Chapter 7 Part II
Abbasid Decline and the Spread of Islamic Civilization to South and Southeast Asia
- Introduction
- Mid 9th century losing control
- Rebellious governors
- new challenging dynasties
- …but still creative – ironically – a golden age without political stability
- architecture
- fine arts
- literature
- philosophy
- mathematics and science
- Territorial growth – warriors, traders, wandering mystics
- political conquest
- peaceful conversion
- Conduit for exchange – between urban/agrarian centers and between nomadic peoples
- ideas
- plants and medicines
- commercial goods
- inventions
- Mid 9th century losing control
- The Islamic Heartlands in the Middle and Late Abbasid Eras
- Introduction – 3rd Abbasid caliph – al-Mahdi
- Courtly excesses > financial drain
- taste for luxury/monumental buildings
- surrounded self with wives, concubines, courtiers
- Political divisions
- continued Shi’a revolts and assassinations
- Problem of succession
- Son/successor poisoned
- Harun al-Rashid (786-809)
- most famous
- enduring
- Harun al-Rashid (786-809)
- Son/successor poisoned
- Courtly excesses > financial drain
- Imperial Extravagance and Succession Disputes
- Extravagance amazed visitors
- Charlemagne impressed by mosques, palaces, treasures
- The Thousand and One Nights
- Luxury and palace intrigue/manipulations
- Throne at 23 – growing power of royal advisors
- signaled shift in power – court advisors now more important
- Now also power struggles between court factions
- Death of Harun al-Rashid led to civil war
- winning son had huge army
- started precedent of having “bodyguards”
- mercenary forces could reach 70,000
- winning son had huge army
- Power shift now to military
- Between military and court, assassinations quite common
- Extravagance amazed visitors
- Imperial Breakdown and Agrarian Disorder
- Caliphs try to move capitals away from Baghdad – kind of like Versailles
- Very expensive
- Cost of new palaces/capitals plus mercenary force = high taxes
- Peasant revolts caused from
- taxation
- pillaging
- Shi’a “encouragement”
- Caliphs try to move capitals away from Baghdad – kind of like Versailles
- The Declining Position of Women in the Family and Society
- Remember Islamic world initially quite open to egalitarian treatment of women
- Harem – women kept in seclusion
- creation of Abbasid court
- win their freedom/gain power by bearing healthy sons
- some women became slaves
- But…slaves captured, purchased from non-Muslim regions
- prized for beauty and intelligence
- best educated men and women
- officials more attracted to slaves then wives sometimes
- more freedom than free women – no veils/robes
- But…slaves captured, purchased from non-Muslim regions
- Veil
- slaves – no veil/robes
- Upper class no career outlets beyond homes
- focused on interests of sons
- lower class women could actually farm, weave clothing, raise silkworms
- Nomadic Incursions and the Eclipse of Caliphal Power
- Kingdoms try to take over power
- 945 Buyids of Persia invade empire and captured Baghdad
- Took names of sultan – victorious
- 1055 Seljuk Turks – replaced Buyids
- Turks were Sunnis – purged Shi’a officials
- Kept Byzantines from taking over
- Lay foundations for Ottoman Empire
- Kingdoms try to take over power
- The Impact of the Christian Crusades
- First Crusade 1096-1099 – most successful for Europeans
- Surpise + political divisions
- Europeans killed Muslim and Jewish inhabitants of Jerusalem
- 200 years of battle – but…had little effect on Muslim princes
- Saladin – Salau-ud-Din – reconquered territory
- Impact much greater on Christians – Muslims show little interest in the west
- Increased European borrowing
- weapons – damascene sword
- fortifications
- science/medicine
- recovered Greek learning
- mastered Arabic numerals
- Middle Eastern rugs/textiles
- names for different cloths – taffeta, muslin
- Popular culture
- Chess
- Troubadours/ballads
- food – dates, coffee, yogurt
- Increased European borrowing
- First Crusade 1096-1099 – most successful for Europeans
- Introduction – 3rd Abbasid caliph – al-Mahdi
- The Age of Learning and Artistic Refinements
- Introduction
- Political divisions not that important – still successful artistically
- Remember – India/Western Europe also fragmented
- One of great ages in human ingenuity and creativity
- Expansion of professional classes
- Great fortunes to be made through trade
- Middle East > Mediterranean Europe
- Coastal India and island southeast Asia
- Overland caravan trade with China
- Great fortunes to be made through trade
- Artists and Artisans
- Mosques/palaces – larger more arnate
- Tapestries/rugs from Persians – rare
- exquisite designs
- vivid colors
- skill
- Fine bronzes/superb ceramics
