in the Mediterranean region from 622 to 750 AD.
Early Arab (Islamic) period Another power was rising in the east, that of
Islam, whilst the
Eastern Roman Empire and
Sassanid Persian empires were both weakened by centuries of stalemate warfare during the
Roman–Persian Wars. In a series of rapid
Muslim conquests, the
Arab armies, motivated by Islam and led by the
Caliphs and skilled military commanders such as
Khalid ibn al-Walid, swept through most of the Middle East;
reducing Byzantine lands by more than half and completely
engulfing the Persian lands. The Arab invasions disrupted the trade relations between Western and Eastern Europe while cutting the trade route with Oriental lands. This however had the indirect effect of promoting the trade across the
Caspian Sea. The export of grains from
Egypt was re-routed towards the
Eastern world. Oriental goods like silk and spices were carried from Egypt to ports like
Venice and
Constantinople by sailors and Jewish merchants. The
Viking raids further disrupted the trade in western Europe and brought it to a halt. However, the
Norsemen developed the trade from Norway to the
White Sea, while also trading in luxury goods from
Spain and the Mediterranean. The
Byzantines in the mid-8th century retook control of the area around the north-eastern part of the Mediterranean. Venetian ships from the 9th century armed themselves to counter the harassment by Arabs while concentrating trade of oriental goods at Venice. The powerful and long-lived Bulgarian Empire was the main European rival in the region of the Mediterranean
Balkan peninsula between the 7th and the 14th centuries, creating an important
cultural,
political,
linguistic and religious legacy during the
Middle Ages. In
Anatolia, the Muslim
expansion was blocked by the still capable Byzantines with the help of the
Tervel of Bulgaria. The Byzantine provinces of
Roman Syria,
North Africa, and Sicily, however, could not mount such a resistance, and the Muslim conquerors swept through those regions. At the far west, they crossed the sea taking
Visigothic Hispania before being
halted in southern France by the
Franks. At its greatest extent, the
Arab Empire controlled three-quarters of the Mediterranean coast, and fostered an economic
interrelationship between the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean. Much of North Africa became a peripheral area to the main Muslim centers in the Middle East, but
Al Andalus and Morocco soon broke from this distant control and became highly advanced societies in their own right. Between 831 and 1071, the
Emirate of Sicily was one of the major centres of Islamic culture in the Mediterranean. After its conquest by the Christian
Normans, the island developed its own distinct culture with the fusion of Latin and Byzantine influences. Palermo remained a leading artistic and commercial centre of the Mediterranean well into the Middle Ages. in the Mediterranean, 7th to 11th centuries The
Fatimids maintained trade relations with the
Italian city-states like
Amalfi and
Genoa before the Crusades, according to the
Cairo Geniza documents. A document dated 996 mentions Amalfian merchants living in
Cairo. Another letter states that the Genoese had traded with
Alexandria. The caliph
al-Mustansir had allowed Amalfian merchants to reside in
Jerusalem about 1060 in place of the Latin
hospice.
Muslim–Christian rivalry More organized and centralized states gradually began to form in Europe during the later
Middle Ages. Motivated by religion and dreams of conquest, the kings of Europe launched a number of
Crusades to try to roll back Muslim power and retake the
Holy Land. The Crusades were unsuccessful in this goal, but they were far more effective in weakening the already tottering Byzantine Empire that began to lose increasing amounts of territory to the
Seljuk Turks and later to the
Ottoman Turks. They also rearranged the balance of power in the Muslim world as Egypt once again emerged as a major power in the eastern Mediterranean. The Crusades led to flourishing of trade between Europe and the
outremer region. Genoa, Venice and
Pisa created colonies in regions controlled by the Crusaders and came to control the trade with the Orient. These colonies also allowed them to trade with the Eastern world. Though the fall of the Crusader states and attempts at banning of trade relations with Muslim states by the Popes temporarily disrupted the trade with the Orient, it however continued. The
Zirid state in eastern Maghreb developed around the great metropolis of
Kairouan collapsed in mid 12th century, with a henceforth fragmented
Ifriqiya becoming a ground for competing external powers from then on. The high Middle Ages also saw the successive rise of two Berber powers, the
Almoravids and the
Almohads, in the Western Maghreb, fostering the developments of cities such as
Marrakesh and
Fez upon their control over
Trans-Saharan trade. Cities in southern Iberia such as
Almería (under Almoravid rule) also thrived in the
High Middle Ages. The 12th century also saw increasing naval and trading progress on the part of Christian powers in the northern shores of the Mediterranean (including Genoa, Pisa, and
Aragon), seemingly offering a challenge to the balance of power in the Western Mediterranean.
