Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes (61 page)

BOOK: Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I owe a debt of gratitude to Susan Hoffman, who as director of the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at San Francisco State, convinced me to teach a class on Islam and the West in 2006. Those lectures were one of the seeds out of which grew this book—a growth spurred also by Neils Swinkel, who taped some of those lectures and Matt Martin, station manager at KALW radio, who aired the edited tapes as a weekly series.
Next, let me thanks my agent, Carol Mann. When I told her I was vaguely thinking of writing something called “world history through Islamic eyes,” she cut in to say, “That’s it! That’s your next book!
West of Kabul
was the ant’s-eye view; this will be the bird’s-eye view.” And she was right—this is a bird’s-eye view of my enduring preoccupation, the conjunction and disjunction of East and West.
And thank you, Lisa Kaufman, my insightful editor, whose notes and line edits have been like having not just a second set of eyes but a second and more exacting brain to apply to this project.
Also, I received priceless feedback on this book while it was still a work in progress from my brother Riaz Ansary, who knows more about the doctrines and early history of Islam than I ever will, from my brilliant sister, Rebecca Pettys, and from my friends Joe Quirk and Paul Lobell. Layma Murtaza generously allowed me to study correspondence and magazines her family inherited from her grandfather Dr. Abdul Hakim Tabibi, a disciple of Sayyid Jamaluddin-i-Afghan. Farid Ansary has contributed with a lifetime of stories, anecdotes, poetry quotations, and wit. Wahid Ansary has done his
best to clue me in to the fine points of our religion, and the
n there is my friend Akbar Nowrouz: Akbar-jan, where would I be without all the Islamic-wisdom stories you send to my e-mail?
But above all, thank you to my wife, Deborah Krant, my first reader, first critic, and indispensable partner; thank you to Elina Ansary, for helping me so much with the maps; and thank you, Jessamyn Ansary, for being so endlessly supportive.
INDEX
Abbas ibn Abd al-Mutt
alib See also Saffah
Abbas the Great
Abbasid age/khalifate
Ali descendants and
Baghdad and
bodyguards (mamluks)
bureaucracy
description(fig.)
economy/commerce
orthodox Islam and
overview
Persian mini dynasties
Persian viziers
philosophy and
Shi’ism and
Turk barbarians and
Abbasid revolution(fig.)
Abduh, Mohammed
Abdul Rahman/the Third
Abdul Wahhab
Abdullah (Hashimite)
Abdullah (Othman’s foster brother)
Abraham, prophet
Abu al-Abbas
Abu Bakr
Mohammed and
Othman (khalifa) and
as successor/beliefs
Abu Muslim(fig.)
Abu Sufyan
Abu Talib
Abyssinia and Mohammed’s followers
Adultery
Adventures of Hajji Baba of Ispahan, The
(Morier)
Afdal, al-
Afghanistan
9/11 and aftermath
abandonment by Europe/U.S.
Anglo-Afghan wars
“Great Game” (Russia/Britain) (fig.)
independence
secular modernism
Soviet Union invasion
Taliban
Wahhabism
Water Carrier’s Son
Aflaq, Michel
Age of Discovery
Age of Justice
Agha-i-Sayyaf
Ahmad Shah Baba
Ahmadinejad
Ahriman
Ahura Mazda
Aims of the Philosophers, The
(Ghazali)
Akbar the Great
Akçam, Taner
Akkadians
Al Azhar University
Alamut fortress
Alaudin Mohammed
Albert of Aix
Albigensians
Alchemy of Happiness, The
(Ghazali)
Alexander the Great
Algeria
France’s takeover
Islamic Salvation Party
Ali
assassination
Ayesha and
as imam
Mohammed and
Mu’awiya and
Omar and
Othman and
Sabbah’s beliefs on
Shi’i/Shi’ism and
succession conflict and
as successor/beliefs
Sufism and
Ali, Mohammed
Ali, Tariq
Ali Shah, Mohammad
Aligarh movement.
See
Sayyid Ahmad, Sir (of Aligarh)
“Allah” meaning
Alp Arslan
Amanullah
Amir Kabir (Mirza Taqi)
Amorites
Amr ibn al-A’as
Amra bin Abdul Rahman
Ansar (“the Helpers”)
Ansary, Tamim
childhood/background
world history/Islamic world and
Antony, Mark
Apostate Wars
Arab nationalism See also Pan-Arab nationalism
Arab Revolt (World Wa
r I) (fig.)