- The Full Flowering of Persian Literature
- Persian caliphs, wives, concubines, advisors, bureaucrats
- Persian language became synonymous with “high culture”
- Language drafted by skilled cartographers
- Epic Poem – Shan-Nama – 10th/11th centuries
- History of Persia – battles, intrigues, love affairs
- Other topics – love affairs, every day life, striving to reach communion with divine
- Blend of mystical and commonplace
- Achievements in the Sciences
- First, preserved and compiled learning of ancient civilizations
- Math
- Second, made major corrections to algebraic/geometric theories
- Trigonometry – sine, cosine, tangent
- Science
- objective experiment
- classification – animal, vegetable, mineral
- weight of minerals
- astronomical tables
- Practical applications
- best hospitals – required formal examinations
- optics/bladder ailments
- From China trade
- perfected – papermaking, silk-weaving, ceramic firing
- best maps – cartography
- Religious Trends
- Key Theme of Muslim world **** Social strife and political divisions vs. trading links and intellectual creativity
- Mysticism gave vibrancy vs. orthodox religious scholars (ulama)
- Orthodox Muslims
- Gained prominence after Crusades
- suspected Greek learning – questioning
- threatened authority
- Qur’an – final, perfect, complete revelation
- Al-Ghazali tried to fuse Greek/Arab traditions
- Sufist movement
- Sufis – name from woolen robes
- great healers
- some led militant bands
- some bodily denial
- some used meditation, songs, drugs, dancing (dervishes)
- helped expand religion
- Personal union with Allah
- Reaction to abstract/impersonal divinity
- World illusory
- Sufis – name from woolen robes
- New Waves of Nomadic Invasions and the End of the Caliphate
- Abbasid domains divided as rival states grew
- Mongols under Chinggis Khan – 1220s
- Grandson – Hulegu continued
- Baghdad overthrown in 1258
- Cairo and Istanbul would become dominant city
- Defeated by Mamluks – Turkish slaves
- Introduction
- The Coming of Islam to South Asia
- Introduction
- Religion carried by invaders, traders, migrants
- Hindus and Muslims came into contact/conflict
- India pattern of nomadic invaders
- those who remained usually assimilated
- Due to strength and flexibility of India’s civilizations
- Offered higher level of material culture than they had before
- Muslims – first to bring in religion and not want to change/assimilate
- those who remained usually assimilated
- Differences between Hindus and Muslims
- Hinduism – open, tolerant, inclusive of various forms, idol worship, meditation
- Islam – doctrinaire, proselytizing, exclusive worship of single god
- Socially – Islam egalitarian vs. Hindu caste, compartmentalized, more rigid
- So…religiously more restrictive vs. socially more restrictive
- Interactions – violent > trade > religious interchange > wary peace
- Political Divisions and the First Muslim Invaders
- First – 711 – Traders
- Arab seafarers
- Muhammad ibn Qasim – preemptive assault to punish attack on Arab trading
- Brought little change – embraced by some
- Lower taxes
- Greater religious toleration
- Local officials get to retain titles, keep running things
- Status of Brahman castes repected
- Arabs lived in cities/garrison towns – apart
- Same pattern as other parts – little attempt at first at conversion, few converted
- First – 711 – Traders
- Indian Influences on Islamic Civilization
- Indian learning
- Hindu mathematics – algebra/geometry
- Use numerals of Hindu scholars
- This number critical to two scientific revolutions
- Medicine to music
- Physicians brought to Baghdad
- Arabian Nights tales maybe based on Indian stories
- Game of chess
- Hindu mathematics – algebra/geometry
- Indian dress, hairstyles, foods, rode on elephants
- Indian learning
- From Booty to Empire: The Second Wave of Muslim Invasions
- Little territory added in centuries following Muhammad ibn Qasim
- But…Turkish slave dynasty? – 962
- Mahmud of Ghazni – series of expeditions
- Drawn by wealth
- Zeal to spread Muslim faith
- Defeated princes
- Muhammad of Ghur and Qutb-ud-din Aibak pushed territory further
- Capital becomes Delhi
- 300 year Muslim dynasties – sultans of Delhi
- Fought Mongol/Turk invaders
- Fought internally
- Fought Hindu princes
- 300 year Muslim dynasties – sultans of Delhi
- Little territory added in centuries following Muhammad ibn Qasim
- Patterns of Conversion
- Interactions accommodating and peaceful
- Few converts won forcibly***
- Sufi mystics quite successful – similar to gurus – helped region
- Mosques/schools center of regional power
- Militias to help protect from bandits
- Cleared forests, helped with settlement
- Welcomed low caste/outcastes
- Charisma
- Most attractive to Islam?
