Byzantine Empire in the Eastern Mediterranean that extended from Syria, Egypt up to and across North Africa is seen to have made significant contact with the emerging Islamic world in the period from seventh and ninth Centuries. The seventh century saw the vast territories in these regions being ruled by the Byzantine Empire from Constantinople, the now Istanbul. These Southern provinces or territories were greatly influenced by the Greco-Roman traditions and formed the home of Coptic, Orthodox and Syriac Christians and Jewish communities. These regions were critical to the wealth and the power of the empire. Great centers for pilgrimage saw large numbers of faithful visit the place coming from as far off as Yemen towards the East and Scandinavia towards the West. There were also major trade routes that extended all the way to India in the South that saw ferrying of silk and ivories into the region, commerce saw the free movement of images as well as ideas throughout this region.
The political or the religious inclination never seemed to have much of impact on the type of decoration that was favored by the wealthy people. The decorations that were used among the wealthy people had a motif of hunting scenes, dancing women and flowering vines being the predominant pattern. There were imprints of running animals and inscriptions as indicated by Rosenberg K., (2012). The Byzantine empire is further seen to interact with the Islamic empires built by the Umayyad and the Abbasids through the architectural fragments that indicate presence of vast desert palaces in places like the Jordan. Even in these palaces that were built by the Muslims, the interaction with Christian Byzantine art is still seen through the use of fans and leaves, only that with the influence of the Islamic art, they became more stylized and intricate in their presentation. Several Koran folios also indicate heavy Islamic influence but the Kufic scripts that were written in silver and gold indicates a connection to the Byzantine luxury manuscripts hence an indication that Islam and Byzantium trends existed side by side for a long time.
Apparently, within the same time of history, Islam, which was then a newly established religion emerged from Mecca and Medina which was alongside the Red Sea trade route that all the way to the Byzantine empire's southern provinces. This saw the transfer of the religious as well as the political authority from the Byzantine Empire to the now newly established Umayyad and a while on to Abbasid Muslim dynasties. The new powers exploited the chance offered by the existing traditions of the empire to come up with religious as well as the secular visual identities in forms of art and other inscriptions (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2012).
The official religion of Byzantine Empire was Christianity as defined by the church hierarchy in Constantinople and by the then emperor. In the seventh century however, there was attempt to make the orthodox faith loyal to the empire and this was met with great resistance, the point of divergence being the definition of Christ as being both divine and human. The orthodox Christians believed that Christ had two natures, the divine and the human. During the initial centuries of the rule of Islam, the orthodox Christians as well as other Christians held significantly important positions in the Islamic administration as well as paying significant roles in the intellectual life of some of the main cities under the Islamic dynasties.
The Syriac Christians were Christians who were speaking Syriac, a form of Aramaic language and they traced their existence back to Saint Peter who is accredited for establishing the first Church in Antioch in the first century. These Christians basically were set apart from the other Christians by their belief that Christ's divinity and humanity were combined or fused into one nature rather than being two separate entities as was believed by the Orthodox Christians. This Christian...
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