Arabian Nights
Arabic language
Arabs
early trade(fig.)
as Semitic
violence and
Arafat, Yasser
Aramaic language
Aristotle
Armenians
assassination of three Pashas
massacre of
in Ottoman Empire
Arslan, Kilij
Asharite school
Asia Minor
before/following Crusades
Sufism and
See also
Ottoman Empire
Assassins, Cult of
Assyrians
Aswan Dam
Atatürk
Atlantic Charter
Attila
Aurangzeb
Austro-Hungarian Empire
Ayatollah definition
Ayesha
Azam Khan, Prince
Azzam, Abdullah
Ba’ath party
Ba’ath Socialist Party
Babur
Babylon/Babylonian empires
Bacon, Francis
Badr battle
Baghdad
building
during Abbasid age
Mongols’ destruction/killings
Baldwin, King of Edessa
Balfour, Arthur James
Balshazzar
Banna, Hassan al-
Banu Hashim clan
Banu Qurayza
Baraka of Mohammed
Barbarossa, Frederick
Basilic cannon
Battle of the Camel
Battle of the Moat
Bayazid I
Baybars, Zahir
Bearden, Milton
Behistun
Bektash
Berke
Bhutto, Zulfikar Ali
Bin Laden, Osama
Bismarck, Otto von
Bolsheviks
Book of Kings, The
(
Shanama
/Firdausi)
Book of Unity, The
(
Kitab-al-Tawhid
/Abdul Wahhab)
Borsoki, al-
Boyle, Robert
British Petroleum (BP)
Buddhism
Bukhari
Bush, George W., administration
Buyid family
Byzantine Empire/Byzantines (fig.)
Caesar, Julius
Calligraphy
Camel, Battle of
Canning, Stratford
Capitulations to Europeans
Catherine the Great
Chaldeans
Chaldiran battle
Charlemagne
Chemistry foundations
Chengez Khan
background/description
invasions
China
before Islam
industrialization/labor and
Mongols and
Christian fundamentalists
Christianity
early expansion
monastic orders
Roman Empire split and
significant events of
See also
Crusades; Orthodox Christianity; Roman Church
Churchill, Winston
Civil War, U.S. (1860-1864)
“Clash of civilizations”
Class divisions (1900s)
cultural divisions
description/effects
Clive, Robert
Cold War effects
Collection of All Histories
(Rashid al-Din)
Columbus, Christopher
Committee for Union and Progress (CUP)
“Composite” bows
Comte, Auguste
Constantinople
Byzantine fire
description(fig.)
Ottomans’ taking
symbolic significance
See also
Istanbul
Constitutionalism
democracy and
Iran
Ottoman Empire
Turkey
Copernicus
Córdoba
Cornwallis, General
“Cradle of civilization”
Crassus
Crosthwaite, Sir Charles
Crusades
alignments
Assassins and
Christian pilgrimages and
crusader states
first contact
Fourth Crusade
“Franj” term
Jerusalem
jihad proponents
landless noblemen and
Muslim disunity
Muslim unity
Nicaea fall
Northern Crusade
overview/effects
residues of
Second Crusade
slaughter/atrocities by Franj
theater of(fig.)
Third Crusade
trade following
Curtin, Philip D.
Da Vinci, Leonardo
Dabashi, Hamid
Daniel
Daquq
Dar al-Funun
Dar al-Islam
Dar al-Harb vs.
description
D’Arcy, William Knox
Darius (“the Great”)
David and Goliath
Democracy
Atlantic Charter
constitutionalism and
Iran
Islam-West relationship (today) and
Jamaluddin-i-Afghan
oil and
Turkey
Deobandis
Dervishes
Descartes, René
Desert Storm
Devshirme program
Diaz, Bartholomew
Din-i Illahi (“the God Religion”)
Diocletian
Dress code
Dulles, John Foster
Duval, Pierre
East India Companies/Company
Egypt
cotton market and
defeat of Mongols
following World War I
French/British competition over
mamluk rule
Mohammed Ali and
Napoleon and
status See also Nasser, Gamal Abdul
Eisenhower, Ike
End of History and the Last Man, The
(Fukuyama)
Engels, Friedrich
English longbow
Ethnic cleansing, UN definition
Eunuchs
Europe (1291-1600 CE)
Americas and
books’ significance
crusading spirit
BOOK: Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes
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