Want this question answered?
The answer you are looking for is: Baghdad. However, it is not actually correct for the question as phrased. The Abbassids were not the last Islamic Empire, Qajjar Persia was. It just happens that the Abbassids were the last Arab-Islamic Empire. Additionally, Baghdad was sacked by the Mongols, who were not Muslims at that time.
Baghdad was the capital city of the Islamic empire in the Abbasi age.
The Abbasid dynasty at Baghdad and the Umayyid dynasty at Cordova (Spain), founded by Abdul Rahman-I.
The peak of the Islamic empire is commonly considered to be during the Abbasid Caliphate, which lasted from 750 to 1258. During this time, the empire expanded across vast territories, reaching its height in terms of political power, cultural influence, and scientific advancements.
There is no Islamic Empire.
The burning of Baghdad effectively ended the Abbassid Empire and confirmed what most Muslims had already suspected for generations, which was that the idea of a unified Islamic World would remain an object of the past.
The Mongol Empire guarded roads carefully to promote trade throughout its territory. The Islamic Golden Age ended.
The answer you are looking for is: Baghdad. However, it is not actually correct for the question as phrased. The Abbassids were not the last Islamic Empire, Qajjar Persia was. It just happens that the Abbassids were the last Arab-Islamic Empire. Additionally, Baghdad was sacked by the Mongols, who were not Muslims at that time.
Baghdad was the capital city of the Islamic empire in the Abbasi age.
Well, Baghdad has been an Islamic city for the better part of the last1400 years or so. Due to this, there have been many an Islamic government there. The most significant of these is the Abassid Empire (750-1258 AD), which ruled in Baghdad. They also came under the control of the Mamluks, the Ottoman Turks and, before the Abassids, the Omayyads and the Rasidun.
The Abbasid dynasty at Baghdad and the Umayyid dynasty at Cordova (Spain), founded by Abdul Rahman-I.
How did decentralizatio led to both the fall of baghdad ad at the same time preservatio of Islamic world
The Muslim Empire established by second Rashidoon Caliph Hazrat Umar RAU, the Ummayad Caliphate, The Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad, and the Ummayad Caliphate in Spain
Baghdad was the capital of the ABBASSID CALIPHATE and was one of the centers of the Islamic Golden Age. It was most notable for its massive library called Beit al-Hikma (بيت الحكمة) or the House of Wisdom. After the Mongols razed Baghdad in 1258, the city lost most of its importance.
The peak of the Islamic empire is commonly considered to be during the Abbasid Caliphate, which lasted from 750 to 1258. During this time, the empire expanded across vast territories, reaching its height in terms of political power, cultural influence, and scientific advancements.
There is no Islamic Empire.
Baghdad, Iraq was the capital of the Abbassid Caliphate, which was largest and most powerful Islamic Empire at that time (of the several that existed). Córdoba, Spain was the capital of the Umayyad Caliphate and Fez, Morocco was the capital of the Idrissid Caliphate.