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{{Short description|none}} <!-- "none" is preferred when the title is sufficiently descriptive; see ] -->
{{about|a religion-specific overview of Arabia before the rise of Islam in 610 CE|the practice of Christianity in pre-Islamic Arabia|Christianity in pre-Islamic Arabia|the practice of Judaism in pre-Islamic Arabia|Judaism in pre-Islamic Arabia|a general overview of civilization in Arabia before Islam|Pre-Islamic Arabia}}
{{good article}}
] votive figurines from Yemen, now in the ], ]]]
] creator god ], BC. 1400–1200 El-Megiddo. El is considered the origin of the words ] and continues to appear in compound names such as ], ], ], ], etc.]]
{{Fertile Crescent myth}}
{{Islam and other religions}}

Indigenous Arabian ], ]s, ], ], ], and ] were among the religions in ]. Arabian polytheism, the dominant form of religion, was based on veneration of ] and spirits. Worship was directed to various gods and goddesses, including ] and the goddesses ], ], and ], at local shrines and temples such as the ] in ]. Deities were venerated and invoked through a variety of rituals, including pilgrimages and divination, as well as ritual sacrifice. Different theories ] regarding the role of ] in Meccan religion. Many of the physical descriptions of the ] are traced to ], especially near the Kaaba, which is said to have contained up to 360 of them.

Other religions were represented to varying, lesser degrees. The influence of the adjacent ] and ] civilizations resulted in ]. Christianity made a lesser impact in the remainder of the peninsula, but did secure some conversions. With the exception of ] in the northeast and the ], the dominant form of Christianity was ]. The peninsula had been a destination for Jewish migration since Roman times, which had resulted in a ] community supplemented by local converts. ]. Additionally, the influence of the ] resulted in ] being present in the peninsula. ] existed in the east and south, while there is evidence of either ] or ] being possibly practiced in Mecca.

== Background and sources ==
{{Arab culture}}
Until about the fourth century, almost all inhabitants of Arabia practiced polytheistic religions at which point ] had begun to spread.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=139}} From the fourth to sixth centuries, ], ], and other ] populations developed. Until recent decades, it was believed that polytheism remained the dominant belief system in pre-Islamic Arabia,{{Sfn|Berkey|2003|p=42}} but recent trends suggest that henotheism or monotheism was dominant from the fourth century onwards.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gajda |first=Iwona |title=Islam and its past: Jahiliyya, Late Antiquity, and the Qur'an |date=2017 |publisher=Oxford university press |isbn=978-0-19-874849-6 |editor-last=Bakhos |editor-first=Carol |series=Oxford studies in the abrahamic religions |location=Oxford |pages=247–256 |chapter=Remarks on Monotheism in Ancient South Arabia |editor-last2=Cook |editor-first2=Michael}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kjær |first=Sigrid K. |date=2022 |title=‘Rahman’ before Muhammad: A pre-history of the First Peace (Sulh) in Islam |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/modern-asian-studies/article/rahman-before-muhammad-a-prehistory-of-the-first-peace-sulh-in-islam/280B60BFF68749648057202B29C7C8F0 |journal=Modern Asian Studies |language=en |volume=56 |issue=3 |pages=776–795 |doi=10.1017/S0026749X21000305 |issn=0026-749X|doi-access=free }}</ref>{{Sfn|Lindstedt|2023}}

The contemporary sources of information regarding the pre-Islamic Arabian religion and pantheon include a growing number of inscriptions in carvings written in Arabian scripts like ], ], and ],{{Sfn|Nicolle|2012|p=19}} pre-Islamic poetry, external sources such as Jewish and Greek accounts, as well as the Muslim tradition, such as the Qur'an and Islamic writings. Nevertheless, information is limited.{{Sfn|Nicolle|2012|p=19}}

One early attestation of Arabian polytheism was in ]'s Annals, mentioning ], ], ], and Atarquruma.{{Sfn|Doniger|1999|p=70}} ], writing in his ''Histories'', reported that the Arabs worshipped ] (identified with ]) and ] (identified with ]).{{Sfn|Mouton|Schmid|2014|p=338}}{{Sfn|Teixidor|2015|p=70}} ] stated the Arabs worshipped Dionysus and ]. ] stated they worshipped Dionysus and ].{{Sfn|Teixidor|2015|p=70}}

Muslim sources regarding Arabian polytheism include the eighth-century '']'' by ], which ] argued to be the most substantial treatment of the religious practices of pre-Islamic Arabia,{{Sfn|Peters|1994a|p=6}} as well as the writings of the Yemeni historian ] on South Arabian religious beliefs.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=92}}

According to the ''Book of Idols'', descendants of the son of ] (]) who had settled in Mecca migrated to other lands carried holy stones from the ] with them, erected them, and ] them like the Kaaba.{{Sfn|Teixidor|2015|p=73-74}} This, according to al-Kalbi led to the rise of idol worship.{{Sfn|Teixidor|2015|p=73-74}} Based on this, it may be probable that Arabs originally venerated stones, later adopting idol-worship under foreign influences.{{Sfn|Teixidor|2015|p=73-74}} The relationship between a god and a stone as his representation can be seen from the third-century ] work called the ''] of Pseudo-Meliton'' where he describes the pagan faiths of Syriac-speakers in northern Mesopotamia, who were mostly Arabs.{{Sfn|Teixidor|2015|p=73-74}} However, mythologies and narratives elucidating the history of these gods, as well as the meaning of their epithets, remains uninformative.{{Sfn|Peters|2003|p=45}}{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=140}}

== Supernatural beings ==
{{Main|List of pre-Islamic Arabian deities}}

=== Pantheons ===
] baetyl depicting a goddess, possibly ].]]
The pre-Islamic Arabian religions were polytheistic, with many of the deities' names known.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=139}} Formal pantheons are more noticeable at the level of kingdoms, of variable sizes, ranging from simple city-states to collections of tribes.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=87}} ], towns, clans, lineages and families had their own cults too.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=87}} Christian Julien Robin suggests that this structure of the divine world reflected the society of the time.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=87}} Trade caravans also brought foreign religious and cultural influences.{{Sfn|Meyer-Hubbert|2016|p=72}} A large number of deities did not have proper names and were referred to by titles indicating a quality, a family relationship, or a locale preceded by "he who" or "she who" (''dhū'' or ''dhāt'' respectively).{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=87}}

The religious beliefs and practices of the nomadic ] were distinct from those of the settled tribes of towns such as ].{{Sfn|Aslan|2008|p=6}} Nomadic religious belief systems and practices are believed to have included ], ] and ] but were connected principally with immediate concerns and problems and did not consider larger philosophical questions such as the afterlife.{{Sfn|Aslan|2008|p=6}} Settled urban Arabs, on the other hand, are thought to have believed in a more complex ] of deities.{{Sfn|Aslan|2008|p=6}} While the Meccans and the other settled inhabitants of the ] worshiped their gods at permanent shrines in towns and oases, the Bedouin practiced their religion on the move.{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=105}}

=== Minor spirits ===
In South Arabia, ''mndh’t'' were anonymous guardian spirits of the community and the ] of the family.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=144}} They were known as 'the sun (''shms'') of their ancestors'.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=144}}

In North Arabia, {{transl|arc|italic=no|ginnaye}} were known from ] inscriptions as "the good and rewarding gods" and were probably related to the '']'' of west and central Arabia.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=145}} Unlike jinn in modern times, {{transl|arc|italic=no|ginnaye}} could not hurt nor possess humans and were much more similar to the Roman ].{{Sfn|Teixidor|1979|p=77}} According to common Arabian belief, ], pre-Islamic philosophers, and poets were inspired by the jinn.{{Sfn|El-Zein|2009|p=34}} However, jinn were also feared and thought to be responsible for causing various diseases and mental illnesses.{{Sfn|El-Zein|2009|p=122}}

=== Malevolent beings ===
Aside from benevolent gods and spirits, there existed malevolent beings.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=145}} These beings were not attested in the epigraphic record, but were alluded to in pre-Islamic Arabic poetry, and their legends were collected by later Muslim authors.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=145}}

Commonly mentioned are ]s.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=145}} Etymologically, the English word "ghoul" was derived from the Arabic ''ghul'', from ''ghala'', "to seize",{{Sfn|Lebling|2010|p=96}} related to the Sumerian '']''.{{Sfn|Cramer|1979|p=104}} They are said to have a hideous appearance, with feet like those of an ass.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=145}} Arabs were said to utter the following couplet if they should encounter one: "Oh ass-footed one, just bray away, we won't leave the desert plain nor ever go astray."{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=145}}

Christian Julien Robin notes that all the known South Arabian divinities had a positive or protective role and that evil powers were only alluded to but were never personified.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=88}}

=== Roles of deities ===
{{Pre-Islamic Arabian deities}} {{Pre-Islamic Arabian deities}}
'''Religion in pre-Islamic Arabia''' was a mix of ], ], ], and ]. ] polytheism, the dominant form of religion in ], was based on veneration of ] and other rituals. Gods and goddesses, including ] and the goddesses ], ] and ], were worshipped at local shrines, such as the ] in ]. Different theories ] regarding the role of ] in Meccan religion.<ref name=berkey42>{{cite book|author=Jonathan Porter Berkey|title=The Formation of Islam: Religion and Society in the Near East, 600-1800|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mLV6lo4mvj0C&pg=PA42|year=2003|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-521-58813-3|page=42}}</ref><ref name= Robinson>{{cite book|author=Neal Robinson|title=Islam: A Concise Introduction|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2UL8AQAAQBAJ&pg=PA75|date=5 November 2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-81773-1|page=75}}</ref><ref name= Peters>{{cite book|author=Francis E. Peters|title=Muhammad and the Origins of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0OrCo4VyvGkC&pg=PA110|year=1994|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0-7914-1875-8|page=110}}</ref><ref name="Peterson2007">{{cite book|author=Daniel C. Peterson|title=Muhammad, Prophet of God|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9zpbEj0xA_sC&pg=PA21|date=26 February 2007|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing|isbn=978-0-8028-0754-0|page=21}}</ref><ref name="Robin304"/> Many of the physical descriptions of the pre-Islamic gods are traced to ], especially near the Kaaba, which is said to have contained up to 360 of them.<ref name=armstrong>{{cite book|page=11|title=Islam: A Short History|author=Karen Armstrong|isbn=0-8129-6618-X|date=2000}}</ref>


==== Role of Allah ====
Other religions were represented to varying, lesser degrees. The influence of the adjacent ], ] and ]s resulted in Christian communities in the northwest, northeast and south of Arabia. Christianity made a lesser impact, but secured some conversions, in the remainder of the peninsula. With the exception of ] in the northeast and the ], the dominant form of Christianity was ]. The peninsula had been subject to Jewish migration since Roman times, which had resulted in a diaspora community supplemented by local converts. Additionally, the influence of the ] resulted in ] being present in the peninsula. ] existed in the east and south, while there is evidence of ] or possibly ]ism being practised in Mecca.
{{Main|Allah}}
Some scholars postulate that in pre-Islamic Arabia, including in Mecca,{{Sfn|Waardenburg|2003|p=89}} Allah was considered to be a deity,{{Sfn|Waardenburg|2003|p=89}} possibly a ] or a ] in a polytheistic ].{{Sfn|Campo|2009|p=34}}{{Sfn|Hughes|2013|p=25}} The word ''Allah'' (from the Arabic ''al-ilah'' meaning "the god"){{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=107}} may have been used as a title rather than a name.{{Sfn|Robinson|2013|p=75}}{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=110}}{{Sfn|Peterson|2007|p=21}} The concept of ''Allah'' may have been vague in the Meccan religion.<ref name=":8" /> According to Islamic sources, Meccans and their neighbors believed that the goddesses ], ], and ] were the daughters of Allah.{{Sfn|Berkey|2003|p=42}}{{Sfn|Hughes|2013|p=25}}{{Sfn|Robinson|2013|p=75}}{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=110}}{{Sfn|Peterson|2007|p=46}}


Regional variants of the word ''Allah'' occur in both pagan and Christian pre-Islamic inscriptions.<ref name=":3" />{{Sfn|Hitti|1970|p=100-101}} References to Allah are found in the poetry of the pre-Islamic Arab poet ], who lived a generation before Muhammad, as well as pre-Islamic personal names.{{Sfn|Phipps|1999|p=21}} Muhammad's father's name was ], meaning "the servant of Allah".<ref name=":8">Böwering, Gerhard, "God and his Attributes", in {{Harvnb|McAuliffe|2006|pp=}}</ref>
== Polytheism and indigenous beliefs ==


Charles Russell Coulter and ] considered that Allah's name may be derived from a pre-Islamic god called Ailiah and is similar to ], Il, ], and ]. They also considered some of his characteristics to be seemingly based on lunar deities like ], ], Shaker, ] and Warakh.{{Sfn|Coulter|Turner|2013|p=37}} ] states that the connection between Ilah that came to form Allah and ancient Babylonian ''Il'' or ''El'' of ancient Israel is not clear. Wellhausen states that Allah was known from Jewish and Christian sources and was known to pagan Arabs as the supreme god.{{Sfn|Guillaume|1963|p=7}} Winfried Corduan doubts ], stating that the term Allah functions as a generic term, like the term El-] used as a title for the god ].{{Sfn|Corduan|2013|p=112, 113}}
===Background, belief systems and sources===
Until about the fourth century, almost all Arabs practised polytheistic religions.<ref name="Hoyland2002">{{cite book|author=Robert G. Hoyland|title=Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XaiGAgAAQBAJ|page= 139|date=11 September 2002|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-64634-0}}</ref> Although significant ] and Christian minorities developed, polytheism remained the dominant belief system in pre-Islamic Arabia.<ref name=berkey42/><ref name= Nicolle>{{cite book|author=David Nicolle|authorlink=David Nicolle|title=The Great Islamic Conquests AD 632-750|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=o3PgFtHzLVEC&pg=PA19|date=20 June 2012|publisher=Osprey Publishing|isbn=978-1-78096-998-5|page=19}}</ref> The religious beliefs and practices of the nomadic ] were distinct from those of the settled tribes of towns such as ].<ref name= Aslan6>{{cite book|author=Reza Aslan|title=No God But God: The Origins, Evolution and Future of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HP1zoWqpqg4C&pg=PA6|date=2 December 2008|publisher=Random House|isbn=978-1-4070-0928-5|page=6}}</ref> Nomadic religious belief systems and practices are believed to have included ], ] and ] but were connected principally with immediate concerns and problems and did not consider larger philosophical questions such as the afterlife.<ref name= Aslan6/> Settled urban Arabs, on the other hand, are thought to have believed in a more complex ] of deities.<ref name= Aslan6/> While the Meccans and the other settled inhabitants of the ] worshiped their gods at permanent shrines in towns and oases, the Bedouin practised their religion on the move.<ref name= Peters105>{{cite book|author=Francis E. Peters|title=Muhammad and the Origins of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0OrCo4VyvGkC&pg=PA105|year=1994|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0-7914-1875-8|page=105}}</ref>


South Arabian inscriptions from the fourth century AD refer to a god called ] ("The Merciful One") who had a monotheistic cult and was referred to as the "Lord of heaven and Earth".{{Sfn|Hughes|2013|p=25}} ] states that scholars are unsure whether he developed from the earlier polytheistic systems or developed due to the increasing significance of the Christian and Jewish communities, and that it is difficult to establish whether Allah was linked to Rahman.{{Sfn|Hughes|2013|p=25}} ], however, considers one of Allah's names, "Ar-Rahman", to have been used in the form of Rahmanan earlier.{{Sfn|Rodinson|2002|p=119}}
The contemporary sources of information regarding the pre-Islamic pantheon include a small number of inscriptions and carvings,<ref name= Nicolle/> remnants of stone ],{{citation needed|date=May 2016}} references in the poetry of the pre-Islamic Arab poet ] and pre-Islamic personal names.<ref name= Phipps21>{{cite book|author=William E. Phipps|title=Muhammad and Jesus: A Comparison of the Prophets and Their Teachings|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uRGoSE8AFAAC&pg=PA21|date=1 September 1999|publisher=A&C Black|isbn=978-0-8264-1207-2|page=21}}</ref> Nevertheless, information is limited<ref name= Nicolle/> and while scholars believe that the dominant traditions of the pre-Islamic Arabia were polytheistic, there is little certainty about the nature of pre-Islamic polytheism and considerable debate.{{citation needed|date=May 2016}} According to ], "one of the characteristics of Arab paganism as it has come down to us is the absence of a mythology, narratives that might serve to explain the origin or history of the gods." <ref name="Peters2003">{{cite book|author=Francis E. Peters|title=Islam, a Guide for Jews and Christians|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DRDwRPIQ1vUC&pg=PA45|year=2003|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=0-691-11553-2|page=45}}</ref>


==== Al-Lat, al-Uzza and Manat ====
The majority of extant information about Mecca during the rise of Islam and earlier times comes from the text of Quran itself and later Muslim sources such as the ] literature dealing with the life of ] and the eighth-century '']''.<ref name="Peters1994">{{cite book|author=Francis E. Peters|title=Mecca: A Literary History of the Muslim Holy Land|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tdb6F1qVDhkC&pg=PA6|year=1994|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=0-691-03267-X|pages=5–7}}</ref> Alternative sources are so fragmentary and specialized that writing a convincing history of this period based on them alone is impossible.<ref name="Humphreys69-71">{{cite book|author=R. Stephen Humphreys|title=Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry|year=1991|publisher=Princeton University Press|pages=69–71}}</ref> Several scholars hold that the sīra literature is not independent of Quran but has been fabricated to explain the verses of Quran.<ref name=Donner33>{{citation |last=Donner |first=Fred M. |chapter=The historical context |title=The Cambridge Companion to the Qur'ān |year=2006 |editor=Jane Dammen McAuliffe |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F2oLiXT_66EC&pg=PA33 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-53934-0|pages=33–34}}</ref> There is evidence to support the contention that some reports of the sīras are of dubious validity, but there is also evidence to support the contention that the sīra narratives originated independently of the Quran.<ref name=Donner33/> Compounding the problem is that the earliest extant Muslim historical works, including the sīras, were composed in their definitive form more than a century after the beginning of the Islamic era.<ref name="Humphreys69-71"/> Some of these works were based on subsequently lost earlier texts, which in their turn recorded a fluid oral tradition.<ref name="Humphreys69-71"/> Scholars do not agree as to the time when such oral accounts began to be systematically collected and written down,<ref name="Humphreys86-87">{{cite book|author=R. Stephen Humphreys|title=Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry|year=1991|publisher=Princeton University Press|pages=86–87}}</ref> and they differ greatly in their assessment of the historical reliability of the available texts.<ref name=Donner33/><ref name="Humphreys86-87"/><ref>{{cite book|author=James E. Lindsay|title=Daily Life in the Medieval Islamic World|year=2005|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6J0WnWABM34C&pg=PA7|page=7}}</ref>
], ] and the dedicator. ], 2nd–3rd century AD.|alt=]]


