The Byzantinium and Sasanian emoires were exhausted from prolonged warfare and vulerable to the emergence of the Arabs .
The 2 empires that continued to spread the Arab empire after it collapsed were:The Ottoman and Mogul empires.
by not enough money barbarian barbarians stole their trade
The first Muslims in India were Arab merchants who traveled to the Malabar Coast of India by sea. When the Muslim armies defeated the Sasanian Empire, many Zoroastrians fled to the east and settled in Gujarat.
There are quite a number of Arab Empires. Assuming you are referring to the Abbassid Caliphate, that was destroyed in 1258, when the Mongols led by Hulegu Khan razed Baghdad to the ground.
Most Arabs share the will to form a united Arab state (but many also just want an alliance to unite Arabs which is what the purpose of the Arab League is). The majority of Arabs also want to put an end to foreign intervention and foreign presence in their nations which has continued ever since the formation of the European empires in Arab territories. In addition, most Arabs are resentful of the Jewish presence in Israel which used to be settled mostly by Arab Palestinians. They believe that their holy lands should belong to them as opposed to the Jews.
what two empires continued to spread Islam after the Arab Empire collapsed?
The 2 empires that continued to spread the Arab empire after it collapsed were:The Ottoman and Mogul empires.
by not enough money barbarian barbarians stole their trade
The first Muslims in India were Arab merchants who traveled to the Malabar Coast of India by sea. When the Muslim armies defeated the Sasanian Empire, many Zoroastrians fled to the east and settled in Gujarat.
There are quite a number of Arab Empires. Assuming you are referring to the Abbassid Caliphate, that was destroyed in 1258, when the Mongols led by Hulegu Khan razed Baghdad to the ground.
There was no specific place that Arab slave traders only sold white slaves. White slaves were common throughout Arab and Islamic Empires for centuries, most coming from Slavic countries and being sold predominately in the Upper Middle East and Anatolia.
The Arab Muslim empires spread rapidly during the 7th and 8th centuries, largely due to a combination of military conquests, trade, and the appeal of Islam. Following the death of the Prophet Muhammad in 632 CE, the Rashidun Caliphate expanded across the Arabian Peninsula, into the Byzantine and Sassanian empires, and beyond. The subsequent Umayyad Caliphate further extended this reach, establishing control over vast territories from Spain to India within a century. This swift expansion was facilitated by the weakening of neighboring empires and the effective use of cavalry in military campaigns.
Some Roman emperors persecuted the Christians: Nero (in 64-65), Maximinus Thrax 235, Decius in 250, Valerian (253-259) and Diocletian and Galerius (303-311). There as a persecution of Christians by Persians and Jews during Byzantine-Sasanian War of 602-628 and in the in the early and Arab Caliphates.
Arab and Berber Muslims from the Northern coast of Africa came to trade with West African Tribes and Empires like Ghana.
The Arab empires' agricultural innovations, such as the introduction of new crops and irrigation techniques, contributed to the growth of rural areas. Meanwhile, the emergence of urban centers as trade hubs and centers of learning fueled their prosperity. Additionally, infrastructure developments like the construction of roads and bridges facilitated the interaction and exchange of goods and ideas between urban and rural areas.
The first two empires that Arab Muslims battled with were the Byzantine Empire and the Sassanian Empire. The conflicts began shortly after the death of the Prophet Muhammad in the early 7th century, as Muslims sought to expand their territory. Key battles like the Battle of Yarmouk in 636 against the Byzantines and the Battle of Qadisiyyah in 636 against the Sassanids marked significant victories that facilitated the rapid expansion of Islamic rule.
The Sinai war, also known as 'the June War, Third Arab Israeli War and The 6 Day War was just one part in a long dispute that the Arab nations had with Israel. Israel had been fighting increasing terrorism and rocket attacks from the Arab countries around Israel, and on 6 June 1967 discovered that Egypt, Jordan and Syria were massing troops and aircraft around Israel's borders. Israel attacked and in 6 days defeated the 3 Arab nations decisively. Israel took the Sinai Peninsula and held it as a'buffer zone ' against further Egyptian tank attacks.