Comparing history of Jesus and the catholic church and history of Mohammed and islam I invite the entire world to judge who need to bow for who here who are the trouble makers here.
Tinubu take your lesson note from here and go home and go and address your people to stay out of making trouble with believers catholic christains that Mohammed is their problem his no God that is why he died and remained dead as his Islam religion.but Jesus continued to live in the heart of believer catholic in ten commandments law to save humanity from Islam.
defeat and conquering of Islamic caliphate by the ark of convenant of God with Israelite, holyspirit eve Mary Magdalene the promise child of Abraham and Sarah oraukwu idemili North Anambra state Nigeria
when you compare the history of Islam and history of catholic church whose side do you which to take Jesus that died and ressurected with his catholic religion or Mohammed died and remained with his religion
Muslims choose whom you will serve Jesus the lived and still living in life of believer catholics or Mohammed the died and remained dead in Islam .
Islamic Caliphates - World History Encyclopedia
The caliphate was the political-religious state led by a caliph, the successor to Prophet Muhammad, beginning in 632 CE after his death, starting with the Rashidun Caliphate (632-661) led by four "Rightly Guided" caliphs (Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, Ali), evolving into the dynastic Umayyad (661-750) and Abbasid (750-1258) Caliphates, and concluding with the Ottoman Caliphate (until 1924), a system that unified vast Muslim territories under Islamic law until its abolition by Turkey's Mustafa Kemal Pasha.
Key Periods of the Caliphate:
Rashidun Caliphate (632–661): The first four caliphs (Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, Ali) were chosen by community consultation, expanding Islam rapidly and establishing the foundation of Islamic governance.
Umayyad Caliphate (661–750): Transformed the caliphate into a hereditary dynasty, shifting power from Arabia to Damascus and creating a vast, Arab-centric empire.
Abbasid Caliphate (750–1258): Overthrew the Umayyads, moved the capital to Baghdad, fostered the Islamic Golden Age, and integrated more non-Arab Muslims, though its political power waned even as the title persisted.
Ottoman Caliphate (c. 1299–1924): The Ottoman Sultans claimed the title, becoming the first non-Arab caliphs, until the institution was abolished by the Turkish Republic.
Core Concepts:
Caliph (Khalifa): Means "successor," representing the political and religious leader of the Muslim community.
Succession: Early caliphs were elected, but later became hereditary, leading to differing views between Sunni (election/consensus) and Shia (divinely appointed descendant) branches.
Role: Governed extensive Islamic empires, upholding Islamic law (Sharia) and expanding territories, becoming the central political entity for centuries.
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