], ] and ] were common names used for multiple goddesses across Arabia.{{Sfn|Robinson|2013|p=75}}{{Sfn|Taylor|2001|p=130, 131, 162}}{{Sfn|Healey|2001|p=110, 153}}{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=63}}{{Sfn|Frank|Montgomery|2007|p=89}} ] states that modern scholars have frequently associated the names of Arabian goddesses ], ] and ] with cults devoted to celestial bodies, particularly ], drawing upon evidence external to the Muslim tradition as well as in relation to ], ] and the ].{{Sfn|Hawting|1999|p=142}}
===Allah===
{{Main article|Allah}}
Some scholars postulate that in pre-Islamic Arabia, including in Mecca, Allah was considered to be a deity, possibly a ] or a ] in a polytheistic ]. The word ''Allah'' (from the Arabic ''al-ilah'' meaning "the god")<ref name="Peters107"/> may have been used as a title rather than a name.<ref name= Robinson/><ref name= Peters/><ref name="Peterson2007"/><ref>Zeki Saritopak, ''Allah'', The Qu'ran: An Encyclopedia, ed. by Oliver Leaman, p. 34</ref><ref name="EoI"/> The concept of ''Allah'' may have been vague in the Meccan religion.<ref name="EoI">L. Gardet, ''Allah'', Encyclopaedia of Islam, ed. by ]</ref><ref name="GodEoQ">Gerhard Böwering, ''God and his Attributes'', Encyclopedia of the Qur'an, ed. by ]</ref> The Meccans and their neighbors believed that the goddesses ], ], and ] were the daughters of Allah.<ref name=berkey42/><ref name= Robinson/><ref name= Peters/><ref name=peterson46>{{cite book|author=Daniel C. Peterson|title=Muhammad, Prophet of God|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=9zpbEj0xA_sC&pg=PA46|date=26 February 2007|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing|isbn=978-0-8028-0754-0|page=46}}</ref>


Allāt (]: اللات) or al-Lāt was worshipped throughout the ancient Near East with various associations.{{Sfn|Coulter|Turner|2013|p=37}} ] in the 5th century BC identifies ''Alilat'' (]: Ἀλιλάτ) as the Arabic name for ] (and, in another passage, for ]),{{Sfn|Mouton|Schmid|2014|p=338}} which is strong evidence for worship of Allāt in Arabia at that early date.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=44}} Al-‘Uzzá (]: العزى) was a fertility goddess{{Sfn|Gilbert|2010|p=8}} or possibly a goddess of love.{{Sfn|Leeming|2004|p=122}} Manāt (]: مناة) was the goddess of destiny.{{Sfn|Coulter|Turner|2013|p=317}}
Regional variants of the word ''Allah'' occur in both pagan and Christian pre-Islamic inscriptions.<ref name="Robin304"/><ref>{{cite book | last = Hitti | first = Philip Khouri | title = History of the Arabs | publisher = Palgrave Macmillan | year = 1970 | pages = 100–101}}</ref> Muhammad's father's name was ], meaning "the servant of Allah".<ref name="GodEoQ"/>


Al-Lāt's cult was spread in Syria and northern Arabia. From ] and ] inscriptions, it is probable that she was worshiped as Lat (''lt''). F. V. Winnet saw al-Lat as a lunar deity due to the association of a crescent with her in 'Ayn esh-Shallāleh and a ]ite inscription mentioning the name of ], the Minaean moon god, over the title of ''fkl lt''. ] and Gonzague Ryckmans linked her with Venus while others have thought her to be a solar deity. John F. Healey considers that al-Uzza actually might have been an epithet of al-Lāt before becoming a separate deity in the Meccan pantheon.{{Sfn|Healey|2001|p=112, 114}} Paola Corrente, writing in ''Redefining Dionysus'', considers she might have been a god of vegetation or a celestial deity of atmospheric phenomena and a ].<ref>Corrente, Paola, "Dushara and Allāt alias Dionysos and Aphrodite in Herodotus 3.8", in {{Harvnb|Bernabé|Jáuregui|Cristóbal|Hernández|2013|pp=265, 266}}</ref>
===Al-lāt, Al-‘Uzzá and Manat===


== Practices ==
Al-lāt, Al-‘Uzzá and Manat were common names used for multiple goddesses across Arabia.<ref name= Robinson/><ref name=TaurisPetra/><ref name=BrillNabateans/><ref name=Hoylandp63/><ref name=Manattauris/><ref name= Hoyland142144/><ref name=FrankArabic/> ] states that modern scholars have frequently associated the names of Arabian goddesses ], ] and ] with cults devoted to celestial bodies particularly ], drawing upon evidence external to the Muslim tradition as well as in relation to ], ] and the ].<ref name="Hawting1999">{{cite book|author=G.R. Hawting|title=The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam: From Polemic to History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mh134wJLwkIC&pg=142|date=9 December 1999|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=1-139-42635-4|page=142}}</ref>
], Jordan.|alt=]]


=== {{anchor|Sacred stones}}Cult images and idols ===
There are two possible etymologies of the name al-lāt.<ref name=EI2>{{Cite encyclopedia|author=T. Fahd| year=1986 | title=al-Lat |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Islam| edition=2nd|publisher=Brill |editors=P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs|volume=5|page=692}}</ref> The etymology best reflecting the Arab lexicographical tradition derives the name from the verb ''latta'' (to mix or knead barley-meal). It has also been associated the "idol of jealousy" erected in the temple of Jerusalem according to the ], which was offered an oblation of barley-meal by the husband who suspected his wife of infidelity. It can be inferred from ]'s ] that a similar ritual was practiced in the vicinity of the idol of Al-lāt in Mecca.<ref name=EI2/> The second etymology, with is more in line with Semitic traditions in general, takes Al-lāt to be the feminine form of Allah.<ref name=EI2/> The word al-Lat was used as a name and title for multiple pre-Islamic goddesses of Arabia and was used for either a wife of Allah or a daughter depending on the region. It was used as a title for the goddesses ] and ].<ref>{{cite book|author=Patricia Monaghan|title=Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Cj5OAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA30|year=2014|publisher=]|isbn=978-1-608-68218-8|pages=30, 31}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Linoln Taiz|author2=Lee Taiz|title=Flora Unveiled: The Discovery and Denial of Sex in Plants|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PByhDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT387&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj3__z5_pjRAhXCsY8KHQLHCj0Q6AEIODAF#v=onepage&f=false|date=7 December 2016|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-190-62773-7|page=387}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=David Leeming|author2=Christopher Fee|title=The Goddess: Myths of the Great Mother|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kjO6CwAAQBAJ&pg=PT76&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi53vaL8pjRAhUJsI8KHaZ7DuAQ6AEIPTAG#v=onepage&f=false|year=1994|publisher=]|isbn=978-1-780-23538-7|page=76}}</ref> The word is akin to ], which was the name of the wife of Semitic deity ].<ref name=sykes>{{cite book|author1=Egerton Sykes|author2=Patricia Turner |title=Encyclopedia of Ancient Deities|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pa7KAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA8|date=4 February 2014|publisher= Routledge|page=7, 8, 63}}</ref> Al-‘Uzzá was meanwhile associated with the Mesopotamian goddesses Nanai, ] and ].<ref>{{cite book|author1=Linoln Taiz|author2=Lee Taiz|title=Flora Unveiled: The Discovery and Denial of Sex in Plants|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PByhDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT387&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj3__z5_pjRAhXCsY8KHQLHCj0Q6AEIODAF#v=onepage&f=false|date=7 December 2016|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-190-62773-7|page=387}}</ref> Manat was apparently associated with the Greek goddess ]. A similar word Menītu/Menūtu was used as a title for Ishtar.<ref>{{cite book|author=John F. Healey|title=The Religion of the Nabataeans: A Conspectus|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=coso-V3gCEAC&pg=PA135|year=2014|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-9-004-10754-0|pages=135}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Karel van der Toorn|author2=Bob Becking|author3=Pieter Willem van der Horst|title=Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-&pg=PA568|year=1999|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing|isbn=978-0-802-82491-2|pages=568}}</ref>
The worship of sacred stones constituted one of the most important practices of the ], including ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last1=Hirsch |first1=Emil G. |last2=Benzinger |first2=Immanuel |author1-link=Emil G. Hirsch |url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/14059-stone-and-stone-worship#anchor2 |title=Stone and Stone-Worship: Semitic Stone-Worship |encyclopedia=] |publisher=] |year=1906 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121031105537/http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/14059-stone-and-stone-worship |archive-date=31 October 2012 |url-status=live |access-date=21 November 2020 |quote=The worship of sacred stones constituted one of the most general and ancient forms of religion; but among no other people was this worship so important as among the ]. The religion of the nomads of ] and ] was summarized by ] in the single statement, "The Arabs worship the stone," and all the data afforded by Arabian authors regarding the pre-Islamitic faith confirm his words. The sacred stone ("nuṣb"; plural, "anṣab") is a characteristic and indispensable feature in an ancient Arabian place of worship. When the Arabs offered ] the blood was smeared on the sacred stones, and in the case of offerings of oil the stones were anointed (comp. Gen. xxviii. 18, xxxi. 13). The same statement holds true of the Greco-Roman cult, although the ], on the other hand, is caressed and kissed by the worshipers. In the course of time, however, the altar and the sacred stone were differentiated, and stones of this character were erected around the altar. Among both ] and ] the maẓẓebah was separated from the altar, which thus became the place for the burning of the victim as well as for the shedding of its blood. That the altar was a development from the sacred stone is clearly shown by the fact that, in accordance with ancient custom, hewn stones might not be used in its construction.}}</ref> ]s of a deity were most often an unworked stone block.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=183}} The most common name for these stone blocks was derived from the Semitic ''nsb'' ("to be stood upright"), but other names were used, such as ] {{transl|ar|masgida}} ("place of prostration") and ] {{transl|ar|duwar}} ("object of circumambulation", this term often occurs in ]).{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=185}} These god-stones were usually a free-standing slab, but Nabataean god-stones are usually carved directly on the rock face.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=185}} Facial features may be incised on the stone (especially in Nabataea), or astral symbols (especially in South Arabia).{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=185}} Under Greco-Roman influence, an anthropomorphic statue might be used instead.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=183}}


The ''Book of Idols'' describes two types of statues: idols (''sanam'') and images (''wathan'').{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|pp=12-13}} If a statue were made of wood, gold, or silver, after a human form, it would be an idol, but if the statue were made of stone, it would be an image.{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|pp=12-13}}
===Mecca===


Representation of deities in animal-form was common in South Arabia, such as the god Sayin from Hadhramaut, who was represented as either an eagle fighting a serpent or a bull.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=90}}] temple in ].|alt=|left]]
====The Kaaba====
The ], whose environs were regarded as sacred (''haram''), became a national shrine under the custodianship of the ], the chief tribe of Mecca, which made the Hejaz the most important religious area in north Arabia.<ref name="Zeitlin33-34">{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v_seJ21M0UoC&pg=PT38&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiZoNC9hKLJAhUjhqYKHeS2CnQQ6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&f=false|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|pages=33–34}}</ref> Its role was solidified by a confrontation with the Christian king ], who controlled much of Arabia from a seat of power in Yemen in the middle of the sixth century.<ref name="Robin286">{{cite book|author=Christian Julien Robin|title=Arabia and Ethiopia. In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GKRybwb17WMC&pg=PA286|year=2012|publisher=OUP USA|pages=286–287}}</ref> Abraha had recently constructed a splendid church in ], and he wanted to make that city a major center of pilgrimage, but Mecca's Kaaba presented a challenge to his plan.<ref name="Robin286"/> Abraha found a pretext, presented by different sources alternatively as pollution of the church by a tribe allied to the Meccans or as an attack on Abraha's grandson in ] by a Meccan party.<ref name="Robin286"/> The defeat of the army he assembled to conquer Mecca is recounted with ] by the Islamic tradition and is also alluded to in the Quran and pre-Islamic poetry.<ref name="Robin286"/> After the battle, which probably occurred around 565, the Quraysh became a dominant force in western Arabia, receiving the title "God's people" (''ahl Allah'') according to Islamic sources, and formed the cult association of ''ḥums'', which tied members of many tribes in western Arabia to the Kaaba.<ref name="Robin286"/>


=== Sacred places ===
]
Sacred places were known as ''hima'', ''haram'' or ''mahram'', and within these places, all living things were considered inviolable and violence was forbidden.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=157}} In most of Arabia, these places would take the form of open-air sanctuaries, with distinguishing natural features such as springs and forests.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=157}} Cities would contain temples, enclosing the sacred area with walls, and featuring ornate structures.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=158}}


===Priesthood and sacred offices===
According to tradition, the Kaaba was a cube-like, originally roofless structure housing a ] venerated as a ].<ref name="Zeitlin33-34"/> The sanctuary was dedicated to Hubal ({{lang-ar|هبل}}), who, according to some sources, was worshiped as the greatest of the 360 idols the Kaaba contained, which probably represented the days of the year.<ref name="armstrong"/> ] and ] both report that the human-shaped idol of Hubal made of precious stone came into possession of the Quraysh with its right hand broken off and that the Quraysh made a hand of gold to replace it.<ref>{{cite book|author=Francis E. Peters|title=Muhammad and the Origins of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0OrCo4VyvGkC&pg=PA108|year=1994|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0-7914-1875-8|pages=108–109}}</ref> A soothsayer performed divination in the shrine by drawing ritual arrows,<ref name="Zeitlin33-34"/> and vows and sacrifices were made to assure success.<ref name="Zeitlin30">{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sbhJJ7AOLL4C&pg=PA30|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|page=30}}</ref> ] argues that relations with deities and fetishes in pre-Islamic Mecca were maintained chiefly on the basis of bargaining, where favors were expected in return for offerings.<ref name="Zeitlin30"/> A deity's or oracle's failure to provide the desired response was sometimes met with anger.<ref name="Zeitlin30"/>
Sacred areas often had a guardian or a performer of cultic rites.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=159}} These officials were thought to tend the area, receive offerings, and perform divination.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=159}} They are known by many names, probably based on cultural-linguistic preference: {{transl|ar|afkal}} was used in the Hejaz, ''kâhin'' was used in the ]-]-{{ill|Hisma region|ar|صحراء حسمى}}, and ''kumrâ'' was used in Aramaic-influenced areas.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=159}} In South Arabia, ''rs<sup>2</sup>w'' and ''<nowiki/>'fkl'' were used to refer to priests, and other words include ''qyn'' ("administrator") and ''mrtd'' ("consecrated to a particular divinity").{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=89}} A more specialized staff is thought to have existed in major sanctuaries.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=159}}


====Allah and Hubal==== === Pilgrimages ===
Pre-Islamic Arabia was a region of many pilgrimage rituals beyond that of ].{{Sfn|Munt|2015}} Many words in Arabian languages were used to describe pilgrimage, including the Semitic ''ḥgg''.{{Sfn|Maraqten|2021|p=433–435}} The most important pilgrimage ritual in ] was the one to the ], dedicated to the god ], which was associated with a ''ḥaram'' or ''maḥram''.{{Sfn|Maraqten|2015}}{{Sfn|Robin|2018}} A number of other South Arabian deities were also associated with special sanctuaries and pilgrimages, including ], ], Siyan, and several more.{{Sfn|Maraqten|2021|p=435–436}}
Different theories have been proposed regarding the role of Allah in Meccan religion. According to one hypothesis, which goes back to ], Allah (the supreme deity of the tribal federation around Quraysh) was a designation that consecrated the superiority of Hubal (the supreme deity of Quraysh) over the other gods.<ref name="Robin304">{{cite book|author=Christian Julien Robin|title=Arabia and Ethiopia. In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GKRybwb17WMC&pg=PA304|year=2012|publisher=OUP USA|pages=304–305}}</ref> However, there is also evidence that Allah and Hubal were two distinct deities.<ref name="Robin304"/> According to that hypothesis, the Kaaba was first consecrated to a supreme deity named Allah and then hosted the pantheon of Quraysh after their conquest of Mecca, about a century before the time of Muhammad.<ref name="Robin304"/> Some inscriptions seem to indicate the use of Allah as a name of a polytheist deity centuries earlier, but we know nothing precise about this use.<ref name="Robin304"/> Some scholars have suggested that Allah may have represented a remote creator god who was gradually eclipsed by more particularized local deities.<ref name="Peterson2007"/> There is disagreement on whether Allah played a major role in the Meccan religious cult.<ref name=berkey42/><ref name= Peters107>{{cite book|author=Francis E. Peters|title=Muhammad and the Origins of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0OrCo4VyvGkC&pg=PA107|year=1994|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0-7914-1875-8|page=107}}</ref> No iconic representation of Allah is known to have existed.<ref name= Peters107/><ref name="Zeitlin33">{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sbhJJ7AOLL4C|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|pages=33}}</ref>


Pilgrimages to sacred places would be made at certain times of the year.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=161}} Pilgrim fairs of central and northern Arabia took place in specific months designated as violence-free,{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=161}} allowing several activities to flourish, such as trade, though in some places only exchange was permitted.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=162}}
====Goddesses====
The three chief ]es of Meccan religion were ], ], and ], who were called the daughters of Allah.<ref name=berkey42/><ref name= Robinson/><ref name= Peters/><ref name=peterson46/> Egerton Sykes meanwhile states that Al-lāt was the female counterpart of Allah while Uzza was a name given by ] to the planet Venus.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Egerton Sykes|author2=Patricia Turner |title=Encyclopedia of Ancient Deities|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pa7KAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA8|date=4 February 2014|publisher= Routledge|page=7, 8}}</ref>


