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ISLAM
ISLAM

... 3. Jews & Christians strayed from their faith, M’s role was to restore faith for all people ...
Islam to 1450
Islam to 1450

... Center of the city was a market place often shared with religious center Cities designed with human-environment interaction in mind Nomads came to city to trade, city often settled by whole tribes Arabs had settled in cities in Syria, Iraq, Jordan ...
• 2nd largest religion • Started in 622 AD, in Mecca • Founder
• 2nd largest religion • Started in 622 AD, in Mecca • Founder

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Multiple-Choice Questions
Multiple-Choice Questions

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The Five Pillars of Islam
The Five Pillars of Islam

...  Shari’a- A ___________________ assembled from the teachings of the Qur’an and Sunna o Regulated family life, ________________, and business and _______________ Links to Christianity and Judaism- Abrahamic Religions  _______________ (God), _____________ (Yahweh), and _____________ (Allah) all wors ...
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Islam after Muhammad Arabian Caliphate
Islam after Muhammad Arabian Caliphate

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Rise of the Arab Empire

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Metropolitan Baptist Design Template
Metropolitan Baptist Design Template

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Intro to Islam

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to file

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From Sept 11th to ISIS File

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Origins of Islam - Walker World History
Origins of Islam - Walker World History

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Dar al-Islam - Okemos Public Schools

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ISLAMIC CULTURAL NATIONALISM (Ss)

... different locales throughout the Middle East and North Africa and that Muslims who had migrated from the region—to Europe and the United States, for instance—are shaped by, and shape the practice of, Islam in the Middle East. Perhaps one of the most widespread cultural counterforces to globalization ...
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Islam-Submission to Allah

... The Abbasid Caliphate: 7501258 • Islamic not Arab Empire—made it more attractive to be Muslim • Required government officials to be Muslim • Conversion expanded • Major advances in learning: University, Algebra, Classical Philosophy, Medicine • Literature: Arabian Nights, Inspiration for many Europ ...
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I. Pre-Islamic Arabia

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The Making of an Arab Empire
The Making of an Arab Empire

... The Making of an Arab Empire It did not take long for the immense transformations occurring in Arabia to have an impact beyond the peninsula. In the centuries that followed, the energies born of those vast changes profoundly transformed much of the Afro-Eurasian world. The new Arab state became a hu ...
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Al-Nahda



Several Arab political parties and movements have been named ""al-Nahda"": For the Tunisian political party, see Ennahda Movement; for the Algerian political party, see Islamic Renaissance Movement.For the Omani football club, see Al-Nahda. For the neighbourhood in Dubai, see Al Nahda, Dubai.Al-Nahda (Arabic: النهضة‎ / ALA-LC: an-Nahḍah; Arabic for ""awakening"" or ""renaissance"") was a cultural renaissance that began in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Egypt, then later moving to Ottoman-ruled Arabic-speaking regions including Lebanon, Syria and others. It is often regarded as a period of intellectual modernization and reform.In traditional scholarship, the Nahda is seen as connected to the cultural shock brought on by Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in 1798, and the reformist drive of subsequent rulers such as Muhammad Ali. However, recent scholarship has shown that the Middle Eastern and North African Renaissance was a cultural reform program that was as ""autogenetic"" as it was Western inspired, linked to the Ottoman Tanzimat and internal changes in political economy and communal reformations in Egypt and Syro-Lebanon.The Egyptian nahda was articulated in purely Egyptian terms, and its participants were mostly Egyptians, and Cairo was undoubtedly the geographical center of the movement. But al-Nahda was also felt in neighboring Arab capitals, notably Beirut and Damascus. The shared language of Arabic-speaking nations ensured that the accomplishments of the movement could be quickly picked up by intellectuals in Arab countries.In the Ottoman-ruled Arabic regions, major influence and motive were the 19th century tanzimat reforms of the Ottoman Empire, which brought a constitutional order to Ottoman politics and engendered a new political class, and later the Young Turk Revolution which allowed proliferation of press and other publications.
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