In 637 A.D., only
five years after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, Arab
Muslims shattered the might of the Iranian Sassanians at the
battle of Qadisiya, and the invaders began to reach into the
lands east of Iran. By the middle of the eighth century, the
rising Abbasid Dynasty was able to subdue the Arab invasion,
putting an end to the prolonged struggle. Peace prevailed
under the rule of the caliph Harun al Rashid (785-809) and
his son, and learning flourished in such Central Asian
cities as Samarkand. From the seventh through the ninth
centuries, most inhabitants of what is present-day
Afghanistan, Pakistan, southern parts of the former Soviet
Union, and areas of northern India were converted to Sunni
Islam. In the eighth and
ninth centuries ancestors of many of today's Turkic-speaking
Afghans settled in the Hindu Kush area (partly to obtain
better grazing land) and began to assimilate much of the
culture and language of the Pashtun tribes already present
there (see Ethnic Groups, ch. 2). By the middle of
the ninth century, Abbasid rule had faltered, and
semi-independent states began to emerge throughout the
empire. In the Hindu Kush area, three short-lived, local
dynasties ascended to power. The best known of the three,
the Samanid, extended its rule from Bukhara as far south as
India and west as Iran. Although Arab Muslim intellectual
life still was centered in Baghdad, Iranian Muslim
scholarship, that is, Shia Islam, predominated in the
Samanid areas at this time. By the mid-tenth century, the
Samanid Dynasty had crumbled in the face of attacks from
Turkish tribes to the north and from the Ghaznavids, a
rising dynasty to the south. The
Pre-Islamic Period
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>>> Ghaznavid
and Ghorid Rule
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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