Islam's 1,000-Year Crusade
Islamic Terrorism Timeline
By Craig Winn
11/16/2006
The 1000-Year Wrong
622 CE: Following the embarrassments of the Satanic Verses and
hallucinogenic Night’s Journey aboard the flying ass, the wannabe prophet
Muhammad was run out of Mecca. In his meeting with 12 warlords from
Yathrib, today’s Medina at a waddi called Aqaba, the first Muslims
"Pledge to wage war against all mankind," and the Islamic Era
officially began. (See the
"Satan’s Bargain" and
"Delusions of Grandeur" chapters of
Prophet of Doom).
633 CE: Muslims got first blood, killing one Meccan and kidnapping
another at Nakhla. They plundered their caravan and brought the booty
back to Muhammad. (See
"The Pedophile Pirate" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
624 CE: Muhammad led the first Muslims out to plunder a Meccan caravan at
Badr. They missed the target but encountered some Meccan merchants who
had gone out to protect their business interests from the Islamic
raiders. The Muslims killed 70 Meccan merchants, most of whom they were
related to, and took almost that many Meccans captive. The hostages were
ransomed back to their families, creating an Islamic precedent that is
followed today. The Qur’an’s
8th
surah is revealed as a situational scripture to justify fighting and
stealing. (See the
"War Made a Profit (and a Prophet)" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
624 CE: Muhammad laid siege to the richest Jewish settlement in Yathrib.
After forcing the Banu Qaynuqa into the desert to die, Muhammad stole
their homes, land, businesses, farms, and treasure. The Qur’an’s
59th
,
61st
,
62nd
,
63rd
, and
64th
surahs are revealed to beguile the Muslims into believing that what they
were doing was religious and good. (See the
"Mein Kampf" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
625 CE: The Muslims continued to terrorize and rob the Meccans, so they
went to Yathrib/Medina to stop the source of their pain. Thinking they
had killed Muhammad at Uhud, as well as most of his jihadists, the
Meccans returned home. Since the terrorist religion was an inch from
being destroyed, Muhammad contrived the
3rd
surah, in which Allah tells Muslims that he will kill those who don’t
fight for Islam. (See the
"Good Muslims Kill" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
625 CE: Needing to satiate the covetous bloodlust of his mercenaries,
Muhammad decided to plunder the second largest Jewish community in
Yathrib. The defenseless Banu Nadir Jews were starved into submission by
the Muslims and forced out into the desert to die. Once again, Muhammad
stole their homes, land, businesses, farms, and treasure. Muhammad had
become so sexually perverted, and such a ruthless megalomaniac, he made
up the
33rd
surah, the Qur’an’s most immoral rant to justify his despicable life.
Allah approves rape and incest. (See the
"Lustful Libertine" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
626 CE: The Meccan merchants returned to Yathrib/Medina to stop Muhammad
from continuing to terrorize them but they were thwarted by a trench he
had dug in the sand. While the Battle of the Trench was a standoff,
Muhammad gloated in typical Islamic fashion.
627 CE: Since the Battle of the Trench was bloodless and booty-less,
Muhammad needed to find easy prey for his sorry lot of jihadists. The
Banu Qurayza Jewish settlement in Yathrib/Medina suffered as a result.
After starving them into surrender, Muhammad had his goons dig trenches
in the center of Medina. He had every Jewish man and boy over the age of
12 tied hand and neck. In small batches he paraded 900 of them out and in
his presence, he had his mujahideen cut off their heads over the open
trench - pushing their bodies in. Muhammad after picking the most
attractive Jewish widow for himself, used lots to determine a selection
order for his followers to choose their rape victims. The Jewish children
were then enslaved and sold to buy more weapons. Portions of the
33rd
surah were revealed to demonstrate that Allah was a terrorist, slave
trader, and murdering thief. (See the
"Islam’s Holocaust" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
628 CE: This was a very, very, bad year. In it, terror became Islam’s
signature act with raids launched against the Lihyan and Banu Mustaliq
Arabs. The Qur’an’s
24th
surah was revealed at this time to get the pedophile prophet out of a
prickly situation with his child wife.
It was then that Allah’s Messenger assembled a considerable force of
jihadists to plunder his hometown of Mecca - a mud hut village of 5,000
people that was home to Allah’s rock pile of rock gods known as the
Ka’aba. But Allah’s boy became timid, and rather than sack his relatives,
he signed the Treaty of Hudaybiyah, whereby Muhammad denied that he was a
prophet and that Allah was God. The Qur’an’s
4th
surah is revealed telling Muslims how that are to fight. (See
"The Tormented Terrorist" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
This led to Islam’s darkest hour. Without the plunder the jihadists
expected from Mecca, the first Muslims turned on Muhammad in a massive
rebellion. So the Islamic warlord did what all despots do - he found a
patsy for his marauding hoard. On their way back to Yathrib/Median
Muhammad’s mujahideen perpetrated a terrorist raid on the Khaybar Jewish
community. The farming village was savagely conquered and plundered. Its
leadership was tortured at Muhammad’s behest. The men were murdered and
the women were raped, with Muhammad again personally participating. And
the Muslims stole the Jewish homes, property, and possessions. Once
again, the Jewish children were enslaved and used to buy more weapons and
build a larger militia. The Qur’an’s
49th
surah is revealed in order to reestablish Muhammad’s tattered
reputation. It is especially revolting. (See the
"Blood & Booty" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
629 CE: In anticipation of dishonoring his sworn commitment to the
Meccans at Hudaybiyah, where Muhammad promised not to terrorize the
Meccans for ten years, Islam’s prophet revealed the
66th
surah in which he says: "Allah has sanctioned for you the
dissolution of your vows." Islam’s god authorized his lone witness
to lie. He then recited the
48th
surah in which peaceful Muslims who did not wish to fight were told
that they would be tortured by Allah. Then he said in the
47th
surah, "So when you clash with the unbelieving infidels in
battle smite their necks until you overpower them, killing and wounding
many of them. When you have thoroughly subdued them, bind them firmly,
making them captives...Thus you are commanded by Allah to continue
carrying out Jihad against the unbelieving infidels until they submit to
Islam.".
With that inspiration, Muhammad’s mujahideen assaulted and plundered the
Arab villages of Mulawwih, Banu Bakr, Harith, Kadid, Salasil, Jusham, and
Idam in a series of terrorist raids. Muhammad then sent them to attack
the Byzantines near the Syrian town of Mu’ta, where the jihadists fought
their first battle against an actual army and were pummeled. (See the
"Legacy of Terror" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
630 CE: Muhammad revealed the Qur’an’s second to last surah moments
before his conquest of Mecca. In the
9th
surah, the Qur’an’s war manifesto, we find: "This announcement
from Allah and his Messenger [Muhammad] to the [Muslim] people on the day
of the Great Pilgrimage [to attack Mecca]: Allah and His Messenger
dissolve (treaty) obligations with unbelievers." Outnumbering the
Meccan merchants two to one, Muhammad’s mujahideen conquer his hometown
and force everyone to surrender to Islam or die.
On their way back home, the Islamic jihadists terrorize the Arab towns of
Hunsin, Auras, and Taif. (See the
"Jihad" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
631 CE:
Having over hunted Jews and Arabs, Muhammad
turned his sights on the Byzantine Christians. He revealed the Qur’an’s
final
surah, the 5th, to turn Christians into the enemy of Islam even
though no Christian had ever spoken a word to or laid a finger on a
single Muslim. With his justification in hand, Muhammad assembled a
militia of 30,000 mujahideen and assaulted Tabuk in today’s Syria. He
gave the Christians an ultimatum: "Pay me or die." (See
the
"Profitable Prophet Plan" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
632 CE: Muhammad dies a miserable death. Under the Caliphate (Deputy of
the Prophet) of Abu Bakr Islamic jihadists led a crusade to conquer all
of Arabia. Arabs would either submit or die. (See the
"Prophet of Doom" chapter of
Prophet of Doom).
After conquering Arabia and forever raping the Arabs of their freedoms,
prosperity, and hope, Abu Bakr’s jihadists plundered Yemen. There,
Mussailima, another false prophet indistinguishable from Muhammad, is
conquered. Muslims then wage war in the communities of Zu Qissa, Abraq,
Buzakha, Zafar, Naqra, and Bani Tamim. (Tabari Volume 10).
633 CE: The Muslim mujahideen led by Khalid al-Walid, the new religion’s
most bloodthirsty terrorist, whom Muhammad himself had nicknamed the
"Sword of Allah" for his ferocity and proclivity to tie women’s
and children’s hands behind their backs and then cut off their heads,
conquered the Persian city of Ullays along the Euphrates River in today’s
Iraq. Khalid beheads so many civilians that a nearby canal, into which
the blood flowed, was called Blood Canal. (Tabari Volume 11:24).
In the months which follow, Khalid’s mujahideen assault Bahrain, Oman,
Mahrah, and Hadramaut. Islam’s second most famous terrorist raids towns
across Iraq, and lays siege to Kazima, Mazar, Walaja, Ulleis, Hirah,
Anbar, Ein at Tamr, Jandal, Firaz, and Daumatul.
634 CE: At the battles of Basra and Ajnadin Damascus in Syria the Muslim
jihadists defeated Byzantine regiments. Today, Osama bin Laden draws
inspiration from the Islamic victory, and especially from an anecdote
about Khalid al-Walid. "Armies become numerous only with victory and
few with defeat. By Allah, I would love it...if the enemy were twice as
many." (Tabari Volume 11:94). Bin Laden quotes Khalid and says that
his fighters love death more than we in the West love life. This affinity
for death comes directly from the Qur’an and Hadith where Muhammad and
Allah say that dying in jihad killing infidels is the surest path to
paradise.
Abu Bakr dies and the Caliphate of Umar ibn al-Khattab begins. His
campaign of terror was particularly brutal. Immediately he attacks
Namaraq and Saqatia.
635 CE: Muslim mujahideen besieged and conquered of Damascus. They fought
and won the battles of the Bridge, Buwaib, and Fahl. They go on to
conquer Damascus.
636 CE: Islamic jihadists attacked and defeated the weakened Byzantines
again at Yarmuk - this time pulverizing them. They fight and win at
Madain.
