Ruled
as the 5th Abbasid Caliph (r. 785 – 809), Harun al-Rashid ibn Muhammad al-Mahdi
(763/766 – 809) presided over an explosive era of great achievements for the
Islamic civilization, but his reign also began the decline of the Abbasid Caliphate.
The
Abbasid Caliphate (750 - 1258) stood was a great Islamic Empire that dominated
two continents. Founded through revolution, it presided over a golden age until
it declined due to intrigue, war, and weakness that led to its centuries of
powerless existence until its downfall in the hands of the Mongols.
In
746, in the marginalized regions of modern day Iran, the region called Khorasan
erupted in revolt against the weakened Umayyad Caliphate. A revolt that grew to
a revolutions and installed a new dynasty that presided over the most
glistening age for Islam – the Abbasid Caliphate.
Islam promised a community
(Umma in Arabic) united and equal regardless of race. But the Umayyad Caliphate
granted anything but that. Its desire to unite the Caliphate under Arabic
culture led to the creation of a whole new class of Muslims that do not share
Arabic blood. They became known as the Mawali.
The
First Fitna of 656 to 661 forever divided Islam. The Sunnis and Shias emerged
at the end of the conflict along with a smaller and obscured sect of Islam
called the Kharijites – those who walk out.
In the middle of the 7th
century, Islam saw division within its community brought by political and
religious rivalry. In 661, a new Caliphate emerged and advanced its realms
becoming the fastest growing empire in the next 50 years. This was the Umayyad
Caliphate.
In 656, the young
religion of Islam faced a crisis, its Caliph murdered and pass issues regarding
succession of the Prophet Mohammed reemerged fueling the civil war called the
First Fitna