Islam Origins. Origins overview Pre-Islamic Arabia as the cultural and historical context for the...

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IslamOrigins

Origins overview• Pre-Islamic Arabia as the cultural

and historical context for the development of Islam

• The Prophet Muhammad• The development of Islam under

the leadership of the Four Rightly Guided Caliphs

Pre-Islamic Arabia

The harsh climate

• of the Arabian peninsula,

• combined with a desert and mountain terrain,

• limited agriculture and rendered the interior regions difficult to access.

Arabian society and religion

• Refected the tribal realities of the Peninsula.

• Bedouin tribes travelled from one area to another in search of water and pasture for their flocks of sheep and camels

Bedouin

• Is the term for the nomadic Arabs of the desert

• Principal sources of livelihood were herding, trade and raiding

Intertribal warfare

• Was a long established activity

• However it was governed by clear guidelines and rules

• For example raiding was illegal during the four sacred months of pilgrimage

The population subsisted

• on a combination of oasis gardening and herding, with some portion of the population being nomadic or seminomadic.

Social organisation

• and identity for peoples of Arabia were based on membership in an extended family.

Social organisation

• A tribe, consisting of a cluster of several clans (groupings of several related families)

• was led by a shaykh (chief) who was selected by consensus of heads of leading clans or families

Social organisation

• These elders formed an advisory council,

• within which the shaykh exercised his leadership and authority as the first among equals.

Arabia - location

Asia to the north-east

Europe to the north-west

Africa to the west

Indian sub-continent to the East

Crossroads of the known world

Location of Arabia

Arabian

Peninsula

Desert

Since they lived in

• such a harsh environment

• the people of Arabia needed to trade with their wealth neighbours

Neighbouring regions of Arabia

Tigris River

Euphrates River

Nile River

Mediterranean Sea

Arabian PeninsulaRed Sea

Dead Sea

And the fertile crescent linked Arabia with the rest of the world

The people of Arabia

• were well-positioned to profit from trade with the surrounding regions

• the exports of frankincense and myrrh brought wealth to the area

The camel was the only animal

• that could cross large tracts of barren land with any reliability.

• The increased trans-Arabian trade led to the rise of cities that could service the trains of camels moving across the desert.

The most prosperous cities

• were relatively close to markets in the Mediterranean region,

• but small caravan cities developed within the Arabian Peninsula as well.

The most important city within the peninsula

• was Makkah (Mecca), which also owed its prosperity to certain shrines in the area visited by Arabs from all over the peninsula.

In the long term

• it was the ideas and people that travelled with the camel caravans that were the most important aspect of trade with the rest of the world.

Arabia – pre-Islamic trade routes

Present day Arabia

Pre-Islamic Arabia

In the 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.

• Both the Byzantine and Persian kingdoms had client Arab tribes allied to their cause of trade and conquest.

The Arabian Peninsula• became a land of refuge for those

seeking escape from both of these empires.

• Heretic Christian sects like the Nestorians, and Jewish tribes escaping the oppressive Byzantines found refuge in the protective deserts and cities of the Peninsula.

The religion of Arabia• Reflected its tribal

nature and social structures.

• Each city had gods and goddess.• Some Arabs held religious beliefs that recognized a number of gods as well as a number of rituals for worshiping them.

Gods and goddesses

• Served as protectors of individual tribes,

• And their spirits were associated with sacred objects

• Trees, stones, springs and wells.

The most important beliefs• involved the sense that certain places

and times of year were sacred and must be respected.

• At those times and in those places, warfare, in particular, was forbidden, and various rituals were required.

• Foremost of these was the pilgrimage, and the best known pilgrimage site was Makkah.

Once a year• the tribes and cities of Arabia would

meet in the city of Mecca during an event known as the Hajj.

• In Mecca, the Ka’ba (Cube), a large cube shaped building housed 360 idols from all the tribes of Arabia.

• The Ka’ba was the centre of Arabian religious life.

Here all the warring tribes

• would put aside their differences as they circled the Ka’ba.

• From the Ka’ba they would proceed to the other shrines outside of Mecca during this five day religious event.

The Hajj• was a tradition that

Arabs of the peninsula remembered going back hundreds of years.

While these deities• were primary objects of worship,• beyond this tribal polytheism was a

shared belief in Allah.• Allah, the supreme high god• Was the creator and sustainer of life,• But remote from everyday concerns

and so was not the object of cult or ritual

The value system

• Or ethical code of Arabia was based firmly in the tribal experience.

• The preservation of tribal and family order was most important.

• With this came fatalism that saw no meaning beyond this life.

Justice was guaranteed

• and administered by the threat of group vengeance.

• Arabian religion had little sense of a universal moral purpose or an individual or communal responsibility.

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