War Without End: A Brief History of the Muslim Conquests
03 Dec, 2006
[Dar al-Islam, al-Harb, Allah, Prophet
Muhammad, Caliph, caliphate, Jihad, conquest, war, Byzantine,
Constantinople, Christendom; ancient civilizations, Persia, China,
Spain, reconquista, Balkans,
Greek,
Greece, India, Hindu Kush, Europe]
Crusading ideals in the West were an
answer to the greater threat of jihad. They were spurred by fear and
necessity in a desperate competition with Islam that, for many
centuries, Christians lost—and were aware that they were losing. The
extent of Islam’s victories can be seen in the all-but-complete
disappearance of the once-thriving Christian communities in North
Africa, the Middle East, and Western Asia, as well as the deep roots
that Islam still has in the Balkans—a region whose very name was
imposed upon it by successful late medieval Turkish imperialism.
Islam is a remarkably successful religion that for most of its
existence has inspired its adherents to creatively synthesize the
often-conflicting requirements of warfare, imperial politics, and
missionary zeal. Projecting Western freedom of action backward in
time seriously distorts the more dramatic story of ongoing Western
weakness that almost destroyed Christendom. The pathos and peril of
much of contemporary radical Islam’s protest against the West is not
fueled primarily by aggrieved victimhood; it is nourished by an even
stronger memory of how Islam’s final victory over Christendom
remained for so long a real possibility. Muslim triumphs in earlier
centuries were the crucible that forged both Christendom’s fears and
Islam’s confidence.
The Rise of the Dar al-Islam
Unlike Christianity, which began on
the margins of social and political life in the Roman world and
stayed there for centuries, Islam quickly achieved a good bit of
worldly success. Within a century of the death of the prophet
Mohammed, his followers had overrun most of the southern half of the
Mediterranean world. Muslim armies advanced from the Arab peninsula
all the way to southern France to the west; north to the outlying
districts of Constantinople, the greatest city of Christendom; and
further eastward to the ancient civilizations of Persia, India, and
the easternmost borders of China.
In Islam’s first centuries, Muslim scholars and jurists formulated
their understanding of the religious and political division of the
world into the Dar al-Islam, or the House of Peace, and the Dar al-Harb,
the House of War. While truces between Islamic and non-Muslim
polities were acceptable, the Koran taught that these were to be
limited in duration. Ultimately, no permanent peace between Muslims
and nonbelievers was possible until all nonbelievers submitted to
Muslim rule, and the Dar al-Islam encompassed the whole world.
Jihad, either in the form of the “greater jihad” (the struggle all
Muslims must wage against sin) or the “lesser jihad” (the armed
struggle with nonbelievers), was integral to bringing wholeness and
unity to a divided world.
Islam’s original conquests were terrifying in their power and speed.
They struck the Mediterranean world at a time when domestic strife
and war made a common front against Arab Muslim expansion
impossible. Fierce doctrinal disputes among Christians and a
thoroughly exhausting war with the Persians left the world’s only
major Christian power, Byzantium, unprepared to face a frightfully
effective jihad. The various small Christian and pagan
principalities in North Africa and Spain—like the weakened
Zoroastrian Persians—were even less able to turn back the Muslim
armies.
Christian and Persian weakness and the success of Islam in bringing
large tracts of territory under its control produced a range of
reactions among Christians and Muslims. In the West, particularly in
Spain, the Muslim religious presence left surprisingly few traces in
the sparse Christian documents of the first century after the
conquest. It appears that most Christians accepted their new Muslim
overlords with equanimity. Indeed, many found that collaboration
with rulers who were tied into the Dar al-Islam’s “common market,”
stretching from Spain to the Hindu Kush in India, was more
profitable than resistance against a new ruling class whose demands
were not initially onerous and whose military power was
irresistible.
The earliest Spanish documents that dwell at any length on the
Muslim presence as a religious issue are the works of St. Eulogius,
written more than a century after the conquest, in the 850s. His
Liber Apologeticus Martyrum, written to other Christians in Spain,
defended the sanctity of Christian martyrs (“the 40 martyrs of
Cordoba”) who had recently been executed for publicly denouncing
Islam and the Prophet. Eulogius, who would soon be killed himself by
Muslim authorities for defending the martyrs, addressed Christian
objections that those whom the Muslims had executed were not martyrs
because they had “suffered at the hands of men who venerated both
God and the law.” This illustrates how thoroughly most Spanish
Christians were submitted to Islamic rule; they defined both Muslims
and their relations to Islam entirely in Islamic terms.
