Science  People  Locations  Timeline
Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Home > Islamic conquest of Afghanistan


 Contents
History of Afghanistan series.
Pre-Islamic period of Afghanistan
Islamic conquest of Afghanistan
Durrani Empire
European influence in Afghanistan
Reforms of Amanullah Khan and civil war
Reigns of Nadir Shah and Zahir Shah
Daoud's Republic of Afghanistan
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan
History of Afghanistan since 1992

1 The Islamic Conquest

In 637, five years after the death of Muhammad, Arab Muslims shattered the might of the Iranian Sassanians at the battles of Qadisiya and Nahawand . The invaders began to reach into the lands east of Iran: Herat was captured in 651. By the middle of the eighth century, the rising Abbasid Dynasty was able to subdue the Arab invasion, putting an end to the prolonged struggle. Peace prevailed under the rule of the caliph Harun al-Rashid ( 785- 809) and his son, and learning flourished in such Central Asian cities as Samarkand. From the seventh through the ninth centuries, most inhabitants of what is present-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, southern parts of the former Soviet Union, and areas of northern IndiaThe Republic of India is a large multicultural country in South Asia, with a population of over one billion. The Indian economy is the fourth largest in the world, in terms of purchasing power parity, and is the world's second-fastest growing economy. were converted to Sunni IslamSunni Islam is the largest denomination of Islam. Followers of the Sunni tradition are known as Sunnis or Sunnites, and sometimes refer to themselves as the Ahlus Sunnah wal-Jamaa'h. It is widely believed among Sunnis that the name Sunni derives from the.

In the eighth and ninth centuries ancestors of many of today's TurkicThe Turkic languages are a group of closely related languages that are spoken by a variety of people distributed across a vast area from Eastern Europe to Siberia and Western China. The Turkic languages are considered by some linguists to be part of the A-speaking Afghans settled in the Hindu KushThe Hindu Kush or Hindukush is a mountain range in Afghanistan as well as in the Northern Areas of Pakistan. It was named during the times when Mughals were making influx into greater India, hence the name Hindu (meaning Indian). It is the westernmost ext area (partly to obtain better grazing land) and began to assimilate much of the culture and language of the PashtunThe Pashtun (also Pushtun Pakhtun or ethnic Afghan in referring to the period of the British Raj or earlier, sometimes Pathan are an ethnic/religious group of people, living primarily in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India and following Pashtunwali. The Pash tribes already present there.

By the middle of the ninth century, Abbasid rule had faltered, and semi-independent states began to emerge throughout the empire. In the Hindu Kush area, three short-lived, local dynasties ascended to power. The best known of the three, the Samanid, extended its rule from BukharaBukhara ( in Persian, Buxoro or in Uzbek; in Russian; also Boxara in Tatar) is one of the major cities of Uzbekistan, capital of the Bukhara region ( Bukhoro Wiloyati). The majority of city's population are Persian-speaking Tajiks. It forms together with as far south as India and west as Iran. Although Arab Muslim intellectual life still was centered in BaghdadCapitals in Asia Baghdad is the capital of Iraq and the Baghdad Province. It is the second largest city in Southwest Asia after Tehran, with the 2003 population estimated at 5,772,000. Situated on the Tigris River at 33°20 north and 44°26 east, the city w, Iranian Muslim scholarship, that is, Shia Islam, predominated in the Samanid areas at this time. By the mid-tenth century, the Samanid Dynasty had crumbled in the face of attacks from Turkish tribes to the north and from the Ghaznavids, a rising dynasty to the south.



Read more »

Non User