Misplaced Pages

Rum (endonym): Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 06:01, 7 May 2014 editDoug Weller (talk | contribs)Edit filter managers, Autopatrolled, Oversighters, Administrators264,417 edits Reverted 3 edits by Rarevogel: P2r is after the discussion of the word Rum, it says "Reference to al-Ritm occurs in the Islamic text that is both first in chronology and axial in significance: namely, the Qur’an.". (TW)← Previous edit Revision as of 21:33, 7 May 2014 edit undoRarevogel (talk | contribs)1,010 edits First in chronlogy, as in the first time it was used. the term thus originates in Quranic arabic. stop undoing my edits pleaseNext edit →
Line 3: Line 3:
{{Refimprove|date=June 2013}} {{Refimprove|date=June 2013}}


'''Rûm''' (pronounced ''ˈrüm'' or ''ˈru̇m''), also transliterated as ''Roum'' or ''Rhum'' (in ] ] "Ρωμιοί" or "Romans", in ] الرُّومُ ''ar-Rūm'', ]/] ''Rum'', from ] ''Hrōm'') is a generic term used at different times in ] to refer to: '''Rûm''' (pronounced ''ˈrüm'' or ''ˈru̇m''), also transliterated as ''Roum'' or ''Rhum'' (]: الرُّومُ ''ar-Rūm'', ]/]: ''Rum'') is a term used in the ] for the ].<ref></ref> It was used at different times in the ] to refer to:


* '''] minorities''' such as the various formerly ]-]-speaking '''] ]s''' and ] living in the ] and their descendants - notably members of the '''] and ] communities''' of ], ], Northern ] and the ] in Southern ] whose ] is still based on ] ] and ''Ancient ]'' priestly rites (called '''''"Al-Rûm"'''''); * '''] minorities''' such as the various formerly ]-]-speaking '''] ]s''' and ] living in the ] and their descendants - notably members of the '''] and ] communities''' of ], ], Northern ] and the ] in Southern ] whose ] is still based on ] ] and ''Ancient ]'' priestly rites (called '''''"Al-Rûm"''''');
* and, more generally, to non-Muslim subjects of the ] or citizens of ] ('''''"Rûmi"''''' or ''"Rûm"'' in the broader sense, but that use is disappearing due to the quasi-extinction of Greek communities in ] and ]). * and, more generally, to non-Muslim subjects of the ] or citizens of ] ('''''"Rûmi"''''' or ''"Rûm"'' in the broader sense, but that use is disappearing due to the quasi-extinction of Greek communities in ] and ]).


* '''] areas''' such as the ] and ] generally, to the ] in particular, or to the ancient ] in ] ] * '''] areas''' such as the ] and ] generally, to the ] in particular, or to the ancient ] in ] ]. The ] was known in early Arabic sources as 'bahr al-Rum' (the Roman-Byzantine sea).


The name derives from the Greek word '''] (meaning "Romans")'''; it refers to the ] which at the time was simply known as the "Roman Empire" and hadn't acquired the designation "Byzantine," which was only applied to the Empire after its dissolution. The city of ] itself is known in Arabic as {{lang|ar|روما}} ''Rūmā''. The name derives from the Greek word '''] (meaning "Romans")'''; it refers to the ] which at the time was simply known as the "Roman Empire" and hadn't acquired the designation "Byzantine," which was only applied to the Empire after its dissolution. The city of ] itself is known in Arabic as {{lang|ar|روما}} ''Rūmā''.

Revision as of 21:33, 7 May 2014

For other uses, see Rum (disambiguation).

Template:Distinguish2

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Rum" endonym – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Rûm (pronounced ˈrüm or ˈru̇m), also transliterated as Roum or Rhum (Arabic: الرُّومُ ar-Rūm, Persian/Turkish: Rum) is a term used in the Quran for the Byzantine Empire. It was used at different times in the Muslim world to refer to:

The name derives from the Greek word Ρωμιοί (meaning "Romans"); it refers to the Byzantine Empire which at the time was simply known as the "Roman Empire" and hadn't acquired the designation "Byzantine," which was only applied to the Empire after its dissolution. The city of Rome itself is known in Arabic as روما Rūmā.

Origins

The Qur'an includes Surat Ar-Rum (i.e., the Sura dealing with "The Romans", sometimes translated as "The Byzantines"). The people known as Byzantine Greeks, were the inhabitants of the Roman Empire, called themselves Ρωμιοί or Ρωμαίοι Rhomaioi, Romans- the term "Byzantine" is a modern designation, used to describe the Eastern Roman Empire, particularly after the major political restructuring of the seventh and eighth century. The Arabs, therefore naturally called them "the Rûm", their territory "the land of the Rûm", and the Mediterranean "the Sea of the Rûm." They called ancient Greece by the name "Yūnān" (Ionia) and ancient Greeks "Yūnānī" (similar with Hebrew "Yavan" for the country and "Yevanim" for the people). The ancient Romans were called either "Rūm" or sometimes "Latin'yun" (Latins).