637 CE: Syria falls to the Islamic onslaught. Then the Muslim crusaders
conquered large portions of western Persia in today’s Iraq, beginning at
the Battle of al-Qadisiyyah. Muslim mujahideen occupy the Persian capital
of Ctesiphon.
638 CE: Islamic raiders attacked and defeated the Roman Byzantines at the
Battle of Yarmouk. Muslims enter, occupy, and annex Jerusalem, taking it
from the Byzantines. All Judea is claimed under the sword of Islam.
Muslims go on to raid Jalula and Jazirah and continue their conquest of
Syria, today’s Jordan, and Lebanon.
On the Eastern front, Islamic armies conquer eastern Persia in today’s
Iran, leaving only the Caspian Sea region firmly under Persian
control.
639 CE: Islamic raiders conquer Khuzestan in the east and enter and begin
plundering Egypt in the west, burning its libraries and defacing its
monumental history.
640 CE: Muslim jihadists capture Caesaria in Syria and Shustar Jande
Sabur in Persia. They fight the battle of Babylon.
On the Western Front, Islam completes its conquest of Egyptian cities in
the north, stealing them from the Romans. Arabia, Egypt, Persia, and the
Fertile Crescent are now the personal fiefdoms of four Islamic
Caliphs.
641 CE: Muslim crusaders who bypassed the countryside of Syria and Judea
en route to Egypt, returned to raise their swords over everyone’s head.
They attack Nihawand and then conquer Alexandria in Egypt.
On the Eastern Front, Islam conquers and occupies all of today’s Iraq,
taking it from the Persians.
642 CE: Islamic mujahideen fight the Battle of Rayy in Persia. Moving
south on the Western Front, they conquer all of Egypt.
643 CE: In the north, Islam’s army conquers Azerbaijan and Tabaristan in
today’s Russia.
644 CE: The Islamic killing machine sacks and plunders Fars, Kerman,
Sistan, Mekran and Kharan. Caliph Umar ibn al-Khattab was assassinated.
Uthman ibn Affan was appointed the third Caliph. Since Uthman’s family
rejected Muhammad’s claim of being the Messenger of Allah, Islam divides
with Shia rioters campaigning for the empowerment of Ali, Muhammad’s
cousin, adopted son, and son-in-law.
646 CE: Muslims battle in Khurasan, Armenia, and Asia Minor throughout
the Caucasus.
647 CE: The Islamic barbarians savagely plundered North Africa. Islamic
jihadists conquered the Island of Cyprus. They besieged and plundered
Tripoli in North Africa. And they forcibly established Islam as the only
acceptable religion in today’s Iran, Iraq, Arabia, and
Afghanistan.
648 CE: The Muslim armies were unified and positioned against the
Byzantines.
650 CE: The Islamic conquest and occupation of Persia was completed. The
entire realm of history’s oldest and most powerful empires surrendered
under the assault of bloody swords when resistance became
futile.
651 CE: Muslims won the Battle of the Masts against the Byzantines and
nearly captured the Byzantine emperor.
652 CE: The Islamic assault against humanity stalled and the Muslim
mujahideen openly displayed their hostility toward Uthman.
654 CE: Islam’s violent and aggressive conquest of North Africa was all
but completed. Only Morocco remained free of the religious scourge.
Muslims now established new fiefdoms throughout the region they
occupied.
656 CE: The Sunni Caliph Uthman was assassinated by Muslim soldiers. Ali
ibn Abi Talib, adopted son, son-in-law, and cousin to Muhammad, was given
the Caliphate. His claim to the throne was having married the prophet’s
daughter Fatima. Killing the Caliph to become Caliph would become
standard operating procedure in the Islamic world.
In the battle of the Camel, Aisha, Muhammad’s child wife, led a rebellion
against Ali for not avenging Uthman’s assassination. Ali’s Shia partisans
won.
657 CE: In more infighting between Shia and Sunni Muslims (today called
"sectarian violence"), the battle of Siffin between Ali and the
Muslim governor of Jerusalem, went against Ali. Forced out of Medina, Ali
moved the Shia capital of Islam to Kufa in Iraq.
658 CE: Major battles were fought by Muslims in Nahrawan and then in
Egypt, where the last pockets of resistance were suppressed. The Umayyad
and then Abbasid caliphates would control Egypt until 868 CE.
660 CE: Ali’s forces recaptured the Hijaz (Mecca-Medina area) and Yemen
from their Sunni Muslim rival, Mu’awiyah. So Mu’awiyah declared himself
Caliph and sets up his throne in Damascus.
661 CE: Ali was assassinated by a rival Sunni Muslim. Ali’s supporters
formed the Shi’ite political/religious party and promoted his son Hasan
to Caliph. They insisted that a blood descendant of Muhammad wield
control over all Muslims. Hasan, however, not wanting to be the next to
die, came to an accommodation with Muawiyyah, a relative of Uthman, and
abdicated the throne, retiring to Medina.
The Caliphate of Muawiyyah I began. He founds the Sunni Umayyid Dynasty
and officially moved the capital of the Islamic Empire from uncivilized
Medina to urbane Damascus. What is interesting about this is that even
though Damascus, unlike Mecca and Medina, was a literate community, and
although we have countless records of Umayyid battles, tax collections,
and political promotions, there isn’t a single line of Islamic scripture
that survives from this time - not a word from the Qur’an or Hadith was
written down. The first Qur’an fragments date to the eighth century and
the oldest Hadith manuscripts date to the ninth century.
There were no Qur’ans or any other written basis for the religion of
Islam when its mujahideen were conquering the world. And that means they
were doing it for booty, not religion. This is one of the most
astounding, and little known, facts of history.
The Umayyid Dynasty would retain dictatorial control over all territories
conquered by Islam through 750 CE.
662 CE: All of the Arabian Peninsula and today’s Iran and Iraq were
unified under the Umayyad and Abbasid caliphates. Their reign of
oppression would last until 1258.
666 CE: Muslim crusaders raided the island of Sicily.
670 CE: Islamic armies continued to plunder portions of North Africa on
the Western Front. Jihadists reach and conquer Morocco. The entire region
was now under the control of the Umayyad and Abbasid caliphates.
The Eastern Army captured Kabul in Afghanistan. Soon Islam would control
and occupy all of the Caucasus and Caspian region.
672 CE: Muslims storm the island of Rhodes, placing it under the dominion
of their swords.
673 CE: The Islamic armies begin the Khurasan campaign.
674 CE: Muslims cross the Oxus. Bukhara becomes a vassal state.
677 CE: Islam’s militants occupy Samarkand and Tirmiz.
678 CE: Muslim armies besieged Constantinople, the capital of the
Christian Byzantine Empire.
680 CE: Caliph Mu’awiyah died and Hussein (Hussain) (Muhammad’s grandson
by way of Ali), his family, and his supporters were massacred in Karbala,
Iraq by the Sunni Umayyids. As a result, Yazid gained control of
Muhammad’s bloody legacy.
682 CE: In North Africa Uqba bin Nafe marched to the Atlantic. He was
ambushed and killed at Biskra. The Muslims evacuated Qairowan and
withdrew to Burqa.
683 CE: Caliph Yazid died. Mu’awiyah II is crowned king of the death
machine.
684 CE: Abdullah bin Zubair declared himself Caliph at Mecca. Marwan I,
disputes the claim and names himself Caliph in Damascus. All the while
the Islamic assault marched on with the Battle of Marj Rahat.
685 CE: Falling like flies, Marwan I died so Abdul Malik became the
Caliph in Damascus. Not losing focus, the Islamic mujahideen fought the
Battle of Ain ul Wada.
686 CE: Mukhtar declared himself Caliph at Kufa, Iraq. As you might
imagine, being the supreme potentate of a religious empire was
profitable.
687 CE: Not wanting to share, the Battle of Kufa was waged between the
Islamic forces of Mukhtar and Abdullah bin Zubair. Mukhtar must of lost
because he was killed.
691 CE: Muslims went on to fight the Battle of Deir ul Jaliq. But then
Kufa fell to Abdul Malik.
The first Dome of the Rock was completed on the Temple Mount in
Jerusalem. It commemorates Muhammad’s hallucinogenic Night’s Journey
aboard a flying ass from Mecca to Jerusalem following the debacle of the
Satanic Verses. Allah’s lone spokesperson claimed to have met all of the
Jewish prophets in the Temple which had been destroyed over six centuries
earlier and then leapt up to heaven - proving that you can’t get to
heaven from Mecca.
692 CE: With the fall of Mecca to Abdul Malik, and the death of Abdullah
bin Zubair, Malik became the sole Caliph.
695 CE: The Khawarij revolt in Jazira and Ahwaz shook Islam. Muslims
however won the Battle of the Karun. Then a campaign against Kahina in
North Africa was launched. Unsuccessful, the Muslims once again withdrew
to Barqa. Next, Islamic forces advanced on Transoxiana and occupied
Kish.
700 CE: Muslim armies fought against the Berbers in North
Africa.
702 CE: Islam endured the Ashath rebellion in Iraq and fought the battle
of Deir ul Jamira.
705 CE: With the death of Abdul Malik Walid I became Caliph.
710 CE: On the Eastern Front, Muslim crusaders conquered the lower Indus
Valley. On the Western Front, Tariq ibn Malik crossed the Bibraltar
straight separating Africa and Europe with a group of Muslims and entered
Europe for the first time.
711 CE: A 7,000 strong Islamic army under the command of Tariq ibn Malik
invaded and conquered Spain, imposing the kingdom of Andalus. Almost all
of the Iberian Peninsula submits to the sword of Islam.
Muslims advanced on Sindh in Afghanistan and Transoxiana and then
conquered Multan.
712 CE: With their recent conquests of Spain, the countryside of Egypt,
and Morocco, the Islamic Empire now occupied and oppressed most all of
the Persian and Roman Empires. The enormous, aggressive, and rapid land
grab had all been achieved with the sword.
715 CE: Walid died and Sulaiman became Caliph.
716 CE: Muslims invaded Constantinople but failed in their attempt to
take the Christian capital.
717 CE: With the death of Sulaiman Umar bin Abdul Aziz took the crown of
Islam.