Slavery in
Algiers, c. 1684 Slavery was a strategic and very important part of all Mediterranean societies during the Middle Ages. The threat of becoming a slave was a constant fear for peasants, fishermen and merchants. Those with money or who had financial backing only feared the lack of support, should they be threatened with abduction for ransom. There were several things which could happen to people in the Mediterranean region of the Middle Ages: • When
Corsairs,
pirate,
Barbary corsairs,
French corsairs or
commerce raiders plied their trade, a peasant, fisherman or coastal villager, who had no financial backing, could be abducted or sold to slave traders, or adversaries, who made large profits on an international market; • If the captive was wealthy or had influential supporters, the captive could be ransomed. This would be the most advantageous plan, since the money exchange was immediate and direct, not long and drawn out as in the slave market business; • The captive could be used immediately by the corsair for labour on the ship rather than traded. In battles during this era, prisoners of war were often captured and used as slaves. Emperors would take large numbers of prisoners, parade them through the capital, hold feasts in honour of their capture and parade diplomats in front of them as a display of victory.
Late Middle Ages (red) and
Venetian (green) maritime trade routes in the
Mediterranean. The "Repubbliche Marinare" (
Maritime republics) of
Amalfi,
Gaeta,
Venice,
Genoa,
Ancona,
Pisa and
Ragusa developed their own empires in the Mediterranean shores. The Islamic states had never been major naval powers, and trade from the east to Europe was soon in the hands of Italian traders, especially the Genoese and the Venetians, who profited immensely from it. The
Republic of Pisa and later the
Republic of Ragusa used diplomacy to further trade and maintained a libertarian approach in civil matters to further sentiment in its inhabitants. The
Republic of Venice got to dominate the eastern mediterranean shores after the
Fourth Crusade. Between 1275 and 1344 a struggle for the control of the
Strait of Gibraltar took place. Featuring the
Marinid Sultanate, the
Nasrid Kingdom of Granada, the
Crown of Castile, the
Crown of Aragón, the
Kingdom of Portugal and the
Republic of Genoa, it was characterized by changing alliances between the main actors. The iberian cities of
Tarifa,
Ceuta,
Algeciras or
Ronda and the African port of
Ceuta were at stake. The Western Mediterranean sea was dominated by the
Crown of Aragon: thanks to their possessions of
Sicily, the
Kingdom of Naples, the
Kingdom of Sardinia, the
Balearic Islands, the
Duchy of Athens the
Duchy of Neopatria, and several northern African cities. In 1347 the
Black Death spread from
Constantinople across the mediterranean basin. Ottoman power continued to grow, and in 1453, the Byzantine Empire was extinguished with the
fall of Constantinople. The Ottomans already controlled Greece,
Bulgaria and much of the
Balkans and soon also began to spread through North Africa. North Africa had grown wealthy from the trade across the
Sahara Desert, but the
Portuguese, who, along with other Christian powers, had been engaged in a long campaign to evict the Muslims from Iberia, had found a method to circumvent this trade by trading directly with
West Africa. This was enabled by a new type of ships, the
caravel, that made trade in the rough Atlantic waters profitable for the first time. The reduction in the Saharan trade weakened North Africa and made them an easy target for the Ottomans. Ceuta was ultimately taken by the Kingdom of Portugal in 1415, searching to undermine Castilian, Aragonese, and Genoese interests in the area. During the Middle Ages, rival Christian and Muslim kingdoms forbade the trade of particular goods to enemy kingdoms including weaponry and other contraband items. The popes forbade the export of these commodities to the Islamic world. The Ottomans too forbade the export of weapons and other strategic items, declaring them
memnu eşya or
memnu olan to Christian states even in peace treaties, however friendly states could import some of the prohibited goods through
capitulations. Despite these prohibitions, trade of contraband occurred on both sides. The European merchants traded in illegal goods with Muslims. The Ottomans were unable to suppress the trade with smuggling being undertaken mainly in the winter when the
Ottoman Navy stationed at the
Istanbul Arsenal was unable to stop Ottoman and non-Ottoman vessels from indulging in the trade. == Modern era ==