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refers to those who practice the religion |
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refers to elements of the religion itself |
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one who believes that Jesus had one divine nature |
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one who believe that Jesus had both human and divinie nature fused into one. |
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precursors of the modern Maronites, tried to evolve a compromise between the Monophysites and orthodox Christianity by postulating that Christ had two natures, human and divine, but a single will. |
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reference to the ruling dynasty in Persia in the sixth-century. |
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a frontier official appointed by Sasanian ruler |
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a religious movement with strong political overtones in which Mazdakites campaigned for the abolition of private property and class distinctions and the equality of women. |
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Lands belonging to the Muslim community or to the caliph especially in Iraq in early Islamic times. |
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land province important in the provincial organization of Muslims |
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the second level of Sasanian aristocracy called the lesser aristocracy |
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the Sasanian state religion, administered by Magi, concentrating on five temples, had only liimited support, more connected with rituals than needs of people. |
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administrated Zoroastrianism faith |
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argues for Christ as 2 distinct persons; one human, one divine |
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area between Tigris and Euphrates |
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Leading tribe in Mecca that opposed Muhammed and afterwards, the tribe dominated early Islamic leadership. |
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paganistic religion in Mecca |
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tribal raids that served to confirm the unity of the kin, give its members military experience, and could be sometimes profitable |
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Arabic santuary that was a neutral zone for different groups to exchange goods and settle disputes. |
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a "verse" or chapter in Qu'ran |
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Muhammed's wife and first convert |
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one of the first converts and the Prophet's son-in-law |
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the migration from Medina to Mecca |
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Meccan Muslims who had left Mecca with Muhammed |
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the Medina tribe that helped Muhammed when he first left Mecca, later pained by their exclusion from Islamic leadership positions |
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the community of believers |
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early influential convert who ordered all Jewish men killed and women and children sold into slavery |
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the meeting after the Prophet's death that chose the next leader |
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first caliph who subdued Ridda wars and began expansion |
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last caliph who battled against factions within Islamic community |
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second caliph, who conquered Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Egypt |
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"deputy of God" also caliph |
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"commander of the faithful" |
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the Prophet's most influential wife |
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the wars in Arabia that followed the death of Muhammed |
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system of settlement that payed conquerors pensions instead of distributing lands among them |
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Syrian governor who opposed caliph Ali in honor of the death of Uthman. Took leadership of Islamic communities with loose system of alliances |
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early Muslim settlers in Iraq, some of whom later joined the Khawarij |
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a council formed to choose a caliph |
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rejected urban life of Kufa and reverted back to boudouin ways and believed they were the only true Muslims in the world. |
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