Synopses & Reviews
In the view of Dr. Martin Sicker, it was with the emergence of Islam that the combination of geopolitics and religion reached its most volatile form and provided the ideological context for war and peace in the Middle East for more than a millennium. The conflation of geopolitics and religion in Islam is predicated on the concept of
jihad (struggle), which may be understood as a
crescentade, in the same sense as the later Christian
crusade, which seeks to achieve a religious goal, the conversion of the world to Islam, by militant means. This equates to a concept of perpetual war with the non-Muslim world, a concept that underlays Muslim geopolitical thinking throughout the thousand-year period covered in this book. However, as Sicker amply demonstrates, the concept often bore little relation to the political realities of the region that as often as not saw Muslims and non-Muslims aligned against and at war with other Muslims.
The story of the emergence and phenomenal ascendancy of the Islamic world from a relatively small tribe in sparsely populated Arabia is one that taxes the imagination, but it becomes more comprehensible when viewed through a geopolitical prism. Religion was repeatedly and often shamelessly harnessed to geopolitical purpose by both Muslims and Christians, albeit with arguably greater Muslim success. Islamic ascendancy began as an Arab project, initially focused on the Arabian peninsula, but was soon transformed into an imperialist movement with expansive ambitions. As it grew, it quickly registered highly impressive gains, but soon lost much of its Arab content. It ended a millennium later as a Turkish—more specifically, an Ottoman—project with many intermediate transformations. The reverberations of the thousand-year history of that ascendancy are still felt today in many parts of the greater Middle East. A comprehensive geopolitical survey for scholars, students, researchers, and all others interested in the history of the Middle East and Islam.
Review
Sicker's narrative is a usable sythesis of this material and as such can be recommended to nonspecialists as a brief introduction to the political history of the premodern Middle East.The Historian
Review
By reading this book the reader gets exposed to a wide range of fascinating issues, indeed.American Review of China Studies
Synopsis
Examines the thousand-year ascendancy of political Islam from the Arab conquests to the zenith of Ottoman expansionism under Suleiman the Magnificent.
Synopsis
Sicker examines the thousand-year ascendancy of Islam from the Arab conquests to the zenith of Ottoman expansionism under Suleiman the Magnificent. He provides a unique perspective on that history that gives full account of the role played by religion as an instrument of geopolitics by both the Muslim and Christian worlds, as jihad and crusade.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [215]-222) and index.
About the Author
MARTIN SICKER is a private consultant and lecturer who has served as a senior executive in the U.S. government and has taught political science at American University and George Washington University.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Empire of the Quraish
The Umayyad Empire
The Abbasid Empire
Abbasid Decline and Imperial Disintegration
The Rise of the Seljukids
The Period of the First Crusades
The Era of the Zengids
Saladin and the Ayyubid Empire
The Eary Thirteenth Century
The Mongol Onslaught
Between Mamluks and Mongols
The Rise of the Ottomans
The Era of Murad and Bayezid
Tamerlane
End of the Byzantine Empire
Mehmed the Conqueror
The Rise of the Safavids
Ottoman Expansionism under Selim
The Era of Suleiman the Magnificent
The End of Islamic Ascendancy
Bibliography