Muhammad and conquest of Mecca
Muhammad was born in Mecca in 570, and thus Islam has been
inextricably linked with the city ever since. He was born in a minor
faction, the Hashemites, of the ruling Quraysh tribe. It was in Mecca,
in the nearby mountain cave of Hira on Jabal al-Nour, that, according to Islamic tradition, Muhammad is said to have begun receiving divine revelations from God through the Archangel Gabriel in 610 AD, and began to preach his form of Abrahamic monotheism against Meccan paganism. After enduring persecution from the pagan tribes for 13 years, Muhammad emigrated (see Hijra) in 622 with his companions, the Muhajirun, to Yathrib (later called Medina). The conflict between the Quraysh and the Muslims, however, continued: the two fought in the Battle of Badr, where the Muslims defeated the Quraysh army outside Medina; while the Battle of Uhud
ended indecisively. Overall, however, Meccan efforts to annihilate
Islam failed and proved to be very costly and ultimately unsuccessful.
During the Battle of the Trench in 627, the combined armies of Arabia were unable to defeat Muhammad's forces .
In 628, Muhammad and his followers marched to Mecca, attempting to
enter the city for pilgrimage. Instead, however, they were blocked by
the Quraysh, after which both Muslims and Meccans entered into the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah,
whereby the Quraysh promised to cease fighting Muslims and promised
that Muslims would be allowed into the city to perform the pilgrimage
the following year. Two years later, the Quraysh violated the truce by
slaughtering a group of Muslims and their allies. Muhammad and his
companions, now 10,000 strong, decided to march into Mecca. However,
instead of continuing their fight, the city of Mecca surrendered to
Muhammad and his followers who declared peace and amnesty for the
inhabitants. The native pagan imagery was destroyed by Muhammad and his
followers and the location Islamized and rededicated to the worship of God. Muhammad declared Mecca as the holiest site in Islam ordaining it as the center of Muslim pilgrimage, one of the faith's Five Pillars. He also declared that no non-Muslim
would be allowed inside the city so as to protect it from the influence
of polytheism and similar practices. Then, Muhammad returned to Medina,
after assigning Akib ibn Usaid as governor of the city. His other activities in Arabia led to the unification of the peninsula.
Muhammad died in 632, but with the sense of unity that he had passed on to his Ummah
(Islamic nation), Islam began a rapid expansion, and within the next
few hundred years stretched from North Africa well into Asia and parts
of Europe. As the Islamic Empire grew, Mecca continued to attract pilgrims not just from Arabia, but now from all across the Muslim world and beyond, as Muslims came to perform the annual Hajj pilgrimage.
Mecca also attracted a year-round population of scholars, pious
Muslims who wished to live close to the Kaaba, and local inhabitants who
served the pilgrims. Due to the difficulty and expense of the Hajj,
pilgrims arrived by boat at Jeddah, and came overland, or joined the
annual caravans from Syria or Iraq.
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