mr. burton 12.3 please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. please, silently sit

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Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit.

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Page 1: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Mr. Burton

12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper.

Please, silently sit.

Page 2: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Big Idea

After the early spread of Islam, three large Islamic empires formed–the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal.

Page 3: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Muslim armies capture many countries

After Muhammad’s death, Abu Bakr became the first caliph, the title that Muslims use for the highest leader of Islam.

Caliphs were not religious leaders, but political and military leaders.

Abu Bakr directed a series of battles against Arab tribes who did not follow Muhammad’s teachings.

Page 4: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Growth of the Empire

Muslim armies battled tribes that did not follow Muhammad’s teachings.

The Muslim armies united Arabia, then defeated the Persian and Byzantine empires.

Conquered people could not build new churches or dress like Muslims.

Christians and Jews could continue to practice their own religion.

After years of fighting Muslim armies, many Berbers, a native people of North Africa, converted to Islam and joined forces with the Arabs.

A combined Berber and Arab army invaded Spain and conquered it in AD 711.

Page 5: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Trade spreading Islam

Along with their trade goods, Arab merchants took Islamic beliefs to new lands.

Islam spread to India, Africa, and Southeast Asia.

Trade brought new products to Muslim lands.

Travelers learned how to make paper from the Chinese.

Merchants brought crops of cotton, rice, and oranges from India, China, and Southeast Asia.

Muslim merchants set up trade businesses in Africa.

Page 6: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

A Mix of Cultures

As Islam spread through trade, warfare, and treaties, Arabs came into contact with people who had different beliefs and lifestyles.

Language and religion helped unify many groups that became part of the Islamic world.

Muslims generally practiced tolerance, or acceptance, with regard to these people.

Jews and Christians, in particular, could keep their beliefs.

Page 7: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Growth of Cities

Baghdad

Capital of Islamic Empire

One of the world’s richest cities through trade and farming.

Center of culture and learning

Cordoba

By the AD 900s, was the largest and most advanced city in Europe

Showplace of Muslim civilization

Page 8: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Expansion of Islam

The great era of Arab Muslim expansion lasted until the 1100s.

Three non-Arab Muslim groups built large, powerful empires that took control of much of Europe, Asia, and Africa.

Page 9: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Ottoman EmpireOttomans were Muslim Turkish warriors who took territory in the mid-1200s.

The Ottomans were aided by slave soldiers called Janissaries.

They had new gunpowder weapons.

Mehmed II and Suleyman I led conquests that turned the Ottomans into a world power.

During Suleyman’s rule, the Ottoman Empire reached its height.

Ottomans took control of the eastern Mediterranean and pushed farther into Europe from 1520–1566.

They would control these areas until the early 1800s.

Page 10: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Safavid Empire Begins

Safavids were Persian Muslims.

A conflict arose over who should be caliph among the Safavids, Ottomans, and other Muslims.

Islam split into two groups.

The Shia thought that only members of Muhammad’s family could become caliphs.

The Sunni thought it did not matter as long as they were good Muslims and strong leaders.

Page 11: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Safavid Empire

The Safavid Empire began in 1501 when the Safavid leader Esma‘il conquered Persia and made himself shah, or king.

He made Shiism, the beliefs of the Shia, the official religion of the empire.

‘Abbas became shah in 1588. He became the greatest Safavid leader.

He defeated the Uzbeks and took back lands that had been lost to the Ottomans.

The Safavids blended Persian and Muslim traditions.

The Safavid Empire lasted until the mid-1700s.

Page 12: Mr. Burton 12.3 Please grab your folder, writing utensil, and paper. Please, silently sit

Mughal Empire

The Mughal Empire was located in northern India and was comprised of Turkish Muslims from Central Asia.

Babur established the Mughal Empire, but it grew mostly under an emperor named Akbar.

Akbar’s tolerant policies allowed Muslims and Hindus to live in peace.

In the late 1600s, an emperor reversed the tolerant policies, which led to conflicts and the end of the empire.