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"How could I allow my soldiers to sail on this disloyal and cruel
sea?" These words, attributed to the most powerful caliph of
medieval Islam, Umar Ibn al-Khattab (634-644), have led to a
misunderstanding in the West about the importance of the
Mediterranean to early Islam. This body of water, known in Late
Antiquity as the Sea of the Romans, was critical to establishing
the kingdom of the caliphs and for introducing the new religion to
Europe and Africa. Over time, it also became a pathway to
commercial and political dominion, indispensable to the prosperity
and influence of the Islamic world. Sea of the Caliphs returns
Muslim sailors to their place of prominence in the history of the
Islamic caliphate. As early as the seventh century, Muslim sailors
competed with Greek and Latin seamen for control of this far-flung
route of passage. Christophe Picard recreates these adventures as
they were communicated to admiring Muslims by their rulers. After
the Arab conquest of southern Europe and North Africa, Muslims
began to speak of the Mediterranean in their strategic visions,
business practices, and notions of nature and the state. Jurists
and ideologues conceived of the sea as a conduit for jihad, even as
Muslims' maritime trade with Latin, Byzantine, and Berber societies
increased. In the thirteenth century, Christian powers took over
Mediterranean trade routes, but by that time a Muslim identity that
operated both within and in opposition to Europe had been shaped by
encounters across the sea of the caliphs.
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