A popular history of the Arab invasions that carved out an empire from Spain to China Today's Arab world was created at breathtaking speed. Whereas the Roman Empire took over 200 years to reach its fullest extent, the Arab armies overran the whole Middle East, North Africa and Spain within a generation. They annihilated the thousand-year-old Persian Empire and reduced the Byzantine Empire to little more than a city-state based around Constantinople. Within a hundred years of the Prophet's death, Muslim armies destroyed the Visigoth kingdom of Spain, and crossed the Pyrenees to occupy southern France. This is the first popular English language account of this astonishing remaking of the political and religious map of the world. Hugh Kennedy's sweeping narrative reveals how the Arab armies conquered almost everything in their path. One of the few academic historians with a genuine talent for story telling, he offers a compelling mix of larger-than-life characters, battles, treachery and the clash of civilizations.
A groundbreaking work that delivers a fresh account of the Arab conquests, incorporating the latest research in Late Antique history
Few centuries in world history have had such a profound and long-lasting impact as the first hundred years of Islamic history. In this book, David Nicolle examines the extensive Islamic conquests between AD 632 and 750.
Questions over the text's construction, purpose, and reception, however, have largely been ignored in current scholarship. This is despite both the text's important historical material and its crucial early date of creation.
The Byzantine- Islamic Transition in Palestine: An Archaeological Approach. New York: Oxford University Press. Bagnall, Roger S., and Klaas A. Worp. 2004. Chronological Systems in Byzantine Egypt: Second Edition. Leiden: Brill.
Informed by the latest scholarship yet written in a lively and accessible style, this is a book that will surprise general readers and specialists alike.
The early Arab conquests pose a considerable challenge to modern-day historians.
The story of the Muslim conquests of the 7th and 8th centuries AD, when armies inspired by the new religion of Islam burst out of Arabia to subjugate the Levant, southwest Asia, North Africa and the Iberian peninsula, destroying two great ...
Samuel ibn Naghrela, 347–50 Sancho, Prince of Leon, 355, 357 Sancho I “the Fat,” King of Leon, 325–26 Sancho II, King of Navarra, 338 Sancho III “the Greater,” King of Navarra, 351, 353 Sancho VII “the Strong,” King of Navarra, 252, ...
Few centuries in world history have had such a profound and long-lasting impact as the first hundred years of Islamic history. In this book, David Nicolle examines the extensive Islamic conquests between AD 632 and 750.
Students and scholars of early Islamic history will find this book a clear, informative and readable introduction to the subject.