==== South Arabian pilgrimages ====
Allāt ({{lang-ar|اللات}}) or Al-lāt was worshipped throughout the ancient Near East with various associations.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Charles Russell Coulter |author2=Patricia Turner |title=Encyclopedia of Ancient Deities|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sEIngqiKOugC&pg=PA37|date=Jul 4, 2013|publisher= Routledge|page=37}}</ref> ] in the 5th century BC identifies ''Alilat'' ({{lang-gr|Ἀλιλάτ}})<ref>{{cite book|author=Herodotus|title=The Histories|url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Hdt.+1.131.3&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0125|publisher=Perseus Digital Library}} 1.131.3</ref> as the Arabic name for ] (and, in another passage, for ]),<ref>{{cite book|author1=Michel Mouton |author2=Stephan G. Schmid |title=Men on the Rocks: The Formation of Nabataean Petra|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bpWGAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA338|date=2014|publisher=Logos Verlag Berlin GmbH|page=338}}</ref> which is strong evidence for worship of Allāt in Arabia at that early date.<ref>{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sbhJJ7AOLL4C&pg=PA44|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|page=44}}</ref> According to the Book of Idols, her idol and shrine stood in ].<ref name="idols">{{cite book|author=Ibn al-Kalbi|title=Book of Idols|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QSvWCgAAQBAJ|date=2015|publisher= Princeton University Press}}</ref> Al-‘Uzzá ({{lang-ar|العزى}}) "The Mightiest" was a fertility goddess<ref>{{cite web|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=4Kis0gWNQ5QC&pg=PA8|title= In Ishmael's House: A History of Jews in Muslim Land|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 2010|page= 8|isbn= 9780486150567}}</ref> or possibly a goddess of love.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=NwGhnDHV6NsC&pg=PA122|title=Jealous Gods and Chosen People : The Mythology of the Middle East|author=David Leeming|publisher= Oxford University Press|date=Jan 15, 2004|page=122}}</ref> Her principal shrine was in Nakhla, a day's journey from Mecca.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=focLrox-frUC&pg=PA206|title=The New Encyclopedia of Islam|author1=Cyril Glassé |author2=Huston Smith |publisher=Rowman Altamira|date= 2003 |page=206}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=csUfJi9CxPEC&pg=PA585&lpg=PA585&source=bl&ots=NALT8zA5dX&sig=rr3neYtF6H-eUhN_IvXzA05H-D8&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjfpaeYr6TJAhWFdKYKHc6nCVsQ6AEIKDAF#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Rivers of Paradise: Moses, Buddha, Confucius, Jesus, and Muhammad as Religious Founders|author1=David Noel Freedman |author2=Michael J. McClymond |publisher= ]|year= 2000|page= 585|isbn= 9780802829573}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title= Studies on Arabia in Honour of G. Felix|author1=John F. Healey |author2=Venetia Porter |publisher= ]|year= 2003|page= 107|isbn= 9780198510642}}</ref> Manāt ({{lang-ar|مناة}}) was the goddess of fate. According to the Book of Idols, an idol of Manāt was erected on the seashore between ] and Mecca.<ref name="idols"/> Inhabitants of several areas venerated Manāt, performing sacrifices before her idol, and pilgrimages of some were not considered completed until they visited Manāt and shaved their heads.<ref name="idols"/>
The most important pilgrimage in ] was probably the pilgrimage of ] at ], performed in the month of dhu-Abhi (roughly in July).{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=89}} Two references attest the pilgrimage of Almaqah dhu-Hirran at 'Amran. The pilgrimage of ] Riyam took place in Mount Tur'at and the Zabyan temple at Hadaqan, while the pilgrimage of Dhu-Samawi, the god of the Amir tribe, took place in Yathill.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=89}} Aside from Sabaean pilgrimages, the pilgrimage of Sayin took place at Shabwa.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=89}}{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=161}}


====Other gods==== ==== Meccan pilgrimage ====
The pilgrimage of Mecca involved the stations of ], ], ] and central Mecca that included ] as well as the Kaaba. Pilgrims at the first two stations performed ''wuquf'' or standing in adoration. At Mina, animals were sacrificed. The procession from Arafat to Muzdalifah, and from Mina to Mecca, in a pre-reserved route towards idols or an idol, was termed {{transl|ar|ijaza}} and {{transl|ar|ifada}}, with the latter taking place before sunset. At Jabal Quzah, fires were started during the sacred month.{{Sfn|al-Azmeh|2017|p=198}}
] ({{lang-ar|مناف}}) was another Meccan god whose idol was caressed by women. Menstruating women were forbidden from coming near his idol.{{refn|group=note|T. Fahd notes that the practice of women touching idols as a token of blessing except during menstruation was common to all idols, according to the available report from Ibn Al-Kalbi.<ref>T. Fahd. Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd ed, Brill, "Manaf"</ref>}} The Meccans were accustomed to name their children ''Abd Manaf''. Muhammad's great-great-grandfather's name was ] which means "slave of Manaf".<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=QSvWCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA27&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjFsNX5yqbJAhUKjo4KHdmIDpAQ6AEIQDAH#v=onepage&q&f=false|title= Book of Idols|author= ] (translated by Nabith Amin Faris)|publisher= ]|year= 2015|pages= 27, 28|isbn= 9781400876792}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=
https://books.google.com/books?id=TpQVOU8udwUC&pg=PA280&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi4j__Sy6bJAhWVj44KHWW8CnMQ6AEIITAB#v=onepage&f=false|title= Journey to the End of Islam|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 2009|page= 280|isbn= 9781593762469}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title= The Encyclopaedia of Middle Eastern Mythology and Religion|first= Jan |last=Knappert|authorlink=Jan Knappert|publisher= Element|year= 1993|page= 195|isbn= 9781852304270}}</ref> He is thought by some scholars to be a ].<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=sEIngqiKOugC&pg=PA305&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwivva_IxqbJAhXBI44KHW0HDN8Q6AEIJjAC#v=onepage&f=false|title= Encyclopaedia of Ancient Deities|author1=Charles Russel Coulter |author2=Patricia Turner |publisher= ]|page= 305|isbn= 9781135963903}}</ref>


Nearby the Kaaba was located the ] which was later called '']''; a place called ''al-Ḥigr'' which ] takes to be reserved for consecrated animals, basing his argument on a Sabaean inscription mentioning a place called ''mḥgr'' which was reserved for animals; and the ]. Both Safa and Marwa were adjacent to two sacrificial hills, one called Muṭ'im al Ṭayr and another Mujāwir al-Riḥ which was a pathway to ] from where the ] is reported to have originated.{{Sfn|al-Azmeh|2017|p=199}}
The pantheon of the Quraysh was not identical with that of the tribes who entered into various cult and commercial associations with them, especially that of the ''hums''.<ref name="Robin303">{{cite book|author=Christian Julien Robin|title=Arabia and Ethiopia. In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GKRybwb17WMC&pg=PA303|year=2012|publisher=OUP USA|pages=303–304}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Francis E. Peters|title=Muhammad and the Origins of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0OrCo4VyvGkC&pg=PA106|year=1994|publisher=SUNY Press|page=106}}</ref> Christian Julien Robin argues that the former was composed principally of idols that were in the sanctuary of Mecca, including Hubal and Manaf, while the pantheon of the associations was superimposed on it, and its principal deities included the three goddesses, who had neither idols nor a shrine in that city.<ref name="Robin303"/>


====Political and religious developments==== ==== Cult associations ====
Meccan pilgrimages differed according to the rites of different cult associations, in which individuals and groups joined for religious purposes. The ''Ḥilla'' association performed the '']'' in autumn season while the ''Ṭuls'' and ''Ḥums'' performed the '']'' in spring.{{Sfn|al-Azmeh|2017|p=201}}
The second half of the sixth century was a period of political disorder in Arabia and communication routes were no longer secure.<ref>{{cite book|author=Christian Julien Robin|title=Arabia and Ethiopia. In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GKRybwb17WMC&pg=PA297|year=2012|publisher=OUP USA|pages=297–299}}</ref> Religious divisions were an important cause of the crisis.<ref name="Robin302">{{cite book|author=Christian Julien Robin|title=Arabia and Ethiopia. In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GKRybwb17WMC&pg=PA302|year=2012|publisher=OUP USA|pages=302}}</ref> Judaism became the dominant religion in Yemen while Christianity took root in the Persian Gulf area.<ref name="Robin302"/> In line with the broader trends of the ancient world, Arabia yearned for a more spiritual form of religion and began believing in afterlife, while the choice of religion increasingly became a personal rather than communal choice.<ref name="Robin302"/> While many were reluctant to convert to a foreign faith, those faiths provided intellectual and spiritual reference points, and the old pagan vocabulary of Arabic began to be replaced by Jewish and Christian loanwords from Aramaic everywhere, including Mecca.<ref name="Robin302"/> The distribution of pagan temples supports ]'s argument that Arabian polytheism was marginalized in the region and already dying in Mecca on the eve of Islam.<ref name="Robin302"/> The practice of polytheistic cults was increasingly limited to the steppe and the desert, and in ], which included two tribes with polytheistic majority, the absence of a public pagan temple in the town or its immediate neighborhood indicates that polytheism was confined to the private sphere.<ref name="Robin302"/> Looking at the text of Quran itself, Hawting has also argued that the criticism of idolators and polytheists contained in Quran is in fact a hyperbolic reference to other monotheists, in particular the Arab Jews and Arab Christians, whose religious beliefs were considered imperfect.<ref name=Donner33/><ref name=Hawting1>{{citation |last=Hawting |first=G. R. |title=The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam: From Polemic to History |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mh134wJLwkIC&pg=PA1 |year=1999 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-139-42635-0 |p=1}}</ref><ref>{{citation |last1=Bernheimer |first1=Teresa |first2=Andrew |last2=Rippin |title=Preface: Gerald Hawting |journal=Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies |volume=78 |number=01 |year=2015 |pp=1–4 |DOI=10.1017/S0041977X14001086}}</ref> According to some traditions, the Kaaba contained no statues, but its interior was decorated with images of Mary and Jesus, of prophets, angels, and trees.<ref name="Robin304"/>


The ''Ḥums'' were the Quraysh, ], ] and ]. They did not perform the pilgrimage outside the zone of Mecca's ], thus excluding Mount Arafat. They also developed certain dietary and cultural restrictions.{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=96}} According to ''Kitab al-Muhabbar'', the ''Ḥilla'' denoted most of the ], ], ], Qūḍa'ah, ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ]. The ''Ṭuls'' comprised the tribes of Yemen and Hadramaut, ], Ujayb and Īyād. The ''Basl'' recognised at least eight months of the calendar as holy. There was also another group which did not recognize the sanctity of Mecca's ] or holy months, unlike the other four.{{Sfn|Wheatley|2001|p=366}}
To counter the effects of anarchy, the institution of sacred months during which every act of violence was prohibited, was reestablished.<ref name="Robin301">{{cite book|author=Christian Julien Robin|title=Arabia and Ethiopia. In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GKRybwb17WMC&pg=PA301|year=2012|publisher=OUP USA|page=301}}</ref> During those months, it was possible to participate in pilgrimages and fairs without danger.<ref name="Robin301"/> The Quraysh upheld the principle of two annual truces, one of one month and the second of three months, which conferred a sacred character to the Meccan sanctuary.<ref name="Robin301"/> The cult association of ''hums'', in which individuals and groups partook in the same rites, was primarily religious, but it also had important economic consequences.<ref name="Robin301"/> Although, as ] has shown, Mecca could not compare with the great centers of caravan trade on the eve of Islam, it was probably one of the most prosperous and secure cities of the peninsula, since, unlike many of them, it did not have surrounding walls.<ref name="Robin301"/> Pilgrimage to Mecca was a popular custom.<ref name="Zeitlin49">{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sbhJJ7AOLL4C&pg=PA30|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|page=49}}</ref> Some Islamic rituals, including processions around the Kaaba and between the hills of al-Safa and Marwa, as well as the salutation "we are here, O Allah, we are here" repeated on approaching the Kaaba are believed to have antedated Islam.<ref name="Zeitlin49"/> Spring water acquired a sacred character in Arabia early on and Islamic sources state that the ] became holy long before the Islamic era.<ref name="Zeitlin31">{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sbhJJ7AOLL4C&pg=PA31|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|page=31}}</ref>


=== Astrology and divination ===
===South Arabia===
The ancient Arabs that inhabited the ] ] used to profess a widespread belief in ] (''ḳadar'') alongside a fearful consideration for the sky and the stars, which they held to be ultimately responsible for every phenomenon that occurs on Earth and for the destiny of humankind.<ref name="Al-Abbasi 2020">{{cite journal |last=al-Abbasi |first=Abeer Abdullah |date=August 2020 |title=The Arabsʾ Visions of the Upper Realm |url=https://archiv.ub.uni-marburg.de/ep/0004/article/view/8301/8105 |journal=] |publisher=] |volume=22 |issue=2 |pages=1–28 |doi=10.17192/mjr.2020.22.8301 |issn=1612-2941 |access-date=23 May 2022}}</ref> Accordingly, they shaped their entire lives in accordance with their ].<ref name="Al-Abbasi 2020"/>
] priestess raising her hand to intercede with the ] on behalf of a donor. Probably first century.]]


In South Arabia, ]s were regarded as ''ms’l'', or "a place of asking", and that deities interacted by ''hr’yhw'' ("making them see") a vision, a dream, or even direct interaction.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=153}} Otherwise deities interacted indirectly through a medium.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=154}}
The civilizations of ] had the most developed pantheon in the Arabian peninsula.<ref>{{cite book|author=Robert G. Hoyland|title=Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XaiGAgAAQBAJ|page= 140|date=11 September 2002|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-64634-0}}</ref> Evidence from surviving inscriptions suggests that each of the southern kingdoms of ], ], ], ] and ] had its own pantheon of three to five deities, the major deity always being a god.<ref name=Robin>{{cite book|editor-first=Greg|editor-last= Fisher|first=Christian Julien|last=Robin|chapter=Before Himyar: Epigraphic evidence|title=Arabs and Empire Before Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hU1zCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA97|date=30 July 2015|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-965452-9|pages=97–98}}</ref> For example, the pantheon of Saba comprised ], the major deity, together with ], ], Himyam, and ]<ref name=Robin/> The main god in Ma'in and Himyar was Athtar, in Qataban it was ], and in Hadhramaut it was ].<ref name=Robin/> Amm was a ] and was associated with the weather, especially lightning.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=P7e5CAAAQBAJ&pg=PT20&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiV6KKCnaLJAhUGIKYKHeX7BBA4ChDoAQglMAI#v=onepage&f=false|title= A Dictionary of Gods and Goddesses, Devils and Demons|author= Manfred Lurker|publisher= ]|year= 2015|page= 20|isbn= 9781136106286}}</ref>


There were three methods of chance-based divination attested in pre-Islamic Arabia; two of these methods, making marks in the sand or on rocks and throwing pebbles are poorly attested.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=155}} The other method, the practice of randomly selecting an arrow with instructions, was widely attested and was common throughout Arabia.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=155}} A simple form of this practice was reportedly performed before the image of ] by a certain man, sometimes said to be the Kindite poet ] according to ].{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=155-156}}{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=30}} A more elaborate form of the ritual was performed in before the image of ].{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=156}} This form of divination was also attested in ], evidenced by an honorific inscription in the temple of ].{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=156}}
Each kingdom's central temple was the focus of worship for the main god and would be the destination for an annual pilgrimage, with regional temples dedicated to a local manifestation of the main god.<ref name=Robin/> Other beings worshipped included local deities or deities dedicated to specific functions as well as deified ancestors.<ref name=Robin/>


=== Offerings and ritual sacrifice ===
Other deities included:
] ]s from ], depicting a hunter, ], a ] and a rider on horseback. Camels were among the sacrificial animals in pre-Islamic Arabia.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=165}}]]
* ] ({{lang-ar|ذو الخلصة}}) was an ] god in ] worshipped by the Bajila and Khatham tribes. He was venerated in the form of a white stone. His sanctuary known by the same name was called the Kaaba of Yemen and rivaled the Kaaba of Mecca.<ref name=b3>{{cite book| title= Kinship and Marriage in Early Arabia|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=VHufEXRlR6EC&pg=PA297 | first= William|last= Robertson Smith|year= 2010|publisher= Forgotten Books| isbn= 978-1-4400-8379-2| page = 297}}</ref><ref name=b2>{{cite book|title=Who Was Jesus?: Conspiracy in Jerusalem|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=yWzcsddrx_wC&pg=PA146 | first= Kamal|last= S. Salibi|year= 2007|publisher= Tauris Parke Paperbacks|isbn= 978-1-8451-1314-8 | page = 146}}</ref><ref name= b4>{{cite book|title= The life of Mahomet | url= https://books.google.com/books?id=YTwBAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA219| first = William | last= Muir | year= August 1878|publisher=Kessinger Publishing |page=219}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=When the Moon Split|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=xJL6gxPUV4EC&pg=PA296 | first=Saifur Rahman Al|last=Mubarakpuri |year=2002|publisher=DarusSalam|isbn=978-9960-897-28-8|page= 296}}</ref><ref name= b5>{{cite book |title= The new encyclopedia of Islam| url= https://books.google.com/books?id=focLrox-frUC&pg=PA251| first= Cyril| last= Glasse | year = 28 Jan 2003 | publisher = AltaMira Press | place = US |isbn=978-0-7591-0190-6|page=251}}</ref>
The most common offerings were animals, crops, food, liquids, inscribed metal plaques or stone tablets, aromatics, edifices and manufactured objects.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=163}} Camel-herding Arabs would devote some of their beasts to certain deities. The beasts would have their ears slit and would be left to pasture without a herdsman, allowing them to die a natural death.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=163}}
* ] ({{lang-ar|تألب}}) was a god worshipped in southern Arabia, particularly in Saba and also a lunar deity. His ] was consulted for advice. A shrine dedicated to him existed in Riyam.<ref>{{cite web|jstor=609235|title=Notes and Communications}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=drAzAQAAIAAJ&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjL38iyqaLJAhWkPKYKHQkCD6sQ6AEIODAH|title= Queen of Sheba: treasures from ancient Yemen|author= St. John Simpson|publisher= ]|year= 2002|pages= 162, 163|isbn= 9780714111513}}</ref>
* ] ({{lang-ar|ود}}) was a lunar deity in ]. His name is interpreted to mean "love". Snakes were associated with him. The Minaean colonists living in Deran (modern day ]) during the rule of ]ites worshipped Wadd as well. A temple of Wadd evidently existed in Dedan. There is evidence from Minaean inscriptions of the presence of ]s in the temple of Wadd who according to some scholars were either priests or cult servants who could later be promoted to higher positions. The tribe of ] worshipped Wadd in the form of a male and is said to have represented heaven.<ref>{{cite book|title= Encyclopaedia of the Qurʼān: Si-Z|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 2005|page= 86|isbn= 9789004123564}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=O84eYLVHvB0C&pg=PA192&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiK3bSjw6HJAhWBs5QKHSa5CDwQ6AEIGzAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= Dictionary of Islam|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 1995|page= 192|isbn= 9788120606722}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=XL-uCgAAQBAJ&pg=PT179&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjoyPjBwqHJAhXBKJQKHbkIDWgQ6AEIGzAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= Discovering Lehi|author= ], Hope A. Hilton|publisher= ]|year= 1996|page= 179|isbn= 9781462126385}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=gLUEOJ-LGc0C&pg=PA120&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiL1OKJxaHJAhWBmZQKHdX2B30Q6AEIGzAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Religious Life of Nabataea|author= Peter Alpass|publisher= ]|year= 2003|page= 120|isbn= 9789004216235}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=syATJKcx5A0C&pg=PA270&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj_mdGV7aHJAhUjF6YKHUvuBdYQ6AEIGzAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= Ancient Kingdoms of West Africa: African-centred and Canaanite-Israelite Perspective; a Collection of Published and Unpublished studies in English and French|author= Dierk Lange|publisher= Verlag J. H. Röll GmbH|year= 2004|page= 9783897541153}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=eeUgC-39WvcC&pg=PA190&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjHo5n6xaHJAhXJk5QKHe56CYQQ6AEIJzAC#v=onepage&f=false|title= Federico Garcia Lorca and the Culture of Male Homosexuality|author= Ángel Sahuquillo|publisher= ]|year= 2007|page= 190|isbn= 9780786428977}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=QSvWCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA9&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjgst6I3qHJAhXFq6YKHYDUCmAQ6AEIMTAE#v=onepage&f=false|title= Book of Idols|author= ] (translated by Nabith Amin Faris)|publisher= ]|year= 2015|page= 9|isbn= 9781400876792}}</ref>
* ] was a female ], possibly related to the ] ] and the broader middle-eastern ]. She was the dominant goddess of the ], and possibly still revered in some form by the ] for several centuries afterward.<ref>J. F. Breton (Trans. Albert LaFarge), Arabia Felix From The Time Of The Queen Of Sheba, Eighth Century B.C. To First Century A.D., 1998, University of Notre Dame Press: Notre Dame (IN), pp. 119-120.</ref><ref>Julian Baldick (1998). Black God. Syracuse University Press. p. 20. ISBN 0815605226.</ref><ref>Merriam-Webster, Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions, 1999 - 1181 páginas</ref><ref>J. Ryckmans, "South Arabia, Religion Of", in D. N. Freedman (Editor-in-Chief), The Anchor Bible Dictionary, 1992, Volume 6, op. cit., p. 172</ref>


