Please print this outline and bring to class on Wednesday.
Chapter 9: The Worlds of Islam: Afro-Eurasian Connections,
600–1500
I. The Birth of a
New Religion
A. The Homeland of
Islam
1. Tribal feuds and trading
centers of the Arabian Peninsula
2. Mecca: home of the Kaaba and the Quraysh
3. Contact with Byzantine and
Sassanid Empires
4. Gods, idols, and “children of
Abraham”
B. The Messenger and
the Message
1. Muhammad Ibn Abdullah
(570–632)
2. Series of revelations
(610–632) become the Quran
3. Revolutionary message of
monotheism
4. A return to the religion of
Abraham
5. “Seal of the prophets”
6. Revolutionary message of
social justice: the Umma
7. Five Pillars of Islam
8. “Greater” and “Lesser” Jihad
C. The
Transformation of Arabia
1. Tension in Mecca and the Hijra, 622
2. Building the Umma in Medina
3. War, alliances, and entry
into Mecca, 630
4. Most of the Peninsula
under a unified Islamic state
5. Fusion of religious and
political authority
6. Sharia
II. The Making of an
Arab Empire
A. War, Conquest,
and Tolerance
1. From the Iberian Peninsula to
the Indus River
2. Battle of Talas, 751
3. Economic drive and spreading
the faith
4. Dhimmis and the Jizya
B. Conversion
1. Spiritual versus social
conversion
2. Slaves, prisoners of war, and
merchants
3. Conversion without
Arabization: Persia, Turks,
and Pakistan
4. Persian influences on Islamic
world
C. Divisions and
Controversies
1. First Four Caliphs (632–661)
and civil war
2. Sunni versus Shia
3. Umayyad (661–750): Damascus
4. Abbasid (750–1258): Baghdad
5. Post–ninth-century sultanates
6. Interpreting and practicing
Sharia
7. Sufi
D. Women and Men in
Early Islam
1. Women in the Quran, Hadith,
and Sharia
2. Restrictions for elite women
in the golden age
III. Islam and
Cultural Encounter: A Four-Way
Comparison
A. The Case of India
1. Turkic invaders
2. Disillusioned Buddhists and
lower-caste Hindus
3. Appeal of Sufi mystics
4. Punjab, Sind, and Bengal
5. Sikhism
B. The Case of Anatolia
1. Turkic invaders
2. 90 percent by
1500
3. Ottoman Empire
C. The Case of West Africa
1. Muslim merchants and scholars
2. Urban centers
3. Little penetration of rural
world and popular culture
D. The Case of Spain
1. Arab and Berber invasion of
Al-Andalus
2. Cordoba’s golden age
3. Increased intolerance
4. Christian reconquest and
expulsion
IV. The World of
Islam as a New Civilization
A. Networks of Faith
1. Ulamas and Madrassas
2. Sufi shaykhs and poets
3. The hadj
B. Networks of
Exchange
1. Vast hemispheric trading zone
2. Merchants and urban elites
3. Technological exchange and an
Islamic “Green Revolution”
4. Mathematics and medicine
V. Reflections: Past
and Present: Choosing Our History
A.
“Present-mindedness”
B. Islamic glories
and Western encroachment
C. Using an Islamic
past
D. Diversity of the
Islamic world
E. Histories of
Tolerance and Conflict
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