Rûm as a name

Al-Rūmī is a nisbah designating people originating in the Byzantine Empire, or lands formerly belonged to Byzantine Roman Empire, especially Anatolia. Historical people so designated include:

  • Suhayb ar-Rumi, a companion of Muhammad
  • Mawlānā Jalāl-ad-Dīn Muhammad Balkhī (Rumi), the 13th century Persian poet
  • Qāḍī Zāda al-Rūmī, 14th century mathematician
  • Tadj ol-Molouk Ayrumlu, Former Queen of Iran (This may be incorrect. The Misplaced Pages article Ayrums claims Tadj ol-Molouk Ayromlou (sic) as an Ayrum, and defines Ayrums as an Azeri subgroup which it says is unrelated to the Urums. This implies her name may not be derived from Al-Rūmī. Reviewing the history of the Ayrum article shows that at one point a different origin related to Rûm, Hayhurum, was proposed for the Ayrum people; but if Ayrum is derived from Hayhurum, then it is still not a form of Al-Rūmī.)

Rûm in geography

Later, because Muslim contact with the Byzantine Empire most often took place in Asia Minor (the heartland of the state from the seventh century onward), the term Rûm became fixed there geographically and remained even after the conquest by the Seljuk Turks, so that their territory was called the land of the Seljuks of Rûm, or the Sultanate of Rûm. But as the Mediterranean was "the Sea of the Rûm", so all peoples on its north coast were called sweepingly "the Rûm".

Ottoman usage

After the Fall of Constantinople, Mehmed II declared himself Kayser-i Rum, literally "Caesar of the Romans". However, later Ottoman Sultans abandoned this title and did not persist in claiming it. During the 16th century the Portuguese used "rume" and "rumes" (plural) as a generic term to refer to the Mamluk-Ottoman forces they faced then in the Indian Ocean.

Under the Ottoman Empire's Millet system, Greeks were in the "Rum Millet" (Millet-i Rum), and also in today's Turkey Rum are the Turkish citizens of Greek ethnicity. The term "Urums", also derived from the same origin, is still used in contemporary ethnography to denote Turkic-speaking Greek populations. "Rumaiic" is a Greek dialect identified mainly with the Ottoman Greeks.

Among the Muslim aristocracy of South Asia, the fez is known as the Rumi Topi (which means "hat of Rome or Byzantium").

Modern usage in Southern Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and the Holy Land

Some historians believe that a sizable proportion of the Hellenized Jewish communities and most Greco-Macedonian settlers in Southern Turkey (Antioch, Alexandretta and neighboring cities) and Syria/Lebanon both converted progressively to the Greco-Roman branch of Christianity that eventually constituted the “Melkite” Churches of the MENA area:

As Jewish Christianity originated at Jerusalem, so Gentile Christianity started at Antioch, then the leading center of the Hellenistic East, with Peter and Paul as its apostles. From Antioch it spread to the various cities and provinces of Syria, among the Hellenistic Syrians as well as among the Hellenistic Jews who, as a result of the great rebellions against the Romans in A.D. 70 and 130, were driven out from Jerusalem and Palestine into Syria.

Some typically Grecian "Ancient Synagogal" priestly rites and hymns have survived partially to the present in the distinct church services of the Melkite and Greek Orthodox communities of the Hatay Province of Southern Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and the Holy Land.

Members of theses ethnocultural communities still call themselves Rûm which means "Eastern Roman" or "Asian Greek", and thus, by extension, "Melkite Christian" i.e. Antiochite and Jerusalemite Greek Orthodox or Greek Catholic Christian in modern Levantine Arabic — a regional dialect spoken in Syria, Lebanon, Northern Israel, the West Bank and the Adana and Hatay provinces of Turkey.

In that particular context, the term "Rûm" is used in preference to Ionani or Yāvāni which means ethnic Greek or "Ionian" in Classical Arabic and Biblical Hebrew.

In Islamic Iberia

In Al-Andalus any Christian slave girl who had embraced Islam was named Roumiya. Also the legendary lover of King Roderic and daughter of Count Julian is named La Cava Rumía – her affair being the putative cause of the Moorish invasion of Hispania in AD 711. The crusades introduced the Franks (Ifranja), and later Arabic writers recognize them and their civilization on the north shore of the Mediterranean west from Rome; so Ibn Khaldun wrote in the latter part of the 14th century.