Pre-Islamic Arabians, especially pastoralist tribes, sacrificed animals as an offering to a deity.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=165}} This type of offering was common and involved domestic animals such as ]s, ] and ], while ] and ] were rarely or never mentioned. Sacrifice rites were not tied to a particular location though they were usually practiced in sacred places.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=165}} Sacrifice rites could be performed by the devotee, though according to Hoyland, women were probably not allowed.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=166}} The victim's blood, according to pre-Islamic Arabic poetry and certain South Arabian inscriptions, was also 'poured out' on the altar stone, thus forming a bond between the human and the deity.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=166}} According to Muslim sources, most sacrifices were concluded with communal feasts.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=166}}
===Nabateans===


In South Arabia, beginning with the Christian era, or perhaps a short while before, statuettes were presented before the deity, known as {{transl|ar|slm}} (male) or {{transl|ar|slmt}} (female).{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=89}}
The main deity of the ] in northern Arabia was ] ({{lang-ar|ذو الشرى}}).<ref name="Ball2002">{{cite book|author=Warwick Ball|title=Rome in the East: The Transformation of an Empire|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qQKIAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA67|date=4 January 2002|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-82387-1|pages=67–68}}</ref> He was the only god known for certain to have been worshipped throughout Nabatea and was associated with the Greek gods ] and ]. The meaning of his name is not clear as there are no definite interpretations of it. ] speculated his name to mean "The lord of mountain range]]."<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=FmTnBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA263&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjZw9ejraLJAhUjhqYKHeS2CnQQ6AEIHzAB#v=onepage&f=false|title= Redifining Dionysos|editor= Alberto Bernabé |editor2=Miguel Herrero de Jáuregui |editor3=Ana Isabel Jiménez San Cristóbal |editor4=Raquel Martín Hernández|publisher= ]|year= 2013|isbn= 9783110301328}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=l4DZAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA230&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjZw9ejraLJAhUjhqYKHeS2CnQQ6AEIGjAA|title= Travel and Religion in Antiquity|author= Philip A. Harland|publisher= ]|year= 2011|page= 230|isbn= 9781554582402}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=coso-V3gCEAC&pg=PA82&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiQyo6ZsKLJAhUkW6YKHYetD0MQ6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Religion of the Nabataeans: A Conspectus|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 2001|pages= 82, 92, 100|isbn= 9789004107540}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title= City and Sanctuary: Religion and Architecture in the Roman Near East|author= Peter Richardson|publisher= ]|pages= 67, 68|year= 2002|isbn= 9780334028840}}</ref> Dushara was represented in the form of a stone cube or more generally in the form of cuboid architecture which can be seen throughout the remains of the Nabateans' principal city, ].<ref name="Ball2002"/> ] has noted a possible connection with the Kaaba and has commented that, as a result, "the Islamic abstract concept of deity certainly owes a debt to Nabatean religion".<ref name="Ball2002"/>
Human sacrifice was sometimes carried out in Arabia. The victims were generally prisoners of war, who represented the god's part of the victory in booty, although other forms might have existed.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=165}}


Blood sacrifice was definitely practiced in South Arabia, but few allusions to the practice are known, apart from some Minaean inscriptions.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=89}}
Al-ʿUzzá was worshipped in Nabataea where she had been adopted alongside Dushara as the presiding goddess at ], the Nabataean capital, where she assumed attributes of ], ], and ]. She was the protectress of the city and also of love and immortality. Despite the same name shared between the al-ʿUzzá of Nabataea and that of Mecca and other places, it is unclear whether there is any continuity of worship or identity between them.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=FcAoBq4_EnEC&pg=PA91&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwisz4DCwqLJAhUDMKYKHcOzAUgQ6AEIPDAG#v=onepage&f=false|title= Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans|author= Jane Taylor|publisher=]|year=2001|isbn= 9781860645082|pages= 91, 130}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title= The World of the Nabataeans: Volume 2 of the International Conference, The World of the Herods and the Nabataeans, Held at the British Museum, 17-19 April 2001|author= Konstantinos D. Politis|publisher= ]|year= 2007|pages= 67, 68|isbn= 9783515088169}}</ref><ref name=FrankArabic>{{cite web|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=g_IJCIT8CdAC&pg=PA89&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi87cXtxqLJAhXHFqYKHdkxDaIQ6AEIOjAG#v=onepage&f=false|title= Arabic Theology, Arabic Philosophy: From the Many to the One|author1=Richard M. Frank |author2=James Edward Montgomery |publisher= ]|year= 2007|pages= 89|isbn= 9789042917781}}</ref>


=== Monotheism ===
], ]]]
{{Main|Monotheism in pre-Islamic Arabia}}
] ({{lang-ar|القوم}}) or ''Shayʾ al-Qawm'' ("he who accompanies/leads the people"), another Nabatean god was the guardian of ]. He was the only truly nomadic god of the Nabataean religion. According to Nabataean inscription, he did not drink wine.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=FcAoBq4_EnEC&pg=PA126&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi9--L_l6LJAhVGMKYKHePcCnUQ6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans|author= Jane Taylor|publisher= ]|year= 2001|page= 126|isbn= 9781860645082}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=m5Z9BgAAQBAJ&pg=PA88&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi36MWRmqLJAhVDW6YKHXJaC0QQ6AEIPDAG#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Pagan God: Popular Religion in the Greco-Roman Near East|author= Javier Teixidor|publisher= ]|year= 2015|page= 88|isbn= 9781400871391}}</ref>
Pre-Islamic Arabia practiced various forms of polytheistic religion until the ], when monotheism was introduced into the region and became largely prevalent by the 6th century, as is attested in texts like the inscriptions from ], ], and the Abd Shams inscription.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Al‐Jallad |first=Ahmad |last2=Sidky |first2=Hythem |date=2022 |title=A Paleo‐Arabic inscription on a route north of Ṭāʾif |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/aae.12203 |journal=Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy |language=en |volume=33 |issue=1 |pages=202–215 |doi=10.1111/aae.12203 |issn=0905-7196}}</ref>


=== Other practices ===
Manat was another Nabatean goddess and was identified with the Greek goddess ]. She was the goddess of fate and justice. Within the Nabataean kingdom, the place she is most often mentioned is ] however there is no direct portrayal of her. In some of the inscriptions, she is linked with Dushara in cursing and fining those who violate the terms of use of the tombs and do not observe the rules, respectively. In two of these inscriptions she is linked with her ''Qaysha'' which according to various interpretations might be referring to another deity or an object.<ref name=Manattauris>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=FcAoBq4_EnEC&pg=PA131&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjIhMXtyqLJAhWCe6YKHZRcC8AQ6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans|author= Jane Taylor|publisher= ]|year= 2001|pages= 131, 133, 217|isbn= 9781860645082}}</ref>
In the Hejaz, menstruating women were not allowed to be near the cult images.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=90}} The area where ]'s images stood was considered out-of-bounds for menstruating women.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=90}} This was reportedly the same with ].{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=27}} According to the ''Book of Idols'', this rule applied to all the "idols".{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=90}} This was also the case in South Arabia, as attested in a South Arabian inscription from al-Jawf.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=90}}


Sexual intercourse in temples was prohibited, as attested in two South Arabian inscriptions.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=90}} One legend concerning Isaf and Na'ila, when two lovers made love in the Kaaba and were petrified, joining the idols in the Kaaba, echoes this prohibition.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=90}}
Al-lat was another Nabatean goddess who was probably identified with ] and ]. An image of her containing elements of both human and block form exists at 'Ain Shellaleh in er-Rumm along with an inscription which describes her as the goddess of ]. Three inscriptions mentioning her exist in ]. However, her name isn't recorded anywhere in Bosra or Petra. Only a single bust of her near the Arched Gate of Petra testifies her existence in the capital. An inscription in Hegra on a tomb mentions her as cursing those who violate the terms of its use.<ref name=BrillNabateans>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=coso-V3gCEAC&pg=PA82&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiQyo6ZsKLJAhUkW6YKHYetD0MQ6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Religion of the Nabataeans: A Conspectus|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 2001|pages= 110, 153|isbn= 9789004107540}}</ref><ref name=TaurisPetra>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=FcAoBq4_EnEC&pg=PA130&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjX48SO0KLJAhWldKYKHUWnBkEQ6AEIIDAB#v=onepage&f=false|title= Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans|author= Jane Taylor|publisher= ]|year= 2001|pages= 130, 131, 162|isbn= 9781860645082}}</ref>


== By geography ==
In the same inscription where Al-lat is mentioned, a deity named ''Hubul'' is also mentioned. Jane Taylor takes this deity to be a god of divination. This is the only place outside South Arabia where a name similar to that of Hubal is mentioned. ] suggests that the Meccan god Hubal may have been of Nabataean origin.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=FcAoBq4_EnEC&pg=PA130&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjX48SO0KLJAhWldKYKHUWnBkEQ6AEIIDAB#v=onepage&f=false|title= Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans|author= Jane Taylor|publisher= ]|year= 2001|page= 162|isbn= 9781860645082}}</ref><ref>''Corpus Inscriptiones Semit.'', vol. II: 198; Jaussen and Savignac, ''Mission Archéologique en Arabie'', I (1907) p. 169f.</ref><ref>Maxime Rodinson, ''Mohammed'', 1961, translated by Anne Carter, 1971, p 39</ref>


=== Eastern Arabia ===
Petra has many "sacred high places" which include altars that have usually been interpreted as places of human sacrifice, although, since the 1960s, an alternative theory that they are "exposure platforms" for placing the corpses of the deceased as part of a funerary ritual has been put forward. However, there is, in fact, little evidence for either proposition.<ref name="Ball2002"/>
], ''Nabu'' (1939). Library of Congress ], Washington, D.C.]]
], 2500 BC]]


The ] civilization, which existed along the Persian Gulf coast and Bahrain until the 6th century BC, worshipped a pair of deities, ] and ].{{Sfn|Crawford|1998|p=79}} It is not known whether these were the only deities in the pantheon or whether there were others.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=142-144}} The discovery of wells at the sites of a Dilmun temple and a shrine suggests that sweet water played an important part in religious practices.{{Sfn|Crawford|1998|p=79}}
===Other northern Arabian cultures===
Religious worship amongst the ], an ancient tribal confederation that was probabably subsumed into Nabatea around the 2nd century AD, was centered around a polytheistic system in which women rose to prominence. Divine images of the gods and goddesses worshipped by Qedarite Arabs, as noted in Assyrian inscriptions, included representations of ], ], ], Dai, Abirillu and Atarquruma. The female guardian of these idols, usually the reigning queen, served as a priestess (''apkallatu'', in Assyrian texts) who communed with the other world.<ref name=Hoylandp132>Hoyland, 2001, pp. 132-133.</ref> Inscriptions in a ] in the region of ] referring to Nuha describe emotions as a gift from him. In addition, they also refer to Ruda being responsible for all things good and bad.<ref name=Hoylandp207>{{citation|title=Arabia and the Arabs: from the Bronze Age to the coming of Islam|first1=Robert G.|last1=Hoyland|edition=Illustrated, reprint|publisher=Routledge|year=2001|page= 207|ISBN=9780415195355}}</ref> There is also evidence that the Qedar worshipped ] to whom the inscription on a silver bowl from a king of Qedar is dedicated.<ref name=Hoylandp63>Hoyland, 2001, p. 63.</ref> In the ], which was passed down orally for centuries before being transcribed c. 500 AD, in tractate ] (folio 5b), it is said that most Qedarites worshiped pagan gods.<ref name=Neusnerp295>Neusner, 2006, p. 295.</ref>


In the subsequent Greco-Roman period, there is evidence that the worship of non-indigenous deities was brought to the region by merchants and visitors.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=142-144}} These included ], a god popular in the Syrian city of ], the Mesopotamian deities ] and ], the Greek deities ] and ] and the west Arabian deities ] and Manat.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=142-144}}
The ], a people referred to in the ] and located in north-western Arabia, may have worshipped ].<ref name="McLaughlin2012">{{cite book|author=John L. McLaughlin|title=The Ancient Near East|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tlFMhesOukAC&pg=PA124|date=1 October 2012|publisher=Abingdon Press|isbn=978-1-4267-6550-6|pages=124–125}}</ref> Indeed, some scholars believe that Yahweh was originally a Midianite god and that he was subsequently adopted by the ].<ref name="McLaughlin2012"/> An Egyptian temple of ] continued to be used during the Midianite occupation of the site, although images of Hathor were defaced suggesting Midianite opposition.<ref name="McLaughlin2012"/> They transformed it into a desert tent-shrine set up with a copper sculpture of a snake.<ref name="McLaughlin2012"/>


=== South Arabia ===
] (cognate with the sumerian ab.gal, related to the ] ], "ferryman") was a pre-Islamic north Arabian god, known from the Palmyrian desert regions as a ] of ] and camel drivers.<ref>{{cite book| last = Jordan| first = Michael| title = Encyclopedia of Gods: Over 2,500 Deities of the World | publisher = Facts on File | date = July 1993 | isbn = 978-0-8160-2909-9 }}</ref>
] priestess raising her hand to intercede with the ] on behalf of a donor. Probably first century.]]
The main sources of religious information in pre-Islamic ] are inscriptions, which number in the thousands, as well as the Quran, complemented by archaeological evidence.


The civilizations of South Arabia are considered to have the most developed pantheon in the Arabian peninsula.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=140}} In South Arabia, the most common god was ], who was considered remote. The patron deity (''shym'') was considered to be of much more immediate significance than ]. Thus, the kingdom of Saba' had ], the kingdom of Ma'in had ], the kingdom of Qataban had ], and the kingdom of Hadhramaut had Sayin. Each people was termed the "children" of their respective patron deity. Patron deities played a vital role in sociopolitical terms, their cults serving as the focus of a person's cohesion and loyalty.
===Eastern Arabia===
The ] civilization, which existed along the Persian Gulf coast and Bahrain until the 6th century BC, worshipped a pair of deities, Inzak and Meskilak.<ref name="Crawford1998">{{cite book|author=Harriet E. W. Crawford|title=Dilmun and Its Gulf Neighbours|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2BevKadehakC&pg=PA79|date=12 March 1998|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-58679-5|page=79}}</ref> It is not known whether these were the only deities in the pantheon or whether there were others.<ref name= Hoyland142144>{{cite book|author=Robert G. Hoyland|title=Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XaiGAgAAQBAJ|pages= 142–144|date=11 September 2002|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-64634-0}}</ref> The discovery of wells at the sites of a Dilmun temple and a shrine suggests that sweet water played an important part in religious practices.<ref name="Crawford1998"/>


Evidence from surviving inscriptions suggests that each of the southern kingdoms had its own pantheon of three to five deities, the major deity always being a god.<ref name=":0">Robin, Christian Julien, "Before Himyar: Epigraphic evidence", in {{Harvnb|Fisher|2015|pp=97–98}}</ref> For example, the pantheon of Saba comprised ], the major deity, together with '], ], Dhat-Himyam, and ].<ref name=":0" /> The main god in Ma'in and Himyar was 'Athtar, in Qataban it was ], and in Hadhramaut it was Sayin.<ref name=":0" /> 'Amm was a ] and was associated with the weather, especially lightning.{{Sfn|Lurker|2015|p=20}} One of the most frequent titles of the god ] was "Lord of ]".{{Sfn|Korotayev|1996|p=82}}
In the subsequent Greco-Roman period, there is evidence that the worship of non-indigenous deities was brought to the region by merchants and visitors.<ref name= Hoyland142144/> These included ], a god popular in the Syrian city of ], the Mesopotamian deities ] and ], the Greek gods ] and ] as well as the west Arabian deities Kahl and Manat.<ref name= Hoyland142144/>


] was an oracular god of Qataban and also the spokesman of Amm.{{Sfn|Lurker|2015|p=26}} His name was invoked in royal regulations regarding water supply.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=141}} Anbay's name was related to that of the Babylonian deity ]. ] was invoked alongside Anbay as god of "command and decision" and his name is derived from the root word "to be wise".{{Sfn|Doniger|1999|p=70}}
=== Bedouins ===


], dedicated to ].]]
The ] were introduced to Meccan ritualistic practices as they frequented settled towns of the Hejaz during the four months of the "holy truce", the first three of which were devoted to religious observance, while the fourth was set aside for trade.<ref>{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v_seJ21M0UoC|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|pages=33–34}}</ref> Alan Jones infers from Bedouin poetry that the gods, even Allah, were less important to the Bedouins than Fate.<ref name="Zeitlin29">{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v_seJ21M0UoC|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|page=29}}</ref> They seem to have had little trust in rituals and pilgrimages as means of propitiating Fate, but had recourse to divination and soothsayers (''kahins'').<ref name="Zeitlin29"/> The Bedouins regarded some trees, wells, caves and stones as sacred objects, either as fetishes or as means of reaching a deity.<ref>{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v_seJ21M0UoC&pg=PT37|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|page=37}}</ref> They created sanctuaries where people could worship fetishes.<ref name="Carmody">{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O6BzCQAAQBAJ&pg=PA135&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj1z7y-k6LJAhWkKaYKHZEhDHcQ6AEIHzAB#v=onepage&f=false|title= In the Path of the Masters: Understanding the Spirituality of Buddha, Confucius, Jesus, and Muhammad|author1=Denise Lardner Carmody |author2=John Tully Carmody |publisher= ]|year= 2015|page= 135|isbn= 9781317468202}}</ref>
Each kingdom's central temple was the focus of worship for the main god and would be the destination for an annual pilgrimage, with regional temples dedicated to a local manifestation of the main god.<ref name=":0" /> Other beings worshipped included local deities or deities dedicated to specific functions as well as deified ancestors.<ref name=":0" />


==== Influence of Arab tribes ====
The Bedouins had a code of honour which ] states may be regarded as their religious ethics. This code encompassed women, bravery, hospitality, honouring one's promises and pacts, and vengeance. They believed that the ghost of a slain person would cry out from the grave until their thirst for blood was quenched. Practices such as killing of infant girls were often regarded as having religious sanction.<ref name="Carmody"/> Numerous mentions of ] in the Quran and testimony of both pre-Islamic and Islamic literature indicate that the belief in spirits was prominent in pre-Islamic Bedouin religion.<ref name="Zeitlin59">{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v_seJ21M0UoC&pg=PT59|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|pages=59–60}}</ref> However, there is evidence that the word jinn is derived from Aramaic, where it was used by Christians to designate pagan gods reduced to the status of demons, and was introduced into Arabic folklore only late in the pre-Islamic era.<ref name="Zeitlin59"/> ] has observed that such spirits were thought to inhabit desolate, dingy and dark places and that they were feared.<ref name="Zeitlin59"/> One had to protect oneself from them, but they were not the objects of a true cult.<ref name="Zeitlin59"/>
The encroachment of northern Arab tribes into South Arabia also introduced northern Arab deities into the region.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=88}} The three goddesses ], ] and ] became known as Lat/Latan, Uzzayan and Manawt.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=88}} Uzzayan's cult in particular was widespread in South Arabia, and in Qataban she was invoked as a guardian of the final royal palace.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=88}} Lat/Latan was not significant in South Arabia, but appears to be popular with the Arab tribes bordering Yemen.{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=88}} Other Arab deities include Dhu-Samawi, a god originally worshipped by the Amir tribe, and Kahilan, perhaps related to ] of ].{{sfn|Robin|2006|p=88}}


