus. ▪ This was a practical move because Damascus was more centrally located and had a large population. ▪ Great increase in number of followers of Islam and a small increase in the size of the territory. ▪ Abbasids Dynasty (750-1258 CE) gains control. ▪ They move the political capital to Baghdad. ▪ One of the longest ruling Islamic dynasties. ▪ They really appreciated scholarly learning, arts, and culture. ▪ They make Baghdad a center of learning and within 100 years in the world’s leading location to scholarly work. ▪ Major advances in the sciences (astronomy, medicine, mathematics, philosophy, translated many Greek and Latin texts into Arabic). Islamic Golden Age ▪ The Abbadids bring about an Islamic Golden Age that lasts from 800-1250 CE. ▪ Avicenna (980-1037 CE). ▪ He was a great philosopher and medical doctor. ▪ He was a close follower of Aristotle. ▪ Averroes (1126-1198 CE). ▪ He lived in Spain and moved to North Africa in his later life. ▪ He was close friends with Maimonides. ▪ He was a philosopher and theologian. ▪ He advocated for the strong use of Greek philosophy in order to better understand Islamic theology. ▪ Al Ghazali (1058-1111 CE). ▪ He wrote the “Folly of the Philosophers.” ▪ He argues that Islam does not need Greek philosophy. It just needs the Qur’an. ▪ Abbasids dynasty comes to an end in 1258 CE. ▪ Baghdad is sacked by the Mongol Horde in 1258. ▪ Baghdad is now controlled by Mongols who are not Muslim. ▪ This ends the Islamic Golden Age. Map of the Mongol Empire This is a map shows the extent of the Mongol empire in 1294 CE. It still is the largest contiguous empire (by land area) to ever exist. Crusades ▪ The Christian Crusades ▪ There are four major ones. ▪ Three of them that make it to the Holy Land, which is controlled by Islam. ▪ Attempts by Christians to regain control of the Holy Land away from Muslim rule. ▪ The first two are able to recapture Jerusalem and put it under Christian control. ▪ Jerusalem is the site of the Dome on the Rock, which is the third holiest site in Islam. ▪ Christians lose control of Jerusalem permanently in 1178 CE. ▪ They lose Jerusalem to the great Muslim general Saladin (1138-1193 CE). ▪ The crusades did greatly weaken the power of the Abbasids. ▪ This is why they are able to be conquered by the Mongol horde in 1238 CE. Map of the Christian Crusades This is a map shows the four major Christian Crusades attempt to take back the Holy Land from Muslim control. Islam after the Mongol Invasion ▪ Many Mongol rulers convert to Islam. ▪ They keep control of Islamic areas with this tactic and even expand into new locations. ▪ They move into Northern India and bring Islam with it. ▪ These are the Mughals (Mughal dynasty). ▪ They are sometimes rather brutal. ▪ From 1375 – 1725 the Mughals control most of Northern India. ▪ One of the Mughal rulers builds the Taj Mahal. ▪ Ottomans (1320-1920) control most, if not all of Turkey. ▪ In 1453, the Ottomans conquer Constantinople and rename it Istanbul. ▪ Muslims control Turkey even to this day. ▪ The Ottomans are only defeated in WW1 by the British. ▪ However, Turkey remains strongly Muslim even today. Taj Mahal The Taj Mahal, a mausoleum in Agra, India, was built in the 1600s by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan as a memorial and mausoleum for his beloved wife, Mumtaz Mahal. Wahhabism ▪ In Saudi Arabi during the mid-1700’s a new, radical form of Islamic theology develops from the Sunni tradition. ▪ Sunnis represent a large majority of Muslims today. ▪ The other major form of Islam is called Shia. ▪ Wahhabism is the name of this radical Sunni theology. ▪ A fundamentalist approach to Sunni Islamic theology. ▪ They are strict followers of Islamic law, which is called sharia. ▪ They advocate for a very literal interpretation of the Qur’an. ▪ This is what makes this fundamentalists. ▪ This is the main form of Islamic theology in Saudi Arabia today. ▪ But, Wahhabism has much less influence outside of the Arabian peninsula. ▪ However, since Saudi Arabia contains Mecca and Medina, Wahhabism is still quite influential. Mystical Islam ▪ Sufism is a mystical form of Islam. ▪ It came into being around 1100 CE about the same time that Kabbalah develops in Judaism. ▪ Recall that mysticism means an attempt to form a special bond or relationship with God usually through deep meditative practice. ▪ Sufism is the smallest branch of Islam today. ▪ It has only several million followers because it has been repressed but this is still more followers than Kabbalah has in Judaism. ▪ Far more than the number of Christian mystics. ▪ One prominent group of Sufis are called the Whirling Dervishes and they live in Turkey. ▪ Sufism is an attempt to join with Allah through spiritual revelation. ▪ Rumi (1207-1273 CE). ▪ He is the poet of love. Whirling Dervishes Mevlevi dhikr; Mevlevis are sometimes known as Whirling Dervishes. Hagia Sophia in Istanbul is in the background.