See also

  • Rûm Province, Ottoman Empire.
  • Rumelia, from Turkish Rum eli meaning 'country of the Romans'.
  • Erzurum, from the Turkish pronunciation of Arabic أرض روم arḍ Rūm, 'Land of the Romans'.
  • Edirne Ciğeri, a Turkish meat dish also referred to as "Rumeli Ciğeri".
  • Rumi calendar, a calendar based on the Julian Calendar, used by the Ottoman Empire after Tanzimat.
  • Mawlānā, great Persian poet who is sometimes referred to as Rumi.
  • Rumiye-i Suğra, the name of the region in Ottoman Empire which included Tokat, Amasya, and Sivas.
  • Rumçi, another term used to refer to the Greeks during the Ottoman times.

Template:Roma etymology

Notes

  1. Byzantium Viewed by the Arabs (page 24)
  2. Ozbaran, Salih, "Ottomans as 'Rumes' in Portuguese sources in the sixteenth century", Portuguese Studies, Annual, 2001
  3. The “Rumi Topi” of Hyderabad, by Omair M. Farooqui, Esq.
  4. "History of Christianity in Syria", Catholic Encyclopedia
  5. Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote, Part I, Chapter 41 (Spanish text, English text).

Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

People and things in the Quran
Characters
Non-humans
Animals
Related
Non-related
Malāʾikah (Angels)
Muqarrabun
Jinn (Genies)
Shayāṭīn (Demons)
Others
Prophets
Mentioned
Ulul-ʿAzm
('Those of the
Perseverance
and Strong Will')
Debatable ones
Implied
People of Prophets
Good ones
People of
Joseph
People of
Aaron and Moses
Evil ones
Implied or
not specified
Groups
Mentioned
Tribes,
ethnicities
or families
Aʿrāb (Arabs
or Bedouins)
Ahl al-Bayt
('People of the
Household')
Implicitly
mentioned
Religious
groups
Locations
Mentioned
In the
Arabian Peninsula
(excluding Madyan)
Sinai Region
or Tīh Desert
In Mesopotamia
Religious
locations
Implied
Events, incidents, occasions or times
Battles or
military expeditions
Days
Months of the
Islamic calendar
Pilgrimages
  • Al-Ḥajj (literally 'The Pilgrimage', the Greater Pilgrimage)
  • Al-ʿUmrah (The Lesser Pilgrimage)
Times for prayer
or remembrance
Times for Duʿāʾ ('Invocation'), Ṣalāh and Dhikr ('Remembrance', including Taḥmīd ('Praising'), Takbīr and Tasbīḥ):
  • Al-ʿAshiyy (The Afternoon or the Night)
  • Al-Ghuduww ('The Mornings')
    • Al-Bukrah ('The Morning')
    • Aṣ-Ṣabāḥ ('The Morning')
  • Al-Layl ('The Night')
  • Aẓ-Ẓuhr ('The Noon')
  • Dulūk ash-Shams ('Decline of the Sun')
    • Al-Masāʾ ('The Evening')
    • Qabl al-Ghurūb ('Before the Setting (of the Sun)')
      • Al-Aṣīl ('The Afternoon')
      • Al-ʿAṣr ('The Afternoon')
  • Qabl ṭulūʿ ash-Shams ('Before the rising of the Sun')
    • Al-Fajr ('The Dawn')
Implied
  • Ghadir Khumm
  • Laylat al-Mabit
  • First Pilgrimage
  • Other
    Holy books
    Objects
    of people
    or beings
    Mentioned idols
    (cult images)
    Of Israelites
    Of Noah's people
    Of Quraysh
    Celestial
    bodies
    Maṣābīḥ (literally 'lamps'):
    • Al-Qamar (The Moon)
    • Kawākib (Planets)
      • Al-Arḍ (The Earth)
    • Nujūm (Stars)
      • Ash-Shams (The Sun)
    Plant matter
  • Baṣal (Onion)
  • Fūm (Garlic or wheat)
  • Shaṭʾ (Shoot)
  • Sūq (Plant stem)
  • Zarʿ (Seed)
  • Fruits
    Bushes, trees
    or plants
    Liquids
    • Māʾ (Water or fluid)
      • Nahr (River)
      • Yamm (River or sea)
    • Sharāb (Drink)
    Note: Names are sorted alphabetically. Standard form: Islamic name / Biblical name (title or relationship)
    Categories:
    Rum (endonym): Difference between revisions Add topic