718 CE: The Islamic invasion, conquest, and occupation of Spain was
completed.
719 CE: Cordova, Spain became the capital of Islamic Europe.
720 CE: With the death of Umar bin Abdul Aziz, Yazid II was anointed
king.
724 CE: With the death of Yazid II, Hisham gained control of Muhammad’s
legacy.
725 CE: The Islamic conquest of Western Europe reached it zenith with
Muslims occupying Nimes in France.
732 CE: The Muslim crusaders were stopped at the Battle of Poitiers
(Tours). While it’s hard to fathom, the Franks (French) halted the
Islamic advance on Western Europe. However, Muslim armies continued to
advance in Asia and Africa.
In this year, the first century of Islam came to an end. It had been
marked by death and destruction. A religion had been fed by plunder and
it had expanded on the backs of its bloodied victims. There is almost
nothing good that can be said of Islam’s first century. The religion has
been a curse on all mankind.
737 CE: The Muslim mujahideen suffered another defeat at Avignon in
France.
740 CE: Shia Muslims revolted under Zaid bin Ali. Suffering another blow,
the Berbers revolted against Islam in North Africa. At the end of the
year, Muslims wage the Battle of the Nobles.
741 CE: The Battle of Bagdoura in North Africa is fought.
742 CE: The Islamic war machine restores Muslim rule in
Qiarowan.
743 CE: With the death of Hisham, Walid II ascends to power in Islam.
This triggers another Shia revolt, this time in Khurasan and under Yahya
b Zaid.
744 CE: With the deposition of Walid I1, Islam experiences the accession
of Yazid II1. Upon his death, Ibrahim was crowned but he was quickly
overthrown. After the Battle of Ain al Jurr, Marwan II becomes chief
potentate of the deadly regime.
745 CE: Kufa and Mosul were occupied by the Khawarjites.
746 CE: After the Battle of Rupar Thutha, Kufa and Mosul were occupied by
Marwan II.
747 CE: Abu Muslim led a revolt in Khurasan.
748 CE: Muslim jihadists fight the Battle of Rayy.
749 CE: After the battles of lsfahan and Nihawand, Kufa was captured by
the Abbasids. As Saffah was then anointed the Abbasid Caliph at Kufa in
the continuing sectarian strife that still consumes the world of
Islam.
750 CE: The Battle of Zab was fought. With the fall of Damascus to Shia
Muslims, Islam experienced the end of the aggressive Umayyad Dynasty and
the rise of the Abbasids. They took their name from Muhammad’s uncle,
al-Abbas, because his descendants had revolted against Umayyad control.
Under the Umayyads, non-Muslims in occupied territories had been
relegated to slave status. The Abbasids were more content, so long as the
conquered paid their taxes.
The capital of the Islamic world was moved from Damascus, Syria to
Baghdad, Iraq. The flea- and lice-infested, sun-baked, mud-hut towns of
Mecca and Medina were ostracized for more civil, less Islamic cultures.
It was in Baghdad that the religion of Islam was born. The first written
edition of the Qur’an was compiled in Kufu, on the outskirts of Baghdad,
sometime around 725 CE. Ibn Ishaq’s Sirat Rasul Allah, known as the Sira,
or Biography of Muhammad, was compiled in Baghdad in 750 CE (some say
768). Without this early biography chronicling Islam’s beginnings, the
religion would not exist, as nothing would be known of its lone prophet
and Allah’s singular voice. No Ishaq, no Prophet, no Prophet, no
Islam.
Then in 850 CE,
Bukhari and Muslim would compile
the most authoritative Hadith collections depicting the words and deeds
of Muhammad and his Companions. Their topical collection becomes the
basis for Salaf, or fundamentalist, Islam. In these texts, Muhammad
explained the Qur’an and established Islamic Sunnah and Sharia Law by
clarifying his message regarding jihad, fighting, the slave trade,
booty, taxation, the virgins in paradise, oppression, the intolerance of
women, Christians, and Jews, as well as his open hostility to freedom of
choice, and affinity for pagan ritual.
Next, the History of al-Tabari, depicting Muhammad’s rise to
power, was compiled in Baghdad between 870 and 920 CE. Tabari’s
Hadith-based depiction of Muhammad’s words and deeds as they were passed
on by way of the Prophet’s Companions (the same folks who passed on the
Qur’an), remains the oldest unedited, uncensored, and unabridged account
of Islam’s beginnings. It is the story of a ruthless terrorist,
money-grubbing pirate, and sexual pervert. While it is astonishing that
anyone trusts Muhammad’s witness, this prophets words and deeds explain
why Muslims were plundering the world.
What’s especially interesting here is that all five of Islam’s oldest
scriptural sources are Shia, including the Qur’an. The Sunni Umayyads
didn’t bother compiling or conveying any religious texts. The entire
basis for the religion of Islam was compiled in Persian Baghdad, one
hundred to three hundred years after it was allegedly conceived by
Muhammad.
751 CE: Wasit was plundered by the Abbasids. Abu Salama was
murdered.
754 CE: With the death of As Saffah, Mansur became Caliph.
755 CE: Abdullah bin Ali led a sectarian revolt. That led to the murder
of Abu Muslim. This in turn led to the Sunbadh revolt in Khurasan. While
this is called the "Golden Era" of Islam, the only thing golden
about it was plunder.
756 CE: Wanting to play king, Abdul Rahman established an Umayyad Emirate
(Islamic Commander or Warlord) in Cordova, Spain. The only major rift in
Abbasid domination of the Islamic Empire at this time was the Iberian
Peninsula, where Umayyad’s continued to rule.
Removed from knowledge of the Prophet Muhammad, and thus the
underpinnings of the religion of Islam as they were being compiled in
Baghdad, the Spanish "Muslims" became Islam’s singular example
of tolerance. Islamic apologists all point to Spain, and not Damascus or
Baghdad, when they extol the virtues of their religion, not knowing that
it was the minimization of their religion that made Spain the
"greatest Islamic civilization yet known.".
762 CE: Shia Muslims revolted under Muhammad (Nafs uz Zakia) and
Ibrahim.
763 CE: Baghdad was established as the undisputed capital of the Islamic
world - at least apart from Spain. There Sunni Muslims suffered a defeat
at the hands of the Shia Abbasids this year.
767 CE: The Khariji state was established by Ibn Madrar at Sijilmasa.
Ustad experiences another revolt in Khurasan.
772 CE: The Battle of Janbi is fought in North Africa. The Rustamid state
was established in Morocco.
775 CE: With the death or the Abbasid Caliph Mansur, Mahdi, meaning the
"Guided One" became Caliph.
777 CE: The Battle of Saragossa was waged in Spain. The Great Mosque of
Cordova was built.
785 CE: With the death of the Caliph Mahdi, Hadi became king for a
day.
786 CE: With the death of Hadi, it was Harun ur Rashid’s turn to play
god.
788 CE: The Idrisid state was set up in Maghrib. With the death of Abdul
Rahman in Spain, Hisham ascended to the throne.
789 CE: Marked the rise of the Idrisid Emirs (Muslim Crusaders) in
Morocco. They would control North Aftica until 985.
Fez was established as a Muslim enclave. Christoforos, a well-known
Muslim who converted to Christianity, was publicly executed.
792 CE: Muslims reinvaded southern France.
799 CE: Muslims suppressed the Khazars revolt.
800 CE: The Islamic Aghlabid Dynasty was established in Tunisia, North
Africa.
803 CE: With the downfall of the Barmakids, Jafar Barmki was
executed.
805 CE: Muslims resumed their campaigns against the Byzantines. Islamic
jihadists recaptured of the islands of Rhodes and Cypress.
807 CE: Caliph Harun al-Rashid ordered the destruction of non-Muslim
churches, shrines, temples, and houses of prayer. This includes the
razing of the Church of Mary Magdalene in Jerusalem.
809 CE: Aghlabid Muslims conquer the island of Sardinia, taking it from
Italy.
813 CE: Christians in Judea were terrorized by Muslims. Many fled the
country under savage Islamic persecution.
814 CE: An Islamic civil war is waged between Muslim rivals Amin and
Mamun. Amin was killed so Mamun became Caliph.
815 CE: Shia Muslims revolted against Sunnis under Ibn Tuba
Tabs.
816 CE: Shia Muslims revolted in Mecca. Harsama suppressed the
revolt.
The Spanish Umayyad Emirs led a raid in which the island of Corsica was
captured from Italy.
817 CE: The Islamic leader Harsama was assassinated.
818 CE: The Umayyad Emirs in Spain captured the islands of Izira and
Majorica, while holding on to Sardinia.
819 CE: The Persian Islamic Empire begins to disintegrate under the
influence ot the Samanid’s in the north.
820 CE: Tahir established the Tahirid (Tharid) regime in Khurasan
(Khorastan, Persia). The Alid Dynasty was formed in Babaristan.
827 CE: Mamun declared the Mutazila sect of Islam as the official state
religion.
The Aghlabi regime in Tunis began their conquests of Sicily. They would
continue to attack the Romans in Sicily through 878.
831 CE: Muslim crusaders captured Palermo, Italy. Using it as a base,
jihadists conducted raids throughout southern Italy.
836 CE: Mutasim moved the capital of Islam to Samarra.
837 CE: The Jats revolt was ruthlessly suppressed.
838 CE: The Babek revolt in Azerbaijan was suppressed.
839 CE: The Maziar revolt in Tabaristan was suppressed.
840 CE: Muslim militias now occupied almost all of southern Italy.
Jihadists captured of the city of Messina in Sicily.
843 CE: Arabs began revolting against Islamic rule.
850 CE: Mutawakkil restored the orthodoxy of fundamentalist Islam making
Salaf Islam the official interpretation of the religion. The timing is
important. This is when Ishaq’s Biography of Muhammad became available by
way of Hisham’s redaction. Tabari’s History and his Qur’an Commentary
were becoming available, and Bukhari’s and Muslim’s topical Hadith
Collections were making their debut. While there were still very few
written copies of the Qur’an in distribution, for the first time there
was sufficient information about Muhammad’s life and words available for
clerics and politicians to elevate Islam from a barbarian credo to a
politicized religion - albeit, the most deceitful, destructive, and
deadly ever conceived by man.
