Muslim conquest of Persia
0 sources
Muslim conquest of Persia
Summary
Muslim conquest of Persia is a war[1]. It ranks in the top 7% of war entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5,734 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Muslim conquest of Persia's instance of is recorded as war[3].
- Muslim conquest of Persia's instance of is recorded as conquest[4].
- Muslim conquest of Persia followed Ridda Wars[5].
- Muslim conquest of Persia was followed by Umayyad campaigns in India[6].
- Muslim conquest of Persia took place at Arab Iraq[7].
- The location of Muslim conquest of Persia was Fars (land)[8].
- The location of Muslim conquest of Persia was Khorasan[9].
- The location of Muslim conquest of Persia was Persian Iraq[10].
- The location of Muslim conquest of Persia was Azerbaijan[11].
- The location of Muslim conquest of Persia was Makran[12].
- The location of Muslim conquest of Persia was Sasanian Empire[13].
- Muslim conquest of Persia is part of Muslim conquests[14].
- Muslim conquest of Persia's Commons category is recorded as Muslim conquest of Persia[15].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Chains[16].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Saniyy[17].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Walaja[18].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Ullais[19].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Hira[20].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of al-Anbar[21].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Ayn al-Tamr[22].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Dawmat al-Jandal[23].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Firaz[24].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of the Bridge[25].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of Buwaib[26].
- Muslim conquest of Persia comprises Battle of al-Qadisiyyah[27].
Body
When and Where
Muslim conquest of Persia began on 633[28]. It ended on 654[29]. Recorded location include Arab Iraq[7], Fars (land)[8], Khorasan[9], Persian Iraq[10], Azerbaijan[11], and Makran[12].
Context
Muslim conquest of Persia is part of Muslim conquests[14]. Recorded instance of include war[3] and conquest[4]. It followed Ridda Wars[5]. It was followed by Umayyad campaigns in India[6].
Participants
Recorded participant include Rashidun Caliphate[30], Sasanian Empire[31], Arab-Christians[32], House of Ispahbudhan[33], House of Mihrān[34], and House of Karen[35].
Why It Matters
Muslim conquest of Persia ranks in the top 7% of war entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5,734 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 24 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36] It is known by 54 alternative names across languages and contexts.[37]