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WHAP CH 11 Islam Shared Community

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“Islam was simultaneously both a single world of shared meaning and interaction and a series of separate and distinct communities, often in conflict with one another.” What evidence could you provide to support both sides of this argument? WHAP – Mr. Duez -- Unit 3 Age of Accelerating Connections, 500-1500 Chapter 11 The Worlds of Islam -- Afro-Eurasian Connections, 600–1500
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Page 1: WHAP CH 11 Islam Shared Community

“Islam was simultaneously both a single world of shared meaning and interaction and a series of separate and distinct communities, often in conflict with one another.” 

What evidence could you provide to support both sides of this argument?

WHAP – Mr. Duez -- Unit 3 Age of Accelerating Connections, 500-1500

Chapter 11 The Worlds of Islam -- Afro-Eurasian Connections, 600–1500

Page 2: WHAP CH 11 Islam Shared Community

“Islam was simultaneously both a single world of shared meaning and interaction and a series of separate and distinct communities, often in conflict with one another.” 

What evidence could you provide to support both sides of this argument?

At the core of a single Islamic world was a common commitment to Islam.

The ulama through education and Sufis through their associations served to bind the Islamic world together.

It also cohered as an immense arena of exchange in which goods, technologies, crops, and ideas circulated widely.

Page 3: WHAP CH 11 Islam Shared Community
Page 4: WHAP CH 11 Islam Shared Community

“Islam was simultaneously both a single world of shared meaning and interaction and a series of separate and distinct communities, often in conflict with one another.” 

What evidence could you provide to support both sides of this argument?

WHAP – Mr. Duez -- Unit 3 Age of Accelerating Connections, 500-1500 Chapter 11 The Worlds of Islam -- Afro-Eurasian Connections, 600–1500

However, Islam was separate and distinct in that is was politically fragmented.

It included numerous distinct and sometimes hostile religious traditions, including Sunni/Shia and ulama/Sufi splits.

It embraced distinctive cultural traditions from sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia that resulted in different attitudes toward social and cultural norms, such as those concerning women.

Page 5: WHAP CH 11 Islam Shared Community
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