Bordering Yemen, the ] Sârat tribe of the ] was said to have worshipped ], Dhu'l-Kaffayn, ] and A'im.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Volume 1|publisher=Brill|pages=812}}</ref> According to the ''Book of Idols'', Dhu'l-Kaffayn originated from a clan of the ].{{Sfn|Hawting|1999|p=125}} In addition to being worshipped among the Azd, Dushara is also reported to have a shrine amongst the Daws.{{Sfn|Hawting|1999|p=125}} Dhu’l-Khalasa was an oracular god and was also worshipped by the ] and Khatham tribes.{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=30}}
Bedouin religious experience also included an apparently indigenous cult of ancestors.<ref name="Zeitlin59"/> The dead were not regarded as powerful, but rather as deprived of protection and needing charity of the living as a continuation of social obligations beyond the grave.<ref name="Zeitlin59"/> Only certain ancestors, especially heroes from which the tribe was said to derive its name, seem to have been objects of real veneration.<ref name="Zeitlin59"/>


====Influence on Aksum====
==Judaism==
Before conversion to Christianity, the ] followed a polytheistic religion that was similar to that of Southern Arabia. The lunar god ] was worshiped in South Arabia and Aksum.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=gB6DcMU94GUC&pg=PA395|title= Ancient Civilizations of Africa|page=395|isbn= 9780435948054|year= 1981|publisher= Univ of California Press}}</ref> The god ], a sky-deity was related to that of 'Attar, was also worshipped in Aksum.{{Sfn|Lurker|2015|p=41}} The god ] was worshiped at ].<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=gB6DcMU94GUC&pg=PA397|title= Ancient Civilizations of Africa|page=397|isbn= 9780435948054|year= 1981|publisher= Univ of California Press}}</ref> The South Arabian gods in Aksum included Dhat-Himyam and ].<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=MNGIzz1VJH0C&q=dhat+aksum&pg=PA180|title= The Archaeology of Ethiopia|page=180|isbn= 978-1136755521|last1= Finneran|first1= Niall|date= 2007-11-08|publisher= Routledge}}</ref> A stone later reused for the church of Enda-Cerqos at Melazo mentions these gods. Hawbas is also mentioned on an altar and sphinx in Dibdib. The name of Nrw who is mentioned in Aksum inscriptions is related to that of the South Arabian god Nawraw, a deity of stars.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=gB6DcMU94GUC&pg=PA397|title= Ancient Civilizations of Africa|pages=352–353|isbn= 9780435948054|year= 1981|publisher= Univ of California Press}}</ref>
{{Further information|Jewish tribes of Arabia}}
] with writing "Yishaq bar Hanina" and a ], 330 BCE–200 CE]]


==== Transition to Judaism ====
A thriving community of ] existed in pre-Islamic Arabia and included both sedentary and nomadic communities. Jews had migrated into Arabia from Roman times onwards.<ref name="Zeitlin2007">{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sbhJJ7AOLL4C&pg=PA87|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|pages=87–93}}</ref> Arabian Jews spoke ] as well as ] and ] and had contact with Jewish religious centers in ] and ].<ref name="Zeitlin2007"/> The Yemeni ] converted to ] in the 4th century, and some of the ], a tribe in central Arabia who were their vassals, were also converted in the 4th/5th century.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=stl97FdyRswC&pg=PA45&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CCwQ6AEwBGoVChMI6bv1jKCRyQIVzBmOCh2G7gpx#v=onepage&f=false|title= Encyclopaedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East|publisher= ]|year= 2009|page= 46|isbn= 9781438126760}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=pfwAG3-rpzcC&pg=PA264&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CDYQ6AEwBmoVChMI6bv1jKCRyQIVzBmOCh2G7gpx#v=onepage&f=false|title= Byzantium and the Arabs in the Sixth Century|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 2003|page= 265|isbn= 9780884022848}}</ref> There is evidence that Jewish converts in the ] were regarded as Jews by other Jews and non-Jews alike and have sought advice from ] on matters of attire and ].<ref name="Zeitlin2007"/> In at least one case, it is known that an Arab tribe agreed to adopting Judaism as a condition for settling in a town dominated by Jewish inhabitants.<ref name="Zeitlin2007"/> Some Arab women in ] are said to have vowed making their child a Jew if the child survived, since they considered the Jews to be people "]" (''`ilmin wa-kitābin'').<ref name="Zeitlin2007"/> ] infers from proper names and agricultural vocabulary that the Jewish tribes of Yathrib consisted mostly of Judaized clans of Arabian and ] origin.<ref>{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sbhJJ7AOLL4C|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|pages=33–34}}</ref>
The ] kings radically opposed polytheism in favor of ], beginning officially in 380.<ref name=":14">Robin, Christian Julien, "Arabia and Ethiopia", in {{Harvnb|Johnson|2012|pp=270}}</ref> The last trace of polytheism in South Arabia, an inscription commemorating a construction project with a polytheistic invocation, and another, mentioning the temple of ], all date from just after 380 (the former dating to the rule of the king Dhara’amar Ayman, and the latter dating to the year 401–402).<ref name=":14" /> The rejection of polytheism from the public sphere did not mean the extinction of it altogether, as polytheism likely continued in the private sphere.<ref name=":14" />


=== Central Arabia ===
The key role played by Jews in the trade and markets of the Hejaz meant that market day for the week was the day preceding the ].<ref name="Zeitlin2007"/> This day, which was called ''aruba'' in Arabic, also provided occasion for legal proceedings and entertainment, which in turn may have influenced the choice of Friday as the day of Muslim congregational prayer.<ref name="Zeitlin2007"/> Toward the end of the sixth century, the Jewish communities in the Hejaz were in a state of economic and political decline, but they continued to flourish culturally in and beyond the region.<ref name="Zeitlin2007"/> They had developed their distinctive beliefs and practices, with a pronounced ] and ] dimension.<ref name="Zeitlin2007"/> In the Islamic tradition, based on a phrase in the ], Arabic Jews are said to have referred to ] as the son of ], although historical accuracy of this assertion has been disputed.<ref name= Robinson/><ref>{{cite book|title=]|pages=1106–1107|chapter=Ezra|volume=6|quote=Muhammad claims (sura 9:30) that in the opinion of the Jews, 'Uzayr (EZRA) is the son of God. These words are an enigma because no such opinion is to be found among the Jews, even though Ezra was singled out for special appreciation.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Kaufmann Kohler|author2=Ignatz Goldziher|authorlink1=Kaufmann Kohler|authorlink2=Ignác Goldziher|title=Jewish Encyclopedia|url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/8263-islam#anchor15|accessdate=14 October 2015|chapter=Islam}}</ref>
The ] tribe's chief god was ], whom their capital Qaryat Dhat Kahl (modern Qaryat al-Faw) was named for.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=50}}{{Sfn|al-Sa'ud|2011|p=84}} His name appears in the form of many inscriptions and rock engravings on the slopes of the ], on the walls of the ] of the village, in the residential houses and on the incense burners.{{Sfn|al-Sa'ud|2011|p=84}} An inscription in Qaryat Dhat Kahl invokes the gods Kahl, ] al-Shariq and ].{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=201}}


==Christianity== === Hejaz ===
According to Islamic sources, the ] region was home to three important shrines dedicated to al-Lat, al-’Uzza and Manat. The shrine and idol of al-Lat, according to the ], once stood in ], and was primarily worshipped by the ] tribe.{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=14}} Al-’Uzza's principal shrine was in ] and she was the chief-goddess of the Quraysh tribe.{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=16}}{{Sfn|Healey|Porter|2003|p=107}} Manāt's idol, reportedly the oldest of the three, was erected on the seashore between ] and Mecca, and was honored by the ] and ] tribes.{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=12}} Inhabitants of several areas venerated Manāt, performing sacrifices before her idol, and pilgrimages of some were not considered completed until they visited Manāt and shaved their heads.{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=12-13}}


In the Muzdalifah region near Mecca, the god ], who is a god of rains and storms, was worshipped. In pre-Islamic times pilgrims used to halt at the "hill of Quzah" before sunrise.{{Sfn|Peters|2017|p=207}} ] is traditionally reported to have introduced the association of fire worship with him on ].{{Sfn|Peters|2017|p=207}}
The main areas of Christian influence in Arabia were on the north eastern and north western borders and in what was to become ] in the south.<ref name="Goddard2000">{{cite book|author=Hugh Goddard|title=A History of Christian-Muslim Relations|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bq2oLEvHzl8C&pg=PA15|year=2000|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-1-56663-340-6|pages=15–17}}</ref> The north west was under the influence of Christian missionary activity from the ] where the ], a client kingdom of the Romans, were converted to Christianity.<ref name="Berkey2003">{{cite book|author=Jonathan Porter Berkey|title=The Formation of Islam: Religion and Society in the Near East, 600-1800|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mLV6lo4mvj0C&pg=PA45|year=2003|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-58813-3|pages=44–46}}</ref> In the south, particularly at ], a centre of Christianity developed as a result of the influence of the Christian ] based on the other side of the ] in ].<ref name="Goddard2000"/> Both the Ghassanids and the Christians in the south adopted ].<ref name="Goddard2000"/>
] in eastern ]. The 4th century remains are thought to be one of ].]]
The third area of Christian influence was on the north eastern borders where the ], a client tribe of the ], adopted ], being the form of Christianity having the most influence in the Sassanian Empire.<ref name="Goddard2000"/> As the ] region of Arabia increasingly fell under the influence of the Sasanians from the early third century, many of the inhabitants were exposed to Christianity following the eastward dispersal of the religion by Mesopotamian Christians.<ref name="gillman">{{cite book|last1=Gillman|first1=Ian|last2=Klimkeit|first2=Hans-Joachim|title=Christians in Asia Before 1500|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UGpr2KsbS94C|publisher=University of Michigan Press|page=87|year=1999|isbn=978-0472110407}}</ref> However, it was not until the fourth century that Christianity gained popularity in the region with the establishment of ] and a ].<ref name="KozahAbu-Husayn2014">{{cite book|author1=Mario Kozah|author2=Abdulrahim Abu-Husayn|title=The Syriac Writers of Qatar in the Seventh Century|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W33koAEACAAJ|date=26 August 2014|publisher=Gorgias PressLlc|isbn=978-1-4632-0355-9|page=55}}</ref> In 1986, the remains of a church thought to date to the 4th century were discovered in ] in eastern ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aina.org/ata/20080828165925.htm|title=4th Century Assyrian Church in Saudi Arabia|work=Assyrian International News Agency|date=28 August 2008}}</ref>


Various other deities were venerated in the area by specific tribes, such as the god ] by the ] tribe and the god Nuhm by the Muzaynah tribe.{{Sfn|Healey|Porter|2003|p=93}}
Beth Qatraye which translates "region of the Qataris" in ] was the Christian name used for the region encompassing north-eastern Arabia.<ref name="adias">, Peter Hellyer, ''Journal of Social Affairs'', volume 18, number 72, winter 2011, p. 88</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aub.edu.lb/communications/media/Documents/May_2011/grant-syriac-EN.pdf|title=AUB academics awarded $850,000 grant for project on the Syriac writers of Qatar in the 7th century AD|publisher=American University of Beirut|date=31 May 2011|accessdate=12 May 2015}}</ref> It included Bahrain, ], Al-Khatt, ], and Qatar.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kozah|first1=Mario|last2=Abu-Husayn|first2=Abdulrahim|last3=Al-Murikhi|first3=Saif Shaheen|title=The Syriac Writers of Qatar in the Seventh Century|publisher=Gorgias Press LLC|year=2014|page=24|isbn=978-1463203559}}</ref> Oman and the United Arab Emirates comprised the ] known as Beth Mazunaye. The name was derived from 'Mazun', the ] name for Oman and the United Arab Emirates. ] was the central city of the diocese.<ref name="adias"/><ref name="syriacw2">{{cite book|last1=Kozah|first1=Mario|last2=Abu-Husayn|first2=Abdulrahim|last3=Al-Murikhi|first3=Saif Shaheen|last4=Al-Thani|first4=Haya|title=The Syriac Writers of Qatar in the Seventh Century|publisher=Gorgias Press LLC|year=2014|page=24|edition=print|isbn=978-1463203559}}</ref>


==== Historiography ====
In ], in the centre of the peninsula, there is evidence of members of two tribes, Kindah and ], converting to Christianity in the 6th century. However, in the ] in the west, whilst there is evidence of the presence of Christianity, it is not thought to have been significant amongst the indigenous population of the area.<ref name="Goddard2000"/>
The majority of extant information about Mecca during the rise of Islam and earlier times comes from the text of the Quran itself and later Muslim sources such as the ] literature dealing with the life of ] and the ''Book of Idols''.{{Sfn|Peters|1994a|p=5-7}} Alternative sources are so fragmentary and specialized that writing a convincing history of this period based on them alone is impossible.{{Sfn|Humphreys|1991|p=69–71}} Several scholars hold that the sīra literature is not independent of the Quran but has been fabricated to explain the verses of the Quran.<ref name=":1">Donner, Fred M., "The historical context", in {{Harvnb|McAuliffe|2006|pp=33–34}}</ref> There is evidence to support the contention that some reports of the sīras are of dubious validity, but there is also evidence to support the contention that the sīra narratives originated independently of the Quran.<ref name=":1" /> Compounding the problem is that the earliest extant Muslim historical works, including the sīras, were composed in their definitive form more than a century after the beginning of the Islamic era.{{Sfn|Humphreys|1991|p=69-71}} Some of these works were based on subsequently lost earlier texts, which in their turn recorded a fluid oral tradition.{{Sfn|Humphreys|1991|p=69–71}} Scholars do not agree as to the time when such oral accounts began to be systematically collected and written down,{{Sfn|Humphreys|1991|p=86–87}} and they differ greatly in their assessment of the historical reliability of the available texts.<ref name=":1" />{{Sfn|Humphreys|1991|p=86-87}}{{Sfn|Lindsay|2005|p=7}}


==== Role of Mecca and the Kaaba ====
Arabicized Christian names were fairly common among pre-Islamic Arabians, which has been attributed to the influence that Syrianized Christian Arabs had on bedouins of the peninsula for several centuries before the rise of Islam.<ref>{{cite book|author=Irving M. Zeitlin|title=The Historical Muhammad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sbhJJ7AOLL4C&pg=PA35|date=19 March 2007|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3999-4|pages=35}}</ref>
]


The ], whose environs were regarded as sacred (''haram''), became a national shrine under the custodianship of the ], the chief tribe of Mecca, which made the Hejaz the most important religious area in north Arabia.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=33–34}} Its role was solidified by a confrontation with the Christian king ], who controlled much of Arabia from a seat of power in Yemen in the middle of the sixth century.<ref name=":2">Robin, Christian Julien, "Arabia and Ethiopia", in {{Harvnb|Johnson|2012|pp=286–287}}</ref> Abraha had recently constructed a ] in ], and he wanted to make that city a major center of pilgrimage, but Mecca's Kaaba presented a challenge to his plan.<ref name=":2" /> Abraha found a pretext for an attack on Mecca, presented by different sources alternatively as pollution of the church by a tribe allied to the Meccans or as an attack on Abraha's grandson in ] by a Meccan party.<ref name=":2" /> The defeat of the army he assembled to conquer Mecca is recounted ] by the Islamic tradition and is also alluded to in the Quran and pre-Islamic poetry.<ref name=":2" /> After the battle, which probably occurred around 565, the Quraysh became a dominant force in western Arabia, receiving the title "God's people" (''ahl Allah'') according to Islamic sources, and formed the cult association of ''ḥums'', which tied members of many tribes in western Arabia to the Kaaba.<ref name=":2" />
Neal Robinson, based on verses in the Quran, believes that some Arab Christians may have held unorthodox beliefs such as the worshipping of a divine triad of God the father, Jesus the Son and Mary the Mother.<ref>{{cite book|author=Neal Robinson|title=Islam: A Concise Introduction|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2UL8AQAAQBAJ&pg=PA76|date=5 November 2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-81773-1|pages=76}}</ref> Furthermore, there is evidence that unorthodox groups such as the ], whose adherents worshiped Mary, were present in Arabia, and it has been proposed that the Qur'an refers to their beliefs.<ref>{{cite book|author=Mun'im Sirry|title=Scriptural Polemics: The Qur'an and Other Religions|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Us4sAwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA149&dq=qur'an%20jesus%205%3A72&pg=PA47#v=onepage&q&f=false|date=1 May 2014|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=46}}</ref> However, other scholars, notably ], ], ] and ], cast doubt on the historicity or reliability of such references in the Quran.{{refn|group=note|Their views are as follows:
* ] argues that Muhammad's knowledge of Christianity "was rather approximative"<ref name="Eliade2013">{{cite book|author=Mircea Eliade|title=History of Religious Ideas, Volume 3: From Muhammad to the Age of Reforms|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xeenAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA77|date=31 December 2013|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-14772-7|page=77}}</ref> and that references to the triad of God, Jesus and Mary probably reflect the likelihood that Muhammad's information on Christianity came from people who had knowledge of the ], which was known for extreme ].<ref name="Eliade2013"/>
* ] points out that we do not know how far Muhammad was acquainted with Christian beliefs prior to the ] and that dating of some of the passages criticizing Christianity is uncertain.<ref name="W. Montgomery Watt 1956 318">{{cite book|author=W. Montgomery Watt|title=Muhammad At Medina|url=https://archive.org/details/muhammadatmedina029655mbp|date=1956|publisher=Oxford At The Clarendon Press|page=318}}</ref> His view is that Muhammad and the early Muslims may have been unaware of some orthodox Christian doctrines, including the nature of the trinity, because Muhammad's Christian informants had a limited grasp of doctrinal issues.<ref>{{cite book|author=W. Montgomery Watt|title=Muhammad At Medina|url=https://archive.org/details/muhammadatmedina029655mbp|date=1956|publisher=Oxford At The Clarendon Press|page=320}}</ref>
* Watt has also argued that the verses criticizing Christian doctrines in the Quran are attacking Christian heresies like tritheism and "physical sonship" rather than orthodox Christianity.<ref name="W. Montgomery Watt 1956 318"/><ref name= Sirry47>{{cite book|author=Mun'im Sirry|title=Scriptural Polemics: The Qur'an and Other Religions|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Us4sAwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA149&dq=qur'an%20jesus%205%3A72&pg=PA47#v=onepage&q&f=false|date=1 May 2014|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=47}}</ref>
* ], ] and Gabriel Reynolds argue that the verses commenting on apparently unorthodox Christian beliefs should be read as an informed, polemically motivated caricature of mainstream Christian doctrine whose goal is to highlight how wrong some of its tenets appear from an Islamic perspective.<ref name= Sirry47/>}}