851 CE: Allah’s and the Qur’an’s intolerance for all competitive
religions and political systems was made manifest when Caliph
al-Matawakkil ordered the destruction every non-Muslim house of prayer,
churche, temple, and shrine which was not destroyed during Caliph
al-Rashid’s 807 decree.
852 CE: Starting with the first written distribution of the Islamic
scriptures in 850, political and religious succession in Islam became a
carnival of death and oppression. The Tahirid ruler Abdullah Tahir was
ousted by Tahir II. In Spain, Abdur Rahman II was replaced by Muhammad I.
Then, Abbasid Caliph Mutawakkil was murdered in a coup so that Muntasir,
the man who had him killed, could live as Caliph. But that didn’t last
long because Muntasir was poisoned the following year so that Mutasin
could pretend to be Allah’s representative. Then Mutasim was deposed and
forced from Samarra to accommodate Mutaaz’s ego. The Abbasid Caliph
Mutaaz abdicated the throne under threat of death. But it didn’t matter.
He was murdered anyway and replaced by his assassin, Muhtadi.
Against this backdrop of musical thrones, other Muslims were playing the
role of warlord and establishing personal fiefdoms. Umar bin Abdul Aziz
created the Habbarid regime in Sind. Ahmad established the Samanid
fiefdom in Transoxiana. Yaqub bin Layth founded the Saffarid dynasty in
Sistan. Ahmad bin Tulun imposed the Tulunid dictatorship in
Egypt.
855 CE: The Christian revolt of Hims in Syria and Judea is suppressed by
the Islamic warlords.
868 CE: The Sattarid regime extended its control over most of Persia. In
Egypt, the Abbasid and Umayyad caliphates were ended. They were replaced
by the Tulunid Dynasty.
869 CE: Black slaves in Iraq revolted against Islamic suppression. Muslim
apologists recruit African Americans into the criminal religious
enterprise known as the Nation of Islam by telling them that Christianity
is the white religion of slavery and Islam is the black religion
committed to freedom. In actuality, the religion of Islam was built upon
the slave trade as is evidenced in this revolt and throughout their
scriptures. Race-based genocide has been a hallmark of Islam ever since.
And Islam’s core mantra is submit and obey. Yahshua, unlike Muhammad
never fought, enslaved, robbed, or rapped anyone, His message was
colorblind. And choice lies at the heart of His Scriptures because it is
the underpinning of a loving relationship.
870 CE: The Turks revolted against the Islamic dictator Muhtadi, killing
him. But it made no difference because he was replaced by a likeminded
fellow, Mutamid.
873 CE: Tahirid rule was extinguished in Persia. This led to the Zanj
revolt in Southern Iraq.
874 CE: With the death of the Samanid ruler Ahmad, Islam continued to be
plagued by unstable and deadly accession rites. With the death of Yaqubb
Layth in Sistan, Amr bin Layth became warlord. With the death of Ahmad
bin Tulun in Egypt, Khamar- Wiyiah became king. With the death of
Muhammad I the Umayyad ruler of Spain, Munzir inherited the throne. In
Sind, the death of Abdullah bin Umar the Habbari ruler left the Islamic
fiefdom rudderless.
Abbulla relaced Munzir, the Umayyad ruler of Spain. With the death of the
Samanid ruler Nasr, Ishmael became potentate. Shortly thereafter, the
Rustamids become the vassals of Spain. With the death of the Tulunid
ruler Khamarwiyiah; Abul Asakir Jaish played god. And with the
assassination of Abul Asakir Jaish; his killer Abu Musa Harun, became
Commander in Chief.
Without new territories and victims to carve up, the leadership of the
religion of Islam turned on itself and sliced their stolen pie into
different sections, ultimately stealing slices from one another. The next
one hundred years is nasty business.
877 CE: Syria and Lebanon came under Tulunid rule.
879 CE: The Seljuk’s, who were Eastern Turkish barbarians, conquered
Mesopotamia and large portions of Persia from the Abbasids. Recognizing
the superiority of Islam when it came to legitimizing rape and plunder,
the Seljuks became Muslims.
891 CE: The Qarmatian fiefdom was established in Bahrain.
898 CE: The Qarmatians sacked Basra.
900 CE: The Fatimids of Egypt overtook most of North Africa by the sword,
and one Islamic regime replaced another.
903 CE: Following the sacking of Basra, the Qarmatian ruler Abu Said, was
assassinated.
905 CE: Abdullah bin Hamdan imposed the Hamdanid regime in Mosul and
Jazirah. This year marked the end of the Tulunid dictatorship in
Egypt.
908 CE: Marked the end of the Saffarid rule, and the annexation of their
territories by the Samanids. The following year, Ubaidullah overthrew the
Aghlablds and imposed the Fatimid regime in North Africa.
909 CE: With the rise of the Fatimid Caliphate in Tunisia, Muslim
Crusaders continue to occupy and plunder Sicily and Sardinia, which were
now completely under their control.
913 CE: With the assassination of the Samanid ruler Ahmad II, Nasr II
became chief potentate.
928 CE: Beginning at this time, the Byzantines begin a revival. This
ultimately led them to recapture territories they had lost to the Muslims
such as Cyprus (964) and Tarsus (969).
929 CE: Qarmatians who had sacked Basra now attacked Mecca and carried
Allah away by removing the Black Stone from the Ka’aba.
930 CE: In Spain, Abdur Rahman III declared himself "the
Caliph.".
931 CE: This year marked the deposition and restoration of the Abbasid
Caliph Muqtadir.
934 CE: The Abbasid Caliph Al Qahir was deposed, replaced by Ar Radi. The
Fatimid Caliph Ubaidullah was then exchanged for Al Qaim. Then, with the
assassination of the Ziyarid ruler Mardawij, Washimgir became king.
Hamdanid ruler Abdullah bin Hamdan was killed so that Nasir ud Daula
could play god.
936 CE: By way of a coup, Ibn Raiq became the Amir (Emir, or Warlord) ul
Umara. Then in 938, by way of another coup, the reigns of power in
Baghdad are captured by Bajkam.
937 CE: Ikhshid, a particularly despotic and oppressive Islamic ruler,
wrote to the Roman Emperor Romanus, boasting over his control over the
Church’s holy places.
The Church of the Resurrection (known today as the Church of Holy
Sepulcher) in Jerusalem, Roman Catholicism’s second most important
shrine, was burned down by Muslims. The few churches which remain in
Jerusalem are attacked and destroyed.
941 CE: The religion of death assassinated Bajkam, allowing Kurtakin to
play Caliph. The following year, Ibn Raiq recaptured his
fiefdom.
943 CE: Al Baeidi came to power by way of a coup. But then the Abbasid
Caliph Muttaqi was forced to seek refuge with the Hamdanids as the result
of an armed insurrection. The same year, Sail ud Daula became Caliph in
Baghdad by way of the sword. Then Muttaqi was blinded and deposed,
leading to Mustakafi. However, he would be deposed the following
year.
945 CE: As a result of the Shiite raid on Baghdad, the Abbasid Empire
became powerless. It was the last time the Islamic world would be united.
Decentralized political regimes and religious sects divided the empire
into an uncivil array of squabbling warlords.
951 CE: There was great joy in mudville when the Qarnaatiana brought
Allah home and cemented the Black Stone back into the Ka’aba’s
wall.
960 CE: Marked the forced conversion of Qarakhanid Turks to
Islam.
962 CE: Islamic oppression is reasserted over Afghanistan by the
Ghaznavid Dynasty.
965 CE: The Ikhshid ruler Abul Hasan Ali was assassinated so that Malik
Kafur could rule.
966 CE: Anti-Christian riots in Jerusalem reach new levels of violence,
death, and destruction.
968 CE: The Byzantines reclaimed Aleppo.
969 CE: The Fatimid Muslims conquered Egypt.
970 CE: The Seljuk hoard besieged Islamic territories from the East. As
they conquered they consumed the poison of Islam and converted.
971 CE: Buluggin bin Ziri established the fiefdom of the Zirids in
Algeria. North Africa was now under the dictatorial rule of the Zayri in
Tunis.
972 CE: Israel and southern Syria were reconquered by the
Fatimids.
973 CE: Shia and Sunni Muslims begin terrorizing one another in Baghdad.
In the chaos, the Turkish General Subuktgin conquers the
capital.
974 CE: Marked the abdication of the Abbasid Caliph Al Muttih and the
accession of At Taii.
975 CE: The Turk General Subuktgin died as did the Fatimid Caliph Al
Muizz. In the vacuum of power, the Buwayhid Sultan Izz ud Daula claimed
power with the help of his cousin Azud ud Daula.
978 CE: With the death of the Buwayhid Sultan Izz ud Daula, authority was
claimed by Azud ud Daula, who survived by three years. The Hamdanids were
then overthrown by the Buwayhids.
986 CE: The Buwyhid Sultan Samsara ud Daula was overthrown by Sharaf ud
Daula in a coup. He would die in two years and be replaced with Baha ud
Daula.
991 CE: The Abbasid Caliph Taii was deposed in a bloody coup.
997 CE: Mahmud, the ruler of the Turkish regime in Gujarat, conducted
seventeen raids into northwestern India (thus Pakistan and Bangladesh) on
behalf of Islam. For his ruthlessness against the Hindu Indians, he is
named: "The Sword of Islam.".
1001 CE: The new millennium begins violently with the Islamic armies
under the command of Mahmud Ghazanavi defeating the Hindu Shahis. Over
the course of the next seven years the Muslims under his leadership would
go on to conquer Bhatiya (1004), Multan and Ghur (1005), and he Rajput
confederacy (1008).
1003 CE: The Muslim dictator al-Hakim begins to persecute Christians in
Judea and Egypt. During his reign of violence, the Church of St. Mark in
Fustat, Egypt, was destroyed.
1009 CE: What was left of the Church of the Resurrection in Jerusalem
after the 937 fire was demolished by the Islamic ruler al-Hakim.
1011 CE: In Spain, Muhammad I is overthrown by Sulaiman. The following
year, Spain was claimed by Bani Hamud through force of arms.
