You need to re-write that so it can be clearly understood please.
An Arabian merchant did change history, by founding a new religion called Islam. His name was Muhammad.
He took over the Persian Empire.He took over the Persian Empire.
No country in the Persian Gulf (called the Arabian Gulf by Arabs) had a change in government in 2002. At that time and to this day, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain were already kingdoms. Kuwait, the UAE, and Qatar were and remain principalities or emirates in Arabic. Iran was and remains an Islamic Republic and Oman was and remains a Sultanate.
To a certain small degree, some of the Arab World countries are putting money behind changing the international appellation (proper term) of the Persian Gulf to the historic Arabic term for the area, the Arabian Gulf. This is not unique, though, to the Persian Gulf. Koreans have been strongly pushing to have the Sea of Japan recognized as the East Sea, Britons have been pushing strongly to have La Manche primarily recognized as the English Channel in Non-English language media, etc. It is unlikely that the majority of non-Arabs will accept the Arabic nomenclature, so there is no need to get worried.
Sargon's creation of an empire changed the later history of Mesopotamia because this was the first empire to be ever built. Sargon's huge empire stretched from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea.
i think it changed history because it built \\
History doesnt change because history is the past, and you can't change the past. Unless you find flaws or new information, I'd say that history can't be changed.
It made the countries on the Arabian Peninsula much more wealthy.
she change the world because she helped women get rights
Because it change our history
you question is weird do you mean in the past or what? because history is in the past
this faith brought Arabs into contact with other civilizations and changed Arabs history