Friday, 18 January 2013

Pre Islamic History

Pre Islamic History Details
 Scientific studies of Pre-Islamic Arabs starts with the Arabists of the early 19th century when they managed to decipher epigraphic Old South Arabian (10th century BCE), Ancient North Arabian (6th century BCE) and other writings of pre-Islamic Arabia. Thus, studies are no longer limited to the written traditions, which are not local due to the lack of surviving Arab historians' accounts of that era; the paucity of material is compensated for by written sources from other cultures (such as Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, etc.), so it was not known in great detail. From the 3rd century CE, Arabian history becomes more tangible with the rise of the Ḥimyarite, and with the appearance of the Qaḥṭānitess in the Levant and the gradual assimilation of the Nabataeans by the Qaḥṭānites in the early centuries CE, a pattern of expansion exceeded in the explosive Muslim conquests of the 7th century. Sources of history include archaeological evidence
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
Pre Islamic History
                   

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