1012 CE: After having persecuted and terrorized Christians and Jews in
Judea and Egypt, the Islamic ruler al-Hakim issued a host of oppressive
decrees against all who observed the Jewish or Christian faith.
1015 CE: An earthquake in Judea topples the dome of the Dome of the Rock
and collapses much of the Islamic shrine.
1018 CE: In Spain another military coup transfers power to Abdul Rahman
IV.
1019 CE: The Islamic war machine began its conquest of the Punjab under
the command of Mahmud Ghazanavi.
1020 CE: Unable to play nicely together, the Buwayhid Sultan ud Daula
Caliphate was overthrown by Musharaf ud Daula,.
1024 CE: In Islamic Spain Abdul Rahman IV was assassinated, leading to
the dominion of Mustafi.
1031 CE: In Spain, with the deposition of Hisharn III, the Umayyad regime
came to an end. And with the collapse of Umayyid Caliphate, the stolen
Islamic pie was sliced into 15 minor independent dynasties throughout
Islamic Andalus.
1036 CE: The Fatimid Caliph Al Zahir died so Mustansir became Allah’s
dictator. But not everywhere: Tughril Beg was crowned as the king of the
Seljuks.
1037 CE: Azerbajjan in northern Persia, fell under the yoke of the Sajid
Dynasty by way of Seljuk swords.
1040 CE: In the Battle of Dandanqan, the Seljuks defeated the
Ghazanavids. This led to the deposition of Masud the Ghazanavid Sultan,
and the accession of Muhammad. At the same time, Al Moravids imposed his
fiefdom in North Africa.
1041 CE: The Ghazanavid Sultan Muhammad was overthrown by
Maudud.
1046 CE: Basasiri led a coup to capture power in Baghdad.
1047 CE: The Zirids in North Africa repudiated their allegiance to the
Fatimid and became allies with the rival Abbasids.
1048 CE: Trying to delay the return of the Byzantines that the Islamic
persecutions of Christians in the Holy Land had precipitated, the Islamic
regime allowed the reconstruction of the Church of the Resurrection which
they destroyed.
1050 CE: Marked the creation of the Al Moravid movement in Mauretania and
Morocco. The Al Moravids (also known as Murabitun and Al-Moravi) were
western Saharan Berbers and followers of fundamentalist Islam. They
adhered to Allah’s orders in the Qur’an, Muhammad’s example in the
Hadith, and thus imposed Sharia law. As fundamentalist Muslims, and as
jihadists, they helped establish the foundation for the
Muslim Brotherhood, which in turn fathered most all of today’s
terrorist organizations.
1055 CE: Muslims began a campaign of confiscating Christian property and
of defacing the rebuilt Church of the Resurrection.
1056 CE: Tughril Beg overthrew the Buwayhids. But then Basasiri
recaptured authority over Baghdad. He deposes Al Qaim and offered his
allegiance to the Fatimid Caliph. So then in 1059, Tughril Beg recaptured
power in Baghdad and al Qaim was restored as the Caliph. These guys made
the kings of Europe look civil by comparison.
1071 CE: In the Battle of Manzikert, the Byzantine emperor was taken
captive by the Seljuks. The Muslims now occupy much of Anatolia.
1071 CE: The Turks (who have now become Muslim Crusaders) invaded Syria,
Jordan, and Judea.
1073 CE: Turkish mujahideen begin their conquest of Jerusalem.
1075 CE: The Seljuks captured Nicea and make it their capital in
Anatolia.
1076 CE: The Al Moravids, after spending 25 years indoctrinating their
people in fundamentalist Islamic ideals, motivated their jihadists to
conquer western Ghana.
1077 CE: The Turkish Seljuk Islamic regime used their jihadists to insure
that their intolerant and repressive views of Islam would hold sway over
the Islamic Empire. They now control most of Arabia, Persia, the
Caucasus, Caspian, India, and Turkey.
1082 CE: The fundamentalist Muslim A1 Moravids conquered
Algeria.
1085 CE: Toledo was recaptured from Muslims by Christian forces.
1086 CE: The Al Moravids sent jihadists to help the Andalus in the Battle
of Zallaca. The Al Moravids defeated the Christians in Spain.
1090 CE: Al Moravids occupied all of Andalus except Saragossa and
Balearic Islands.
1091 CE: The Normans captured the island of Sicily, ending over 260 years
of Muslim rule.
1094 CE: Byzantine Emperor Alexius Comnenus I asked western Christendom
for help against Seljuk invasions of his territory. The Seljuks were a
ruthless stain of Eastern Turkish Muslims.
1095 CE: Pope Urban II extolled the virtues of fighting for the Roman
Catholic Church by stealing a page out of the Qur’an. The first crusade
was launched to retake Jerusalem from the Muslims who had conquered it
from the Byzantines. Christians and Jews had been severely persecuted in
the last century with Muslims destroying their churches and synagogues
and stealing their homes and land.
1099 CE: The crusaders captured Jerusalem and behaved no better than the
Muslims they deposed.
It can be argued that sometimes the Byzantine and European leaders did
not behave in an exemplarily fashion. And sometimes it is argued that the
Muslims displayed tolerance and acted with restraint. Both are true -
especially if one begins their review of these interactions in 1095
rather than 622. However, as this timeline confirms, the Muslims were the
aggressors and the Christian leaders showed considerable restraint as
their lands attacked and occupied. Further, the Islamic jihadists were
overwhelmingly more violent and intolerant than the Christians they
displaced. While it has become popular to regard Islam as an innocent
victim, and the Byzantines and Europeans as bullies, the opposite is
actually true.
The culture created by Islam became dependent upon conquest because the
religion made building a viable economy impossible. And when conquest was
no longer possible, the Muslim warlords stole fiefdoms from one another
and then imposed ever more draconian measures on the people who were
subjected to their religious and political authority. Simply stated,
unable to give Muslims a reason to live, Muhammad gave them a reason to
die. His legacy is one of death and destruction, rape and plunder. Every
life and place infected by his demonic religion was made worse by
it.
1100 CE: Afghanistan fell under the yoke of the Ghorid regime. They would
continue to oppress the Afghani people until 1215 CE.
1130 CE: The fundamentalist Al-Mohad (Al-Moravi) regime used their
mujahideen to make all of North Africa their personal sandbox.
1144 CE: Imad ud Din Zangi captured Edessa from the Christians during the
second crusade.
1147 CE: In the Maghrib, the Al Moravids were overthrown by the Al Mohads
under Abul Mumin.
1153 CE: With the death of the Seljuk Sultan Malik Shah I1, Muhammad II
became Commander in Chief of the Turkish Jihadists.
1159 CE: With the death of the Seljuk Sultan Muhammad II, Gulaiman became
king.
1161 CE: The death of the Seljuk Sulaiman brought Arsalan Shah to
power.
1171 CE: With the end of the Fatimids, Salah ud Din founded the Ayyubid
dynasty in Egypt.
1174 CE: Salah ud Din annexed Syria into his Islamic fiefdom.
1175 CE: The Ghurids defeated the Guzz Turks and occupied
Ghazni.
1179 CE: Shahab ud Din Ghuri captured Peshawar.
1186 CE: The Ghurids were overthrown by the Ghaznvaids in the
Punjab.
1187 CE: Salah ud Din wrests Jerusalem from the Christians in the third
crusade. The same year, Muslim general Salah al-Kin al-Ayyubi, defeats
the Christians in Egypt and ends the crusades.
In all of this time, Christians, trying to recapture their land, had
waged three aggressive campaigns against Muslims. The first attempt was a
fragile victory, the second a draw, and the third was a defeat. At this
point there had been 50 Islamic assaults for every Christian response.
Over time, that number would grow to 100 to 1.
1191 CE: Marks the Battle of Tarain between the Rajputs and the
Ghurids.
1193 CE: With the death of Salah ud Din, Al Aziz became commander of the
Muslim Mujahideen. Second battle of Tarain was fought.
1194 CE: Occupation of Delhi by the Muslims. This year also marked the
end of Seljuk rule.
1199 CE: The conquest of Northern India and Bengal by the
Ghurids.
1204 CE: Shahab ud Din Ghuri defeated by the Ghuzz Turks.
1211 CE: End of the Ghurid regime. Their territories were annexed by the
Khawarzam Shahs. In India Aram Shah was overthrown by Iltutmish.
1212 CE: The Battle of Al Uqab was waged in Spain marking the end of the
Al Mohad. The Al Mohads were defeated by the Christians in Spain at the
Al-Uqba. The Al Mohad Sultan An Nasir escaped to Morocco.
1214 CE: The Banu Marin under their leader Abdul Haq occupied the
northeastern part of Morocco.
1216 CE: The Al Mohads suffered a defeat at the hands of the Marinids and
Banu Marin at the battle of Nakur.
1217 CE: The Marinids suffered defeat in the battle fought on the banks
of the Sibu River. Abdul Haq was killed and the Marinids evacuated
Morocco.
1218 CE: The Marinids returned to Morocco under their leader Othman and
occupied Fez.
1223 CE: In Spain, a brother of Yusuf declared his independence and
assumed the title of Al Adil. Abu Muhammad overthrew Al Adil who escaped
to Morocco and overthrew Abdul Wahid.
1229 CE: The Ayyubid Al Kamil allowed Christians to return to Jerusalem.
Al Mamun invaded Morocco with Christian help which might explain the
conditions tied to the right of return.. Yahya was defeated and power is
captured by Al Mamun. He subsequently denied the Mahdiship of Ibn
Tumarat.
1244 CE: The Al Mohads defeated the Marinids at the battle of Abu Bayash.
The Marinids evacuated Morocco.
1245 CE: The Muslims re-conquered Jerusalem.
1248 CE: Abu Said attacked Tlemsen, but was ambushed and killed. This led
to the accession of his son Murtada.
Muslim control of Spain was reduced to the Kingdom of Granada which would
survive to two centuries.
1250 CE: The Marinids returned to Morocco, and occupied most of the
country.
1251 CE: The Ottoman Turks captured Egypt, stealing the land of the
Pharaohs from Mamluk Muslims.
1258 CE: The Mongols sacked Baghdad. The Abbasid Caliph Mustasim was
killed. This extinguished all remaining traces of Abbasid rule.
