The Middle East: 616–627 CE Shifts in…
616 CE to 627 CE
The Middle East: 616–627 CE
Shifts in Regional Power and Religious Transformation
The Third Perso-Turkic War
The Third Perso-Turkic War marks the culmination of a series of conflicts between the Sassanian Empire and the Western Turkic Khaganate. Unlike the preceding conflicts fought primarily in Central Asia, this war unfolds primarily in Transcaucasia, significantly reshaping the geopolitical landscape of the region. Initiated in 627 by Khagan Tong Yabghu of the Western Göktürks, in alliance with Emperor Heraclius of the Eastern Roman Empire, the war pits these forces against the Sassanian Persians and their allies, the Eurasian Avars. This conflict occurs against the backdrop of the broader and final Byzantine-Sassanid War, ultimately setting the stage for dramatic shifts in power throughout the Middle East.
Islamic Conversion of Oman
In the early seventh century, the strategically positioned region of Oman undergoes a profound religious and cultural transformation with the advent of Islam, signaling a new era of Arab dominance. According to tradition, the Prophet Muhammad dispatches one of his military leaders to Oman, aiming to convert the local population—including Arab inhabitants, some of whom are Christians, as well as the Persian garrison, followers of Zoroastrianism. The Arabs embrace Islam, but the Persians maintain their Zoroastrian faith, leading to significant demographic and social changes. The Islamic conversion results in the displacement of Iranian settlers, further solidifying the region’s integration into the burgeoning Islamic world.
This era thus encapsulates a critical juncture characterized by military upheavals and religious conversions that profoundly alter the cultural and political landscapes of the Middle East.