Answer 1
Cairo has been an important capital of the earlier Muslim Province of Egypt. It has also been a famous place of learning and trade centre.
Baghdad had been the Capital of Abbasid Caliphate for many centuries. It has seen the Golden period of Islam. It had been the most important centre of culture, arts and learning.
Cordoba had been the capital city of Umayyad Caliphate for many centuries.
It had been the most important centre of culture, arts, and learning during a period when most of Europe was called wild, wild West.
Answer 2
The three cities were the capitals of the Fatimid (Cairo), Umayyad (II) (Cordoba), and Abbassid (Baghdad) Caliphates. In each were established great universities, important mosques, large markets, and huge bureaucratic centers.
Answer 1
Cairo has been an important capital of the earlier Muslim Province of Egypt. It has also been a famous place of learning and trade centre.
Baghdad had been the Capital of Abbasid Caliphate for many centuries. It has seen the Golden period of Islam. It had been the most important centre of culture, arts and learning.
Cordoba had been the capital city of Umayyad Caliphate for many centuries.
It had been the most important centre of culture, arts, and learning during a period when most of Europe was called wild, wild West.
Answer 2
The three cities were the capitals of the Fatimid (Cairo), Umayyad (II) (Cordoba), and Abbassid (Baghdad) Caliphates. In each were established great universities, important mosques, large markets, and huge bureaucratic centers.
It is the largest city in Iraq, not the world.Baghdad (Arabic: بغداد‎ = Baġdād,) is the capital of Iraq and of Baghdad Governorate, with which it is coterminous. Having a municipal population estimated between 7 and 7.5 million, it is the largest city in Iraq, and the second largest city in the Arab World (after Cairo, Egypt)
What is a cairo conference
Cairo is the first city in egypt
Before Cairo is was Memphis, although it has been Thebes at one point
Menes established Memphis as the capital of Lower Egypt. Memphis was located on the Nile river just south-east of Cairo. Memphis had easy access to the Aegean sea.
Baghdad, Cairo, and Damascus
"Golden Age" is undefined. I would consider the golden age of the Muslim Civ to be the Abbasids c. AD 800. If that's true the answer is Baghdad. The center of the Muslim Civ originally was Mecca (630-661) and then Damascus (661-750).
Baghdad, Cairo, and Damascus
Baghdad, Cairo, and Damascus
There are about 75 independent Muslim states. There are many cities in each Muslim country. Anyhow, Mecca (makka), Madina Munawara, Ta'if, Riyadh, Karachi, Islamabad, Dhaka, Lahore, Cairo, Damascus, Tripoli, Baghdad, Kabul, etc are some cities of the Muslims.
Nearly every major Islamic holy city (with the exception of Moulay Idriss) has come under Ottoman control. (This includes the cities of Mecca, Medina, Jerusalem, Damascus, Cairo, Baghdad, An-Najaf (Shiites), Karbala (Shiites), etc.) The two you are probably looking for are Mecca and Medina.
Examples: Mecca, Madina, Jerusalem, Damascus, Baghdad & Cairo.
Someone going from Mecca to Cairo and Mecca to Baghdad would both go up the Saudi coastline, but after coming to the Wadi Arabah (along the Jordanian-Israeli Border) the merchant to Cairo would begin to go west to cross through Israel and the Sinai Peninsula and the merchant to Baghdad would go northeast to Damascus and then down the Euphrates River Valley.
Overcrowding, lack of jobs, inadequate transportation, and poor housing are common.
They translated books from Latin and Greek languages. They established schools and universities in Baghdad, Kufa, Cairo, Cordova and many other cities. Students from European countries came to these universities and sought knowledge and then spread it to their countries.
no but i do
the major cities of the ottoman empire were: Istanbul, Cairo, Haleb (Aleppo), Buda, Bursa, Baghdad etc...