This topic provides a complete introduction to Islamic caliphates. It includes the achievements of the Rightly Guided Caliphs (Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, Ali), the Umayyad Caliphate (Mu'awiyah, Yazid, Um...
The Rightly Guided Caliphate refers to the 30-year caliphate that lasted from the death of the Prophet ﷺ (11 AH) until the martyrdom of Ali (RA) (40 AH).
They are called "Khulafa-e-Rashidun" because they always remained on truth and justice.
The Prophet ﷺ said: "The Caliphate will last for 30 years after me, then there will be kingship." (Tirmidhi)
| # | Name | Title | Duration of Caliphate | Death |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Abu Bakr as-Siddiq (RA) | Siddiq, Atiq | 11-13 AH (2 years 3 months) | 13 AH |
| 2 | Umar al-Farooq (RA) | Farooq | 13-23 AH (10 years 6 months) | 23 AH |
| 3 | Uthman Ghani (RA) | Dhun-Noorayn, Ghani | 23-35 AH (12 years) | 35 AH |
| 4 | Ali al-Murtada (RA) | Murtada, Asadullah | 35-40 AH (5 years) | 40 AH |
| 5 | Hasan bin Ali (RA) (for a brief period) | Sabt ar-Rasul | 40-41 AH (6 months) | 50 AH |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Name | Abdullah bin Uthman bin Amir (Abu Quhafah) |
| Title | As-Siddiq (the ever-truthful), Al-Atiq (the freed one) |
| Relation | Father-in-law of the Prophet ﷺ (father of Aisha RA) |
| Before death | The Prophet ﷺ appointed him to lead the prayer during his illness |
| Achievement | Details |
|---|---|
| Declaration of Caliphate | Selected as the first Caliph by the Companions at Saqifah Bani Sa'idah |
| Wars against Apostates (Wars of Riddah) | Fought against false prophets (Musaylimah al-Kadhdhab, Tulayhah al-Asadi, Aswad al-Ansi) |
| Battle of Yamamah | Fought against Musaylimah al-Kadhdhab – 700 Huffaz (memorizers of Quran) were martyred |
| Compilation of the Quran | On Umar's advice, ordered Zaid bin Thabit to compile the Quran into a single volume (Mushaf) |
| Preparation of Usamah's Army | The Prophet ﷺ had appointed Usamah bin Zaid as commander – Abu Bakr dispatched the army |
| Military successes | Advanced towards the borders of Iraq and Syria |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | 13 AH (August 22, 634 CE) |
| Age | 63 years |
| Burial place | Chamber of Aisha (in Masjid an-Nabawi, beside the Prophet ﷺ) |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Name | Umar bin Khattab bin Nufayl |
| Title | Al-Farooq (the distinguisher between truth and falsehood) |
| Relation | Father-in-law of the Prophet ﷺ (father of Hafsa RA) |
| Acceptance of Islam | 6th year of prophethood (after Hamzah RA) – his acceptance gave strength to the Muslims |
| Achievement | Details |
|---|---|
| Hijri Calendar | On the advice of Ali (RA) in 17 AH, the Hijri calendar was introduced (first month: Muharram 1 AH) |
| Establishment of Bait-ul-Mal | Established a formal treasury (Bait-ul-Mal) and fixed stipends |
| Judicial system | Appointed judges (Qadis) and established courts |
| Military organization | Fixed regular salaries for the army and established cantonments |
| Expansion of the empire | Conquered Persia (Iran), Iraq, Syria, Palestine, and Egypt |
| Battle of Yarmouk (15 AH) | Defeated the Byzantines (Romans) in Syria |
| Battle of Qadisiyyah (16 AH) | Defeated the Persians in Iran |
| Conquest of Jerusalem (16 AH) | Took Jerusalem from the Byzantines – he himself went there and prayed |
| Conquest of Egypt (19 AH) | Amr ibn al-As conquered Egypt |
| Administrative reforms | Appointed governors in provinces, established a postal system |
| Public works | Built roads, inns, canals |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | 23 AH (1st Muharram 23 AH) |
| Assassin | Abu Lu'lu Firoz (a Persian slave) |
| Incident | Was stabbed 3 times with a dagger while leading the Fajr prayer |
| Burial place | Chamber of Aisha (beside the Prophet ﷺ and Abu Bakr) |
| Age | 63 years |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Name | Uthman bin Affan bin Abi al-As |
| Titles | Dhun-Noorayn (possessor of two lights – married two daughters of the Prophet ﷺ), Al-Ghani (the wealthy) |
| Relation | Son-in-law of the Prophet ﷺ (married Ruqayyah RA, then Umm Kulthum RA) |
| Acceptance of Islam | Among the early Muslims (after the invitation) |
