Pre-Islamic Arabia
The original Arab, the Bedouin
by Philip K Hitti (from "The Arabs: A Short History") Ancient accounts of Arabia
(from the Internet Ancient History Sourcebook)
Herodotus, c. 430 BCE
Strabo, c. 22 CE
Dio Cassius, c. 220 CE
Ammianus Marcellinus, c. 380 CE
Procopius of Caesarea, c. 550 CE
Pre-Islamic Arabic culture
The desert origins of the Arabs, by Richard Hooker [World Cultures website]
Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fifth
Century
by Irfan Shahid (Dumbarton Oaks Research Library, Washington DC)
The birth of Islam
Muhammad, The Prophet of Allah by Philip K. Hitti (from "The Arabs: A Short History")
Muhammad by Maxime Rodinson (Pantheon Books, 1980)
Muhammad: Prophet and Statesman by Montgomery Watt (Oxford University Press, 1961)
Meccan trade and the rise of Islam by Patricia Crone (from "The Rise of Islam", Princeton University Press, 1987)
Muhammad and the origins of Islam, by Richard Hooker [World Cultures website]
Selections from the "Life of Muhammad" Ibn Ishaq (died c.773 CE):
The Prophet of Islam by Muhammad Hamidullah (from "Introduction to Islam", Centre Culturel Islamique, Paris, 1969)
Muhammad the Prophet by Prof. K. S. Ramakrishna Rao, University of Mysore, India (from "Islam and Modern age", Hyderabad, March 1978)
Companions of the Prophet by Abdul Wahid Hamid (from "Companions of The Prophet", Vol.1)
Islamic time line Dates and dynasties - from 570 to 1250
Islamic expansion
The Battle of Badr 624 CE
This was the first battle between believers and unbelievers, and it is still the most famous in Islamic history.
Battle
of Badr (Wikipedia)
New light on the story of the Banu
Qurayza and the Jews of Medina
by W N Arafat (Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 1976)
The Battle of Yarmuk (636 CE) and
after
An account by al-Baladhuri (d. c. 892) of the battle against the Byzantine army which
delivered Syria to the Muslim. [Internet Islamic Sourcebook]
The Arab conquest
of Egypt 642 CE
Two accounts - a Coptic version from "The History of The Patriarchs of
Alexandria" and an Arab version from Al-Baladhuri's "The Conquest of
Alexandria" [Internet Medieval Sourcebook]
Tribe
and state in Arabia
by Fred Donner (from "The Early Islamic Conquests", Princeton University Press,
1981)
Byzantium
confronted by Islam
by Judith Herrin (from "The Formation of Christendom", Princeton University
Press, 1987)
The Pact of Umar
(7th century)
Dealing with the status of non-Muslims under Muslim rule. Alternative version.
The early caliphate
The
"Rightly-Guided" Caliphs
University of Southern California Muslim Students' Association
Abu Bakr (632-634 CE)
'Umar (634-644 CE)
'Uthman (644-656 CE)
'Ali (656-661 CE)
The
Caliphate
The early patriarchal caliphs, by Richard Hooker [World Cultures website]
The
Shi'a
Origins of the Sunni-Shi'a schism, by Richard Hooker [World Cultures
website]
Umayyads and
Abbasids
The golden age of Arab and
Islamic culture
by Gaston Wiet. From "Baghdad: Metropolis of the Abbasid Caliphate", University
of Oklahoma Press Baghdad under the Abbasids
(c.1000 CE)
A contemporary description of the city in its heyday
Civil
war and the Umayyads
From the death of the Prophet to the end of the Ummayad Dynasty (661-750 CE). By Richard
Hooker [World Cultures website]
The Abbasid Dynasty (750 to
1258 CE)
by Richard Hooker [World Cultures website]
Law
and justice
by J. Schact, Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Islam
Tales of the Caliphs
(c.940 CE)
Anecdotes from the Book of Golden Meadows by the early historian, Abul Hasan Ali
Al-Masu'di.
The Experiences of the
Nations
(c. 980 CE)
A question of succession in the Abbasid court. By Ibn-Miskawaih
Towards
a history of Aleppo and Damascus in the early Middle Ages (635-1260 CE)
by Professor R. Stephen Humphreys, University of California at Santa Barbara. (Lecture at
the University of Kyoto, 29 October 1997)
Islam in Europe
IN 711, Tariq ibn Ziyad, at
the head of a mainly Berber army, began the conquest of Spain and, by 733, the Muslims had
reached as far north as Poitiers in France. This marked the start of a period of Islamic
rule which continued until the fall of Granada in 1492 - the year that Columbus arrived in
America. Many reminders of this period can still be found in the Iberian peninsula,
including the name of Gibraltar (Jabal Tariq - "the mountain of Tariq").
