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Social and Economic Conditions In Per-Islamic Mecca
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2009
Extract
Mecca's existence depended primarily on its location near the most important trade route in western Arabia which linked the surplus-producing region of Yemen with Syria. The route branched near Ayla in the north to proceed to Gaza on the Mediterranean and also to Egypt. Another route branched near Mecca to proceed in a northeasterly direction toward al-Ubulla, Ḥīra, and eventually Sasanid Persia. The commercially advantageous location of Mecca was enhanced further by the Zamzam waterwell which made Mecca a convenient stop in the trade of antiquity. Also the concept of the ḥaram, the sacred area, and its center, the Ka⊂ba, made Mecca the object of pilgrimage during the sacred months, pilgrims/merchants traveled with security of life and property and went to Mecca to trade their commodities.
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References
NOTES
1 The most detailed history of pre-Islamic Arabia may be found in Jawād, ⊂Alī, Al-Mufaṣṣal fīt Tārīkh al-⊂Arab qabla al-Islām (10 vols.; Beirut, 1971);Google Scholar see also Levi, G. della Vida, “Pre-Islamic Arabia,” in Faris, N., ed., The Arab Heritage (Princeton, 1934), pp. 25–57;Google Scholar O'Leary, D., Arabia Before Muhammad (London, 1927);Google Scholar Smith, S., “Events in Sixth Century Arabia,” Bulletin of the School of African and Oriental Studies, 16 (1954), 425–468.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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