The Great Arab Conquests: How The Spread Of: Isl...

Unlike many nomadic invasions, the Arab conquests were followed by a lasting cultural and linguistic integration that defines the modern Middle East and North Africa.

: While military expansion was swift, mass conversion to Islam took centuries. Early rulers often discouraged immediate conversion to protect tax revenues (jizya) and allowed Christian and Jewish communities to maintain their religious freedom and property. The Great Arab Conquests: How the Spread of Isl...

Within just one hundred years following the death of the Prophet Muhammad in 632 CE, Arab armies established an empire stretching from the Atlantic Ocean in the west to the borders of China and India in the east. Unlike many nomadic invasions, the Arab conquests were

In the mid-seventh century, a new power emerged from the Arabian Peninsula that permanently altered the course of human history. Based on the scholarly work The Great Arab Conquests: How the Spread of Islam Changed the World We Live In by historian Hugh Kennedy, these conquests represented an "astonishing remaking of the political and religious map of the world," occurring at a speed that eclipsed even the expansion of the Roman Empire. The Speed and Scale of Expansion Within just one hundred years following the death

: The unified empire acted as a bridge between East and West, preserving ancient Greek and Persian knowledge while introducing innovations like paper and Indian numerals (now called Arabic numerals) to Europe. A New Global Order

: By the mid-eighth century, the caliphates controlled roughly 13 million square kilometers, including the Iberian Peninsula (Spain), North Africa, the Levant, and Central Asia.

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