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Arabia the Cradle of Islam

Arabia the Cradle of Islam. Introduction of Arabia before the advent of Islam. History of Islam The Arabian Peninsula the birthplace of Islam is one of the hottest and driest regions in the world mainly of deserts descendents of Noah’s third son Shem (Sámi in Arabic) called Semites

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Arabia the Cradle of Islam

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  1. Arabia the Cradle of Islam

  2. Introduction of Arabia before the advent of Islam

  3. History of Islam • The Arabian Peninsula the birthplace of Islam is one of the hottest and driest regions in the world • mainly of deserts • descendents of Noah’s third son Shem (Sámi in Arabic) • called Semites • Geographically covered the area of Sinai, Yemen, Iraq and Syria. • theses Semitic people have migrated into the Fertile Crescent. • into existing civilizations.

  4. sixth century AD, • north of the Arabian Peninsula two great powers were locked in a seesaw power struggle. • The Christian Byzantine kingdom, successors of the Roman Empire was to the Northwest and controlled the Mediterranean Sea, North Africa and the lands of Palestine. • In the northeast lay the Zoroastrian Persian kingdom also called Sassanid Empire. (King of Kings) • Both the Byzantine and Persian kingdoms had client Arab tribes allied to their cause of trade and conquest.

  5. Both were very proud • Rated the Arab very low • Called them barbarians (uncivilized person ) • No interaction/no traffic with Arabs • Except Trade • No friends with Arabs • Byzantines and Persians did not like each other either. • Fight with each other (both) • Success and Defeat either • Due to war a lot of damage was caused • Particularly trade • Over-land trade routes to the Far East, India , China which pass through Persia ,were broken

  6. Yemen • Highland Country • Favorable Climate • Rain , cold winters • Wheat, millet(grain), barley crops • Grapes, figs(fruit), apricots, walnuts • Famous Mocha Coffee • Sana is Capital City • Richest part of the Arabia

  7. Hadramaut • To the East of the Yemen • Coastal Land • Propesous land • Ancient cities and canals ruins in it • Frankincese tree , whose gum yielded a perfume • The people were hardy • People loved the sea and traded with the East and Far East since very ancient times. • They settled in East Africa

  8. Nejed • Tableland (elevated flat region) in the centre of Arabia • Two entirely barren areas lies in the south and north of it • In south desert called Rub-ul-khali ( the empty quarter) • In north Nufud desert • Healthy land • Famous for its brave tribesmen and noble horses

  9. Hijaz/ Al-Hijaz • It lies in the North of the Yemen and to the West of Nejd • Not as much pleasant climate • Not as much greenery • It has its gardens, oasis(fertile ground in a desert), orchards(area of fruit or nut trees) at Medina and Taif • Now its most important • Two holy Cities • Makkah and Medina

  10. Arab Life • No big cities • No enough wealth • No enough people • Lived in small groups • The descendants of a common ancestor, joined to form a clan(group of families), and few clans of same origin make tribes • Life was uncertain and dangerous • Tempers (anger, annoyance) were never cool

  11. Fought for the test of their arm and horses • Life was cheap • Death was unimportant • Throughout the life fight for honour • Loved to quote verses, listen to and honour the poets • Enjoy poetic contest • Winners verses hang on the wall of Ka’aba • A century before Islam they have been fighting each other • Then • New trade route were introduced • Eastern Route • Western Route • After trade the life of the people getting changed • Trade served the Arabs well • Makkah became an important trade depot • Connection between Mecca and Yathrib

  12. Families in Makkah grew rich • Important tribe was Qurasih • Bani Qureish was the descendant from the Prophet Ibrahim through his elder son Ismail

  13. Abd Manaf had two sons • Hashim • Abd Shams------Ommayyah (Son)---Assertive (self confident) person Helping hand with uncle Hasham Families grew into clans • Bani Hasham • Bani Ommayah

  14. Bni-Omayyah • Commerce • Trade • Quite Prominent among leaders of the commercial group Bani-Hashsim • Leaned(to rest against or on something for support) • Piety • Hunting • Archery (the activity of shooting with a bow and arrow) • Swordmanship • Trade

  15. In the middle of Sixth Century • Leader of Bani-Omayyah was Abu Sufyan grandson of Omayyah • Chief of Bani-Hashim was Abdul Mutalib • Head man was chosen not only for his birth, but also for qualities, experience, seniority, prestige(honor), wisdom • The Headman of Makkah was Abu Sufyan

  16. Abu-Sufyan----Muawiya (son) • Able, sober, could read and write, how to deal with men, has considerable native shrewdness (good at judging people or situations) • Abdul-Mutalib—many sons? • Hamza: hunter, warrior, • Abu Talib, Abbas: sober men, good judgment • Abu Lahab: Obstinate (inflexible) man with limited intelligence, mean(unkind) and revengeful • Abdullah: the youngest son

  17. Abdullah, the youngest son was married in 570 with Aminah bint Wahhab a lady of rank

  18. Birth of Holy Prophet • 570 AD in Makkah • Father died before His birth • Mother died when He was 6 years old • Then Grand father died • Abu Talinb, uncle adopted and raised Him as his own son. • At the age of 12, young Mohammed was taken on a caravan-trading venture to Syria and experienced the world outside of Arabia for the first time. • Christian monk named Buhaira, proclaimed Talib’s  young nephew is the last prophet and warns him about the Jews.

  19. At the age of 25, Mohammed marries a 40 year old wealthy, widow named Khadijah who owns trading caravans. • During the next 15 years of his life he interacts with Arabs known as the Hanefites. • Hanefites were Arabs who rejected idol worship and were searching for the true religion. They looked to the religion of the Jews and Christians as being close to the goal. • The Hanefites abandoned (left) their idols and retreated to the caves of Mecca in meditation and prayer.

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