Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined...

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Spread of Islam Islamic Culture

Transcript of Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined...

Page 1: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Spread of IslamIslamic Culture

Page 2: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

The Spread of Islam

When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international flavor

Page 3: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Rise of Muslim cities• As a symbol of their culture,

Muslim rulers put a lot of work into their cities

• Great cities were Cordoba, Cairo, Jerusalem and especially the Abbasid capital of Baghdad

• Baghdad was built in a circular design formed by three protective walls

• The caliph’s palace was made of marble and stone along with a grand mosque

Page 4: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Continuing Rome’s learning

• After the decline of Rome, scholarship in Europe declined and may have been lost if it hadn’t been for Muslim leaders and scholars

• The House of Wisdom was opened in the early 800s in Baghdad

• It was a combination of a library, academy and translation center – texts were translated from Greece, India, Persia, etc. into Arabic

Page 5: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Muslim literature

• Qu’ran is the standard for all Arabic literature and poetry

• Famous popular literature included The Thousand and One Nights, a collection of fairy tales, parables, and legends

• Parts came from India and Persia but the people of the Muslim Empire added to it

Page 6: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Muslim art

• Muslims believe that only Allah can create life, so images of living beings were discouraged

• Many artists turned to calligraphy, the art of beautiful handwriting

Page 7: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Arabesque

Arabesque decoration is a complex, ornate design, usually incorporating flowers, leaves, and geometric patterns. The designs can be found at mosques, mosaics, textiles, and sculptures.

Page 8: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Muslim architecture

• Great Muslim architecture is generally found in mosques

• It often blended Muslim ideas with Byzantine ones and included ideas from the area

Cordoba Mosque in Spain

Page 9: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Medical Advances • al-Razi, a Persian scholar, was the greatest physician of the Muslim world

• Wrote an encyclopedia called the Comprehensive Book that drew on Greek, Syrian and Arabic knowledge and Treatise on Smallpox and Measles

• Believed patients would be healthier if they breathed clean air

al-Razi

Page 10: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Math and science

• Muslim scholars made two great contributions in the areas of math and science:

1. Reliance on scientific observation and experimentation

2. The ability to find mathematical solutions to old problems

• Greek scholars preferred logical reasoning rather than conducting experiments

• Spent time studying astronomy and charted stars, comets, and planets

Page 11: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Impact on Society• Math:

Al-Jabr: wrote a book on a math technique today we call Algebra

• Science:

Ibn-Alhazen: wrote a book called Optics

• Art:

Calligraphy

The Thousand and One Nights

Page 12: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Impact on Society• Medicine:

Ibn-Sina: Discovered tuberculosis is contagious, can spread through water & soil, person’s emotional health is influenced by the physical health, 1st to describe: Meningitis, parts of the eye, &valves of the heart

• Geography:

Ibn-Battuta: Muslim Explorer who traveled over 75, 000 miles and to every Muslim land, detailed map information and worked for foreign leaders

Page 13: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Muslim philosophy

• The House of Wisdom translated the works of Greek philosophers into Arabic

• The greatest Muslim philosopher was Ibn Rushd (also known as Averroes) who was critizied for trying to blend Aristotle’s and Plato’s views with those of Islam

Ibn Rushd

Page 14: Spread of Islam Islamic Culture. The Spread of Islam When Islam spread, Arabic culture was combined with native cultures to create a truly international.

Assignment (Activity 3.4.5)Islamic Museum Brochure

• With one partner, prepare a brochure for a museum exhibit about Muslim learning, culture, and history

• Take one sheet of copy paper and fold in half – on the front, create a cover design for your exhibition

• Choose 3 different elements of Muslim learning, culture and history

• You must describe each element with words and pictures that you draw – no clip art!