The Mongol II-Khans under Halaku established their regime in Iran and
Iraq with the capital at Maragah. Berek Khan, the Muslim chief of the
Golden Horde, protested against the treatment meted out to the Abbasid
Caliph and withdrew his contingent from Baghdad.
1260 CE: The Battle of Ayn Jalut in Syria was waged. The Mongols were
defeated by the Mamluks of Egypt. The spell of the invincibility of the
Mongols was broken.
1266 CE: Berek Khan, the first ruler of the Golden Horde of Mongol
Mujahideen to be converted to Islam, died.
In what some call the eighth crusade, Christian attempt to reclaim
Tunisia, but fail.
1267 CE: Malik ul Salih established the first Muslim state of Samudra
Pasai in Indonesia. The archipelago would never recover.
Murtada sought the help of the Christians, and the Spaniards to invade
Morocco. The Marinids then drove the Spaniards from Morocco. But with the
assassination of Murtada, Abu Dabbas became potentate.
1269 CE: Abu Dabbas was overthrown by the Marinida, ending the
fundamentalist Islamic regime of the Al Mohads in Morocco.
1270 CE: Mansa Wali, the founder of Islamic rule in Mali, died.
1272 CE: Marked the death of Muhammad I, the founder of the Islamic state
of Granada. Yaghmurason invaded Morocco but loses the battle.
1274 CE: The Marinids wrest Sijilmasa from the Zayenids by
force.
The ninth crusade under Edward I of England ended in fiasco and Edward
returned home.
1280 CE: The Battle of Hims was waged.
1286 CE: Bughra Khan declared his independence in Bengal under the name
of Nasiruddin.
1290 CE: Marked the end of the slave dynasty when Jalaluddin Khilji came
into power. Othman then embarked on a career of conquest and by 1290 CE
most of the Central Maghreb was conquered by the Zayanids.
1296 CE: Alauddin Ghazan converted to Islam.
1299 CE: The Muslim Mongols invaded Syria. The Muslim Marinids besieged
Tlemsen, the capital of the Zayanids.
1301 CE: In Bengal, Death of Ruknuddin the king of Bengal, succeeded by
brother Shamsuddin Firuz.
1305 CE: The Khiljis Muslim regime of Alauddin Khilji conquered
Rajputana.
1308 CE: This was the year of the coup in which the dictators of six
Islamic fiefdoms were exchanged by way of the sword.
1310 CE: In the Chughills empire, Kubak was overthrown by his brother
Isan Buga. In the Marinids empire, Abu Rabeah Sulaiman was overthrown by
Abu Said Othman. In the Khiljis empire, Alauddin conquered
Deccan.
1312 CE: In Tunisia, Abul Baqa was overthrown by Al Lihiani.
1313 CE: The Muslim Mongol Khans invaded Syria, but the Mongols were
repulsed by other Muslims as ruthless as they were.
1314 CE: In Kashmir, Rainchan overthrew Sinha Deva the Raja of Kashmir.
Rainchan converted to Islam and adopted the name of Sadrud Din.
In Granada, Abul Juyush was overthrown by his nephew Abul Wahid
Ismail.
1315 CE: In Tunisia, a sectarian war was waged between Bougie and Tunis.
Lihani was defeated and was killed. Abu Bakr became the ruler of Bougie
and Tunis.
1316 CE: In the Khiljis empire, Malik Kafur, a Hindu convert, usurped
power. Two years later, the assassination of Malik Kafur and deposition
of Shahabuddin Umar, led to the accession of Qutbuddin Mubarak. In the
Chughills Empire, Isan Buga overthrown by Kubak.
1320 CE: In the Khiljis regime, the assassination of Qutbuddin Mubarak in
a coup facilitated the usurpation of power by Khusro Khan a Hindu
convert. Khusro Khan, however, was overthrown by Ghazi Malik. Thus ended
the rule of the Khiljis.
In Tunisia, Abu Bakr was expelled from Tunis by Abu Imran.
1321 CE: In the Chughills Empire, Hebbishsi was overthrown by Dava
Temur.
1322 CE: In the Chughills Empire, Dava Temur was overthrown by
Tarmashirin, who is converted to Islam. In Bengal, the death of
Shamsuddin Firuz caused the Islamic kingdom to be divided into two parts.
Ghiasuddin Bahadur became the ruler of East Bengal with the capital at
Sonargaon, and Shahabuddin became the ruler of West Bengal with the
capital at Lakhnauti.
1325 CE: In Granada, the assassination of Abul Wahid Ismail, led to the
ascension of his son Muhammad IV. The assassination of Muhammad IV paved
the way for the coronation of his brother Abul Hallaj Yusuf.
1326 CE: The Muslim Ottoman Turks conquered Bursa.
1327 CE: With the rise of the Ottoman Turk Empire the Seljuk Empire
disintegrates. Arab and Persian Muslims are segregated and fragmented
along Sunni-Shia lines and are ruled by rival warlords in militaristic
fiefdoms. They lose their influence and fall victim to the Ottoman Turks
who, while Muslims, have no regard for Islam’s origins in Mecca, Medina,
and Baghdad.
The Turks captured the city of Nicaea and established the Ottoman capital
in Bursa.
1329 CE: In the Tughluqs Islamic fiefdom, Muhammad Tughluq shifted the
capital from Delhi to Daulatabad in Deccan.
1330 CE: Amir Hussain established the Jalayar regime in Baghdad. In
Tunisia, Abu Bakr overthrew Abu Imran and the state was again united
under him. In Bengal, Muhammad Tughluq reversed the policy of his father
and restored Ghiasuddin Bahadur to the throne of Sonargeon.
1331 CE: In Bengal was annexed by the Tughluqs.
1336 CE: In the Mongols II Khans Empire, Arpa was defeated and was
killed. In the Ottoman Empire, the Turks annexed the state of
Karasi.
In Bengal, The Tughluq Governor at Sonargeon was assassinated by his
armor bearer who claimed power for himself and declared his independence,
assuming the name of Fakhruddin Mubarak Shah.
1337 CE: In the Mongols II Khans Empire, Musa was overthrown and Muhammad
became the Sultan for a year and then he was deposed. On the
disintegration of the II-Khan rule, Abdur Razaq, a military mercenary,
established a personal fiefdom in Khurasan.
The Ottoman Turks captured the city of Nicomedia. In Algeria, the land
was occupied by Marinid Muslims.
1339 CE: In Bengal, the Tughluq governor at Lakhnauti-Qadr was
assassinated and power was usurped by the army commander-in-chief who
declared assumed the title of Alauddin Ali Shah.
With very little left to conquer, the carcass was being carved
up.
1342 CE: In the Golden Horde Empire, Tini Beg was overthrown by his
brother Jani Beg.
1343 CE: In the Chughills Empire, Muhammad was overthrown in a coup by
Kazan. In Bengal, Ilyas an officer of Alauddin, murdered his patron and
captured the throne of West Bengal.
1344 CE: In the Mongols II Khans Empire, the violent deposition of
Sulaiman led to the succession of Anusherwan.
1345 CE: In Bengal, llyas captured East Bengal and reunited the
fiefdom.
1347 CE: The Muslim Marinids captured Tunisia. In the Bahmanids fiefdom,
Hasan Gangu declared his independence and established a state in
Deccan.
1349 CE: In Africa, the Zayanids under Abu Said Othman recaptured
Algeria.
1350 CE: In the Sarbadaran Empire, a revolt against Abdur Razaq elevated
Amir Masud to power. In Tunisia, the deposition of Fadal empowered his
greedy brother Abu Ishaq. In Kashmir, Jamshed was overthrown by his
step-brother Alauddin Ali Sher. Muslims were not treating each other any
better than they were treating non-M uslims.
1352 CE: In Africa, the Marinids recaptured Algeria. Abu Said Othman was
taken captive and killed.
1353 CE: Marked the end of the Mongol II Khan regime. The Ottoman Turks
acquired the fortress of Tympa on the European side of the Hollespoint.
The Muzaffarids Muslims conquered Shiraz and established their capital
there.
1354 CE: The Muzaffarids annexed Isfahan. In Granada, the assassination
of Abu Hallaj Yusuf led to the crowning of his son Muhammad V. The
Prophet would have been so proud.
1359 CE: In the Muzaffarids realm, Shah Shuja was deposed by his brother
Shah Mahmud. In Tunisia, Abul Abbas a nephew of Abu Ishaq, revolted and
establishes his rule in Bougie.
In Algeria, The Zayanids under Abu Hamuw II recaptured their fiefdom. In
the Marinids fiefdom, Abu Bakr Said was overthrown by Abu Salim Ibrahim.
In Granada, Muhammad V lost the throne in palace revolution and was
succeeded by Ismail.
1360 CE: In Granada, Ismail was overthrown by his brother-in-law Abu
Said.
1361 CE: The Ottoman Turks under the command of Murad conquered part of
Thrace and established a capital at Demolika.
In the Golden Horde regime, Kulpa was overthrown by his brother Nauroz.
In the Marinids Empire, Abu Salim Ibrahim overthrown by Abu Umar. Abu
Umar was then overthrown by Abu Zayyan.
1362 CE: The Islamic Golden Horde realm was reduced to a state of
anarchy. During the next 20 years, 15 rulers came to the throne and made
their exit.
In Granada, Abu Said was overthrown by Muhammad V who had come to rule
for the second time.
1365 CE: The Ottoman Turks defeated the Christians at the battle of
Matiza. As a result, the Byzantine ruler became a vassal of the
Turks.
1371 CE: The Muslim Ottoman Turks invaded of Bulgaria, occupying
Bulgarian territory and annexing the Balkans into the Ottoman
Empire.
1374 CE: In the Marinids fiefdom, Abu Muhammad was overthrown by Abul
Abbas. In the Sarbadaran regime, the deposition of Muhammad Temur led to
the empowerment of Shamsuddin.
1378 CE: In the Bahmanids realm, Mujahid was assassinated and the throne
was captured by his uncle Daud.
1379 CE: The Turkomans of the Black Sheep Empire, under Bairam Khawaja
established the independent principality of the Turkomans with their
capital at Van in Armenia.
In the Bahmanids fiefdom, the assassination of Daud facilitated the
accession of Muhammad Khan.