Frankish resistance defeated a major Arab raid at Tours in 732 a.d.,
but it was as much their poverty as their arms (and growing
divisions within the Dar al-Islam) that defended Christians north of
the Pyrenees from incorporation into the Muslim world.
For most Christians in the East, however, the initial expansion and
stabilization of Islam was an unmitigated disaster—made worse by
continuing Muslim aggression throughout the eighth century.
Beginning in the seventh century, the Byzantines secured their
greatly reduced landward frontier in the East through a series of
drastic militarizing reforms that turned much of the empire into a
garrison state. Though its Muslim neighbors lacked the unity to
launch all-out assaults, the constant pressure of Muslim raiders
searching for slaves and loot—as well as the equally permanent
threat of Arab piracy throughout the Mediterranean—required
Byzantium to remain on a permanent war footing.
Byzantium endured this centuries-long conflict and produced a
remarkable flowering of its culture at home and abroad. Byzantine
missionaries, artists, teachers, and soldiers expanded their
empire’s cultural, religious, and political influence in the Balkans
and southern Ukraine. Yet this revival took place under the shadow
of three increasingly heavy swords of Damocles. The first two were
of Byzantium’s own making, but forged by the strains of a war for
survival: its own fractured, despotic internal politics and its
tortured and at times hostile relations with other Christians—both
with older Christian Churches to their east and west as well as
northward among the newly Christianized peoples its missionaries
evangelized. Their belief in the empire’s mission led Byzantines to
regard their state as the political center of Christendom—but also
produced an imperial arrogance that undermined the empire’s ability
to cooperate effectively with other Christians. These two factors
were rendered more dangerous still by the third and most
unpredictable of threats: the permanent commitment of Muslims to
jihad.
The Calm Before the Storm
In the Dar al-Islam, the Byzantines faced an enemy that constantly,
if at times sporadically, renewed its commitment to jihad. The
Muslim world was strengthened by its contacts with the peoples of
Asia and its wider-ranging access to slave labor in Asia and Africa
more than Byzantium was by relations with its coreligionists. The
original expansion and vast reach of the Dar al-Islam provided it
with the necessary power to recover from the period of weakness and
division that ensued after its founding. Byzantium, on the other
hand, had no such sure allies.
The tenth century is often regarded as a low point in Islamic
expansion and jihadist enthusiasm, as well as a time of Byzantine
revival as the empire recovered from over a century of hammer blows
and engaged in a modest reconquista of some of its territories. Yet
even this “low point” saw the development of a whole corpus of
jihadist theology and sermon literature matched by equally
compelling deeds. Ghazis, or Muslim holy warriors, launched numerous
raids on Byzantine territory throughout the century and successfully
internationalized their anti-Byzantine struggle by drawing in other
peoples to join in the “defensive” effort to hold earlier Muslim
conquests and keep Byzantium hemmed into easily assaulted frontiers.
The century opened with a spectacular Muslim success: the Arab sack
of the second city of Byzantium, Thessalonica, on July 29, 903,
enslaving 30,000 Christians. In 931 Muslim raiding parties reached
as far as Ankuriya (modern Ankara), deep in Byzantine territory, and
took thousands more Christians captive. Ribats, quasi-monastic
Muslim establishments that were part monastery and part fortress,
flourished all along the border of northern Syria and southern
Anatolia and acted as bases from which Ghazis, who came from as far
away as Central Asia, traveled to join in assaults against Christian
“polytheists.”
Muslim writers used Byzantine counterattacks to inflame Muslim
opinion and sought to bring about religious revival and greater
Muslim commitment to jihad. The great jihadist preacher, Ibn Nubata
al-Fariqi, developed an entire cycle of sermons that became the
model for such literature for centuries and would later inspire
Saladin. In sermons that anticipate the tender reassurances of God’s
protection that Pope Urban showered on Crusaders over a century
later, Ibn Nubata constantly exhorted Ghazis to take up the cause of
jihad. Take this passage, for example, cited in Carole Hillenbrand’s
The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives (Routledge, 2000):
Do you think that He will forsake you whilst you are assisting Him,
or do you imagine that He will desert you whilst you are steadfast
in His path? Certainly not! …So put on—may God have mercy on you—for
the Jihad the coat of mail of the faithful and equip yourselves with
the armor of those who trust [in God].
