Umayyads & Abbasids
Umayyad (bani Umaiyyah) 
The Umayyad caliphate established in 661 was to last for about a  century. During this time Damascus became the capital of an Islamic  world which stretched from the western borders of China to southern  France.
Not only did the Islamic conquests continue during this  period through North Africa to Spain and France in the West and to Sind,  Central Asia and Transoxiana in the East, but the basic social and  legal institutions of the newly founded Islamic world were established.  
Abbasids (bani Abbasiah)
 The Abbasids, who succeeded the Umayyads, shifted the capital to Baghdad  which soon developed into an incomparable center of learning and  culture as well as the administrative and political heart of a vast  world.
They ruled for over 500 years but gradually their power  waned and they remained only symbolic rulers bestowing legitimacy upon  various sultans and princes who wielded actual military power. The  Abbasid caliphate was finally abolished when Hulagu, the Mongol ruler,  captured Baghdad in 1258, destroying much of the city including its  incomparable libraries.
While the Abbasids ruled in Baghdad, a  number of powerful dynasties such as the Fatimids, Ayyubids and Mamluks  held power in Egypt, Syria and Palestine. The most important event in  this area as far as the relation between Islam and the Western world was  concerned was the series of Crusades declared by the Pope and espoused  by various European kings. The purpose, although political, was  outwardly to recapture the Holy Land and especially Jerusalem for  Christianity.
Although there was at the beginning some success  and local European rule was set up in parts of Syria and Palestine,  Muslims finally prevailed and in 1187 Saladin, the great Muslim leader,  recaptured Jerusalem and defeated the Crusaders. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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