1380 CE: In the Golden Horde Empire, the throne was captured by
Toktamish, a prince of the White Horde of Siberia.
Emir Temur crossed the Oxus and conquered Khurasan and Herat. Then he
invaded Persia and subjugated the Muzaffarids and Mazandaran.
1381 CE: In Emir Temur’s rising Empire, his jihadists annexed Seestan and
captured Qandhar.
1384 CE: Emir Temur led a conquest of Astrabad, Mazandaran, Rayy and
Sultaniyah.
In the Marinids empire, Abul Abbas was overthrown by Mustansir.
1386 CE: Islamic Emir Temur annexed Azerbaijan and overran Georgia. That
led to the subjugation of Gilan and Shirvan. Turkomans of the Black Sheep
were defeated.
1387 CE: In the Marinid Muslim enclave, Muhammad was overthrown by Abul
Abbas who came to power for the second time.
1391 CE: Islamic Emir Temur annexed Fars and the Muzaffarids.
1393 CE: Emir Temur defeated Tiktomish, the ruler of the Golden Horde. He
captured Jalayar.
1394 CE: Still on the warpath, the vicious Emir Temur defeated the Duke
of Moscow.
Qara Othman established the rule of the White Sheep Turkomans in
Diyarbekr.
1395 CE: Emir Temur defeated Toktamish and razed Serai to the ground,
ending the rule of the Golden Horde. Emir Temur then annexed
Iraq.
1396 CE: Emir Temur subjugates the Sarbadaran empire, annexing their
territory.
1398 CE: The ruthless Emir Temur launched his Islamic crusade against
India.
The Tughluqs Empire witnessed the invasion of Emir Timur’s mujahideen.
Mahmud Shah escaped from the capital and went into hiding.
1399 CE: Emir Temur continued his military campaign in Iraq and
Syria.
1400 CE: The Mamluks lost Syria which was occupied by Emir
Timur.
1402 CE: The Ottoman Turks were defeated at the battle of Ankara. Bayazid
was taken captive by Emir Timur.
1405 CE: The Timurids Empire is rocked with the death of Emir Timur. His
son, Shah Rukh, assumes power.
1407 CE: In the Golden Horde empire, Shadi Beg was deposed to facilitate
the installation of Faulad Khan by the king maker Edigu. That led to the
deposition of Faulad Khan and the installation of Timur. Two years later
Timur was deposed to accommodate Jalaluddin. Then in 1413, Jalaluddin was
deposed and replaced by Karim Bardo. The following year a coup dumped
Karim Bardo and elevated Kubak Khan. He served for a year prior to being
ousted Jahar Balrawi. A few months later, he was deposed by Chaighray.
Then in 1419, this Golden Horde potentate was overthrown by Ulugh
Muhammad. The following year Daulat Bairawi grabbed power.
In Morocco, Abu Said Othman was assassinated paving the way for the
succession of his infant son, Abdul Haq.
1424 CE: The Halsida of Tunisia occupied Algeria. This state of affairs
continued throughout the fifteenth century.
1425 CE: In the Uzbegs Islamic regime in Russia, Abul Khayr declared his
independence in the western part of Siberia.
1430 CE: The Uzbeg jihadists under Abul Khayr occupied
Khawarazm.
1434 CE: Turkomans of the Black Sheep empire deposed Qara Iskandar and
installed his brother Jahan Shah. Turkomans of the White Sheep empire
replaced Qara Othman with his son Ali Beg.
1439 CE: In the Golden Horde Empire, Ulugh Muhammad withdrew from Sarai
and established the principality of Qazan.
1446 CE: The Ottoman Turks fight the second battle of Kossova resulting
in an Ottoman victory. Serbia was annexed to Turkey and Bosnia became its
vassal state as a result.
1449 CE: The Uzbeg’s Abul Khayr captured Farghana.
1453 CE: The Ottoman Turks captured Constantinople and toppled the last
Christian outpost in the Middle East. The Byzantine Empire was now
extinguished by Islam. With the last obstacle removed, the Muslims
assault the Balkans and continue their westward invasion.
With the sack of Constantinople, now Istanbul, the Ottoman Turks move
their capital from Bursa to the now vanquished capital of the Byzantine
Empire.
Infighting among rival Islamic warlords continued to be the hallmark of
Islamic history.
1454 CE: The Ottoman Turks attacked Wallachia, making it a vassal state
of Turkey.
1456 CE: The Ottoman Turks annexed Serbia.
1461 CE: The Ottoman Turks annexed Bosnia and Herzogovina.
1462 CE: The Ottoman Turks annexed Albania.
1467 CE: Jahan Shah of the Black Sheep attacked Turkomans of the White
Sheep Empire. Jahan Shah was defeated and the Black Sheep territories
were annexed by the White Sheep.
1468 CE: Turkomans of the White Sheep empire under Uzun Hasan, defeated
the Timurids at the battle of Qarabagh whereby the White Sheep became the
masters of Persia and Khurasan.
In the Burji Mamluks fiefdom, the deposition of Femur Bugha in a military
coup empowered the Mamluk General Qait Bay.
1469 CE: The death of Abu Said led to the disintegration of the Timurid
state.
1472 CE: In Morocco, Sharif Muhammad al Jati was overthrown by the
Wattisid chief Muhammad al Shaikh who established the rule of the
Wattisid regime.
1473 CE: The Ottoman Turks were victorious in the war against
Persia.
1475 CE: The Ottoman Turks annexed the Crimea. Then the Muslim mujahideen
attacked Venice, weakening the Italian city but not destroying it.
However, in the aftermath of their armed assaults, the Ottomans became
master of the Aegean Sea.
1479 CE: Khalil, religious and political leader of the Turkomans of the
White Sheep was overthrown by his uncle Yaqub.
1480 CE: In the Golden Horde Empire, Khan Ahmad was assassinated by his
son Said Ahmad II. But that didn’t work out the way he had planned. Said
Ahmad was overthrown by his brother Murtada the following year.
1489 CE: In Tunisia, Abu Zikriya Yahya was overthrown by Abul Mumin. The
following year, Abul Mumin was overthrown, and Abu Yahya recaptured
power.
1492 CE: Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile end Muslim rule in
Spain and then sponsor Christopher Columbus.
1495 CE: In the Turkomans of the White Sheep Bayangir was deposed by his
cousin Rustam. Two years later, Rustam was overthrown by Ahmad. Anarchy
and fragmentation were the result.
1498 CE: In the Burji Mamluks fiefdom, the removal of Nasir Muhammad from
power empowered Zahir Kanauh.
1499 CE: The Uzbeg leader Shayhani Khan conquered Transoxiana.
The Ottoman Turks defeated the Venetian fleet in the battle of
Lepanto.
1500 CE: Following the militaristic example of the Seljuk and Ottoman
Muslim regimes, the Mongol Muslims and the Safavid Islamists created
their own fiefdoms by way of the sword.
In the Burji Mamluks empire, Zahir Kanauh was overthrown by Ashraf Gan
Balat.
1501 CE: Isamil (Ishmael) I established the Safavid fiefdom in Persia and
the prophetic Muftism of the Twelfth-Imam sect of Shi’ism became the
official state religion of what is today, Iran and Iraq.
1507 CE: The Portuguese under d’Albuquerque established ports in the
Persian Gulf.
1508 CE: Marked the end of the Turkomans of the White Sheep regime. Their
territories were annexed by the Safawids.
1511 CE: The Potuguese D’Albuquerque conquered Malacca from the
Muslims.
1517 CE: The Ottoman Sultan Selim Yavuz (nicknamed "the Grim")
defeated the Mamluks and conquered Egypt from rival Muslims.
1526 CE: Louis of Hungary was killed at the Battle of Mohacs.
1526 CE: The Battle of Panipat was waged in India, paving the way for the
Moghul conquest. Babur established his Indian Islamic capital at Delhi
and Agra.
1528 CE: The Ottoman Turks took Buda in Hungary.
1529 CE: Marked the unsuccessful Ottoman siege of Vienna.
1550 CE: The Muslim kingdom of Atjeh was established in Sumatra.
1550 CE: Islam spread into Java, the Moluccas, and Borneo.
1568 CE: During the Alpujarra uprising of the Moriscos Muslims forcibly
converted to Catholicism in Spain.
1571 CE: The Ottomans were defeated at the naval Battle of Lepanto. The
Islamic dominance in the Mediterranean was brought to a close.
1578 CE: In the Battle of the Three Kings at Qasr al-Kabir in Morocco,
King Sebastian of Portugal was killed.
1600 CE: Sind was annexed by the Mughals, ending Arghun rule in
Sind.
1601 CE: Khandesh was annexed by the Mughals.
1603 CE: In the Battle of Urmiyah the Turks suffered a significant
defeat. Persia now occupied Tabriz, Mesopotamia.
1607 CE: Ahmadnagar was annexed by the Mughals.
1609 CE: Bidar was annexed by the Mughals.
1611 CE: Kuch Behar was subjugated by the Mughals.
1612 CE: Kamrup was annexed by the Mughals.
1618 CE: Tipperah was annexed by the Mughals.
1641 CE: The Ottoman Turks captured Azov.
1648 CE: In Turkey Ibrahim was deposed facilitating the accession of
Muhammad IV.
1658 CE: With the deposition of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan, Islam saw
the accession of Aurangzeb.
1675 CE: The Sikh Guru Tegh Bahadur was executed.
1682 CE: Assam was annexed by the Mughals.
1683 CE: One-thousand years after the Islamic siege of the world began
following Muhammad’s death, the Ottoman Turks lifted their siege of
Vienna and retreated. Kara Mustafa, the Grand Wazir, was executed for the
failure of the expedition that marked the eventual demise of the Islamic
Empire.
1686 CE: Bijapur was annexed by the Mughals.
1687 CE: Golkunda was annexed by the Mughals.
In the second battle of Mohads, the Ottoman Turks were defeated by
Austria. The deposition of Muhammad IV led to the accession of Sulaiman
II.
1700 CE: Murshid Quli Khan declared the independence of Bengal and
established his capital at Murshidabad.
1703 CE: Ahmad 11I became the Ottoman Sultan. But in the same year, it
was the birth of the religious fundamentalist Muhammad bin Abdul Wahab
that would change the world.