| Achievement | Details |
|---|---|
| Standardization of the Quran | Seeing different recitations of the Quran in different regions, he prepared a standard Mushaf |
| Copies of the Mushaf | Prepared 4-6 copies of the Mushaf (sent to Makkah, Kufa, Basra, Damascus, and one kept in Medina) |
| Burning of old copies | Burned and destroyed all old and differing copies |
| Establishment of naval forces | Allowed Mu'awiyah (governor of Syria) to build a navy |
| Expansion | Conquered Armenia, Azerbaijan, and parts of Africa |
| Expansion of Masjid an-Nabawi | Expanded the Prophet's Mosque |
| Welfare projects | Built roads, wells, inns |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Cause | Complaints of corruption against some governors |
| Siege by rebels | In 35 AH, rebels besieged Medina |
| Martyrdom | Rebels broke into his house and martyred him while he was reciting the Quran |
| Date | 18th Dhul Hijjah 35 AH (June 17, 656 CE) |
| Age | 82 years (or 86) |
| Burial place | Jannat al-Baqi (Medina) |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Name | Ali bin Abi Talib bin Abdul Muttalib |
| Titles | Al-Murtada (the pleased one), Asadullah (Lion of Allah) |
| Relation | Cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet ﷺ (husband of Fatimah RA) |
| Acceptance of Islam | First child to believe (age 10) |
| Achievement | Details |
|---|---|
| Transfer of capital | Moved the capital from Medina to Kufa (Iraq) – because the rebels' center was there |
| Battle of the Camel (Jamal) – 36 AH | Fought against Aisha (RA), Talhah (RA), and Zubair (RA) – the first internal battle among Muslims |
| Battle of Siffin – 37 AH | Fought against Mu'awiyah (governor of Syria) – arbitration (Tahkim) was agreed upon |
| Emergence of the Kharijites | After the Battle of Siffin, a group called "Kharijites" emerged (opposed both Ali and Mu'awiyah) |
| Battle of Nahrawan – 38 AH | Fought against the Kharijites – the Kharijites were defeated |
| Judicial reforms | Issued instructions to judges and governors |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | 17th (or 19th) Ramadan 40 AH (January 27, 661 CE) |
| Assassin | Abdur-Rahman ibn Muljam (a Kharijite) |
| Incident | Was struck with a poisoned sword while leading the Fajr prayer |
| Age | 63 years |
| Burial place | Najaf (Iraq) – near Kufa |
After Ali (RA), his son Hasan (RA) assumed the caliphate for 6 months.
Then he made peace with Mu'awiyah and handed over the caliphate to him.
This peace is known as "Aam al-Jama'ah" (The Year of Unity).
| Feature | Abu Bakr | Umar | Uthman | Ali |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duration of Caliphate | 2 years 3 months | 10 years 6 months | 12 years | 5 years |
| Title | Siddiq | Farooq | Dhun-Noorayn | Murtada |
| Greatest achievement | Compilation of the Quran | Hijri Calendar | Standardization of the Quran | Made Kufa the capital |
| Death | Natural | Martyred (23 AH) | Martyred (35 AH) | Martyred (40 AH) |
| Age at death (years) | 63 | 63 | 82 | 63 |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Founder | Mu'awiyah bin Abi Sufyan (RA) |
| Capital | Damascus (Syria) |
| Duration | Approximately 90 years (41 AH to 132 AH) |
| Total rulers | 14 Caliphs |
| Name | Duration of Caliphate | Major Achievements |
|---|---|---|
| Mu'awiyah bin Abi Sufyan (RA) | 41-60 AH (20 years) | Military reforms, strengthened navy, conquered Cyprus, advanced into Africa |
| Yazid bin Mu'awiyah | 60-64 AH (4 years) | The Battle of Karbala (61 AH) – martyrdom of Husayn (RA) |
| Mu'awiyah bin Yazid | 64 AH (a few months) | Ruled for a very short period |
| Marwan bin al-Hakam | 64-65 AH (1 year) | Strengthened the Umayyad government |
| Abdul Malik bin Marwan | 65-86 AH (21 years) | Built the Dome of the Rock (Qubbat as-Sakhrah) in Jerusalem, minted coins |
| Al-Waleed bin Abdul Malik | 86-96 AH (10 years) | Conquered Spain (Andalus), expanded Masjid an-Nabawi |
| Sulayman bin Abdul Malik | 96-99 AH (3 years) | Siege of Constantinople |
| Umar bin Abdul Aziz | 99-101 AH (2 years 5 months) | The fifth Rightly Guided Caliph (according to some), justice and fairness, ended oppression |
He is called the "Fifth Rightly Guided Caliph" (after Hasan RA).