- Buddhists
- Buddhism being corrupted by rituals/didn’t follow Buddha’s teachings
- Muslims raided Buddhist temples
- Some Buddhists – orgies/magic experiments
- Low-caste, untouchables, animistic tribal peoples
- Egalitarian
- Group conversions
- Desire to escape head tax
- Intermarriage
- Buddhists
- Interactions accommodating and peaceful
- Patterns of Accommodation
- Hindu community not really concerned with Islam initially
- Believed religion would soon be absorbed
- Hindus worked as administrators
- Muslims separated from Hindus
- Muslim communities
- sexual relations restricted
- Some Muslims adopted Hindu ways
- claimed divine descent
- minted coins with Hindu images
- socially divided Muslim communities along caste lines
- adopted customs
- Indian foods
- dress
- Pan – limestone wrapped in betel leaves
- Women treated poorly
- Married at early ages
- sati performed by upper caste Muslims
- Hindu community not really concerned with Islam initially
- Islamic Challenge and Hindu Revival
- Threatened by Islam
- Actively proselytizing religion
- Great appeal to large segments of the Indian population
- Hindu reaction – increasing popularity – extending methods of prayer/ritual
- Place greater emphasis on devotion to gods/goddesses
- bhaktic cults
- open to women/untouchables
- Mira Bai – writers of religious poetry
- saints from low-caste origins worshipped by all – brahmains down
- Kabir – saint who played down difference
- languages in vernacular
- chants, dances, drugs – spiritual intoxication
- state of ecstasy > attachment to gods – earthly life irrelevant
- Threatened by Islam
- Stand-Off: The Muslim Presence in India at the End of the Sultanate Period
- Brahmans took a more active role
- Denounced Muslims as infidel destroyers of Hind temples
- Denounced Muslims as polluted meat-eaters
- Muslims couldn’t be flexible
- Hinduism says some rituals optional – can’t be true for Islam
- Hindus remained majority
- Least converted/integrated of all the areas Muhammad’s message reached ***
- Brahmans took a more active role
- Introduction
- The Spread of Islam to Southeast Asia
- Introduction
- Island southeast Asia usually a middle ground for trade
- Drop off Chinese products, Arab/Indian vessels pick up
- Goods from Sumatra
- aromatic woods
- spices, cloves, mace
- By 8th century – trade controlled by Muslims
- Elements of religion filtered slowly
- 13th century – Shrivijaya empire fell, Islams had full control
- Incentive now for trading centers to adopt faith
- Island southeast Asia usually a middle ground for trade
- Trading Contacts and Conversion
- Peaceful/voluntary conversion more common than force
- Merchants introduced rituals
- Stated most of known world already converted
- Port centers convert first
- Malacca converted – moved inland
- Trading links critical
- Enhance personal ties
- Common basis in law
- Eastern ports now culturally/economically linked
- Bali – Hinduism – remained impervious to Islam
- Mainland southeast Asia remained Buddhist
- Merchants introduced rituals
- Peaceful/voluntary conversion more common than force
- Sufi Mystics and the Nature of Southeast Asian Islam
- Syncretism
- Spread by Sufis – mysticism
- Tolerated earlier animist, Hindu, Buddhist beliefs/rituals
- Many beliefs would be seen contrary to origins
- Women retained stronger position
- Markets dominated by female buyers/sellers
- Inheritance still matrilineal
- Fused Javanese puppet shows
- Introduction
- Global Connections
- Political friction irrelevant, still a central focus for many continents
- Led to refinement of civilized life
- Fine arts, sciences and literature
- Conflicts left open fringes to European political expansion
- Growing orthodoxy – growing less receptive to outside influences
- Bad timing, Christian Europe entering stage of unprecedented curiosity, experimentation
- Political friction irrelevant, still a central focus for many continents