If, as some scholars (such as Hillenbrand) have argued, this was the
low point of jihadist ideals among Muslims, even this ebb stretched
Byzantine defenses and forced them to wage perpetual war. It also
sowed seeds that flowered in the eleventh and twelfth centuries in
the Dar al-Islam. Jihad proved to be an integral and hardy perennial
in the gardens of Islam.
The End of the Beginning
On the Day of Orthodoxy—March 13, 1071 a.d.—the Byzantine Emperor
Romanus IV led one of the largest armies that Byzantium had fielded
in centuries out of Constantinople. Romanus’s goal was to end the
ongoing Turkish raids that were slowly wearing away the defenses of
the heartlands of the Byzantine Empire and one of the richest and
most ancient centers of Christian life: Anatolia. Though we know
this region today as Turkey, in the eleventh century Anatolia was a
thoroughly Christian territory. The sad fate of Romanus’s campaign
was integral to Anatolia’s renaming and re-creation.
From earliest antiquity, Anatolia’s position at the crossroads of
Europe and Asia had made it one of the wealthiest and most heavily
urbanized parts of the Mediterranean world. It was a diverse region,
containing many large Greek communities as well as Phrygians,
Cappadocians, Celts in the region of Galatia, Armenians, and Jews,
among others. In this urbanized melting pot of peoples—which
included St. Paul’s hometown of Tarsus—Christianity spread rapidly.
The names of a number of the cities in the region, if not their
subsequent histories, are especially familiar to those steeped in
the book of Revelation: Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis,
Philadelphia, and Laodicia. It seems that the call for repentance
recorded in St. John’s revelations proved successful in the early
second century, because these and other churches experienced an
intense and vibrant urban Christianity and carried out fruitful
missionary endeavors. In Anatolia the transition from paganism to
Christianity was gentler than elsewhere in the Roman world. The
wealth and deep Christian roots of the region recommended it to
Constantine as the place to locate Constantinople and refound the
Roman Empire in the East. By the tenth and eleventh centuries,
Anatolia was the home of eight to ten million people, including many
tens of thousands of refugees—most Christian, but some Muslim—from
the Dar al-Islam.
Ironically, the people who conquered this region in the name of
Islam, the Seljuq Turks, came to their faith peacefully, though they
had not experienced the millennia of high culture that set them
apart from the peoples of Anatolia. Conversion of the warlike and
nomadic Turkish peoples in Central Asia began in the eighth and
ninth centuries; they began to migrate to the Middle East in the
tenth and eleventh centuries. It was these peoples who crushed
Byzantine military power in 1071 and thereby brought on the
Crusades. Eventually, led by the House of Osman—hence, the
Ottomans—the Turkish peoples completed the conquest of
Constantinople and created an empire and a caliphate on Byzantium’s
ruins that endured until 1924. The Seljuqs and the Ottomans carried
the banners of Islam farther into Christendom than any had reached
before.
The Turks, like the first Muslim Arabs, combined the devotion of
enthusiastic converts with a determination to wage war for the
Prophet and profit. Converted by Sunni missionaries, these Turkish
immigrants were appalled by the power (and tempted by the wealth) of
the heterodox and latitudinarian Shia who dominated much of the
political life of the Middle East at the time. In the eyes of
Turkish tribesmen, among the many faults of contemporary Islamic
society was its relatively greater tolerance toward Christians and
Jews, who lived among Muslims or came as pilgrims to the Holy
Places—as well as the less-than-fully-committed pursuit of jihad
against the Byzantines.
The Turks sought to cut out this rot in three ways:
1.Struggle with the heterodox Shia within the Dar al-Islam
2.Greater persecution of Christians, especially pilgrims coming to
the Holy Places in the Dar al-Islam
3.Vigorous jihad against Byzantium.
