|
History of Palestine
Sensing the futility of
defending the Holy Land against the Arabs, Roman Emperor
Heraclius carried away the True Cross of Christ to
Constantinople. Marooned in Aaelia Capitolina (Jerusalem) with
an Arab army besieging its walls, the future looked bleak indeed
for its Patriarch, Sophronius. However, news reached him that
the Arabs had not put Damascus to the sword. The Patriarch
therefore despatched messengers to Omar ibn-al-Khattab, the
third "Caliph" (successor to the prophet Mohammed) and supreme
commander of the Arab armies, expressing his willingness to
surrender Jerusalem to him.
Omar was a devout and
modest man, and he rode from Syria across the pleasant hills of
Galilee, accompanied only by a single servant, with whom he took
turns in riding the camel.
He joined his army before
Jerusalem in AD 637, and signed its surrender terms-which called
for the protection of the Christians, their property and
churches. This marked the first time in which Jerusalem was
spared slaughter and destruction by a conquerer.
Omar then proceeded to
search for the Rock on which Mohammed had prayed. The Holy Rock
was at length discovered under debris and, after uncovering and
clearing the site, Omar ordered that no prayers be made there
until it had been cleansed by three falls of rain.
Caaesarea, the Roman
capital of Palestine, was the last to fall in AD 640; having
withstood an Arab siege because it was supplied by sea.
Palestine finally became an integral part of the Arab World; its
integration into the Arab world being a natural ending to a long
series of Arab incursions into the land ever since the dawn of
history.
Dissensions and rivalries
soon broke out among the Muslim leaders. In Jerusalem, in AD
661, Moawiya proclaimed himself Caliph of the Ommayad dynasty
(Moawiya belonged to the Ommayad family). He transferred the
seat of the caliphate from Medina in the Arabian desert to
Damascus and, like wildfire, Arab armies overran territories
extending from Spain to Turkestan in Central Asia. In AD 691,
the Caliph Abdel Malik ibn-Marwan constructed a mosque over the
Holy Rock. This Dome of the Rock mosque is one of the Islam's
holiest sites, and still remains one of the most beautiful
buildings in the world.
In AD 750, Arabs calling
themselves Abbasids seized power from the Ommayads, and
transferred the capital of the Arab World to Baghdad. The Arabs
were now the sole representatives of civilization. In contrast
to the barbarism which had spread over Europe by the invasion of
nothern peoples, the Arabs went back to Greek philosophy, and
opened up new paths to the study of nature.
The Ommayad period was
filled with wars of invasion, far-away expeditions and striking
triumphs. Under the Abbasids, men's minds were filled with new
ideas, and writings of all kinds sprang into being. Arabic
became the medium of learning for the Middle East. To the caliph
Abu Jafar al-Mansur belongs the credit for encouraging the
studies of exact sciences; astronomy, chemistry and medicine
were advanced, and algebra invented. But it was the word with
which the Arabs prided themselves, as they sat listening to
poetry and to such legendary stories as "A thousand and One
Nights."
The Abbasy caliphs,
however, relied heavily on Persian and Turkish elements, and
when the Caliph Mootasim chose to employ only Turks as his
palace guards, the Turks gradually gained the upper hand in the
fabulous and plush Arab palaces. By AD 850 the Turks were in
complete control of the puppet caliphs. Revolts broke out in
Palestine, Syria and Egypt; as the people protested and refused
the authority of the Turks, and the Abbasid authority over
Palestine became nominal.
In AD 966 Fatimid Arabs
(named after Fatima, the daughter of the Prophet Mohammed)
occupied Egypt and Palestine. Cairo became the capital of the
Fatimids, and ewhen Hakim bi-amr-Allah mounted the Fatimid
throne he caused the church of the Holy Sepulchre to be entirely
destroyed, an act which excited indignation throughout the West.
In the year 1070 Seljuk
Turks from Turkestan in Central Asia invaded Palestine. These
rugged Muslim horsemen began harassing the Christian pilgrims;
and the lamentable accounts which the pilgrims gave on their
return to Europe of the insults and oppression they had
suffered, gave birth to the romantic notion of capturing the
Holy Land. Although the Fatimids of Egypt reoccupied Palestine
in 1098, they lost it a year later to the Crusaders.
|