He distributed the wealth of Bait-ul-Mal among the poor.
During his time, there was no one hungry.
He abolished the practice of cursing Husayn (RA).
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Last Caliph | Marwan bin Muhammad (127-132 AH) |
| End | Ended at the hands of the Abbasids in 132 AH |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Founder | Abul Abbas as-Saffah (132 AH) |
| Capital | Baghdad (Iraq) – then Samarra (later) |
| Duration | Approximately 524 years (132 AH to 656 AH) |
| Total rulers | 37 Caliphs |
Lineage: Descendants of Abbas bin Abdul Muttalib (uncle of the Prophet ﷺ)
Golden Age of Sciences and Arts
House of Wisdom (Bait-ul-Hikmah) – Library and research center established
| Name | Duration of Caliphate | Major Achievements |
|---|---|---|
| Abul Abbas as-Saffah | 132-136 AH (4 years) | Eliminated the Umayyads, founder of the Abbasids |
| Abu Ja'far al-Mansur | 136-158 AH (22 years) | Founded the city of Baghdad (145 AH) |
| Al-Mahdi | 158-169 AH (11 years) | Military campaigns, expansion of Baghdad |
| Harun ar-Rashid | 170-193 AH (23 years) | Golden Age of the Abbasids – House of Wisdom, character of Arabian Nights |
| Al-Ma'mun ar-Rashid | 198-218 AH (20 years) | Promoted the House of Wisdom, translation of Greek books, promoted Mu'tazilah |
| Al-Mu'tasim Billah | 218-227 AH (9 years) | Kept Turkish guards (Turkish slaves), made Samarra the new capital |
| Al-Mutawakkil 'Alallah | 232-247 AH (15 years) | Ended the House of Wisdom, defended the orthodox creed |
| Al-Muqtadir | 295-320 AH (25 years) | Weak government, attacks on Baghdad |
His era is called the "Golden Age"
House of Wisdom (Bait-ul-Hikmah) in Baghdad – the world's largest library
Progress in science, mathematics, medicine, astronomy, philosophy
Diplomatic relations with China and France (Charlemagne)
Further promoted the House of Wisdom
Had Greek, Persian, and Indian books translated into Arabic
Established observatories
Made Mu'tazilah (rationalist school) the state religion (later ended by Mutawakkil)
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Last Caliph | Al-Musta'sim Billah (640-656 AH) |
| End | The Mongols destroyed Baghdad in 656 AH (1258 CE) |
| Details | Hulagu Khan attacked Baghdad – hundreds of thousands of Muslims were killed. The books of the House of Wisdom were thrown into the Tigris River (the water turned black) |
| Period | Characteristics | Rulers |
|---|---|---|
| First Period (132-232 AH) | Rise, powerful | Mansur, Harun, Ma'mun |
| Second Period (232-334 AH) | Weakness, influence of Turkish slaves | Mutawakkil, Mu'tadid |
| Third Period (334-447 AH) | Control by Buyids (Shia) | Muqtadir, Qadir |
| Fourth Period (447-656 AH) | Control by Seljuks (Sunni) | Muqtafi, Mustadi |
| Final Period (656 AH) | Mongol invasion | Musta'sim |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Founder | Osman I (Osman Ghazi) – 699 AH (1299 CE) |
| Capitals | Bursa → Edirne → Istanbul (Constantinople) |
| Duration | Approximately 643 years (699 AH to 1342 AH) |
| Total Sultans / Caliphs | 36 |
| Name | Duration | Major Achievements |
|---|---|---|
| Osman I | 699-726 AH (27 years) | Founder of the Ottoman Empire |
| Mehmed the Conqueror (Mehmed II) | 855-886 AH (31 years) | Conquered Constantinople (857 AH / 1453 CE) – made Istanbul the capital |
| Suleiman the Magnificent (Suleiman I) | 926-974 AH (48 years) | Golden Age – expansion into Europe, Asia, Africa, lawmaking |
| Selim I | 918-926 AH (8 years) | Conquered Egypt, transferred the Caliphate to Istanbul |
| Abdul Hamid II | 1293-1327 AH (34 years) | Last powerful Caliph, struggle against colonial powers |
| Mehmed VI (Wahid ad-Din) | 1327-1341 AH (14 years) | Last Ottoman Sultan |
The longest-lasting Islamic caliphate (643 years)
