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쌰깔 크롱🤍
쌰깔 크롱🤍
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Sunday 16 November 2025 01:21:06 GMT
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From the mid-8th century, the Abbasid Caliphate ushered in the Islamic Golden Age, a period when the Muslim world became the most advanced civilization on Earth. With Baghdad as its shining capital, the caliphate stretched from North Africa to Central Asia, uniting cultures under one vast network of trade, scholarship, and faith. Baghdad’s House of Wisdom became the greatest center of knowledge of its time. Scholars translated works of philosophy, medicine, astronomy, and mathematics from Greek, Persian, Indian, and Chinese sources into Arabic. But they did not just preserve knowledge — they expanded it. Muslim mathematicians like Al-Khwarizmi invented algebra and algorithms, astronomers like Al-Biruni and Al-Tusi refined planetary models, and doctors such as Ibn Sina (Avicenna) and Al-Razi wrote medical encyclopedias that would be studied in Europe for centuries. Optics, chemistry, engineering, and geography all advanced far beyond what was known elsewhere. Art and literature flourished as well. The Abbasid court sponsored poets, musicians, and architects, giving rise to masterpieces of Arabic literature like One Thousand and One Nights. Calligraphy and Islamic art reached new heights, blending beauty with spiritual meaning. Baghdad, Cairo, Cordoba, and Samarkand became dazzling cities, filled with libraries, mosques, gardens, and markets. This prosperity was built on a global economy. Muslim merchants dominated trade routes from Spain to China, carrying silk, spices, gold, and knowledge across the Indian Ocean and Silk Road. The introduction of paper from China created a revolution in learning, spreading books and literacy on a scale never seen before. For nearly 500 years, the Abbasid era made the Muslim world the center of global civilization. When Europe was in its so-called “Dark Ages,” scholars traveled to Muslim lands to learn. The knowledge preserved and developed in Baghdad, Cordoba, and Cairo later flowed into Europe, helping spark the Renaissance and shaping modern science, medicine, and philosophy.|| #fyp #islam #islamicgoldenage #arab #edit
From the mid-8th century, the Abbasid Caliphate ushered in the Islamic Golden Age, a period when the Muslim world became the most advanced civilization on Earth. With Baghdad as its shining capital, the caliphate stretched from North Africa to Central Asia, uniting cultures under one vast network of trade, scholarship, and faith. Baghdad’s House of Wisdom became the greatest center of knowledge of its time. Scholars translated works of philosophy, medicine, astronomy, and mathematics from Greek, Persian, Indian, and Chinese sources into Arabic. But they did not just preserve knowledge — they expanded it. Muslim mathematicians like Al-Khwarizmi invented algebra and algorithms, astronomers like Al-Biruni and Al-Tusi refined planetary models, and doctors such as Ibn Sina (Avicenna) and Al-Razi wrote medical encyclopedias that would be studied in Europe for centuries. Optics, chemistry, engineering, and geography all advanced far beyond what was known elsewhere. Art and literature flourished as well. The Abbasid court sponsored poets, musicians, and architects, giving rise to masterpieces of Arabic literature like One Thousand and One Nights. Calligraphy and Islamic art reached new heights, blending beauty with spiritual meaning. Baghdad, Cairo, Cordoba, and Samarkand became dazzling cities, filled with libraries, mosques, gardens, and markets. This prosperity was built on a global economy. Muslim merchants dominated trade routes from Spain to China, carrying silk, spices, gold, and knowledge across the Indian Ocean and Silk Road. The introduction of paper from China created a revolution in learning, spreading books and literacy on a scale never seen before. For nearly 500 years, the Abbasid era made the Muslim world the center of global civilization. When Europe was in its so-called “Dark Ages,” scholars traveled to Muslim lands to learn. The knowledge preserved and developed in Baghdad, Cordoba, and Cairo later flowed into Europe, helping spark the Renaissance and shaping modern science, medicine, and philosophy.|| #fyp #islam #islamicgoldenage #arab #edit

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