==== The Kaaba, Allah, and Hubal ====
== Iranian religions ==
According to tradition, the Kaaba was a cube-like, originally roofless structure housing a ] revered as a relic.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=33-34}} The sanctuary was dedicated to Hubal (]: هبل), who, according to some sources, was worshiped as the greatest of the 360 idols the Kaaba contained, which probably represented the days of the year.{{Sfn|Armstrong|2000|p=11}} ] and ] both report that the human-shaped idol of Hubal made of precious stone (agate, according to the Book of Idols) came into the possession of the Quraysh with its right hand broken off and that the Quraysh made a hand of gold to replace it.{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=108–109}} A soothsayer performed ] in the shrine by drawing ritual arrows,{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=33–34}} and vows and sacrifices were made to assure success.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=30}} ] argues that relations with deities and fetishes in pre-Islamic Mecca were maintained chiefly on the basis of bargaining, where favors were expected in return for offerings.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=30}} A deity's or oracle's failure to provide the desired response was sometimes met with anger.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=30}}
Iranian religions existed in pre-Islamic Arabia on account of ] military presence along the ] and ] and on account of trade routes between the ] and ]. Some Arabs in northeast of the peninsula converted to ] and several Zoroastrian temples were constructed in ]. Some of the members from the tribe of ] had converted to the religion. There is also evidence of existence of ] in Arabia as several early sources indicate a presence of "]" in Mecca, although the term could also be interpreted as referring to ]. There is evidence for the circulation of Iranian religious ideas in the form of Persian loan words in Quran such as '']'' (paradise).<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=95jSBFFaDkUC&pg=PA31&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CBoQ6AEwAGoVChMImMbXsu2TyQIVSo-OCh221Avd#v=onepage&f=false|title= Muslim Identities: An Introduction to Islam|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 2013|pages= 31, 32|isbn= 9780231531924}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=mLV6lo4mvj0C&pg=PA47&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CBoQ6AEwAGoVChMI8viggfCTyQIVFFeOCh3vEwvO#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Formation of Islam: Religion and Society in the Near East, 600-1800|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 2003|pages= 47, 48|isbn= 9780521588133}}</ref>


Different theories have been proposed regarding the role of Allah in Meccan religion. According to one hypothesis, which goes back to ], Allah (the supreme deity of the tribal federation around Quraysh) was a designation that consecrated the superiority of Hubal (the supreme deity of Quraysh) over the other gods.<ref name=":3">Robin, Christian Julien, "Arabia and Ethiopia", in {{Harvnb|Johnson|2012|pp=304–305}}</ref> However, there is also evidence that Allah and Hubal were two distinct deities.<ref name=":3" /> According to that hypothesis, the Kaaba was first consecrated to a supreme deity named Allah and then hosted the pantheon of Quraysh after their conquest of Mecca, about a century before the time of Muhammad.<ref name=":3" /> Some inscriptions seem to indicate the use of Allah as a name of a polytheist deity centuries earlier, but we know nothing precise about this use.<ref name=":3" /> Some scholars have suggested that Allah may have represented a remote creator god who was gradually eclipsed by more particularized local deities.{{Sfn|Peterson|2007|p=21}} There is disagreement on whether Allah played a major role in the Meccan religious cult.{{Sfn|Berkey|2003|p=42}}{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=107}} No iconic representation or idol of Allah is known to have existed.{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=107}}{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=33}}
Zorastrianism was introduced in the ] including modern-day ] during the rule of Persian empires in the region starting from 250 B.C. The religion was mainly practiced in Bahrain by Persian settlers. Zorastrianism was also practiced in the Persian-ruled area of modern-day ]. The religion also existed in Persian-ruled area of modern ]. The descendants of Abna, the Persian conquerors of Yemen were followers of Zorastrianism.<ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=4-xaVGUWVYQC&pg=PA19&hl=en&sa=X&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Middle East: Bahrain, Cyprus, Egypt|publisher= ]|year= 2004|isbn= 9780313329234|page= 19}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=YT-kBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA105&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjIrOSs3p_JAhXYWo4KHTKPCQgQ6AEIHzAB#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Zorastrianism|author= ], Yuhan Shorab-Dinshaw Vevaina, Anna Tessman|publisher= ]|year= 2015|isbn= 9781444331356|page= 105}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=imw_KFD5bsQC&pg=PA4&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjU59rp4p_JAhUBUo4KHZ3nB-UQ6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&f=false|title= The Oxford History of Islam|author= ]|publisher= ]|year= 1999|page= 4|isbn= 9780195107999}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title= Jews and Arabs in Pre- and Early Islamic Arabia|author= Michael Lecker|publisher= ]|year= 1998|isbn= 9780860787846|page= 20}}</ref>


==See also== ==== Other deities ====
The three chief ]es of Meccan religion were ], ], and ], who were called the daughters of Allah.{{Sfn|Berkey|2003|p=42}}{{Sfn|Robinson|2013|p=75}}{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=110}}{{Sfn|Peterson|2007|p=46}} Egerton Sykes meanwhile states that Al-lāt was the female counterpart of Allah while Uzza was a name given by ] to the planet Venus.{{Sfn|Sykes|2014|p=7}}

Other deities of the Quraysh in Mecca included ], ]. Although the early Arab historian ] calls Manaf (]: مناف) "one of the greatest deities of Mecca", very little information is available about it. Women touched his idol as a token of blessing, and kept away from it during menstruation. Gonzague Ryckmans described this as a practice peculiar to Manaf, but according to the ], a report from ] indicates that it was common to all idols.{{Sfn|Fahd|2012}} Muhammad's great-great-grandfather's name was ] which means "slave of Manaf".{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=27-28}} He is thought by some scholars to be a ].{{Sfn|Coulter|Turner|2013|p=305}} The idols of ] were located near the Black Stone with a '']'' performed to Isāf during sacrifices. Various legends existed about the idols, including one that they were petrified after they committed adultery in the Kaaba.{{Sfn|al-Azmeh|2017|p=199}}

The pantheon of the Quraysh was not identical with that of the tribes who entered into various cult and commercial associations with them, especially that of the ''hums''.<ref name=":6">Robin, Christian Julien, "Arabia and Ethiopia", in {{Harvnb|Johnson|2012|pp=303–304}}</ref>{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=106}} Christian Julien Robin argues that the former was composed principally of idols that were in the sanctuary of Mecca, including Hubal and Manaf, while the pantheon of the associations was superimposed on it, and its principal deities included the three goddesses, who had neither idols nor a shrine in that city.<ref name=":6" />

==== Political and religious developments ====
The second half of the sixth century was a period of political disorder in Arabia and communication routes were no longer secure.<ref>Robin, Christian Julien, "Arabia and Ethiopia", in {{Harvnb|Johnson|2012|pp=297–299}}</ref> Religious divisions were an important cause of the crisis.<ref name=":4" /> Judaism became the dominant religion in Yemen while Christianity took root in the Persian Gulf area.<ref name=":4" /> In line with the broader trends of the ancient world, Arabia yearned for a more spiritual form of religion and began believing in afterlife, while the choice of religion increasingly became a personal rather than communal choice.<ref name=":4" /> While many were reluctant to convert to a foreign faith, those faiths provided intellectual and spiritual reference points, and the old pagan vocabulary of Arabic began to be replaced by Jewish and Christian ]s from Aramaic everywhere, including Mecca.<ref name=":4" /> The distribution of pagan temples supports ]'s argument that Arabian polytheism was marginalized in the region and already dying in Mecca on the eve of Islam.<ref name=":4">Robin, Christian Julien, "Arabia and Ethiopia", in {{Harvnb|Johnson|2012|pp=302}}</ref> The practice of polytheistic cults was increasingly limited to the steppe and the desert, and in ] (later known as Medina), which included two tribes with polytheistic majorities, the absence of a public pagan temple in the town or its immediate neighborhood indicates that polytheism was confined to the private sphere.<ref name=":4" /> Looking at the text of the Quran itself, Hawting has also argued that the criticism of idolaters and polytheists contained in Quran is in fact a hyperbolic reference to other monotheists, in particular the Arab Jews and Arab Christians, whose religious beliefs were considered imperfect.<ref name=":1" />{{Sfn|Hawting|1999|p=1}} According to some traditions, the Kaaba contained no statues, but its interior was decorated with images of ] and Jesus, prophets, angels, and trees.<ref name=":3" />

To counter the effects of anarchy, the institution of sacred months, during which every act of violence was prohibited, was reestablished.<ref name=":5">Robin, Christian Julien, "Arabia and Ethiopia", in {{Harvnb|Johnson|2012|pp=301}}</ref> During those months, it was possible to participate in pilgrimages and fairs without danger.<ref name=":5" /> The Quraysh upheld the principle of two annual truces, one of one month and the second of three months, which conferred a sacred character to the Meccan sanctuary.<ref name=":5" /> The cult association of ''hums'', in which individuals and groups partook in the same rites, was primarily religious, but it also had important economic consequences.<ref name=":5" /> Although, as ] has shown, Mecca could not compare with the great centers of caravan trade on the eve of Islam, it was probably one of the most prosperous and secure cities of the peninsula, since, unlike many of them, it did not have surrounding walls.<ref name=":5" /> Pilgrimage to Mecca was a popular custom.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=49}} Some Islamic rituals, including processions around the Kaaba and between the hills of al-Safa and Marwa, as well as the salutation "we are here, O Allah, we are here" repeated on approaching the Kaaba are believed to have antedated Islam.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=49}} Spring water acquired a sacred character in Arabia early on and Islamic sources state that the well of Zamzam became holy long before the Islamic era.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=31}}

==== Advent of Islam ====
] depicting the destruction of idols during the ]; here ] is represented as a flame.]]

According to Ibn Sa'd, the opposition in Mecca started when the prophet of ], ], delivered verses that "spoke shamefully of the idols they (the Meccans) worshiped other than Himself (God) and mentioned the perdition of their fathers who died in disbelief".{{Sfn|Peters|1994b|p=169}} According to ], as the ranks of Muhammad's followers swelled, he became a threat to the local tribes and the rulers of the city, whose wealth rested upon the Kaaba, the focal point of Meccan religious life, which Muhammad threatened to overthrow.<ref name=":7" /> Muhammad's denunciation of the Meccan traditional religion was especially offensive to his own tribe, the Quraysh, as they were the guardians of the Kaaba.<ref name=":7">Watt, Montgomery, "Muhammad", in {{Harvnb|Lambton|Lewis|1977|pp=36}}</ref>

The ] around 629–630 AD led to the destruction of the idols around the ], including ].{{Sfn|Armstrong|2000|p=23}} Following the conquest, shrines and temples dedicated to deities were destroyed, such as the shrines to al-Lat, al-’Uzza and Manat in Ta’if, Nakhla and al-Qudayd respectively.{{Sfn|al-Tabari|1990|p=46}}{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=13-14, 25-26}}

=== North Arabia ===
Less complex societies outside South Arabia often had smaller pantheons, with the patron deity having much prominence. The deities attested in north Arabian inscriptions include ], ], Allah, Dathan, and ].{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=207}} Inscriptions in a ] in the region of ] referring to Nuha describe emotions as a gift from him. In addition, they also refer to Ruda being responsible for all things good and bad.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=207}}

The ] tribes in particular prominently worshipped the goddess ] as a bringer of prosperity.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=207}} The Syrian god ] was also worshipped by ] tribes and is mentioned in Safaitic inscriptions.{{Sfn|Healey|2001|p=126}}

Religious worship amongst the ], an ancient tribal confederation that was probably subsumed into Nabataea around the 2nd century AD, was centered around a polytheistic system in which women rose to prominence. Divine images of the gods and goddesses worshipped by Qedarite Arabs, as noted in Assyrian inscriptions, included representations of ], ], ], Dai, Abirillu and Atarquruma. The female guardian of these idols, usually the reigning queen, served as a priestess ({{transl|mis|apkallatu}}, in Assyrian texts) who communed with the other world.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=132–136}} There is also evidence that the Qedar worshipped ] to whom the inscription on a silver bowl from a king of Qedar is dedicated.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=63}} In the ], which was passed down orally for centuries before being transcribed c. 500 AD, in tractate ] (folio 5b), it is said that most Qedarites worshiped pagan gods.{{Sfn|Neusner|2006|p=295}}

] dedicated to the god Salm]]

The Aramaic ] inscription discovered by Charles Hubert in 1880 at ] mentions the introduction of a new god called Salm of ''hgm'' into the city's pantheon being permitted by three local gods – Salm of Mahram who was the chief god, Shingala, and Ashira. The name Salm means "image" or "idol".{{Sfn|Teixidor|2015|p=72}}

The ], a people referred to in the ] and located in north-western Arabia, may have worshipped ]. An Egyptian temple of ] continued to be used during the Midianite occupation of the site, although images of Hathor were defaced suggesting Midianite opposition.{{Sfn|McLaughlin|2012|p=124–125}} They transformed it into a desert tent-shrine set up with a copper sculpture of a snake.{{Sfn|McLaughlin|2012|p=124–125}}

The ]ites worshipped the god Dhu-Ghabat and rarely turned to others for their needs.{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=141}} Dhu-Ghabat's name means "he of the thicket", based on the etymology of ''gabah'', meaning forest or thicket.{{Sfn|Healey|2001|p=89}} The god ], a god of writing probably related to a ] and perhaps was brought into the region by the Babylonian king ],{{Sfn|Hoyland|2002|p=141}} is mentioned in ]ite inscriptions as well.{{sfn|Drijvers|1980|p=154}} The worship of the ] gods ] and ] was spread from ] to Arabia.{{Sfn|Kaizer|2008|p=87}}

According to the ''Book of Idols'', the ] tribe worshipped al-Fals, whose idol stood on ],{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=51}} while the ] tribe worshipped ], who had an idol in Dumat al-Jandal.{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=9}}{{Sfn|Hawting|1999|p=92}}

==== Nabataeans ====
{{Further|Nabataean religion}}], ]]]
The ] worshipped primarily northern Arabian deities. Under foreign influences, they also incorporated foreign deities and elements into their beliefs.

The Nabataeans' chief-god is ]. In Petra, the only major goddess is ], assuming the traits of ], ] and ]. It is unknown if her worship and identity is related to her cult at Nakhla and others. The Nabatean inscriptions define Allāt and Al-Uzza as the "bride of Dushara". Al-Uzza may have been an epithet of Allāt in the Nabataean religion according to John F. Healey.<ref>{{cite book |author=Paola Corrente |editor1=Alberto Bernabé |editor2=Miguel Herrero de Jáuregui |editor3=Ana Isabel Jiménez San Cristóbal |editor4=Raquel Martín Hernández |publisher=Walter de Gruyter|title=Redefining Dionysos|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FmTnBQAAQBAJ&q=allat+sky&pg=PA263|pages=263, 264|isbn=9783110301328 |date=2013-06-26 }}</ref>

Outside Petra, other deities were worshipped; for example, ] and Manat were invoked in the Hejaz, and ] was invoked in the ] and the ]. The Nabataean king ], who founded ], was deified and worshipped as a god.{{Sfn|Sartre|2005|p=18}} They also worshipped ],{{Sfn|Taylor|2001|p=126}} ],{{Sfn|Drijvers|1980|p=154}} and various Greco-Roman deities such as ] and ].{{Sfn|Taylor|2001|p=145}} Maxime Rodinson suggests that Hubal, who was popular in Mecca, had a Nabataean origin.{{Sfn|Rodinson|2002|p=39}}

] holding up a bust of ], crowned as ] and encircled by the signs of the zodiac. Amman Museum copy of Nabataean statue, 100 AD.]]
The worship of Pakidas, a Nabataean god, is attested at ] alongside ] in an inscription dated to the first century A.D. while an Arabian god is also attested by three inscriptions dated to the second century.{{Sfn|Chancey|2002|p=136}}

The Nabataeans were known for their elaborate tombs, but they were not just for show; they were meant to be comfortable places for the dead.{{Sfn|Healey|2001|p=169–175}} Petra has many "sacred high places" which include altars that have usually been interpreted as places of human sacrifice, although, since the 1960s, an alternative theory that they are "exposure platforms" for placing the corpses of the deceased as part of a funerary ritual has been put forward. However, there is, in fact, little evidence for either proposition.{{Sfn|Ball|2002|p=67–68}}

==== Religious beliefs of Arabs outside Arabia ====
Palmyra was a cosmopolitan society, with its population being a mix of Aramaeans and Arabs. The Arabs of Palmyra worshipped ], Rahim and ]. The temple of al-Lat was established by the ] tribe, who were probably an Arab tribe.{{Sfn|Teixidor|1979|p=36}} The nomads of the countryside worshipped a set of deities, bearing Arab names and attributes,{{Sfn|Drijvers|1976|p=4}} most prominent of them was ],{{Sfn|Drijvers|1976|p=21}} who himself is not attested in Palmyra itself.{{Sfn|Teixidor|1979|p=81}} Ma'n, an Arab god, was worshipped alongside Abgal in a temple dedicated in 195 AD at Khirbet Semrin in the Palmyrene region while an inscription dated 194 AD at Ras esh-Shaar calls him the "good and bountiful god". A stele at Ras esh-Shaar shows him riding a horse with a lance while the god Saad is riding a camel. Abgal, Ma'n and Sa'd were known as the ''genii''.{{Sfn|Teixidor|1979|p=82}}

The god Ashar was represented on a stele in ] alongside another god Sa'd. The former was represented on a horse with Arab dress while the other was shown standing on the ground. Both had ] hairstyle, large facial hair and moustaches as well as similar clothing. Ashar's name is found to have been used in a ] among the Arab-majority areas of the region of the ], like ], where names like "Refuge of Ashar", "Servant of Ashar" and "Ashar has given" are recorded on an inscription.{{Sfn|Teixidor|1979|p=84}}

In ], the ] was the primary god around the time of the Roman Emperor ] and this worship was presumably brought in by migrants from Arabia. Julian's oration delivered to the denizens of the city mentioned that they worshipped the Sun surrounded by Azizos and Monimos whom ] identified with ] and ] respectively. Monimos derived from ''Mu'nim'' or "the favourable one", and was another name of Ruda or Ruldaiu as apparent from spellings of his name in ].{{Sfn|Teixidor|1979|p=68-69}}

The idol of the god al-Uqaysir was, according to the ''Book of Idols'', located in ], and was worshipped by the tribes of ], ], ], ], and ].{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=42}} Adherents would go on a pilgrimage to the idol and shave their heads, then mix their hair with wheat, "for every single hair a handful of wheat".{{Sfn|al-Kalbi|2015|p=42}}

A shrine to Dushara has been discovered in the ] of ] in Italy. The city was an important nexus for trade to the Near East, and it is known to have had a Nabataean presence during the mid 1st century BCE.<ref>AA.VV. Museo archeologico dei Campi Flegrei – Catalogo generale (vol. 2) – Pozzuoli, Electa Napoli 2008, pp. 60–63</ref> A Minaean altar dedicated to Wadd evidently existed in Delos, containing two inscriptions in Minaean and Greek respectively.<ref>Robin, Christian Julien, "Before Himyar: Epigraphic evidence", in {{Harvnb|Fisher|2015|pp=118}}</ref>

