Islamic Civilization

82 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

Cards In This Set

Front Back
Abbas (Shah)
· One of the greatest Safavid kings of all time (his rule marked the cultural apogee of Safavid rule)
· Routine-ization of authority (took away charismatic authorization and made it stable)
· Like the Ottomans, supplemented the army with a slave army of Ulams (Ghulam Infantry, which used muskets)
· Theological revolution during his time (Safavids persecuted and suppressed Sufi orders so other religious figures wouldn’t try to assert authority)
Abbasids
· Golden Age of Islam
· Capital in Baghdad
· Able to rule centrally for first couple centuries but then there was more rule out of Baghdad and principalities started to rule “in the name of Allah” under the Caliphate
· Knew it was important to have a Turkish-speaking clave army from Central Asia (this army was based in Samarra)
· Allowed for the popularization and spread of Mu’tazila (“those who separate themselves)
Akbar
· Had a court that attracted Europeans and Jesuits
· Time of extraordinary excess in Europe so European merchants would try to buy them and then bring them there to sell
Ali ibn Abi Talib
· First supporter of Muhammad
· Muhammad’s cousin and son-in-law
· Fourth of Rashidun
· Shi’ites were his supporters (significance for Shi’as)
aniconism
· Muslim conscious choice not to use images (both in the Koran and in mosques)
· Invites you to get in the mode of thinking about the divine
· Replaced with plant and vegetal motifs
Arabesque
· Plant motifs that are elaborate and look to be growing on trellises
· Motifs that fill in the geometric shapes
· Encourages people to think and contemplate
Ardabil
· Home of dynastic shrine that Shah Abbas substantially endowed during his pilgrimage (Abbas used charitable endowments as a political instrument to shore up his main claims to legitimacy)
· When Abbas restored the shrine here, he was strengthening his family line
· Bequests included household estates and personal property (jewelry, weapons, horses, sheep, goats)


Ayatollah Khomeini
· Developed from Twelver Shi’ism and was the pinnacle of the hierarchy of interpreters of the sharia
· Leader of the 1979 Iranian Revolution
· After the revolution the number of people calling themselves ayatollah increased so much that the title “ayatollah al-uzma” (the greatest sign of God) had to be created
Babur
· Founder of the Mughal dynasty (Zahir al-Din Muhammad)
· Caghatay Turk descended on his father’s side from Timur and on his mother’s side from Genghis Khan
· Nickname “Babur” derived from the Indo - Persian word for “beaver”
· Kept a diary that he started to turn into an autobiography (until recent times only the true autobiography in Islamic literature)
· Couldn’t gain a foothold in Central Asia so instead looked at India and Afghanistan
· His earlierst construction was a garden in Kabul, Afghanistan
Bahri Mamluks
· Sea: on Nile
· One of the two lines of mamluks
· Turks from Southern Russia
· Descendants of Qalawun
Baraka
· Sufis believed that there were some particularly pious people (God’s friends) who developed a close and personal relationship with God
· Blessing/spiritual electricity (also, extraordinary power)
· Demonstrates a Saint’s closeness to God which permits him to perform miracles like healing, reviving the dead, and flying
· Power does not diminish after death so Sufis venerate the living and the dead saints
· Sufi movement towards the inward approach to belief was originally a private thing but then it turned into a more social force
Bazaar
· Marketplace for trade
· Essential for concentrated marketing and production of Safavids
· Taxed by the state
· In Isfahan, was extended by Shah Abbas and connects Masjid-i-juma to the royal square
Burji Mamluks
· Ruled from citadel East of Cairo
· Circassians from N. Caucasus
· Burji means “of the tower”

caliph/khalifa
· Replaced by sultans (under Seljuks)
· Post-caliphate: religious authority separates from political authority and city was a cultural center
· Successor of the prophet (leading community both religiously and politically)
· Localized rule, claimed to rule “in the name of Allah”
· First system of government established in Islam
· Rulers were called this beginning in the Umayyad empire
· Everything was done in the name of the Caliph
· Perpetuated messages of Muhammad and the order of civilization through their leadership
caravanserai
· Medieval Islamic times: enormous growth of caravan cities
· Rulers would build caravanserais to protect merchants and encourage trade
· Medieval equivalent of motels for commercial travelers (spaced along major routes a day’s journey apart)
· Typical one was located near a permanent source of water and was a walled building with a single entrance big enough to fit animals
· Layout: first floor had stables and rooms for storing goods, upstairs were beds for merchants and caravaneers
· Generally at the center of the market and functioned as a wholesale market