1711 CE: In a war between Ottoman Turkey and Russia, Russia was defeated
at the battle of Pruth.
1713 CE: Jahandar Shah was overthrown by his nephew Farrukh
Siyar.
1718 CE: In the war against Austria, the Ottoman Turks were defeated.
With the resulting treaty of Passarowich, Turkey lost control of
Hungary.
1722 CE: The Battle of Gulnabad was waged between the Afghans and the
Persians. The Persians were defeated and the Afghans under Shah Mahmud
became the masters of a greater part of Persia. Shah Hussain was taken
captive.
1730 CE: Zanzibar was taken from the Portugese and occupied by
Oreart.
1747 CE: Ahmad Shah Durrani established his fiefdom in
Afghanistan.
1752 CE: Ahmed Shah Durrani captured and occupied the Punjab, Kashmir and
Sind.
1761 CE: Ahmad Shah Durrani came to India at the invitation of Shah
Waliullah Dehlavi and smashed the budding Maratha powerbase in the battle
of Panipat.
1764 CE: Areadi Gaya, converts to Islam and becomes the ruler of the Futa
Bandu State in West Sudan.
1783 CE: Marked the end of Kalhora rule in Sind.
1797 CE: Russia captured Dagestan during its ongoing conflict with the
Ottomans.
1799 CE: Ranjit Singh declared himself Maharajah of Punjab after
defeating the Afghan Muslims.
1799 CE: Khoqand was now an independent Islamic State.
1803 CE: Shah Abdul Aziz ibn Saud assassinated by a Shia Muslim. Shah
Shuja was proclaimed King of Afghanistan.
1805 CE: Ibn Saud captured Medina, defeating the Turk garrison. Saud
partnered with religious fundamentalist Muhammad bin Abdul Wahab.
Together they sought to create an Islamic theocracy in Arabia after
ousting rival warlords and the Islamic Ottoman Turks. That Wahhabi
fiefdom is called Saudi Arabia.
1804 CE: Othman Dan Fodio established the Islamic State of Sokoto in
Central Sudan.
1805 CE: The Faraizi movement was launched in Bengal. Muhammad Ali was
appointed Pasha of Egypt by the Ottoman Turks.
1807 CE: The Darqawi sect revolted against Islamic Ottoman Turk
domination. Tunisia repudiated the suzerainty of Algeria.
1811 CE: The British occupied Indonesia.
1812 CE: Medina fell to the Islamic Egyptians.
1813 CE: Mecca and Taif were captured by Muslim Egyptian forces and the
Saud family of warlords was expelled from Hijaz.
1814 CE: Iran executed an accord of alliance with the British known as
Definitive Treaty.
1814 CE: King Othman of Tunisia was assassinated by his cousin
Mahmud.
1816 CE: The British withdrew from Indonesia, restoring the archipelago
to the Dutch.
1827 CE: Malaya became a preserve of the British according to the Anglo-
Netherland treaty in 1824.
1828 CE: Russia and Turkey declared war against one another once
again.
1830 CE: French forces landed near Algiers, Algeria, ending 313 years
rule of Islamic Turkish rule.
1831 CE: Syed Ahmad Barelvi and Shah Ismail, both leaders of the Jihad
movement in India, fell fighting the Sikhs in Balakot.
1832 CE: The Ottoman Turks were defeated in the battle of Konia by
Islamic Egyptian forces.
1832 CE: Sayyid Said, King of Oman, shifted his capital to
Zanzibar.
1839 CE: The Egyptians defeated the Ottoman Turks in the battle of
Nisibin.
1840 CE: European powers encouraged Egypt to relinquish control over
Syria.
1841 CE: The state of Adamawa was established by Adams adjacent to
Nigeria.
1842 CE: Amir Abdul Qadir was ousted from Algeria by the French. He
crossed over into Morocco.
1842 CE: Shah Shuja was assassinated, ending the Durrani regime in
Afghanistan.
1847 CE: Amir Abdul Qadir surrendred to France under the condition of
safe passage to a Muslim country of his choice. France violated its
pledge and took him as a captive.
1850 CE: Ali Muhammad Bab was arrested and executed by Iranian
government. Qurratul Ain Tabira, a renowned poet and staunch advocate of
Babism was also assassinated.
1852 CE: Abdul Qadir was freed by Napoleon. He settled in
Turkey.
1855 CE: Khiva was annexed by Russia.
1857 CE: The British captured Delhi from the Muslims and eliminated
Mughal regime in India after 332 years of occupation. The last Mughal
Emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar, was exiled to Rangoon in Burma. This ended
1000 years of Muslim oppression over Hindu India.
1859 CE: Imam Shamil laid down his arms before the Russian forces and the
Islamic State of Daghestan became a Russian province.
1860 CE: Maulay Muhammad was defeated by Spain.
1862 CE: The Faraizi movement fizzled out after the death of Dadu
Miyan.
1865 CE: The Khoqand State was dissolved by Russia.
1869 CE: Jamaluddin Afghani was exiled from Afghanistan. He fleed to
Egypt.
1871 CE: Tunisia recognized the suzerainty (external political control)
of Turkey.
1876 CE: Britain purchased shares of Khediv Ismail in the Suez canal and
got deeply involved in Egyptian politics.
1878 CE: Turkey handed over Cyprus to Britain.
1878 CE: Adrianople fell to Russia at the end of the Turk-Russian
War.
1879 CE: Jamaluddin Afghani was exiled from Egypt.
1879 CE: With the treaty of Berlin, Muslim Turkey lost 80% of its
territory in Europe. Islam was now in full retreat.
1881CE: France entered Tunisia. The Bey acknowledged supremacy of France
as a result of the treaty of Bardo.
1881 CE: Muhammad Ahmad declared himself Mahdi in northern Sudan. The
legacy of his regime would ultimately slaughter 2.7 million
Africans.
1882 CE: Egypt came under British military occupation as a result of
Islam’s worldwide collapse.
1885 CE: Muhammad Ahmad declared the Government of Sudan to be under his
rule.
1885 CE: The Mahdi Sudani died five months after his occupation of
Khartoum.
1890 CE: The Banbara State collapsed.
1895 CE: Afghanistan received the Wakhan corridor by way of an
accommodation from Russia and British India making the Afghan border
touch China.
1895 CE: Mirza Ghulam Ahmad of Qadian claimed prophethood.
1897 CE: The Islamic state of Bagirimi fell under French
control.
1899 CE: With the fall of Mahdi State, the Sudan was occupied jointly by
the British and the Egyptians.
1901 CE: Ibn Saud (Abd al-Aziz) captured Riyad. The Wahhabi fiefdom of
Saud begins to emerge.
1902 CE: French forces entered Morocco.
1904 CE: Morocco became a French protectorate under the Conference of
Algeciras.
1905 CE: The beginning of the Salafiyyah movement is witnessed in Paris.
Its main sphere of influence would be in Egypt with the
Muslim Brotherhood. Salaf Islam is fundamental, uncorrupted Islam
based entirely on the words and deeds of the prophet Muhammad and his
Companions.
1907 CE: The beginning of the Young Turks movement in Turkey.
1912 CE: The beginning of the Muhammadiyyah movement in
Indonesia.
1914 CE: World War I. The Ottoman Turks ally with Germany. The Turks
invade Russia and are pummeled. Under Ottoman rule, secret Muslim Arab
nationalist societies were formed.
1915 CE: The Turks blamed their defeat on the Armenian Christians. They
force the entire population of two million people from the homes and land
- killing over a million unarmed Armenian men, women, and children in
genocidal rage.
1916 CE: Arab Muslims revolted against Ottoman Turkish rule. Lawrence of
Arabia led attacks on the Hijaz Railway. What was left of the Ottoman
Empire was destroyed by Saudi Muslims serving the British.
1918 CE: Armistice signed with the defeated Ottomans on October 30. Syria
and Damascus became a French protectorate.
1921 CE: Abd Allah bin Husayn was pronounced King of Transjordan by the
British. Faysal bin Husayn was made King of Iraq. His father was the
Sharif of Mecca. Abd al-Karim led a revolt against colonial rule in the
Moroccan Rif.
1922 CE: Mustafa Kemal abolished the Turkish Sultanate now that it was
powerless.
1924 CE: The Turkish Caliphate was abolished. King Abd al-Aziz, a Saud
and Wahhabi Muslim, conquered Mecca and Medina. He established the
Kingdoms of Najd and Hijaz which grow with British help into Saudi
Arabia.
1925 CE: Reza Khan seized the government in Persia and established the
Pahlavi dynasty with British and American assistance.
1926 CE: Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud assumed the title of King of Najd and
Hijaz.
1928 CE: Hasan al-Banna founds the
Muslim Brotherhood.
1932 CE: Iraq was granted independence by the League of Nations as is the
fiefdom of Saudi Arabia.
1934 CE: A war was fought between King Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud and Imam
Yahya of Yemen. Asir was annexed by Saudi Arabia.
1935 CE: Persia was renamed Iran.
1936 CE: Increased Jewish immigration into Judea was stimulated by the
Nazis. Mufti Muhammad Husseini traveled to Berlin and convinced Hitler to
murder Jews rather then exile them. The Holocaust is the result.
1939 CE: World War II. Six million Jews are slaughtered with Islamic
assistance.
1941 CE: British and Russian forces invaded Iran and Reza Shah was forced
to abdicate in favor of his son Mohammad Reza Shah in Iran.
1946 CE: Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria were granted independence from
Britain and France.
1947 CE: Pakistan fought a civil war with India to form a state comprised
of Muslims.
1948 CE: State of Israel is created as a result of the Holocaust. Arab
armies attack the new nation but are defeated.
1949 CE: Hasan al-Banna, the leader of the
Muslim Brotherhood, was assassinated by Egypt.
1951 CE: Libya became an independent Marxist Muslim state.
1952 CE: King Faruq of Egypt, a very perverted fellow, was forced to
abdicate.
1953 CE: General Zahedi led a coup against Musaddeq, and the Shah
returned to power.
1956 CE: Morocco amd Tunisia became independent Islamic states.
This review brings us to
the beginning of the
Islamic Terror Timeline...