Encyclopedia of Islam



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Encyclopedia of  Islam

southern coast around the eighth and ninth 

centuries. Ismailis from Persia introduced Islam 

into northern India around the 10th and 11th 

centuries by winning Hindu converts through 

their missionary activities. They were followed 

by Turkish and Afghan warriors who invaded to 

pillage and conquer but ended up establishing 

the Delhi Sultanate, which ruled much of the 

north and the Deccan Plateau between the 13th 

and 16th centuries. Contrary to the “conquest 

by the sword” thesis, large numbers of Hin-

dus did not convert to Islam. Rather, scholarly 

research indicates that there was an inverse rela-

tionship between where the centers of Muslim 

political power were and where the most con-

versions occurred, which was on the political 

periphery. The indigenous peoples of Bengal in 

the northeast, for example, did not convert until 

the 16th century, when rulers of the Mughal 

dynasty encouraged the introduction of wet rice 

agriculture in new land made available when 

the Ganges River shifted its course eastward. 

The agents of this development were Sufis and 

Muslim scholars, who built mosques and shrines 

that became magnets for the native people, and 

educational centers for the dissemination of 

Islamic knowledge and lore. As the historian 

Richard Eaton has observed, rather than conver-

sion by the sword, Bengalis were converted by 

the plow.

2

In summary, conquest was but one among 



many factors that contributed to the expansion of 

Islam. Emigration, trade, intermarriage, political 

patronage, the systematization of Islamic tradi-

tion, urbanism, and the quest for knowledge must 

also be recognized. Sufis, too, played a role in 

the spread of Islam along trade routes and even 

to the remotest areas. Pilgrimage should also be 

recognized as a factor, especially the annual hajj 

to Mecca, which gathered scholars, mystics, mer-

chants, and ordinary believers from many coun-

tries together in one place. After performing the 

required hajj rituals, pilgrims often took up resi-

dence in Mecca to study and meet with scholars 

and mystics, but eventually they returned home 

with stories about the Islamic holy land and new 

insights about Islam to convey to their families 

and neighbors.

These factors continue to be in effect today, 

although in modern forms. They have been 

involved in Islam’s spread into western Europe, 

the Americas, Australia, and New Zealand. Many 

mosques and Islamic centers have opened in 

these countries since the 1960s, and the Muslim 

presence is being increasingly felt in schools, 

the workplace, and the public sphere. Likewise, 

global forces are changing the ways Muslims 

think about themselves and their religion—for 

better or worse. This includes the colonization of 

many Muslim lands by European powers during 

the 19th and 20th centuries. The rapid pace with 

which such changes have occurred, compared 

with earlier times, has been assisted significantly 

by the widespread availability of motorized trans-

portation and the emergence of the new print and 

electronic media, which have closed the distances 

that once posed limitations on the movement of 

people, commercial goods, and, above all, ideas 

and religious beliefs.

Scope of this Encyclopedia

The purpose of any encyclopedia is to be compre-

hensive, balanced, and up-to-date. It should also 

provide readers with new information, familiarize 

them with foreign concepts and terms, and direct 

them to additional publications on the subjects 

presented in it. It is a challenge to meet all of these 

objectives in any single undertaking, particularly 

one such as this, which is limited to one volume 

2

 Richard Eaton, “Approaches to the Study of Conversion to 



Islam in India.” In Approaches to Islam in Religious Studies, 

edited by Richard C. Martin, 108–123 (New York: One World 

Press, 1987); ———, “Who Are the Bengal Muslims? Conver-

sion and Islamization in Bengal.” In Understanding the Bengal 



Muslims: Interpretative Essays, edited by Rafiuddin Ahmed, 

25–51 (Oxford and Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2001).





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