Spread across three continents (Europe, Asia, Africa)
The last major power to use the title of Caliph
Ended after defeat in World War I (1914-1918)
After World War I, the Allied powers (Britain, France) planned to end the Ottoman Empire
The Ottoman Caliph (Abdul Hamid II / Mehmed VI) was the spiritual leader of the Muslims
Muslims of the Indian subcontinent started a movement to protect the Caliphate
| Name | Role |
|---|---|
| Maulana Muhammad Ali Johar | Leader of the movement |
| Maulana Shaukat Ali | Brother of Muhammad Ali |
| Maulana Abul Kalam Azad | Intellectual leadership |
| Maulana Mahmud al-Hasan | Leader of Deoband |
| Gandhi | Hindu-Muslim unity (on this occasion) |
| Event | Date | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Establishment of Khilafat Committee | 1919 | Established in Bombay |
| Hijrat Movement | 1920 | Migration to Afghanistan (failed) |
| Movement of Non-Cooperation | 1920 | Boycott of British goods |
| Aligarh Movement | 1920 | Boycott of Aligarh University |
| Chauri Chaura incident | 1922 | Violent incident; Gandhi withdrew the movement |
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | March 3, 1924 |
| Event | Mustafa Kemal Ataturk (Turkish national leader) abolished the Caliphate |
| Effect on the Subcontinent | The Khilafat Movement failed; disappointment spread among Muslims |
| Ruler | Era | Greatest Achievement |
|---|---|---|
| Abu Bakr (RA) | 11-13 AH | Compilation of the Quran, Wars of Riddah |
| Umar (RA) | 13-23 AH | Hijri Calendar, expansion of the empire |
| Uthman (RA) | 23-35 AH | Standardization of the Quran |
| Ali (RA) | 35-40 AH | Made Kufa the capital |
| Mu'awiyah | 41-60 AH | Navy, founder of the Umayyad Caliphate |
| Umar bin Abdul Aziz | 99-101 AH | Fifth Rightly Guided Caliph, justice |
| Harun ar-Rashid | 170-193 AH | House of Wisdom, Golden Age |
| Al-Ma'mun ar-Rashid | 198-218 AH | Promoted the House of Wisdom, translations |
| Mehmed the Conqueror | 855-886 AH | Conquered Constantinople |
| Suleiman the Magnificent | 926-974 AH | Ottoman Golden Age, lawmaking |
| Event | Year (AH) | Year (CE) | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Battle of Yarmouk | 15 AH | 636 CE | Umar (RA) – Defeated the Byzantines |
| Battle of Qadisiyyah | 16 AH | 637 CE | Umar (RA) – Defeated the Persians |
| Conquest of Jerusalem | 16 AH | 638 CE | Umar (RA) took it from the Byzantines |
| Conquest of Egypt | 19 AH | 640 CE | Amr ibn al-As |
| Battle of the Camel (Jamal) | 36 AH | 656 CE | Between Ali (RA) and Aisha (RA) |
| Battle of Siffin | 37 AH | 657 CE | Between Ali (RA) and Mu'awiyah |
| Battle of Nahrawan | 38 AH | 658 CE | Between Ali (RA) and the Kharijites |
| Battle of Karbala | 61 AH | 680 CE | Martyrdom of Husayn (RA) against Yazid |
| Conquest of Constantinople | 857 AH | 1453 CE | Mehmed the Conqueror |
| Fall of Baghdad | 656 AH | 1258 CE | Hulagu Khan (Mongol) |
| End of Caliphate (Ottoman) | 1342 AH | 1924 CE | Mustafa Kemal Ataturk |
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Number of Rightly Guided Caliphs | 4 (or 5 including Hasan) |
| First Rightly Guided Caliph | Abu Bakr (RA) |
| Who started the Hijri Calendar? | Umar (RA) |
| Who standardized the Quran? | Uthman (RA) |
| Who made Kufa the capital? | Ali (RA) |
| Founder of the Umayyad Caliphate | Mu'awiyah bin Abi Sufyan |
| Who is called the Fifth Rightly Guided Caliph? | Umar bin Abdul Aziz |
| Who established the House of Wisdom (Bait-ul-Hikmah)? | Harun ar-Rashid |
| Who founded the city of Baghdad? | Abu Ja'far al-Mansur (Abbasid) |
| Who destroyed Baghdad? | Hulagu Khan (Mongol) |
| Who conquered Constantinople? | Mehmed the Conqueror (Ottoman) |
| When did the Ottoman Caliphate end? | 1924 CE |
| Who led the Khilafat Movement in India? | Maulana Muhammad Ali Johar |