The rise of Islam
in the Arabian Peninsula had a significant impact on Aksum
during the seventh and eighth centuries. By the time of the
Prophet Muhammad's death (A.D. 632), the Arabian Peninsula,
and thus the entire opposite shore of the Red Sea, had come
under the influence of the new religion. The steady advance
of the faith of Muhammad through the next century resulted
in Islamic conquest of all of the former Sassanian Empire
and most of the former Byzantine dominions. Despite the
spread of Islam by conquest elsewhere, the Islamic state's
relations with Aksum were not hostile at first. According to
Islamic tradition, some members of Muhammad's family and
some of his early converts had taken refuge with the
Aksumites during the troubled years preceding the Prophet's
rise to power, and Aksum was exempted from the jihad, or
holy war, as a result. The Arabs also considered the
Aksumite state to be on a par with the Islamic state, the
Byzantine Empire, and China as one of the world's greatest
kingdoms. Commerce between Aksum and at least some ports on
the Red Sea continued, albeit on an increasingly reduced
scale. Problems between
Aksum and the new Arab power, however, soon developed. The
establishment of Islam in Egypt and the Levant greatly
reduced Aksum's relations with the major Christian power,
the Byzantine Empire. Although contact with individual
Christian churches in Egypt and other lands continued, the
Muslim conquests hastened the isolation of the church in
Aksum. Limited communication continued, the most significant
being with the Coptic Church in Egypt, which supplied a
patriarch to the Aksumites, but such contacts were
insufficient to counter an ever-growing ecclesiastical
isolation. Perhaps more important, Islamic expansion
threatened Aksum's maritime contacts, already under siege by
Sassanian Persians. Red Sea and Indian Ocean trade, formerly
dominated by the Byzantine Empire, Aksum, and Persia,
gradually came under the control of Muslim Arabs, who also
propagated their faith through commercial activities and
other contacts. Aksum lost its
maritime trade routes during and after the mid-seventh
century, by which time relations with the Arabs had
deteriorated to the point that Aksumite and Muslim fleets
raided and skirmished in the Red Sea. This situation led
eventually to the Arab occupation of the Dahlak Islands,
probably in the early eighth century and, it appears, to an
attack on Adulis and the Aksumite fleet. Later, Muslims
occupied Sawakin and converted the Beja people of that
region to Islam. By the middle of
the ninth century, Islam had spread to the southern coast of
the Gulf of Aden and the coast of East Africa, and the
foundations were laid for the later extensive conversions of
the local populace to Islam in these and adjacent regions.
East of the central highlands, a Muslim sultanate, Ifat, was
established by the beginning of the twelfth century, and
some of the surrounding Cushitic peoples were gradually
converted. These conversions of peoples to the south and
southeast of the highlands who had previously practiced
local religions were generally brought about by the
proselytizing efforts of Arab merchants. This population,
permanently Islamicized, thereafter contended with the
Amhara-Tigray peoples for control of the Horn of
Africa.
Library of Congress Country Study Ethiopia and the
Early Islamic Period
Library of Congress Country Study
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