=== Bedouin religious beliefs ===
The ] were introduced to Meccan ritualistic practices as they frequented settled towns of the Hejaz during the four months of the "holy truce", the first three of which were devoted to religious observance, while the fourth was set aside for trade.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=33–34}} Alan Jones infers from Bedouin poetry that the gods, even Allah, were less important to the Bedouins than Fate.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=29}} They seem to have had little trust in rituals and pilgrimages as means of propitiating Fate, but had recourse to divination and soothsayers ({{transl|ar|kahins}}).{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=29}} The Bedouins regarded some trees, wells, caves and stones as sacred objects, either as fetishes or as means of reaching a deity.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=37}} They created sanctuaries where people could worship fetishes.{{Sfn|Carmody|Carmody|2015|p=135}}

The Bedouins had a code of honor which ] states may be regarded as their religious ethics. This code encompassed women, bravery, hospitality, honouring one's promises and pacts, and vengeance. They believed that the ghost of a slain person would cry out from the grave until their thirst for blood was quenched. Practices such as killing of infant girls were often regarded as having religious sanction.{{Sfn|Carmody|Carmody|2015|p=135}} Numerous mentions of ] in the Quran and testimony of both pre-Islamic and Islamic literature indicate that the belief in spirits was prominent in pre-Islamic Bedouin religion.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=59–60}} However, there is evidence that the word jinn is derived from Aramaic, {{transl|arc|ginnaye}}, which was widely attested in Palmyrene inscriptions. The Aramaic word was used by Christians to designate pagan gods reduced to the status of demons, and was introduced into Arabic folklore only late in the pre-Islamic era.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=59–60}} ] has observed that such spirits were thought to inhabit desolate, dingy and dark places and that they were feared.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=59–60}} One had to protect oneself from them, but they were not the objects of a true cult.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=59–60}}

Bedouin religious experience also included an apparently indigenous cult of ancestors.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=59–60}} The dead were not regarded as powerful, but rather as deprived of protection and needing charity of the living as a continuation of social obligations beyond the grave.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=59–60}} Only certain ancestors, especially heroes from which the tribe was said to derive its name, seem to have been objects of real veneration.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=59–60}}

== Other religions ==

=== Abrahamic religions ===

==== Judaism ====
{{Main|Judaism in pre-Islamic Arabia}}

] with writing "Yishaq bar Hanina" and a ], 330 BC – 200 AD|alt=]]
A thriving community of ] existed in pre-Islamic Arabia and included both sedentary and nomadic communities. Jews had migrated into Arabia from Roman times onwards.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} Arabian Jews spoke ] as well as ] and ] and had contact with Jewish religious centers in ] and ].{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} The Yemeni ] converted to ] in the 4th century, and some of the Kinda were also converted in the 4th/5th century.{{Sfn|Shahîd|1995|p=265}} Jewish tribes existed in all major Arabian towns during Muhammad's time including in ] and ] as well as ] with twenty tribes living in the peninsula. From tomb inscriptions, it is visible that Jews also lived in ] and ].{{Sfn|Gilbert|2010|p=2, 9}}

There is evidence that Jewish converts in the ] were regarded as Jews by other Jews, as well as by non-Jews, and sought advice from ] on matters of attire and ].{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} In at least one case, it is known that an Arab tribe agreed to adopt Judaism as a condition for settling in a town dominated by Jewish inhabitants.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} Some Arab women in ] are said to have vowed to make their child a Jew if the child survived, since they considered the Jews to be people "]" (''ʿilmin wa-kitābin'').{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} ] infers from proper names and agricultural vocabulary that the Jewish tribes of Yathrib consisted mostly of Judaized clans of Arabian and ] origin.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=33–34}}

The key role played by Jews in the trade and markets of the Hejaz meant that market day for the week was the day preceding the ].{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} This day, which was called ''aruba'' in Arabic, also provided occasion for legal proceedings and entertainment, which in turn may have influenced the choice of Friday as the day of Muslim congregational prayer.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} Toward the end of the sixth century, the Jewish communities in the Hejaz were in a state of economic and political decline, but they continued to flourish culturally in and beyond the region.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} They had developed their distinctive beliefs and practices, with a pronounced ] and ] dimension.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=87–93}} In the Islamic tradition, based on a phrase in the ], Arab Jews are said to have referred to ] as the son of ], although the historical accuracy of this assertion has been disputed.{{Sfn|Robinson|2013|p=75}}

] agriculturalists lived in the region of ].{{Sfn|Smart|2013|p=305}}{{Sfn|Holes|2001|p=XXIV–XXVI}} According to ], the ] may be the ] "descendants of converts from Christians (Arameans), Jews and ] inhabiting the island and cultivated coastal provinces of ] at the time of the Arab conquest".{{Sfn|Holes|2001|p=XXIV-XXVI}} From the Islamic sources, it seems that Judaism was the religion most followed in Yemen. ] claimed all Yemenites to be Jews; ] however states only Himyarites and some Kindites were Jews.{{Sfn|Lecker|1998|p=20}}

==== Christianity ====
] in eastern ]. The 4th century remains are thought to be one of ].]]{{Main|Christianity in pre-Islamic Arabia}}

The main areas of Christian influence in Arabia were on the northeastern and northwestern borders and in what was to become ] in the south.{{Sfn|Goddard|2000|p=15–17}} The north west was under the influence of Christian missionary activity from the ] where the ], a client kingdom of the Romans, were converted to Christianity.{{Sfn|Berkey|2003|p=44–46}} In the south, particularly at ], a centre of Christianity developed as a result of the influence of the Christian ] based on the other side of the ] in ].{{Sfn|Goddard|2000|p=15–17}} Some of the ] had converted to Christianity. One family of the tribe built a large church at Najran called ''Deir Najran'', also known as the "Ka'ba of Najran". Both the Ghassanids and the Christians in the south adopted ].{{Sfn|Goddard|2000|p=15–17}}

The third area of Christian influence was on the north eastern borders where the ], a client tribe of the ], adopted ], being the form of Christianity having the most influence in the Sassanian Empire.{{Sfn|Goddard|2000|p=15–17}} As the ] region of Arabia increasingly fell under the influence of the Sassanians from the early third century, many of the inhabitants were exposed to Christianity following the eastward dispersal of the religion by Mesopotamian Christians.{{Sfn|Gilman|Klimkeit|2013|p=87}} However, it was not until the fourth century that Christianity gained popularity in the region with the establishment of ] and a ].{{Sfn|Kozah|Abu-Husayn|2014|p=55}}

In pre-Islamic times, the population of Eastern Arabia consisted of ] (including ]) and ] Christians among other religions.{{Sfn|Houtsma|1993|p=98}} ] functioned as a ].{{Sfn|Smart|2013|p=305}}{{Sfn|Cameron|2002|p=185}} Serjeant states that the Baharna may be the ] descendants of converts from the original population of Christians (Aramaeans), among other religions at the time of Arab conquests.{{Sfn|Holes|2001|p=XXIV–XXVI}} Beth Qatraye, which translates "region of the Qataris" in ], was the Christian name used for the region encompassing north-eastern Arabia.<ref name=":9">, Peter Hellyer, ''Journal of Social Affairs'', volume 18, number 72, winter 2011, p. 88</ref><ref>. American University of Beirut. 31 May 2011. on 28 April 2015. Retrieved 12 May 2015.</ref> It included Bahrain, ], Al-Khatt, ], and Qatar.{{Sfn|Kozah|Abu-Husayn|2014|p=24}} Oman and what is today the United Arab Emirates comprised the ] known as Beth Mazunaye. The name was derived from 'Mazun', the ] name for Oman and the United Arab Emirates. ] was the central city of the diocese.<ref name=":9" />{{Sfn|Kozah|Abu-Husayn|2014|p=24}}

In ], in the centre of the peninsula, there is evidence of members of two tribes, Kinda and ], converting to Christianity in the 6th century. However, in the ] in the west, whilst there is evidence of the presence of Christianity, it is not thought to have been significant amongst the indigenous population of the area.{{Sfn|Goddard|2000|p=15–17}}

Arabicized Christian names were fairly common among pre-Islamic Arabians, which has been attributed to the influence that Syrianized Christian Arabs had on Bedouins of the peninsula for several centuries before the rise of Islam.{{Sfn|Zeitlin|2007|p=35}}

Neal Robinson, based on verses in the Quran, believes that some Arab Christians may have held unorthodox beliefs such as the worshipping of a divine triad of God the father, Jesus the Son and Mary the Mother.{{Sfn|Robinson|2013|p=76}} Furthermore, there is evidence that unorthodox groups such as the ], whose adherents worshipped Mary, were present in Arabia, and it has been proposed that the Quran refers to their beliefs.{{Sfn|Sirry|2014|p=46}} However, other scholars, notably ], ], ] and ], cast doubt on the historicity or reliability of such references in the Quran. Their views are as follows:

* ] argues that Muhammad's knowledge of Christianity "was rather approximative"{{sfn|Eliade|2013|p=77}} and that references to the triad of God, Jesus and Mary probably reflect the likelihood that Muhammad's information on Christianity came from people who had knowledge of the ], which was known for extreme ].{{sfn|Eliade|2013|p=77}}
* ] points out that we do not know how far Muhammad was acquainted with Christian beliefs prior to the ] and that dating of some of the passages criticizing Christianity is uncertain.{{sfn|Watt|1956|p=318}} His view is that Muhammad and the early Muslims may have been unaware of some orthodox Christian doctrines, including the nature of the trinity, because Muhammad's Christian informants had a limited grasp of doctrinal issues.{{sfn|Watt|1956|p=320}}
* Watt has also argued that the verses criticizing Christian doctrines in the Quran are attacking Christian heresies like tritheism and "physical sonship" rather than orthodox Christianity.{{sfn|Watt|1956|p=318}}{{Sfn|Sirry|2014|p=47}}
* ], ] and Gabriel Reynolds argue that the verses commenting on apparently unorthodox Christian beliefs should be read as an informed, polemically motivated caricature of mainstream Christian doctrine whose goal is to highlight how wrong some of its tenets appear from an Islamic perspective.{{Sfn|Sirry|2014|p=47}}

=== Iranian religions ===
Though they lack any surviving physical evidence,{{Sfn|Lindstedt|2023|p=6, n. 9}} Iranian religions may have existed in pre-Islamic Arabia on account of ] military presence along the ] and ] and on account of trade routes between the ] and ]. According to Islamic-era sources, Arabs in northeast of the peninsula converted to ] and several ] were constructed in ]. There is also evidence of existence of ] in Arabia as several early sources indicate a presence of "]" in Mecca, although the term could also be interpreted as referring to ]. However, according to the most recent research by Tardieu, the prevalence of Manichaeism in Mecca during the 6th and 7th centuries, when Islam emerged, can not be proven.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tardieu |first=Michel |title=Manichaeism, translated by DeBevoise |year=2008}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Tardieu |first=Michel |title=Les manichéens en Egypte |publisher=Bulletin de la Société Française d’Egyptologie}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Manichaeism Activity in Arabia |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/manicheism-iv-missionary-activity-and-technique- |quote=That Manicheism went further on to the Arabian peninsula, up to the Hejaz and Mecca, where it could have possibly contributed to the formation of the doctrine of Islam, cannot be proven.}}</ref> Similar reservations regarding the appearance of Manichaeism and Mazdakism in pre-Islamic Mecca are offered by Trompf & Mikkelsen et al. in their latest work (2018).<ref>{{Cite book |last=Garry W. Strompf & Gunner Mikkelsen |title=The Gnostic World |publisher=] |year=2018 |isbn=978-1138673939 |quote=Perhaps the charge of zandaqa functions in this report as a belated rhetorical caricature with no historical substance, much like the employment of congeners 'Manichee' and 'Gnostic' in the vocabulary of christian heresiography. If this is the case, historians can no longer appeal to the testimony of al-Kalbī as undisputable evidence for the proliferation of Manichaen-Doctrine in pre-islamic Mecca.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Ibid Strompf & Mikkelsen et al |quote=This tradition is persistently echoed by later tradents ... whose values as independent witnesses to Manichaean activity in early seventh century Mecca are correspondingly suspect.}}</ref> There is evidence for the circulation of Iranian religious ideas in the form of Persian loan words in Quran such as '']'' (paradise).{{Sfn|Hughes|2013|p=31, 32}}{{Sfn|Berkey|2003|p=47, 48}}

Zoroastrianism was also present in Eastern Arabia{{Sfn|Crone|2005|p=371}}{{Sfn|Gelder|2005|p=110}}{{Sfn|Stefon|2009|p=36}} and Persian-speaking Zoroastrians lived in the region.{{Sfn|Houtsma|1993|p=98}} The religion was introduced in the region including modern-day ] during the rule of Persian empires in the region starting from 250 B.C. It was mainly practiced in Bahrain by Persian settlers. Zoroastrianism was also practiced in the Persian-ruled area of modern-day ]. The religion also existed in Persian-ruled area of modern ]. The descendants of ], the Persian conquerors of Yemen, were followers of Zoroastrianism.{{Sfn|Esposito|1999|p=4}}{{Sfn|Lecker|1998|p=20}} Yemen's Zoroastrians who had the ] imposed on them after being conquered by Muhammad are mentioned by the Islamic historian ].{{Sfn|Lecker|1998|p=20}} According to Serjeant, the Baharna people may be the ] descendants of converts from the original population of ancient Persians (majus) as well as other religions.{{Sfn|Holes|2001|p=XXIV-XXVI}}

=== Buddhism ===
There are some Islamic documents that, when describing the state of religion in pre-Islamic Arabia, include a presence of ]. One recurring theme in these depictions is that the Buddhist community was able to store some of their idols in the ]. ] (d. 1318), in his ], says both that Buddhist idols could be found in the Kaaba and that both Arabs and some Persians on the peninsula saw themselves as students of the Buddha. One Islamic ] from the thirteenth century depicts Muhammad destroying Hindu and Buddhist idols at the Kaaba. ] said that Buddhists see the Kaaba as one of their temples. Al-Masudi also depicts the ] tribe of Mecca as having gold-plated deer statues, which were then seen as typical Buddhist symbols. Mostafa Vaziri has speculated about a possible historicity to these descriptions, suggesting that Buddhism reached Arabia through Indian merchants and trade routes. Vaziri also speculates an influence of Buddhist architecture on the design of the Kaaba, such as from the Nawbahār and other Buddhist ]<nowiki/>s.{{Sfn|Vaziri|2012|p=91–95}}

== See also ==
* ] * ]
* ]
* ]
* ] * '']''
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* ]
* ]

== References ==
=== Citations ===
{{Reflist |32em}}


==Notes== === Sources ===
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{{Refend}}


{{Pre-Islamic Arabia}}
==References==
{{Religion topics |ancient}}
{{reflist|2}}
{{Paganism}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Arabian Mythology}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Arabian Mythology}}
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Latest revision as of 12:15, 19 January 2025

This article is about a religion-specific overview of Arabia before the rise of Islam in 610 CE. For the practice of Christianity in pre-Islamic Arabia, see Christianity in pre-Islamic Arabia. For the practice of Judaism in pre-Islamic Arabia, see Judaism in pre-Islamic Arabia. For a general overview of civilization in Arabia before Islam, see Pre-Islamic Arabia.

Alabaster votive figurines from Yemen, now in the National Museum of Oriental Art, Rome
Gilded statue of the Canaanite creator god El, BC. 1400–1200 El-Megiddo. El is considered the origin of the words Ilah and continues to appear in compound names such as Gabriel, Michael, Azrael, Ishmael, etc.
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Indigenous Arabian polytheism, ancient Semitic religions, Christianity, Judaism, Mandaeism, and Zoroastrianism were among the religions in pre-Islamic Arabia. Arabian polytheism, the dominant form of religion, was based on veneration of deities and spirits. Worship was directed to various gods and goddesses, including Hubal and the goddesses al-Lāt, al-‘Uzzā, and Manāt, at local shrines and temples such as the Kaaba in Mecca. Deities were venerated and invoked through a variety of rituals, including pilgrimages and divination, as well as ritual sacrifice. Different theories have been proposed regarding the role of Allah in Meccan religion. Many of the physical descriptions of the pre-Islamic gods are traced to idols, especially near the Kaaba, which is said to have contained up to 360 of them.

Other religions were represented to varying, lesser degrees. The influence of the adjacent Roman and Aksumite civilizations resulted in Christian communities in the northwest, northeast, and south of Arabia. Christianity made a lesser impact in the remainder of the peninsula, but did secure some conversions. With the exception of Nestorianism in the northeast and the Persian Gulf, the dominant form of Christianity was Miaphysitism. The peninsula had been a destination for Jewish migration since Roman times, which had resulted in a diaspora community supplemented by local converts. Judaism had largely grown in South Arabia and the northwest Hijaz. Additionally, the influence of the Sasanian Empire resulted in Iranian religions being present in the peninsula. Zoroastrianism existed in the east and south, while there is evidence of either Manichaeism or Mazdakism being possibly practiced in Mecca.

Background and sources

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South Arabian deities

Until about the fourth century, almost all inhabitants of Arabia practiced polytheistic religions at which point pre-Islamic Arabian monotheism had begun to spread. From the fourth to sixth centuries, Jewish, Christian, and other monotheistic populations developed. Until recent decades, it was believed that polytheism remained the dominant belief system in pre-Islamic Arabia, but recent trends suggest that henotheism or monotheism was dominant from the fourth century onwards.

The contemporary sources of information regarding the pre-Islamic Arabian religion and pantheon include a growing number of inscriptions in carvings written in Arabian scripts like Safaitic, Sabaic, and Paleo-Arabic, pre-Islamic poetry, external sources such as Jewish and Greek accounts, as well as the Muslim tradition, such as the Qur'an and Islamic writings. Nevertheless, information is limited.

One early attestation of Arabian polytheism was in Esarhaddon's Annals, mentioning Atarsamain, Nukhay, Ruldaiu, and Atarquruma. Herodotus, writing in his Histories, reported that the Arabs worshipped Orotalt (identified with Dionysus) and Alilat (identified with Aphrodite). Strabo stated the Arabs worshipped Dionysus and Zeus. Origen stated they worshipped Dionysus and Urania.

Muslim sources regarding Arabian polytheism include the eighth-century Book of Idols by Hisham ibn al-Kalbi, which F.E. Peters argued to be the most substantial treatment of the religious practices of pre-Islamic Arabia, as well as the writings of the Yemeni historian al-Hasan al-Hamdani on South Arabian religious beliefs.

According to the Book of Idols, descendants of the son of Abraham (Ishmael) who had settled in Mecca migrated to other lands carried holy stones from the Kaaba with them, erected them, and circumambulated them like the Kaaba. This, according to al-Kalbi led to the rise of idol worship. Based on this, it may be probable that Arabs originally venerated stones, later adopting idol-worship under foreign influences. The relationship between a god and a stone as his representation can be seen from the third-century Syriac work called the Homily of Pseudo-Meliton where he describes the pagan faiths of Syriac-speakers in northern Mesopotamia, who were mostly Arabs. However, mythologies and narratives elucidating the history of these gods, as well as the meaning of their epithets, remains uninformative.

