Islam : a thousand years of faith and power / Jonathan Bloom and Sheila Blair.
Publication details: New Delhi : Sterling Paperbacks, 2004.Description: 268 p., [32] p. of plates : col. ill., maps, portsISBN:- 8120725727 :PhP560/504
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | BSOP Library | GC | BP55/B62i 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.2 | Available | 00031374 |
--6.the crucible --7.City and country --8.The flowering of intelletual life --[pt]. 3.The age of empires, 1250-1700 --9.Regional powers --10.Consolidation --11.Expansion.
First published by Yale Nota Bene in 2002.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [251]-257) and index.
[pt.]. 1.Muhammad and the origins of Islam, 600-750 --1.The world at the rise of Islam --2.Muhammad and the revelation of Islam --3.The sources of faith --4.Muhammd's successors --5.The spread of Islamic power --[pt]. 2.The golden age, 750-
Historians Jonathan Bloom and Sheila Blair provide a comprehensive and accessible overview of the origin of this extraordinary religion, culture, and belief system that often has been misunderstood in the West. In its first thousand years, while Europe suffered through the Dark Ages, Islamic civilization flourished in a string of glittering cities such as Cordoba, Fez, Cairo, Istanbul, Baghdad, and Samarqand. Muslims expanded the boundaries of human knowledge in literature, art, science, and medicine. Bloom and Blair tell the remarkable story of Islam's rise to world prominence, from its revelation to Muhammad and its extraordinary spread within a century of the Propher's death, through its golden age of empire and the forging of a rich new culture, to the changes it experienced after the Mongol invasions of the thirteenth century.