Study Guide 15

Spread of Islam into Africa & Asia, Islamic Civilization,Readings: Rediscovering Arabic Science, Muslim Agricultural Revolution, The Earth and Its Peoples (p. 202-216)

AP World History

Kienast

Key terms:

Caravanserai

Camel saddle

Compass

Astrolabe

Dhow

Bills of exchange

Credit

Checks

Banking houses

Muslim merchant communities

Timbuktu

Kilwa

Melaka

Swahili

Turkic

Muslim Agricultural Revolution

Qanat System

Noria and sakia

Shaduf

Madrasas

Sufism

Essential questions:

1. What factors allowed Islam to spread rapidly through Africa and Asia?

2. Describe how trade routes promoted the growth of each of the following cities: Timbuktu,

Kilwa, and Melaka.

3. In what ways was Islamic civilization more egalitarian than other societies of the day, and in

what ways was it similar to other societies in terms of equality?

4. What were the philosophical, scientific, and mathematical contributions of Islamic

civilization?

Key Concepts

Familiarize yourself with the following key concepts through class discussions or readings:

Key Concept 3.1. Expansion and Intensification ofCommunication and Exchange Networks

I. Improved transportation technologies and commercial practicesled to an increased volume of trade, and expanded the geographicalrange of existing and newly active trade networks.

A. Existing trade routes flourished and promoted the growth of powerfulnew trading cities.

Required examples of existing trade routes:

• The Mediterranean Sea

• The Trans-Saharan

• The Indian Ocean basins

E. The expansion of empires facilitated Trans-Eurasian trade andcommunication as new peoples were drawn into their conquerors’economies and trade networks.

Required examples of empires:

• The Caliphates

II. The movement of peoples caused environmental and linguisticeffects.

A. The expansion and intensification of long-distance trade routes oftendepended on environmental knowledge and technological adaptations to it. (example: The way the Arabs and

Berbers adapted camelsto travel across andaround the Sahara)

C. Some migrations and commercial contacts led to the diffusion oflanguages throughout a new region or the emergence of new languages such as the spread of Bantulanguages including

Swahiliand the spread of Turkicand Arabic languages

III. Cross-cultural exchanges were fostered by the intensification ofexisting, or the creation of new, networks of trade and communication.

A. Islam, based on the revelations of the prophet Muhammad, developedin the Arabian peninsula. The beliefs and practices of Islam reflectedinteractions among Jews, Christians, and Zoroastrians with the localArabian peoples. Muslim rule expanded to many parts of Afro-Eurasiadue to military expansion, and Islam subsequently expanded through theactivities of merchants and missionaries.

B. In key places along important trade routes, merchants set up diasporiccommunities, such as Muslim merchantcommunities in theIndian Ocean region,where they introduced their own cultural traditions into theindigenous culture.

D. Increased cross-cultural interactions resulted in the diffusion ofliterary, artistic, and cultural traditions (Islam in Sub-SaharanAfrica and Southeast Asia)

E. Increased cross-cultural interactions also resulted in the diffusion of

scientific and technological traditions. (example: The influence of Greekand Indian mathematicson Muslim scholarsand the return of Greekscience and philosophyto Western Europe viaMuslim al-Andalus inIberia

IV. There was continued diffusion of crops and pathogens throughoutthe Eastern Hemisphere along the trade routes.

A. New foods and agricultural techniques were adopted in populatedareas.

Key Concept 3.2. Continuity and Innovation of StateForms and Their Interactions

I. Empires collapsed and were reconstituted; in some regions newstate forms emerged.

C. Some states synthesized local and borrowed traditions such as Persian traditions that

influenced Islamic states