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Islam

Sunni Islam

Sunni Islam is the majority branch of Islam that frames religious life around the Quran and the prophetic Sunnah while tracing its legal thought through four classical schools and a long caliphal and scholarly legacy.

601 - PresentMiddle East7th century CE

Quick Facts

Period
601 - Present
Region
Middle East
Key Figures
AbĆ« Bakr al‑áčąiddÄ«q, AbĆ« កanÄ«fa al‑NuÊżmān, Aáž„mad ibn កanbal +2 more

Key Figures

The Story

This narrative combines documented history with dramatized scenes for storytelling purposes.

Timeline

First Revelations to Muhammad (traditional account)

**c. 610 CE** — According to Islamic tradition, the Prophet Muhammad received his first revelation in Mecca around 610 CE. These revelations, recorded in the Quran, become the foundational scripture for the Muslim community; historians situate the event in the socio-religious context of seventh-century Arabia while analyzing textual development.

Hijra: Migration to Yathrib (Medina)

**622 CE** — The migration (Hijra) of Muhammad and his followers from Mecca to Yathrib (renamed Medina) in 622 CE marks a pivotal chronological and communal turning point; Muslim tradition uses this date to begin the Islamic calendar. The move enabled the constitution of a new communal polity and led to the drafting of communal covenants that shaped early Muslim governance.

Death of Muhammad and Early Succession Disputes

**632 CE** — Muhammad's death in 632 CE precipitated debates over succession and political authority. Sunni tradition holds that the community selected Abu Bakr as the first caliph; the ensuing disagreements over leadership contributed to the early Sunni–Shia divide and to later juridical and political formulations.

Uthmanic Codification of the Quran (traditional account)

**c. 650s CE** — Muslim tradition attributes to the third caliph, Uthman ibn Affan, the commissioning of an official codex of the Quran to unify recitation and textual transmission around the mid‑seventh century. Historians and textual scholars debate aspects of the manuscript history, but the Uthmanic recension remains a key reference point in both devotional and academic accounts.

Beginning of Umayyad Rule

**661 CE** — The establishment of the Umayyad dynasty in 661 CE centralized political authority under a dynastic caliphate based in Damascus. The Umayyad period shaped administrative and fiscal structures and presided over further territorial expansion, setting new patterns for the relationship between political power and religious authority.

Abbasid Revolution and Shift of Power to Baghdad

**750 CE** — The Abbasid revolution (c. 750 CE) overthrew the Umayyads and shifted political authority to Baghdad, inaugurating a period of scholarly patronage and urban cultural flourishing. The Abbasid era saw significant developments in theology, law, and the compilation of hadith, shaping Sunni scholarly traditions.

Compilation of Major Hadith Collections

**9th century CE** — In the ninth century, scholars such as al‑Bukhari (810–870) and Muslim ibn al‑Hajjaj (817–875) compiled collections of prophetic reports that later Sunni tradition would regard as highly authoritative. Their methodological emphasis on chains of transmission contributed to the technical sciences of hadith authentication.

Formation of the Four Sunni Madhhabs

**8th–10th centuries CE** — Between the eighth and tenth centuries, juristic schools associated with Abu កanifa, Malik ibn Anas, al‑ShāfiÊżÄ«, and Ahmad ibn កanbal developed distinct legal methodologies, later formalized as the Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi‘i, and Hanbali schools. These madhhabs structured Sunni legal diversity and regional jurisprudential practice.

Founding of al‑Azhar (institutional milestone)

**970 CE** — Al‑Azhar mosque and educational institution was founded in Cairo in 970 CE under the Fatimid dynasty; over subsequent centuries it became a major center of learning for Sunni jurisprudence and theology, especially after the city’s political and religious realignments. Al‑Azhar's development exemplifies the institutionalization of Sunni scholarship.

Sack of Baghdad by the Mongols

**1258 CE** — The Mongol siege and fall of Baghdad in 1258 CE ended the Abbasid political order centered in the city and produced dramatic political and intellectual ruptures. While the caliphal institution experienced profound disruption, Sunni scholarly traditions adapted by relocating centers of learning and rearticulating religious authority in new contexts.

Rise of the Wahhabi Movement (18th century reform)

**1720s–1792** — In the eighteenth century, Muhammad ibn ÊżAbd al‑Wahhab (1703–1792) and his alliance with political actors in the Arabian Peninsula initiated a reformist movement emphasizing doctrinal puritanism and a return to early textual sources. Often labeled Wahhabism or early Salafism, this movement influenced religious politics in the Arabian region and beyond.

Abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate

**3 March 1924** — The formal abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate in 1924 by the Turkish Republic represented a watershed in Sunni political symbolism and forced a reconfiguration of claims to supra‑national religious authority. The event intensified debates over religion and modern nationhood in the Sunni world.

Sources

  • primary_text
    The Quran (primary scripture)

    Standard online access to the primary scripture of Islam, central to Sunni belief and practice.

  • primary_text
    Sahih al‑Bukhari and Sahih Muslim (hadith collections)

    Online repository for canonical Sunni hadith collections and translations; central to study of the Sunnah and hadith sciences.

  • academic_book
    A History of Islamic Societies

    Ira M. Lapidus. A broad, scholarly survey of the social and historical development of Islamic communities.

  • academic_book
    The Formation of Islamic Law

    Wael B. Hallaq. A detailed study of the historical development of Islamic legal theory and practice.

  • academic_book
    Hadith: Muhammad's Legacy in the Medieval and Modern World

    Jonathan A.C. Brown. Scholarly analysis of the hadith corpus and its role in Islamic life and law.

  • academic_edited_volume
    The Cambridge History of Islam

    P. M. Holt, Ann K. S. Lambton, Bernard Lewis (eds.). Foundational essays on Islamic history, institutions, and culture.

  • academic_book
    Muhammad: A Prophet for Our Time

    Karen Armstrong. A historical and sympathetic account of Muhammad’s life and significance for modern readers.

  • reference_encyclopedia
    Encyclopaedia Britannica: Sunni Islam

    Concise, peer-reviewed summary of Sunni Islam, its history, and major doctrines.

  • academic_book
    An Introduction to Islam

    Frederick M. Denny. A useful textbook introducing Islamic beliefs, law, and history with scholarly neutrality.

  • academic_book
    Islam: A Short History

    Karen Armstrong. General historical introduction to Islam and its major developments.

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