THE CALIPHS OF CORDOVA.—In Spain the caliphs of Cordova allowed to the Christians freedom of worship and their own laws and judges. The mingling of the conquerors with the conquered gave rise to a mixed Mozarabic population. The Franks conquered the country as far as the Ebro (812). Under Mohammed I. (852), the Saracen governors of the provinces sought to make themselves independent; but the most brilliant period of the caliphate of Cordova followed, under Abderrahman III. (912-961). In the eleventh century there was anarchy, produced by the African guard of the caliphs, which played a part like that of the Turkish guard at Bagdad, and by reason of the rebellion of the governors. In 1031 the last descendant of the Omayyads was deposed, and in 1060 the very title of caliph vanished. The caliphate gave place to numerous petty Moslem kingdoms. The African Mussulmans came to their help, and thus gave the name of Moors to the Spanish Mohammedans. Their language and culture, however, remained Arabic. The Arabian conquests had moved like a deluge to the Indus, to the borders of Asia Minor, and to the Pyrenees. In Syria they were not generally resisted by the people. Egypt, for the same reason, was an easy conquest. It took the Moslems sixty years to conquer Africa. In three years nearly all Spain was theirs; and it was not until seven hundred years after this time that they were utterly driven out of that country.
THE MOSLEM GOVERNMENT—The Moslem civilization rested on the Koran. Grammar, lexicography, theology, and law stood connected at first with the study and understanding of the Sacred Book. The Caliph was the fountain of authority. There was a fixed system of taxation, the poll-tax and land-tax being imposed only on non-Moslem subjects. All Moslems received a yearly pension, a definite sum determined by their rank. The empire was divided into provinces, each governed by a Prefect, who was a petty sovereign, subject only to the Caliph. The Generals were appointed by the caliph, by the prefects, or by the Vizier, who was the prime minister. The Judges (cadis) were appointed by the same officers. There was a court of appeal over which the caliph presided. There were inspectors of the markets, who were also censors of morals. The Imam had for his function to recite the public prayers in the mosque. The leader of the yearly pilgrimage to Mecca was an officer of the highest dignity.
THEOLOGY: LAW: LITERATURE.—The Mohammedans entered into discussions of theology, which gave rise to differences, and to schools and sects. The nature of the Deity, predestination, the future life, were subjects of profound and subtle inquiry. More than once, pantheistic doctrine was broached by speculative minds, such as Avicenna and Averrhoes. In Persia, Súfism, a form of mysticism, made great progress. It extolled the unselfish love of God, and a contemplative and ascetic life. Law was studied; and on the basis of the Koran, and of reasonings upon it, systems of jurisprudence were created. Science and Literature kept pace with legal studies. Poetry flourished through the whole period of the Eastern caliphate. There were, also, Persian poets who hold an important place in the history of literature, of whom Firdousi (about 940 to 1020) and Saadi (who died in 1291) are the most eminent. Under the Abbassides in Syria, through Christian scholars and by translations, the Arabians became acquainted with the Greek authors. They cultivated geography. The Moslems were students of astronomy, and carried the study of mathematics, which they learned from the Greeks and Hindus, very far. But they apparently felt no interest in the poets, orators, and historians of antiquity. In the study of Aristotle, and in metaphysical philosophy, they were proficients. Medicine, also, they cultivated with success. They delved in Alchemy in the search for the transmutation of metals.
COMMERCE AND THE ARTS.—The Moslems engaged actively in commerce. They acquired much skill in various branches of mechanical art. The weapons of Damascus and of Toledo, the silks of Granada, the saddles of Cordova, the muslins, silks, and carpets of the Moslem dominions in the East, were highly prized in Christian countries. They manufactured paper. Forbidden to represent the human form in painting and sculpture, their distinction in the fine arts is confined to architecture. Peculiar to them is the Arabesque ornamentation found in their edifices: the idea of the arch was borrowed from the Byzantine style. One of their most famous monuments is the mosque at Cordova. The ruins of the Alhambra, in Spain, a palace and a fortress, illustrate the richness and elegance of the Saracenic style of building.
THE ARABIAN MIND.—Neither in architecture, nor in any other department, were the Arabs in a marked degree original. They invented nothing. They were quick to learn, and to assimilate what they learned. They were apt interpreters and critics, but they produced no works marked by creative genius. Many of the scholars at the court of the caliphs were Christians and Jews. Yet Bagdad, Samarcand, Cairo, Grenada, Cordova, were centers of intellectual activity and of learning when the nations of Western Europe had not escaped from the barbarism resulting from the Teutonic invasions.
LITERATURE.—Lives of Mohammed by MUIR, SPRENGER (German), Irving: Encycl. Brit., Art. Mohammedanism; Kuenen, National Religions and Universal Religions; Nöldeke, Gesch. d. Quorans (1860); Muir, The Corân (1878); R. B. Smith, Mohammed and Mohammedanism (1875); Stobart, Islam and its Founder; Ockley, History of the Saracens (sixth edition, 1857); FREEMAN, History and Conquests of the Saracens (1870).
THE CARLOVINGIAN HOUSE
PIPIN of Heristal, d. 714.
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+—Charles Martel, d. 741.
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+—PIPIN the Short, king 752-768.
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+—CHARLEMANGE, 768-814 (emperor 800).
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| +—Pipin, King of Italy, d. 810.
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| | +—BERNARD, d. 818.
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| +—Charles, King of Franconia.
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| +—LOUIS the Pious, 814-840.
| |
| | LOTHARINGIA
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| +—LOTHAR I, 843-855.
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| | +—LOUIS II, 855-875
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| | | +—Hermingarde, m.
| | | BOSO I, King of Provence, 879-887
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| | | +—LOUIS, 887-905 (emperor 901) m. Eadgifu,
| | | daughter of Edward the Elder
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| | +—Lothar II, d. 869.
| | |
| | +—Charles, d. 863
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| | GERMANY
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| +—LOUIS the German, 843-876.
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| | +—CARLOMAN, d. 880.
| | | |
| | | +—ARNULF, King of Germany, 887-899 (emperor 896).
| | | |
| | | +—LOUIS the Child, 900-911.
| | |
| | +—LOUIS the Younger. d 880.
| | |
| | +—CHARLES the Fat (emperor 881-887), d. 888.
| |
| | FRANCE
| |
| +—CHARLES the Bald, 843-877 (emperor 875).
| |
| +—LOUIS II, 877-879.
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| +—LOUIS III, 879-882
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| +—Carloman, 879-884
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| +—CHARLES the Simple, m. Eadgifu,
| daughter of Edward the Elder
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| +—LOUIS IV (D'Outremer), 936-954.
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| +—Matilda, m. CONRAD the Peaceful.
| | |
| | +—RUDOLPH III, 993-1032
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| +—LOTHAR, 954-986.
| | |
| | +—LOUIS V, 986-987.
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| +—Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine, d. 994.
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+—Carloman, 768-771.
RIVAL KINGS OF FRANCE NOT OF THE CARLOVINGIAN LINE.
Robert the Strong, d. 866.
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+—EUDES, king 887-893.
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+—ROBERT, king 922-923.
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+—Emma, m. RUDOLPH of Burgundy; king 923-926.
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+—Hugh the Great (father of Hugh Capet).