The answer you are looking for is: Baghdad. However, it is not actually correct for the question as phrased. The Abbassids were not the last Islamic Empire, Qajjar Persia was. It just happens that the Abbassids were the last Arab-Islamic Empire. Additionally, Baghdad was sacked by the Mongols, who were not Muslims at that time.
Yes. During the Caliphate of Umayyad. It was the capital of AN Arab Empire, not THE Arab Empire. By the time that the Umayyads established their rule in Spain, they lost control of the Middle East and North Africa to the Abbassids.
Several different empires continued to spread Islam after the collapse of the Abbassid Caliphate, the last Arab-led Caliphate (prior to the 21st century). Some of these numerous states include: the Ottoman Empire, the Safavid Empire, the Timurid Empire, the Mughal Empire, the numerous Islamic Sultanates in Indonesia (specifically in Sumatra and Java), the Omani Empire and Somali States, the Songhai Empire in central Africa, etc.
what two empires continued to spread Islam after the Arab Empire collapsed?
When the Abbaside were in power the greatest Arab empire was the Abbasid Caliphate (750-1258). It was the second largest Muslim (not just Arab) empire in history, second only to the Umayyad Caliphate (661--750) which preceded it.
kingdom tower is in arab arab empire rising 1620 meters
Sassanid Empire.
No. Arab is not a common Iranian last name.
The 2 empires that continued to spread the Arab empire after it collapsed were:The Ottoman and Mogul empires.
At the end of WW1, the Arab lands once controlled by the Ottoman Empire came under the control of England and France.
The Arab Empire spread to all of Southwest Asia, Damascus, North Africa, Spain, and then eastward into the lands beyond Persia.
The last empire was the Hillton Empire.