Byzantine Empire
the eastern half of the Roman Empire, which survived after the fall of the Western Empire
Nika Rebellion
riot that saw crazed fans call for the overthrow of Justinian, his wife Theodora saved his crown
patriarch
leader of the church
Slavs
people group from eastern Europe, north of the Black Sea that traded with the Byzantines, same ethnic group as the Russians
Kiev
trade center and capital of the first major Russian state
Bedouins
Arabia's earliest inhabitants who were nomadic herders, "desert dweller"
Ka'aba
shrine located in Mecca, erected by Abraham
umma
Islamic community
hajj
pilgrimage to Mecca
shari'a
collection of Islamic law formed by the Qur'an and Sunna
Sunni
an Islamic group that believes any Muslim can be caliph
Abbasids
clan that overthrew the Umayyads in 750, descendents of Muhammad, established Baghdad as capital city, ruled during golden age
House of Wisdom
academic center established in Baghdad
Justinian
Byzantine emperor who reconquered much of the territory previously under the rule of the Roman empire, ordered the construction of the Hagia Sofia, introduced new legal code
Muhammad
founder of Islam, prophet, born into family of Mecca's ruling tribe, worked as caravan merchant
Uthman
murdered Umayyad caliph whose death set off a civil war between Muslims
Ibn Rushd
Spanish-Arab philosopher, also known as Averroes
Justinian's Code
simple, clear and logical work that reorganized and standardized confusing Roman laws
iconoclasts
those opposed to the use of icons
schism
seperation
Cyrillic
form of the Greek alphabet used for writing Slavic languages, attributed to Cyril
Dome of the Rock
mosque in Jerusalem built on the location where Muslims believe Abraham prepared to sacrifice his son Isaac
Mecca
important Arabian city, holy city in Islam, birthplace of Muhammad
Islam
monotheistic religion based on the teachings of the prophet Mohammed
Qu'ran
holy book of Islam, Muslims believe it contains the flawless words of Allah
shahada
Islamic declaration of faith in no God but God
jihad
struggle with external and internal challenges as Muslims strive to please God
Shi'a
an Islamic group that believes only descendents of Muhammad can be a caliph
Library of Cordoba
center of learning established by the Umayyads
Theodora
Justinian's wife, influenced empirical policy, fought for the passage of laws to protect women, children, and some Christian minority groups
Ali
Muhammad's son-in-law by virtue of his marriage to Fatima, considered the first caliph by Shi'ites
Harun al-Rashid
most well-known Abbasid caliph
Ibn Battuta
scholar who traveled from China to Spain, writing detailed accounts of his visits across the Islamic empire and beyond
Hagia Sophia
large church in Constantinople built by order of Justinian
icons
religious images of Jesus and the saints
excommunication
expulsion from the church
Constantinople
capital city of the Byzantine Empire
The Thousand and One Nights
collection of popular Muslim folktales
Medina
city in western Arabia where Muhammad and his followers fled to escape persecution in Mecca
Hijrah
Muhammad's journey from Mecca to Medina to escape persecution
Five Pillars of Islam
five acts of worship required by all Muslims: the belief in Allah, praying five times a day, giving to the needy, fasting during Ramadan, and making the pilgrimage to Mecca
mosque
Islamic place of worship
caliph
successor
Umayyads
dynasty that ruled the Islamic Empire and established hereditary succession, moved the capital city to Damascus, established kingdom of al-Andalus in Spain
calligraphy
art of beautiful handwriting
al-jabr
algebra
Cyril
missionary sent by the Byzantine government to eastern Europe to convert Russians and Balkans to Orthodox Christianity
Abu Bakr
first caliph after the death of Muhammad, administrative/military leader but not a prophet, spread Islam to parts of Byzantine and Persian empires
Ibn Sina
Islamic scientist/philosopher who organized the medical knowledge of the Greeks and Arabs into the Canon of Medicine, also known as Avicenna
al-Khwarizmi
muslim mathematician who created the technique of "al-jabr" or algebra
Vladimir of Kiev
converted to Orthodox Christianity and ordered his subjects to convert, conquered by the Mongols
Ivan III
first ruler of the independent state of Russia, declared himself czar, declared Moscow "Third Rome"