The_Face_of_Boo wrote:
^^ What about the Pagan heritage in Arabia? There are undeniable evidences of pre-islamic paganism there. The Black Stone of the Kaaba is said to be a part of pagan ritual and there are strong evidences for that, which suggests that people were Pagans there.
It's no secret that Christian tribes existed there but are you sure these coins were used all across the Umayyad empire?
I have no idea. We are talking about something that took place more than 1,300 years ago. Nonetheless, the ruler of the Arab world at the time took upon himself to mint coins with explicit Christian motifs even though the official Islamic position is that the Arab world was wholly islamized by the time of Muhammad's apparent death in 632.
This is the evidence we have. The remaining history of the Arab world before the 8th century is very poorly documented.
What we do now is that there was a split in the Catholic Church in the 5th century which resulted in Nestorius (who questioned the official Church position on the Divine nature of Christ - just as Mainstream Islam) was forced East from Constantinople, and eventually settled and died in Egypt. Several historians in the two books I mentioned believe that Islam may have evolved from this branch of Christianity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestoriushttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NestorianismThe_Face_of_Boo wrote:
These how are Ummyad dinars looked like:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Categ ... yyad_dinarThey had "There's no god but Allah" and no cross.
What you've showed were probably Arab-Byzantine coins, or Ummiyads probably adopted some Byzantine coin models and then modified the cross.
I've found this example:
http://www.islamic-awareness.org/Histor ... inar4.htmlThese are all from a later date than the ones I posted. From what I could find, the oldest one of those can be from no earlier than 691, 11 years after the end of Muawiyah I's reign.
Muawiyah I was the first Umayyad caliph (and the first caliph whose existence is supported by historical evidence). Based on his coinage, though, the evidence suggests that he was a Christian.
The_Face_of_Boo wrote:
It still doesn't add up tho, why the Umayyads would want to imitate Byzantine coins?
It adds up if they were Christians competing with Constantinople, and if Islam only began to evolve later around the beginning of the 8th century.