Hanafi Sunnis are pretty much your standard mainstream Sunni Islam. Since the Middle East has been controlled by Turks and Mongols for so long, it tends to be a bit more lax than usual, particularly on alcohol for instance, but otherwise no surprises.Interesting. It would be good to know about the Islamic sects too, I suppose.
I do need to write a longer Chobanid description, don't I? Well, if you mean a political summary: conquered by the Salur Turkish Sultanate in the eleventh century. Salur splintered into competing regional polities starting from the late eleventh century; the Baghdad sultanate wound up securing most of the prize by the middle twelfth century, but the Mediterranean coast was held by competing Damascus- and Antioch-based sultanates. Both weakened in the twelfth century, the former under pressure from the Romans and the Baghdad Sultanate, the latter under Usfurid pressure. As of the Mongol advent, most of Syria was controlled by the Romans, most of Palestine and Jordan controlled by the Usfurids, and Iraq held by the Baghdad Sultanate. It all fell to the Mongols and was under Temurid control for the next century. As time progressed the Temurids became more and more focused on their borders with Rome and the Golden Horde, and the Turkish notables of Baghdad became increasingly influential in internal politics, so the governors of Syria and Jordan became increasingly autonomous. Said governors were briefly independent, with Egyptian encouragement, during the transition to Artuklu rule, but were suppressed by the center; the disastrous Egyptian attempt to protect Jordan at the time discouraged further Egyptian interference beyond Sinai for a long time. The Artuklu then ruled it all for a while, but the Artuklu were even more concerned with Persia and Rome, especially after the Kantakouzenid rise to power, than the Temurids had been, so the southern Levant was neglected as Artuklu rule continued; the disruption of the Eastern Med trade caused by the suppression of Sicily didn't help either, though Egyptians did eventually take over a lot of it. Jordan and Palestine broke away from the Artuklu shortly before the Sultanate collapsed while the rest of the regional elites had to look to their own defense after the Artuklu collapsed. Splinter states in the center warred amongst themselves for the empire, while external powers gobbled up the periphery: Anatolia fell to the Romans, a large part of Mesopotamia to the Persians, and the southern Levant fell under Egyptian influence, if not, in most cases, actual control. The Chobanids, meanwhile, were picking up steam, and wound up conquering Syria and conquering/rescuing northern Iraq, and finally brought the overstretched Roman reconquest to a dead halt in Cilicia. Riding high on prestige from that victory, and with the Romans and Persians distracted, they invaded Palestine. The Egyptians didn't try particularly hard to hold their positions, being themselves more concerned with maintaining their commercial position in the face of Roman assertiveness, and were in any case pretty rapidly trashed and thrown out. Without Egyptian backing the locals had no chance against the Chobanids, and were incorporated into the state.Query: what's been the history of the Levant over the last few centuries?
What happened to the Roman military renaissance that started with Theophilos and picked up steam in the OTL late ninth century? No Phokades or Tzimiskes to conquer Cilicia and Syria? Or did they just have Slavic issues or something?Well, if you mean a political summary: conquered by the Salur Turkish Sultanate in the eleventh century.
So, basically Seljuqs By Any Other Name? Would the Usfurids be like Turkmen analogs, then, who conquered Egypt instead of Anatolia in TTL?Perfectionist said:Salur splintered into competing regional polities starting from the late eleventh century; the Baghdad sultanate wound up securing most of the prize by the middle twelfth century, but the Mediterranean coast was held by competing Damascus- and Antioch-based sultanates.
Stopped by a general military crisis in the mid tenth century. Basically, they threw away a couple of armies in Italy just in time to meet a Bulgar resurgence and the unification of a large slice of Syria and eastern Anatolia by a very dangerous emir of Aleppo. They could have beaten any two of those threats, but they kept trying to beat all three, and so wound up losing everywhere.What happened to the Roman military renaissance that started with Theophilos and picked up steam in the OTL late ninth century? No Phokades or Tzimiskes to conquer Cilicia and Syria? Or did they just have Slavic issues or something?
Yep.So, basically Seljuqs By Any Other Name?
No. Turkmen analogs did conquer Egypt, but they never established a very stable state. The Usfurids were a native group that threw them out.Would the Usfurids be like Turkmen analogs, then, who conquered Egypt instead of Anatolia in TTL?
In northern Andalusia, Sicily, and the Levant, mostly. There are some in Roman Catholic Europe, but the monastics tend to be fairly hostile to them.Thlayli said:This sort of reminds me, where are all the Jews? Any notable expulsions?
Stopped by a general military crisis in the mid tenth century. Basically, they threw away a couple of armies in Italy just in time to meet a Bulgar resurgence and the unification of a large slice of Syria and eastern Anatolia by a very dangerous emir of Aleppo. They could have beaten any two of those threats, but they kept trying to beat all three, and so wound up losing everywhere.
[B][U] Tribal World Imperial World Commercial World
[/U][/B]
[B]Infrastructure: Material Basis of Society and Culture[/B]
Human Population 6-84 million 100+ million billions
Nature, Energy natural resources natural resources natural resources and
and Materials and services and services services, fossil fuels
Technology tools of foraging tools of intensive industrial tools, factory
gardening, herding agriculture, farming, mechanized
irrigation, plows, transport, electronic
metal, writing information systems
[B]Structure: Organization of Society[/B]
Economy domestic subsistence, tribute, tax, global markets, commodities,
feasting, reciprocal plunder, conquest, money, factories, financial
exchange slavery, coins institutions, public debt,
specialization, corporations, capital
unequal exchange, accumulation, unequal
limited markets, exchange
long-distance
luxury trade
Society low density rural high density rural, high density rural, cities
bands of 50, tribes cities of 100000, of millions, capitalists,
and villages of 500, social class: royalty laborers, consumers, race
family, kin, affines, nobles, commoners, ethnicity, nationality,
young, old, males, slaves, castes, social classes, community,
females, language ethnicity commonwealth
Polity / Government autonomous bands chiefdoms of 5000, constitutional nation
and villages of 500, city-states of 50000, states of 100+ million,
descent groups kingdoms of 5 million, courts, police, professional
empires of 50 million, military, democracy,
armies, tyranny, universities
bureaucracy
[B]Superstructure: Empirical Knowledge, Noumenal Beliefs and Practices[/B]
Ideology animism, shamanism mana, high gods, nationalism, patriotism
ancestor cults, myth polytheism, divine monotheism, knowledge
magic, ritual, taboo, kings, priests, sacred advertising, economic
spirits, divination, texts, human sacrifice growth, progress, free
animal sacrifice market
It's not his. But a good save on his side.Looks good Matt0088
Have you got any other forbidden knowledge from before times up your sleeves?![]()