The word
Mashriq refers to the eastern part of the Arab world.
Arabian Peninsula The seventh century saw the rise of Islam as the peninsula's dominant religion. The
Islamic prophet Muhammad was born in Mecca in about 570 (53
BH) and first began preaching in the city in 610, but
migrated to
Medina in 622. From there, he and his companions united the
tribes of Arabia under the banner of
Islam and created a single Arab Muslim religious polity in the Arabian peninsula. Muhammad established a new unified polity which, under the subsequent
Rashidun and
Umayyad caliphates, saw a century of rapid expansion of Arab power well beyond the Arabian peninsula in the form of a vast Muslim Arab Empire.
Levant The Arabs of the
Levant are traditionally divided into
Qays and Yaman tribes, back to the pre-Islamic era and was based on tribal affiliations and geographic locations. They include
Banu Kalb,
Kinda,
Ghassanids, and
Lakhmids. On the eve of the
Rashidun Caliphate's
conquest of the Levant in the 7th century, Arab tribes largely migrated to the Levant and
Upper Mesopotamia with the Muslim armies in the mid-7th century.
Egypt The Arabs have inhabited the eastern Egypt Desert and the
Sinai Peninsula for thousands of years, and were a part of the
Nabatean Kingdom. The Muslim caliphate also allowed the migration of Arab tribes to Egypt. The Muslim governor of Egypt encouraged the migration of tribes from the Arabian Peninsula to Egypt to increase the
spread of Islam and to strengthen his regime by enlisting warrior tribesmen to his military forces, encouraging them to bring their families and entire clans. The
Fatimid era was the peak of Bedouin Arab tribal migrations to Egypt.
Sudan In the 12th century, the Arab
Ja'alin tribe migrated into
Nubia and
Sudan and formerly occupied the country on both banks of the
Nile from
Khartoum to
Abu Hamad. They trace their lineage to
Abbas, uncle of Muhammad. They are of Arab origin, but now of mixed blood mostly with
Nilo-Saharans and
Nubians. Other Arab tribes migrated into Sudan in the 12th century and intermarried with the indigenous populations, forming the
Sudanese Arabs. In 1846, many Arab
Rashaida migrated from
Hejaz in present-day Saudi Arabia into what is now
Eritrea and north-east Sudan after tribal warfare had broken out in their homeland. The Rashaida of Sudan and Eritrea live in close proximity with the
Beja people. Large numbers of
Bani Rasheed are also found on the Arabian Peninsula. They are related to the
Banu Abs tribe. == Maghreb ==