When Baghdad Ruled the Muslim World: The Rise and Fall of Islam’s Greatest Dynasty

  • ISBN13: 9780306814808
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
“A beautifully written and definitive history of Baghdad…opening the doors to the old city and letting its secrets spill out.” (Library Journal) The “golden age of Islam” in the eighth and ninth centuries was as significant to world history as the Roman Empire was in the first and second centuries. The rule of Baghdad’s Abbasid Dynasty stretched from Tunisia to India, and its legacy influenced politics and society for years to come. In this deftly woven narrativ… More >>

When Baghdad Ruled the Muslim World: The Rise and Fall of Islam’s Greatest Dynasty

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5 Responses to “When Baghdad Ruled the Muslim World: The Rise and Fall of Islam’s Greatest Dynasty”

  • This is one of the best history books that I have read. The best thing about it is that it reads like a novel. When you start reading it you cant stop because you really want to know what happens next, and most of the time I already knew what was going to happen!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  • The rise and fall of Baghdad considers the earliest days of the city’s origins, charting the rise and fall of the city during the Abbasid dynasty, when Baghdad was the seat of cultural and political power in the region. Any who would profess to understand modern Islam and Baghdad must understand the city’s heyday during the 8th and 9th centuries: and this is the place to do it. When Baghdad Ruled The Muslim World: The Rise And Fall Of Islam’s Greatest Dynasty offers important keys to understanding Islam’s foundations.

    Rating: 5 / 5

  • This purely popular tale of the Baghdad Abbasid Caliphate is a wonderful book, full of splendor and tales of the times of the Caliphs, the Harem, early Islam, the founding of modern Baghdad, luxury, corruption, bad governance, murder, passion, rape, affluence gone wild, gluttony, exorbitance, decadence and political failure.

    The Abbasids were the first dynasty following the first four `righteous’ caliphs(Bakr, Omar, Uthman, Ali) who followed the death of Mohammed. The movement of the capital of Islam to Baghdad symbolized the secular transference of temporal power from its religious foundations into a colonial capital of imperial Islam, after-all the region around Baghdad, modern day Iraq, then Mesopotamia, was a country full of Jews, Zoroastrians, Pagans, Assyrian Christians, Nestorians, Jacobites, Gnosts and others. Muslims were a minority in this land. Baghdad was a new city created to rule a colonial empire that was recently created. The empire that the Abbasids ruled was wealthy beyond belief, corrupt, licentious, full of slander, moral turpitude and court scandals. This excellent tale of this period doesn’t really shed light on the modern `conflict’ as claimed but it is an excellent fascinating tale, unfortunately it doesn’t follow the narrative of Baghdad through to its destruction by the Mongols, but only to the replacement of the Abbasids by the Fatamids who rode to power on the backs of Turkic immigrant warriors from the east, see the book `black banners from the east’ for a narrative of the rise of the Fatamids. If this sheds light on anything to do with Islam and modern times it shows that fundamentalist Islam’s accusations of Western power, wealth and immorality, are mirrored in the actions of early Islam, which resembled the modern day west far more than modern day Islam, an irony. Islam in the 8th century was far from the fundamentalist form we see today, however there is nothing admirable in its use of Harems and slavery.

    Seth J. Frantzman

    Rating: 5 / 5

  • So much of the study of history is concerned with dates. I can remember in college with cram sheets of when things happened. Mr. Kennedy doesn’t write much of dates. He writes of people, people living more than a thousand years ago when our own western history was in a period we call the dark ages when learning was forgotten and the Roman Catholic church ruled all.

    This was the time when the Shia and the Sunni were falling apart and beginning the conflict that rages to this day (In the morning paper a group of terrorists in Iraq stopped a bus or two, let the Sunni people go and murdered the Shia.)

    This was the time that Osama bin Laden seeks to re-establish. An old glory such as Mussolini felt about Roman times.

    For a couple of centuries a family ruled most of the Islamic world from Baghdad. For those of us more familiar with the antics of the kings of England there is a striking resemblance, palace intrigue, key supporters changing sides, murder, imprisonment, struggles over succession.

    This book brings to life an aspect of history that few of us have heard before but which is increasing in importance in our time.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  • Hugh Kennedy has done a wonderful job here of writing about one of the greatest dynasties in history. The history is comprehensive providing details about the caliphs, the battles for successions, their harems, the names of important men in each reign, and court intrigues etc., The book is very easy to read and at no point does the reader lose interest. In spite of breaking up the narration, of successive reigns and interspersing it with descriptions of court culture and palaces built by the rulers, the author has maintained a wonderful flow in the book.

    My only disappointment was that the author did not provide more indepth information on 1. the famous libraries of Baghdad and 2. the economic and financial system prevalent at the time. I looked in vain for details of trading markets and goods brought in to Baghdad at the time and for any mention of the modus operandi of monetary transactions.

    However, the book is still one of the most comprehensive English Language histories of the dynasty that I have come accross.
    Rating: 4 / 5

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