The Rise and Fall of Muslims - An Analytical and critical study of Islamic History
The Rise and Fall of the Muslims is an analytical and critical study of Islamic history examining the moral, spiritual, and political factors that shaped the trajectory of Muslim civilization. Authored by Maulana Saeed Akbar Abadi, the work traces the formative period of Islamic governance from the era of the Khulaf¿¿ al-R¿shid¿n through the Umayyad, Abbasid, Ottoman, Andalusian, and Mughal periods. The book situates political authority within the Qur'¿nic framework of taw¿¿d (Divine Unity), taqw¿ (piety), justice, and public accountability. It highlights how adherence to revelation, ethical governance, and supervision of authority contributed to early Muslim ascendancy, while internal dissension, moral decline, administrative corruption, and weakening of religious commitment are identified as causes of deterioration. Major themes include:The Caliphate and its juristic foundations Governance under Banu Umayyah and Banu Abbas The Ottoman (¿l-e-¿Usm¿n) polity and its decline Muslim rule in Andalusia and India Spiritual and intellectual vitality as civilizational foundations Causes of degeneration in political and moral life The work adopts a reflective historiographical method, combining narrative history with moral analysis. Rather than presenting political theory in modern ideological terms, it frames Muslim ascendancy and decline through adherence to, or departure from, Qur'¿nic principles and prophetic guidance. This volume is suitable for scholars, students of Islamic history, and institutional libraries seeking a comprehensive interpretive account of Muslim political civilization within its classical religious framework.
Qadeem Press
978-93-94770-23-2

