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History & Culture. The Fertile Crescent. The first civilizations in the world developed in the Fertile Crescent. From the Persian Gulf north through the plains of the Tigris and Euphrates to Asia Minor and the Mediterranean coast.
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The Fertile Crescent • The first civilizations in the world developed in the Fertile Crescent. • From the Persian Gulf north through the plains of the Tigris and Euphrates to Asia Minor and the Mediterranean coast. • Many of the plants and animals found on farms throughout the world were first domesticated here. • By 3000 B.C. the Sumerians built the world's first known cities in southern Mesopotamia. • They depended on irrigated fields of wheat and barley. • City merchants traded goods throughout the region.
Ancient Empires • Mesopotamia's rich resources attracted many invaders. • Akkadians conquered the Sumerians in about 2350 B.C. and created the region's first empire. • Islands of the Persian Gulf became major trading centers eventually linking merchants of Mesopotamia and India. • 550 B.C. an empire developed in Persia and they conquered both Mesopotamia and Asia Minor. • Later, the Greeks and Romans controlled much of the region.
The Rise of Islam • Muhammad, who was born in Mecca, established Islam. • Around 610 A.D. he had a vision of the angel Gabriel who told him to preach the word of God (Allah). • He spread Allah's message to people called Muslims. • The Qur'an contains Allah's message to Muhammad. • Due to persecution, Muhammad established a Muslim community in the city of Medina. • By the time of his death in 632, Islam had spread throughout the Arabian Peninsula. • Within a century Islam had spread as far as Morocco and Spain, and later to Central and Southeast Asia as well as India.
Empires and Independence • In the 1200s the Mongols conquered what is now Afghanistan, Iran, and Iraq. • In the 1500s the Safavids came to power in Iran and soon seized Afghanistan from the Muslim rulers of India. • The more than 200 year rule of the Safavids is considered the golden age of Persian culture. • Literature, architecture, and arts flourished. • Persian carpets, ceramics, and textiles became renowned. • Britain and Russia tried controlling the area in the 1800s and both Iran and Afghanistan became independent in the 1900s.
Empires and Independence • In the 1500s the Ottoman Turks conquered Mesopotamia and the east and west coasts of the Arabian Peninsula. • This land was held until the British took over in the early 1900s. • Iraq and Saudi Arabia became independent in 1932. • Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Yemen, and the UAE did not become independent until the 1960s and 70s.
People and Languages • Most people in the Persian Gulf and Southwest Asia are Arabs. • Arabic place names in Spain and Morocco, Central Asia, and India. • Located primarily in Saudi Arabia and Iraq. • Kurds are Muslims but not Arabs. • Live in borderlands of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey. • Most Iranians are Persians who speak Farsi. • Iran also includes Arabs and Turks. • The Pashtun are the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan. • Pashtun refers to several tribes that speak the Pashtu language.
Sunnis and Shia Sunnis (orthodox) • Choose their imams. • 90 percent of Muslims. • Spread throughout the world. Shia • Only Muhammad's descendants. • Iran, southern Iraq, Yemen, Syria, and Lebanon. • Imams have considerable political power in Iran.