Chronology of Muslims in Europe
(711-1790) The Islamic conquest
of Spain
An account by Ibn Abd al-Hakim, and Egyptian who died in 870 or 871. From "History of
the Conquest of Spain", translated by John Harris Jones (Kaestner, Gottingen, 1858)
Tarik's address to his
soldiers, 711 CE
Al-Maggari's account. Quoted by Charles F. Horne (ed), "The Sacred Books and Early
Literature of the East", (Parke, Austin, & Lipscomb, New York, 1917) [Internet Medieval Source Book]
The Battle of Poitiers
(or Tours), 732 CE
Anonymous Arab chronicler
The defeat of Abd al-Rahman by the Franks halted the Muslims' northward advance. Some
historians regard it as a turning point in world history and Gibbon even suggested that if
the Muslims had won Oxford would have become a city of minarets rather than spires. A more
modern view is that the Muslims were not much interested in the north (they disliked the
weather) but victory at Poitiers might have led them to conquer Italy.
Three more accounts of the
battle.
Columbus:
What if ... ?
by Aileen Vincent-Barwood
The fact that the discovery of America coincided with the end of Islamic rule in Spain
provides fertile ground for historical speculation. Is it possible that Christopher
Columbus greeted the inhabitants of the New World with the words: "As-salaamu
alaykum"?
Ibn
Rushd's criticisms of the theologians’ arguments for the
existence of God
Dr Ibrahim Y. Najjar discusses "the appealing
audacity" of Ibn Rushd (Averroes)
The Crusades
History of the Crusades
Probably the best introduction to the Crusades is this on-line course developed by Dr E L
Skip Knox at Boise State University, Idaho. It covers
the following topics: The major Crusades
General histories
Other Crusades and topics
A brief account of the
Crusades
From Muslims on Line
A Christian-Muslim
debate (12th Century) Usamah Ibn Munqidh
(1095-1188)
Usamah was a Muslim warrior and courtier, who fought against the Crusaders with Saladin.
This extract from his authobiography, written around 1175, discusses the Franks.
Licence to Venice to trade
with the Saracens (1198)
Pope Innocent III
The Assassins
by Philip K. Hitti. From: "The Book of Grass: An Anthology on Indian Hemp",
edited by George Andrews and Simon Vinkenoog.
The Crusade of St. Louis
An Arab account by al-Makrisi. From: "The Road to Knowledge of the Return of
Kings", in "Chronicles of the Crusades", Henry G. Bohn (ed), London, 1848
Medieval accounts of Salah
al-Din's recovery of Jerusalem
by Hadia Dajani-Shakeel. From: Hisham Nashabe (ed) "Studia Palaestina:
Studies in honour of Constantine K. Zurayk", Institute for Palestine Studies, Beirut
1988.
Fatimids and Mamluks
The ruling circles
by Yacov Lev.
From "State and Society in Fatimid Egypt", E J Brill, Leiden, 1991
Turks and Ottomans
The Turkish Irruption
by J J Saunders. From "A History of Medieval Islam", Routledge, London
The Liberation/Fall of
Constantinople 1453
A Muslim view by Muhammad El-Halaby
A Survey of the Turkish Empire
by Sir William Eton, 1799
Proclamation for the Ottoman
Empire
The Young Turks, 1908
The age of imperialism
Islamic law and Western
imperialism
Jane F. Collier examines the historical processes that constructed a cultural opposition
between the supposed rule of law in the West and imagined religious fanaticism in the
East. From Law & Society Review 28.2 (1994). The story of the Suez Canal
From "All the Year Round", January 8, 1876
Why Britain acquired Egypt in
1882
Explanation by the Earl of Cromer (first British Viceroy of Egypt), dated 1908
Declaration
Between the United Kingdom and France Respecting Egypt and Morocco
April 8, 1904
Letter to Ali ibn Hussain
(1915)
Sir Henry McMahon, British High Commissioner in Egypt, wrote a series of 10 letters to Ali
Ibn Hussain, Sherif of Mecca, during the First World War in the hope of attracting Arab
support against the Turks. The implication was that after the war Britain would support an
independent Arab state.
The Sykes-Picot
Agreement (1916)
Lawrence of Arabia
T E Lawrence, 1888-1935, archaeologist, traveller, wartime intelligence officer, guerrilla
leader, diplomat, writer.
Influence
as Power
by Rich Stiller. An online book about Lawrence [PDF file] |