It is a testimony to Turkish martial prowess—and the constant
bleedings to which both Muslims and Byzantium’s Christian foes had
subjected the empire—that they pursued and achieved these objects
almost simultaneously.
The disciplines of nomadic life, with its emphasis on horsemanship
and horse archery, made the Turks crushingly effective at raiding
and war. Seljuq raids into Armenia, which began in the 1020s,
devastated the country and began speculation among some Armenian
princes and priests that the end of the world was at hand. What made
such raids all the more difficult to repel was their constant, yet
ad hoc, character. Turkish raiding parties often operated
independently. Even treaties the Byzantines negotiated with Turkish
princes or the caliph could not restrain raiders who thought of
themselves as ghazis and who often had the verbal approval of their
overlords to carry on their assaults.
These ad hoc raids enslaved thousands of Christian captives yearly,
endangered trade and agriculture along the borders, and wore at
Armenia and Byzantium’s defenses; yet worse was soon to come. Alp
Arslan (“the Valiant Lion”), the Turkish prince who unified the
Seljuqs in 1063 and was eventually to win the great victory of
Mantzikert, carried on raids of such brutality and scope that
Christian chroniclers referred to him as “a drinker of blood” and
one of the forces of the Antichrist.
He worked hard to earn this reputation. Matthew of Edessa, an
Armenian historian, describes Alp Arslan’s sack of Ani (now known as
Arpa Cay), the capital of Armenia in 1064 (which Seljuq chronicles
describe as a “large flourishing city with 500 churches”):
The army entered the city, massacred its inhabitants, pillaged and
burned it leaving it in ruins, making prisoners of all who escaped
the massacre, and took possession. [The number dead were such] that
they blocked all the streets and one could not make way for himself
without crossing over them. The number of prisoners was not less
than 30,000 souls.
I wanted to enter the city and see it with my own eyes. I tried to
find a street without having to walk over corpses. But that was
impossible.
The Annals of the Siljuq Turks, which describes a whole series of
campaigns Arp Arslan waged in Armenia that year—including the
destruction of numerous towns and monasteries—corroborates Matthew’s
history. In words that reflect no more regret of the costs of jihad
than the chroniclers of the Crusades displayed when describing the
fall of Jerusalem, the annals report:
They entered the city and killed more of the inhabitants than one
could count, so that many of the Muslims were unable to enter the
city because there were so many corpses. They took captive nearly as
many as they killed.
The happy news of these conquests traveled around these lands and
the Muslims rejoiced. The report…was read out in Baghdad in the
Caliphal Palace and the caliph issued a rescript praising and
blessing Arp Arslan.
The sack of Ani proved to be the key to Anatolia. For the next
several years Arp Arslan and other Seljuq raiders became more bold
in their assaults, sacking major shrines such as that of St. Basil
in Cappadocia and in 1070 capturing Chonae, a site famed for its
shrine of the archangel (which the Turks promptly turned into a
stable).
And so, the next year, Emperor Romanus led his Byzantine army to
battle. It did not go well for him.
The Battle of Mantzikert was one of the more decisive and yet
unknown battles of the early Middle Ages. Arp Arslan’s forces routed
Romanus’s army, taking the emperor himself as prisoner. The panic
that ensued in Byzantium was as complete as was the rejoicing in the
Dar al-Islam, whose armies had fought Byzantium for centuries
without scoring such a success. The Byzantine defeat was made all
the more terrible by the successful efforts of Romanus’s rivals to
seize the throne during his captivity. The short but sharp civil war
that followed—upon his release Romanus attempted to retake his
throne and pay the ransom he had negotiated with Arp Arslan—drew
even more troops into battle far away at Constantinople. As a
result, Byzantine defenses in the east were shattered and the empire
divided. The Turks had little trouble mopping up the remains.
The wars that followed were not a traditional conquest; the Turks
were too few in number to thoroughly subdue a region only slightly
smaller than Texas and containing millions of Christians. Rather,
over time, their continual raids throughout Anatolia allowed them to
expel, enslave, or impoverish the region’s Christian inhabitants.
