Further reading: Hisham ibn Kalbi, The Book of Idols,
trans. N. A. Faris (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University
Press, 1952); Gordon D. Newby, A History of the Jews of
Arabia: From Ancient Times to Their Eclipse under Islam
(Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1988);
F. E. Peters, The Arabs and Arabia on the Eve of Islam
(Aldershot, U.K. and Brookfield, Vt.: Ashgate, 1999).
Arabic language and literature
Arabic is the fifth or sixth most widely spoken
language in the world today, after Mandarin
Chinese, English, Spanish, Hindi, and possibly
Bengali. It is the official language of 21 modern
countries; nearly 160 million Arabic speakers in
the Middle East and abroad use it as their mother
tongue. More than 1 billion Muslims around the
world regard it as their sacred language because
it is the language of the q
Uran
, the Islamic
holy
book
. Many Jews and Christians living in the
Middle East also speak it. Arabic has been used
continuously as a living, written, and spoken
language for nearly 1,400 years and has served
as the medium for the creation and transmission
of a great number of works on religion, history,
philosophy
,
science
, and
mathematics
.
Classified by linguists as a member of the
Semitic family of the Afro-Asiatic languages,
Arabic is related to Hebrew, Aramaic, and the
Akkadian language of ancient Mesopotamia. It
originated in the Arabian Peninsula, where it
was a poetic language used by the b
edoUin
and
townspeople prior to the appearance of i
slam
in
the seventh century. The main reason for its rise
as a world language is because it is the language
of the Quran, which declares itself to be a direct
“revelation” from God “in plain Arabic speech”
(Q 26:192–196). In addition to being a sacred
language, the Umayyad
caliph
Abd al-Malik b.
Marwan (r. 685–705) made Arabic the administra-
tive language of the early Arab empire, leading to
its codification as a literary language with its own
formal grammar by the end of the eighth century.
Thus, as lands and peoples from Spain and North
Africa to the banks of the Indus River fell under
the control of Arab Muslim governments, Arabic
became the language of their subjects, Muslims
and non-Muslims alike. The languages formerly
spoken by the native peoples in these regions
became isolated, minority languages, such as Cop-
tic in e
gypt
and Aramaic in Mesopotamia (i
raq
),
or they were noticeably changed by the introduc-
tion of Arabic vocabulary, such as the Persian
language. Turkish, Hindi, and Urdu also have an
extraordinary number of Arabic loanwords as a
result of the spread of Islamic religion and civili-
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