No. The Islamic Golden Age was a period from about 750 to 1258 AD. The Ottoman Empire arose in 1299 AD.
The Islamic Caliphate at one point in time spread from the Iberian peninsula (Spain and Portugal) all the way to India. And there were also many colonies in the Malaysian islands South of China. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Age-of-caliphs.png
The Islamic Empire is in three continents Asia, Africa, and Europe. Islam is spread all over the world (as Christianity) but with different percentage of Muslims to each country total population.
There is no Islamic Empire.
One dynasty which was around during the time of the Romans was the (247 BC - 224 AD) which ruled the Parthian Empire, the third of the four Persian pre-Islamic empires. Another dynasty was the Sasanian dynasty (224-651) which ruled the Sasanian Empire, the fourth pre-Islamic Persian empire.
No. The Islamic Golden Age was a period from about 750 to 1258 AD. The Ottoman Empire arose in 1299 AD.
The Islamic Caliphate at one point in time spread from the Iberian peninsula (Spain and Portugal) all the way to India. And there were also many colonies in the Malaysian islands South of China. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Age-of-caliphs.png
The Islamic Empire is in three continents Asia, Africa, and Europe. Islam is spread all over the world (as Christianity) but with different percentage of Muslims to each country total population.
There is no Islamic Empire.
One dynasty which was around during the time of the Romans was the (247 BC - 224 AD) which ruled the Parthian Empire, the third of the four Persian pre-Islamic empires. Another dynasty was the Sasanian dynasty (224-651) which ruled the Sasanian Empire, the fourth pre-Islamic Persian empire.
The Roman empire once stretched over three continents.
The title of the Islamic Empire was Caliphate. The Caliph was called Amir-ul-Momineen.
There is not just one Islamic Empire but over 25 different Islamic Empires in different parts of the world. The first Islamic Empire, the Rashidun Caliphate existed from 633 CE to 661 CE. This was followed by the Umayyad Caliphate from 661 CE to 750 CE. The Umayyads were in turn replaced by the Abbassids who ruled all or part of the Middle East from 750 CE to 1256 CE. In turn, they were replaced by the Ilkhanate, the Seljuks, and the Ottomans all the way until the 20th Century,
It depends on the Islamic Empire in question. Assuming that you are talking about the Abbassid Caliphate (which is most commonly referred to as "the Islamic Empire"), the group that brought them down was the MONGOLS.
In 1492 the Islamic Empire finally left Spain but i dont know when it began.
The Islamic empire expanded through conquest. Islam as a religion spread both due to the imperial growth and due to peaceful conversions of those outside of the empire.
All of Arabia (the entire Arabian Peninsula) was under Islamic Rule in 750 C.E. and had been under Islamic Rule for over a century by that point.