For the next 300 years the population plummeted by almost half, in
spite of increasing Muslim migration to the region. Much of these
formally fertile territories became pastureland for the
still-nomadic Turks, while many cities fell into ruin. Just as
southern Spain would be devastated 500 years later by the expulsion
of its Muslim population, Anatolia became a wasteland under the rule
of its new, religiously intolerant and alien masters. Furthermore,
losing Anatolia permanently crippled Byzantium. The broken eastern
shield of Christendom proved an easy target for the ghazis of the
Dar al-Islam to evade and eventually shatter in the centuries
following Mantzikert.
Once they finished with Eastern Christendom, the gateway to further
European conquest was wide open.
Our Enemies, Our Teachers
It is commonplace to claim that the Crusades scarred the imagination
of the Muslim world for centuries. While modern Arab nationalists
and Islamists have at times pointed to the Crusades as a source of
anti-Western views in the Middle East, this is simply incorrect.
Bernard Lewis, one of the foremost Western scholars of Islam, has
demonstrated that Western Christendom remained a subject of
relatively little interest to Muslims for centuries after the
Crusades. In spite of the hard-fought campaigns of the Crusades,
Arab—and later Turkish—ignorance of even the most basic aspects of
Europe’s geography and culture during and after the struggle could
make a modern undergraduate blush. For centuries, Western
Christendom remained a frontier area for Muslims against which they
continued to wage successful war until almost the beginning of the
modern era. Beyond that, it held little interest.
From the beginning, Christendom paid dearly to hold its own in the
face of the Dar al-Islam’s jihads. The wars that Islam waged against
Christendom—and Christendom’s counterattacks—degenerated into
remarkably dirty wars that often empowered the worst impulses in
both faiths. For Christians these struggles opened up a Pandora’s
box of evils: They provided a renewed impetus to popular
anti-Semitism in the Middle Ages and helped empower Christian
participation in the slave trade in the 15th and 16th centuries—a
radicalization that chillingly prefigures our country’s current
conversations over the use of torture as a legitimate means of
combating the jihadist threat.
Yet for Islam the fruits of victory often spoiled. The intermittent
but relatively greater tolerance that characterized Islam’s
relations with other “peoples of the book” in the Middle East,
Muslim Spain, and the Balkans was the tolerance of victors secure in
their triumph. Even in the midst of triumph, however, this tolerance
was mingled with contempt. The pressures of jihad that called forth
the West’s Crusades led Muslims to abuse their power over Christian
and Jewish subjects under the Dar al-Islam in campaigns of forced
conversion, pogroms, and other brutalities. In the modern era, as
the pace of Islam’s advance slowed and the tide began to turn in the
West’s favor, the Dar al-Islam’s tradition of tolerance also
collapsed. The magnanimity of victory has proven too limited an
experience for Muslims to have established tolerance as a key part
of their religious culture.
Yet just as natural history reveals that God is peculiarly fond of
beetles, human history demonstrates His delight in paradoxes and
dialectics. The terror of jihad gave birth to the crusading zeal in
the eleventh century that helped delay Islam’s further advance
westward. In the face of Islam’s even more successful jihads in the
15th and 16th centuries, Christianity in turn became more aggressive
and expansive than it had ever been. Christendom succeeded in
garnering power and resources by colonizing the Western Hemisphere
and sidestepping the Dar al-Islam’s status as the middleman in trade
with Asia, eventually breaking Islam’s hegemonic power in Eurasia.
However, as Christendom experienced its greatest triumphs in
discovering and colonizing the New World, Christians also turned
their own militarized struggles for religious security inward during
the Reformation, unintentionally undermining Christendom and leaving
a secularizing Western Europe in its wake.
Ironically, then, the successes of Islam’s jihads have ultimately
strengthened and built up a Dar al-Harb more resistant than ever to
the advance of Islam as it relieved Western Christians from the
burden of continuing their battles as religious wars. While jihad is
no less terrifying now than it has been for centuries, unlike the
past, its current terror contains an underlying anxiety and futility
for its devotees. This lies both in modern-day would-be ghazis’
inability to use anything but fear to achieve their goals as well as
the subversion by a secular West of the close social, political, and
religious unity of Muslim societies.
Let us hope that the nihilism and isolation of jihadist militancy
presage the renunciation by faithful Muslims of sacralized violence.
Such a turn would free those who call upon the name of the One God
from the well-earned stigma of religious brutality.
Source: Crisis Magazine