The shift in power to Damascus, the Umayyad capital city, was to have profound effects on the development of Islamic history. For one thing, it was a tacit recognition of the end of an era. The first four caliphs had been without exception Companions of the Prophet - pious, sincere men who had lived no differently from their neighbors and who preserved the simple habits of their ancestors despite the massive influx of wealth from the conquered territories. Even 'Uthman, whose policies had such a divisive effect, was essentially dedicated more to the concerns of the next world than of this. With the shift to Damascus much was changed.
  In the early days of Islam, the extension of Islamic rule had been based  on an uncomplicated desire to spread the Word of God. Although the  Muslims used force when they met resistance they did not compel their  enemies to accept Islam. On the contrary, the Muslims permitted  Christians and Jews to practice their own faith and numerous conversions  to Islam were the result of exposure to a faith that was simple and  inspiring. 
Photo: Medieval Muslims regarded the Great Mosque built by the Umayyads in Damascus as one of the wonders of the world. 
  Muiawiyah was an able administrator, and even his critics concede that  he possessed to a high degree the much-valued quality of hilm - a  quality which may be defined as "civilized restraint" and which he  himself once described in these words: 
  I apply not my sword where my lash suffices, nor my lash where my tongue  is enough. And even if there be one hair binding me to my fellowmen, I  do not let it break: when they pull I loosen, and if they loosen I pull.  
  Nevertheless, Mu'awiyah was never able to reconcile the opposition to  his rule nor solve the conflict with the Shi'is. These problems were not  unmanageable while Mu'awiyah was alive, but after he died in 680 the  partisans of 'Ali resumed a complicated but persistent struggle that  plagued the Umayyads at home for most of the next seventy years and in  time spread into North Africa and Spain. 
Photo: Facing al-Gharbiyah, the western minaret, a muezzin at the Umayyad Mosque calls believers to prayer. 
  Under 'Abd al-Malik, the Umayyads expanded Islamic power still further.  To the east they extended their influence into Transoxania, an area  north of the Oxus River in today's Soviet Union, and went on to reach  the borders of China. To the west, they took North Africa, in a  continuation of the campaign led by 'Uqbah ibn Nafi' who founded the  city of Kairouan - in what is now Tunisia - and from there rode all the  way to the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. 
  These territorial acquisitions brought the Arabs into contact with  previously unknown ethnic groups who embraced Islam and would later  influence the course of Islamic history. The Berbers of North Africa,  for example, who resisted Arab rule but willingly embraced Islam, later  joined Musa ibn Nusayr and his general, Tariq ibn Ziyad, when they  crossed the Strait of Gibraltar to Spain. The Berbers later also  launched reform movements in North Africa which greatly influenced the  Islamic civilization. In the East, Umayyad rule in Transoxania brought  the Arabs into contact with the Turks who, like the Berbers, embraced  Islam and, in the course of time, became its staunch defenders. Umayyad  expansion also reached the ancient civilization of India, whose  literature and science greatly enriched Islamic culture. 
 Photo: The minaret of the Great Mosque at Kairouan in Tunisia became the prototype for the majority of North African minarets. 
  One of the Umayyad caliphs who attained greatness was 'Umar ibn 'Abd  al-'Aziz, a man very different from his predecessors. Although a member  of the Umayyad family, 'Umar had been born and raised in Medina, where  his early contact with devout men had given him a concern for spiritual  as well as political values. The criticisms that religious men in Medina  and elsewhere had voiced of Umayyad policy - particularly the pursuit  of worldly goals - were not lost on 'Umar who, reversing the policy of  his predecessors, discontinued the levy of a poll tax on converts. 
  This move reduced state income substantially, but as there was clear  precedent in the practice of the great 'Umar ibn al-Khattab, the second  caliph, and as 'Umar ibn 'Abd al-'Aziz was determined to bring  government policy more in line with the practice of the Prophet, even  enemies of his regime had nothing but praise for this pious man. 
  The last great Umayyad caliph was Hisham, the fourth son of 'Abd  al-Malik to succeed to the caliphate. His reign was long - from 724 to  743 - and during it the Arab empire reached its greatest extent. But  neither he nor the four caliphs who succeeded him were the statesmen the  times demanded when, in 747, revolutionaries in Khorasan unfurled the  black flag of rebellion that would bring the Umayyad Dynasty to an end. 
  Although the Umayyads favored their own region of Syria, their rule was  not without accomplishments. Some of the most beautiful existing  buildings in the Muslim world were constructed at their instigation -  buildings such as the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, the Dome of the Rock  in Jerusalem, and the lovely country palaces in the deserts of Syria,  Jordan, and Iraq. They also organized a bureaucracy able to cope with  the complex problems of a vast and diverse empire, and made Arabic the  language of government. The Umayyads, furthermore, encouraged such  writers as 'Abd Allah ibn al-Muqaffa' and 'Abd al-Hamid ibn Yahya  al-Katib, whose clear, expository Arabic prose has rarely been  surpassed. 
  Photo: The shrine of the  Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, built in an area revered by Muslims,  Christians and Jews alike covers the rock from which Muhammad is  believed to have ascended to heaven with the Angel Gabriel. 






 
 









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