TimCallahan
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2009
- Messages
- 6,293
While I believe there are broad patterns to be perceived in history, I believe that contingency also plays a part. This is particularly true of the spread of Islam, largely through conquest, from the Arabian peninsula. Consider the following:
1) Two powerful empires that could have blocked military excursions from the Arabian peninsula, The Eastern Roman and Sassanid Persian empires, had just exhausted each other in a twenty-five year war when the Muslims erupted from Arabia. Had they not gotten involved in that debacle, they probably would have stopped the Muslims cold.
2) Having overrun Egypt, the Muslims moved west, converted the Moors and attacked Spain. There they easily overthrew a weak, corrupt, poorly organized state, the Visigothic kingdom, and moved on to the conquest of another such state, the Frankish kingdom. That the Muslim expansion not occurred at a time when most states in their path were weak and ill organized, the spread of Islam would not have been so rapid and dramatic.
3) The Moors were stopped by Charles Martel at the Battle of Tours. This was in northern France. Had they won that battle, France, as well as Spain, would have been under the rule of the Moors and all Europe would have been open to Muslim conquest.
4) Following the Battle of Tours (732), the Umayyad Caliphate was overthrown by the Abbasids (750). While the Abbasids triumph was nearly complete, the Umayyads held on in the Iberian peninsula. Had the Umayyads not been overthrown, they could have mounted a second, larger assault on the Frankish kingdom, possibly conquering it. Had the Abbasids managed a complete conquest of the Umayyad Caliphate, including Spain, they, too could have made a second attack on France. As it was, the Umayyad emirate in the Iberian peninsula lacked the military resources that had been avialable to the Umayyads as a caliphate. Further, they had a hostile power now just to the south of them. Thus, these two events, the Battle of Tours in 732 and the incomplete overthrow of the Umayyads in 750, effectively ended Muslim into western Europe.
All or any of these events - the 25 year long war between the Byzantines and Persians, The general timing of the Muslim expansion, the Battle of Tours and the Abbasid overthrow of the Umayyads - could have easily gone another way, causing vast changes in the history of Europe, north Africa and the Middle East.
1) Two powerful empires that could have blocked military excursions from the Arabian peninsula, The Eastern Roman and Sassanid Persian empires, had just exhausted each other in a twenty-five year war when the Muslims erupted from Arabia. Had they not gotten involved in that debacle, they probably would have stopped the Muslims cold.
2) Having overrun Egypt, the Muslims moved west, converted the Moors and attacked Spain. There they easily overthrew a weak, corrupt, poorly organized state, the Visigothic kingdom, and moved on to the conquest of another such state, the Frankish kingdom. That the Muslim expansion not occurred at a time when most states in their path were weak and ill organized, the spread of Islam would not have been so rapid and dramatic.
3) The Moors were stopped by Charles Martel at the Battle of Tours. This was in northern France. Had they won that battle, France, as well as Spain, would have been under the rule of the Moors and all Europe would have been open to Muslim conquest.
4) Following the Battle of Tours (732), the Umayyad Caliphate was overthrown by the Abbasids (750). While the Abbasids triumph was nearly complete, the Umayyads held on in the Iberian peninsula. Had the Umayyads not been overthrown, they could have mounted a second, larger assault on the Frankish kingdom, possibly conquering it. Had the Abbasids managed a complete conquest of the Umayyad Caliphate, including Spain, they, too could have made a second attack on France. As it was, the Umayyad emirate in the Iberian peninsula lacked the military resources that had been avialable to the Umayyads as a caliphate. Further, they had a hostile power now just to the south of them. Thus, these two events, the Battle of Tours in 732 and the incomplete overthrow of the Umayyads in 750, effectively ended Muslim into western Europe.
All or any of these events - the 25 year long war between the Byzantines and Persians, The general timing of the Muslim expansion, the Battle of Tours and the Abbasid overthrow of the Umayyads - could have easily gone another way, causing vast changes in the history of Europe, north Africa and the Middle East.
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