People
Places
Religion
Religion Pt 2
Grab Bag
100

(570-632) Born in Mecca, died in Medina. Founder of Islam. Regarded by Muslims as a prophet of God. Teachings make up the Qu'ran, the Muslim holy book.

Mohammed

100

As a part of the Mali Empire, this city became a major terminus of the trans-Saharan trade and a center of Islamic learning

Timbuktu

100

Christian followers in the Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantine Empire); split from Roman Catholic Church and shaped life in eastern Europe and western Asia

Eastern Orthodox Church

100

Islamic empire ruled by those believed to be the successors to the Prophet Muhammad

Caliphate

100

The short dynasty between the Han and the Tank; built the Grand Canal, strengthened the government and introduced Buddhism to China

Sui Dynasty

200

Movement from the Arabian peninsula; spread of Islam; invaded/settled/ruled the Middle East, Africa, and southern Europe; mixed with native cultures

Arab Migrations

200

(330-1543) The eastern half of the ROman Empire, survived after the fall of the Western Empire at the end of the 5th century C.E. the capital was Constantinople, named after Emperor Constantine

Byzantine Empire

200

"the people of the book" later extended to Zoroastrians and Hindus which offered state protection under an Islamic state bust still reduced individual to second-class citizen status

Dhimmis

200

The collective community of Islamic peoples, which is thought to transcend ethnic and political boundaries.

Ummah

200

a group of traveling merchants and animals is called this

Caravan

300

Byzantine Missionaries sent to convert eastern Europe and Balkans; responsible for the creation of Slavic written script called Cyrillic.

Cyril and Methodius

300

The first Islamic government established within India from 1206-1520. Controlled a small area of northern India and was centered in Delhi

Delhi Sultanate

300

a member of the branch of Islam that regards Ali as the legitimate successor to Mohammed and rejects the first three caliphs

Shiite

300

tax that non-Muslims had to pay when living within a Muslim empire

Jizya

300

the doctrines of a monotheistic religion founded in Northern India in the 16th century by Guru Nanak and combining elements of Hinduism and Islam

Sikhism

400

Indian religious leader who founded Sikhism in dissent from the caste system of Hinduism

Guru Nanak

400

From 1235-1400 this was a strong empire of Western Africa, with its trading cities of Timbuktu and Gao, it had many mosques and universities. The Empire upheld gold-salt trade

Mali Empire

400

a religion based on the teachings of the prophet Mohammad which stresses belief in one god (Allah), Paradise and Hell, and a body of law written in the Quran. Followers are called Muslims

Islam

400

Declaration of faith, prayer, alms, fasting, and pilgrimage

5 Pillars of Islam

400

Apolitical-religious system in which the secular ruler is also head of the religious establishment, as in the Byzantine Empire.

Caesaropapism

500

Emperor of the kingdom of Mali in Africa, he made a famous pilgrimage to Mecca and established trade routes to the Middle East

Mansa Musa

500

The split between the Eastern and Western Christian Churches in 1054

East-West Schism

500

the spread of Islam via trade through he Indian Ocean and East Africa in the Post-Classical Era

Muslim Diaspora

500

A branch of Islam whose members acknowledge the first four caliphs as the rightful successors of Muhammad

Sunni

500

a government in which the supreme power is in the hands of a sultan; the sultan may be an absolute ruler or a sovereign with constitutionally limited authority

sultanate

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