Supernatural beings

Main article: List of pre-Islamic Arabian deities

Pantheons

Nabataean baetyl depicting a goddess, possibly al-Uzza.

The pre-Islamic Arabian religions were polytheistic, with many of the deities' names known. Formal pantheons are more noticeable at the level of kingdoms, of variable sizes, ranging from simple city-states to collections of tribes. Tribes, towns, clans, lineages and families had their own cults too. Christian Julien Robin suggests that this structure of the divine world reflected the society of the time. Trade caravans also brought foreign religious and cultural influences. A large number of deities did not have proper names and were referred to by titles indicating a quality, a family relationship, or a locale preceded by "he who" or "she who" (dhū or dhāt respectively).

The religious beliefs and practices of the nomadic Bedouin were distinct from those of the settled tribes of towns such as Mecca. Nomadic religious belief systems and practices are believed to have included fetishism, totemism and veneration of the dead but were connected principally with immediate concerns and problems and did not consider larger philosophical questions such as the afterlife. Settled urban Arabs, on the other hand, are thought to have believed in a more complex pantheon of deities. While the Meccans and the other settled inhabitants of the Hejaz worshiped their gods at permanent shrines in towns and oases, the Bedouin practiced their religion on the move.

Minor spirits

In South Arabia, mndh’t were anonymous guardian spirits of the community and the ancestor spirits of the family. They were known as 'the sun (shms) of their ancestors'.

In North Arabia, ginnaye were known from Palmyrene inscriptions as "the good and rewarding gods" and were probably related to the jinn of west and central Arabia. Unlike jinn in modern times, ginnaye could not hurt nor possess humans and were much more similar to the Roman genius. According to common Arabian belief, soothsayers, pre-Islamic philosophers, and poets were inspired by the jinn. However, jinn were also feared and thought to be responsible for causing various diseases and mental illnesses.

Malevolent beings

Aside from benevolent gods and spirits, there existed malevolent beings. These beings were not attested in the epigraphic record, but were alluded to in pre-Islamic Arabic poetry, and their legends were collected by later Muslim authors.

Commonly mentioned are ghouls. Etymologically, the English word "ghoul" was derived from the Arabic ghul, from ghala, "to seize", related to the Sumerian galla. They are said to have a hideous appearance, with feet like those of an ass. Arabs were said to utter the following couplet if they should encounter one: "Oh ass-footed one, just bray away, we won't leave the desert plain nor ever go astray."

Christian Julien Robin notes that all the known South Arabian divinities had a positive or protective role and that evil powers were only alluded to but were never personified.

Roles of deities

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Role of Allah

Main article: Allah

Some scholars postulate that in pre-Islamic Arabia, including in Mecca, Allah was considered to be a deity, possibly a creator deity or a supreme deity in a polytheistic pantheon. The word Allah (from the Arabic al-ilah meaning "the god") may have been used as a title rather than a name. The concept of Allah may have been vague in the Meccan religion. According to Islamic sources, Meccans and their neighbors believed that the goddesses Al-lāt, Al-‘Uzzá, and Manāt were the daughters of Allah.

Regional variants of the word Allah occur in both pagan and Christian pre-Islamic inscriptions. References to Allah are found in the poetry of the pre-Islamic Arab poet Zuhayr bin Abi Sulma, who lived a generation before Muhammad, as well as pre-Islamic personal names. Muhammad's father's name was ʿAbd-Allāh, meaning "the servant of Allah".

Charles Russell Coulter and Patricia Turner considered that Allah's name may be derived from a pre-Islamic god called Ailiah and is similar to El, Il, Ilah, and Jehovah. They also considered some of his characteristics to be seemingly based on lunar deities like Almaqah, Kahl, Shaker, Wadd and Warakh. Alfred Guillaume states that the connection between Ilah that came to form Allah and ancient Babylonian Il or El of ancient Israel is not clear. Wellhausen states that Allah was known from Jewish and Christian sources and was known to pagan Arabs as the supreme god. Winfried Corduan doubts the theory of Allah of Islam being linked to a moon god, stating that the term Allah functions as a generic term, like the term El-Elyon used as a title for the god Sin.

South Arabian inscriptions from the fourth century AD refer to a god called Rahman ("The Merciful One") who had a monotheistic cult and was referred to as the "Lord of heaven and Earth". Aaron W. Hughes states that scholars are unsure whether he developed from the earlier polytheistic systems or developed due to the increasing significance of the Christian and Jewish communities, and that it is difficult to establish whether Allah was linked to Rahman. Maxime Rodinson, however, considers one of Allah's names, "Ar-Rahman", to have been used in the form of Rahmanan earlier.

Al-Lat, al-Uzza and Manat

Bas-relief: Nemesis, al-Lat and the dedicator. Palmyrene, 2nd–3rd century AD.

Al-Lāt, Al-‘Uzzá and Manāt were common names used for multiple goddesses across Arabia. G. R. Hawting states that modern scholars have frequently associated the names of Arabian goddesses Al-lāt, Al-‘Uzzá and Manāt with cults devoted to celestial bodies, particularly Venus, drawing upon evidence external to the Muslim tradition as well as in relation to Syria, Mesopotamia and the Sinai Peninsula.

Allāt (Arabic: اللات) or al-Lāt was worshipped throughout the ancient Near East with various associations. Herodotus in the 5th century BC identifies Alilat (Greek: Ἀλιλάτ) as the Arabic name for Aphrodite (and, in another passage, for Urania), which is strong evidence for worship of Allāt in Arabia at that early date. Al-‘Uzzá (Arabic: العزى) was a fertility goddess or possibly a goddess of love. Manāt (Arabic: مناة) was the goddess of destiny.

Al-Lāt's cult was spread in Syria and northern Arabia. From Safaitic and Hismaic inscriptions, it is probable that she was worshiped as Lat (lt). F. V. Winnet saw al-Lat as a lunar deity due to the association of a crescent with her in 'Ayn esh-Shallāleh and a Lihyanite inscription mentioning the name of Wadd, the Minaean moon god, over the title of fkl lt. René Dussaud and Gonzague Ryckmans linked her with Venus while others have thought her to be a solar deity. John F. Healey considers that al-Uzza actually might have been an epithet of al-Lāt before becoming a separate deity in the Meccan pantheon. Paola Corrente, writing in Redefining Dionysus, considers she might have been a god of vegetation or a celestial deity of atmospheric phenomena and a sky deity.

Practices

Stone-carved god-stones in Petra, Jordan.

Cult images and idols

The worship of sacred stones constituted one of the most important practices of the Semitic speaking peoples, including Arabs. Cult images of a deity were most often an unworked stone block. The most common name for these stone blocks was derived from the Semitic nsb ("to be stood upright"), but other names were used, such as Nabataean masgida ("place of prostration") and Arabic duwar ("object of circumambulation", this term often occurs in pre-Islamic Arabic poetry). These god-stones were usually a free-standing slab, but Nabataean god-stones are usually carved directly on the rock face. Facial features may be incised on the stone (especially in Nabataea), or astral symbols (especially in South Arabia). Under Greco-Roman influence, an anthropomorphic statue might be used instead.

The Book of Idols describes two types of statues: idols (sanam) and images (wathan). If a statue were made of wood, gold, or silver, after a human form, it would be an idol, but if the statue were made of stone, it would be an image.

Representation of deities in animal-form was common in South Arabia, such as the god Sayin from Hadhramaut, who was represented as either an eagle fighting a serpent or a bull.

Floor-plan of the peristyle hall of the Awwam temple in Ma'rib.

Sacred places

Sacred places were known as hima, haram or mahram, and within these places, all living things were considered inviolable and violence was forbidden. In most of Arabia, these places would take the form of open-air sanctuaries, with distinguishing natural features such as springs and forests. Cities would contain temples, enclosing the sacred area with walls, and featuring ornate structures.

Priesthood and sacred offices

Sacred areas often had a guardian or a performer of cultic rites. These officials were thought to tend the area, receive offerings, and perform divination. They are known by many names, probably based on cultural-linguistic preference: afkal was used in the Hejaz, kâhin was used in the Sinai-Negev-Hisma region [ar], and kumrâ was used in Aramaic-influenced areas. In South Arabia, rsw and 'fkl were used to refer to priests, and other words include qyn ("administrator") and mrtd ("consecrated to a particular divinity"). A more specialized staff is thought to have existed in major sanctuaries.

Pilgrimages

Pre-Islamic Arabia was a region of many pilgrimage rituals beyond that of Hajj. Many words in Arabian languages were used to describe pilgrimage, including the Semitic ḥgg. The most important pilgrimage ritual in South Arabia was the one to the Temple of Awwam, dedicated to the god Almaqah, which was associated with a ḥaram or maḥram. A number of other South Arabian deities were also associated with special sanctuaries and pilgrimages, including Dhu Samawi, Qaynan, Siyan, and several more.

Pilgrimages to sacred places would be made at certain times of the year. Pilgrim fairs of central and northern Arabia took place in specific months designated as violence-free, allowing several activities to flourish, such as trade, though in some places only exchange was permitted.

South Arabian pilgrimages

The most important pilgrimage in Saba' was probably the pilgrimage of Almaqah at Ma'rib, performed in the month of dhu-Abhi (roughly in July). Two references attest the pilgrimage of Almaqah dhu-Hirran at 'Amran. The pilgrimage of Ta'lab Riyam took place in Mount Tur'at and the Zabyan temple at Hadaqan, while the pilgrimage of Dhu-Samawi, the god of the Amir tribe, took place in Yathill. Aside from Sabaean pilgrimages, the pilgrimage of Sayin took place at Shabwa.

Meccan pilgrimage

The pilgrimage of Mecca involved the stations of Mount Arafat, Muzdalifah, Mina and central Mecca that included Safa and Marwa as well as the Kaaba. Pilgrims at the first two stations performed wuquf or standing in adoration. At Mina, animals were sacrificed. The procession from Arafat to Muzdalifah, and from Mina to Mecca, in a pre-reserved route towards idols or an idol, was termed ijaza and ifada, with the latter taking place before sunset. At Jabal Quzah, fires were started during the sacred month.

Nearby the Kaaba was located the betyl which was later called Maqam Ibrahim; a place called al-Ḥigr which Aziz al-Azmeh takes to be reserved for consecrated animals, basing his argument on a Sabaean inscription mentioning a place called mḥgr which was reserved for animals; and the Well of Zamzam. Both Safa and Marwa were adjacent to two sacrificial hills, one called Muṭ'im al Ṭayr and another Mujāwir al-Riḥ which was a pathway to Abu Kubais from where the Black Stone is reported to have originated.

Cult associations

Meccan pilgrimages differed according to the rites of different cult associations, in which individuals and groups joined for religious purposes. The Ḥilla association performed the hajj in autumn season while the Ṭuls and Ḥums performed the umrah in spring.

The Ḥums were the Quraysh, Banu Kinanah, Banu Khuza'a and Banu 'Amir. They did not perform the pilgrimage outside the zone of Mecca's haram, thus excluding Mount Arafat. They also developed certain dietary and cultural restrictions. According to Kitab al-Muhabbar, the Ḥilla denoted most of the Banu Tamim, Qays, Rabi`ah, Qūḍa'ah, Ansar, Khath'am, Bajīlah, Banu Bakr ibn Abd Manat, Hudhayl, Asad, Tayy and Bariq. The Ṭuls comprised the tribes of Yemen and Hadramaut, 'Akk, Ujayb and Īyād. The Basl recognised at least eight months of the calendar as holy. There was also another group which did not recognize the sanctity of Mecca's haram or holy months, unlike the other four.

Astrology and divination

The ancient Arabs that inhabited the Arabian Peninsula before the advent of Islam used to profess a widespread belief in fatalism (ḳadar) alongside a fearful consideration for the sky and the stars, which they held to be ultimately responsible for every phenomenon that occurs on Earth and for the destiny of humankind. Accordingly, they shaped their entire lives in accordance with their interpretations of astral configurations and phenomena.

In South Arabia, oracles were regarded as ms’l, or "a place of asking", and that deities interacted by hr’yhw ("making them see") a vision, a dream, or even direct interaction. Otherwise deities interacted indirectly through a medium.

There were three methods of chance-based divination attested in pre-Islamic Arabia; two of these methods, making marks in the sand or on rocks and throwing pebbles are poorly attested. The other method, the practice of randomly selecting an arrow with instructions, was widely attested and was common throughout Arabia. A simple form of this practice was reportedly performed before the image of Dhu'l-Khalasa by a certain man, sometimes said to be the Kindite poet Imru al-Qays according to al-Kalbi. A more elaborate form of the ritual was performed in before the image of Hubal. This form of divination was also attested in Palmyra, evidenced by an honorific inscription in the temple of al-Lat.

Offerings and ritual sacrifice

Thamudic petroglyphs from Wadi Rum, depicting a hunter, ibex, a camel and a rider on horseback. Camels were among the sacrificial animals in pre-Islamic Arabia.

The most common offerings were animals, crops, food, liquids, inscribed metal plaques or stone tablets, aromatics, edifices and manufactured objects. Camel-herding Arabs would devote some of their beasts to certain deities. The beasts would have their ears slit and would be left to pasture without a herdsman, allowing them to die a natural death.

Pre-Islamic Arabians, especially pastoralist tribes, sacrificed animals as an offering to a deity. This type of offering was common and involved domestic animals such as camels, sheep and cattle, while game animals and poultry were rarely or never mentioned. Sacrifice rites were not tied to a particular location though they were usually practiced in sacred places. Sacrifice rites could be performed by the devotee, though according to Hoyland, women were probably not allowed. The victim's blood, according to pre-Islamic Arabic poetry and certain South Arabian inscriptions, was also 'poured out' on the altar stone, thus forming a bond between the human and the deity. According to Muslim sources, most sacrifices were concluded with communal feasts.

In South Arabia, beginning with the Christian era, or perhaps a short while before, statuettes were presented before the deity, known as slm (male) or slmt (female). Human sacrifice was sometimes carried out in Arabia. The victims were generally prisoners of war, who represented the god's part of the victory in booty, although other forms might have existed.

Blood sacrifice was definitely practiced in South Arabia, but few allusions to the practice are known, apart from some Minaean inscriptions.

Monotheism

Main article: Monotheism in pre-Islamic Arabia

Pre-Islamic Arabia practiced various forms of polytheistic religion until the 4th century, when monotheism was introduced into the region and became largely prevalent by the 6th century, as is attested in texts like the inscriptions from Jabal Dabub, Ri al-Zallalah, and the Abd Shams inscription.

Other practices

In the Hejaz, menstruating women were not allowed to be near the cult images. The area where Isaf and Na'ila's images stood was considered out-of-bounds for menstruating women. This was reportedly the same with Manaf. According to the Book of Idols, this rule applied to all the "idols". This was also the case in South Arabia, as attested in a South Arabian inscription from al-Jawf.

Sexual intercourse in temples was prohibited, as attested in two South Arabian inscriptions. One legend concerning Isaf and Na'ila, when two lovers made love in the Kaaba and were petrified, joining the idols in the Kaaba, echoes this prohibition.

By geography

Eastern Arabia

Lee Lawrie, Nabu (1939). Library of Congress John Adams Building, Washington, D.C.
The Worshipping Servant statue from Tarout Island, 2500 BC

The Dilmun civilization, which existed along the Persian Gulf coast and Bahrain until the 6th century BC, worshipped a pair of deities, Inzak and Meskilak. It is not known whether these were the only deities in the pantheon or whether there were others. The discovery of wells at the sites of a Dilmun temple and a shrine suggests that sweet water played an important part in religious practices.

In the subsequent Greco-Roman period, there is evidence that the worship of non-indigenous deities was brought to the region by merchants and visitors. These included Bel, a god popular in the Syrian city of Palmyra, the Mesopotamian deities Nabu and Shamash, the Greek deities Poseidon and Artemis and the west Arabian deities Kahl and Manat.

South Arabia

Sculpture of a Sabaean priestess raising her hand to intercede with the sun goddess on behalf of a donor. Probably first century.

The main sources of religious information in pre-Islamic South Arabia are inscriptions, which number in the thousands, as well as the Quran, complemented by archaeological evidence.

The civilizations of South Arabia are considered to have the most developed pantheon in the Arabian peninsula. In South Arabia, the most common god was 'Athtar, who was considered remote. The patron deity (shym) was considered to be of much more immediate significance than 'Athtar. Thus, the kingdom of Saba' had Almaqah, the kingdom of Ma'in had Wadd, the kingdom of Qataban had 'Amm, and the kingdom of Hadhramaut had Sayin. Each people was termed the "children" of their respective patron deity. Patron deities played a vital role in sociopolitical terms, their cults serving as the focus of a person's cohesion and loyalty.

Evidence from surviving inscriptions suggests that each of the southern kingdoms had its own pantheon of three to five deities, the major deity always being a god. For example, the pantheon of Saba comprised Almaqah, the major deity, together with 'Athtar, Haubas, Dhat-Himyam, and Dhat-Badan. The main god in Ma'in and Himyar was 'Athtar, in Qataban it was Amm, and in Hadhramaut it was Sayin. 'Amm was a lunar deity and was associated with the weather, especially lightning. One of the most frequent titles of the god Almaqah was "Lord of Awwam".

Anbay was an oracular god of Qataban and also the spokesman of Amm. His name was invoked in royal regulations regarding water supply. Anbay's name was related to that of the Babylonian deity Nabu. Hawkam was invoked alongside Anbay as god of "command and decision" and his name is derived from the root word "to be wise".

Ruins of temple of Awwam, dedicated to Almaqah.

Each kingdom's central temple was the focus of worship for the main god and would be the destination for an annual pilgrimage, with regional temples dedicated to a local manifestation of the main god. Other beings worshipped included local deities or deities dedicated to specific functions as well as deified ancestors.

Influence of Arab tribes

The encroachment of northern Arab tribes into South Arabia also introduced northern Arab deities into the region. The three goddesses al-Lat, al-Uzza and Manat became known as Lat/Latan, Uzzayan and Manawt. Uzzayan's cult in particular was widespread in South Arabia, and in Qataban she was invoked as a guardian of the final royal palace. Lat/Latan was not significant in South Arabia, but appears to be popular with the Arab tribes bordering Yemen. Other Arab deities include Dhu-Samawi, a god originally worshipped by the Amir tribe, and Kahilan, perhaps related to Kahl of Qaryat al-Faw.

Bordering Yemen, the Azd Sârat tribe of the Asir region was said to have worshipped Dhu'l-Shara, Dhu'l-Kaffayn, Dhu'l-Khalasa and A'im. According to the Book of Idols, Dhu'l-Kaffayn originated from a clan of the Banu Daws. In addition to being worshipped among the Azd, Dushara is also reported to have a shrine amongst the Daws. Dhu’l-Khalasa was an oracular god and was also worshipped by the Bajila and Khatham tribes.

Influence on Aksum

Before conversion to Christianity, the Aksumites followed a polytheistic religion that was similar to that of Southern Arabia. The lunar god Hawbas was worshiped in South Arabia and Aksum. The god Astar, a sky-deity was related to that of 'Attar, was also worshipped in Aksum. The god Almaqah was worshiped at Hawulti-Melazo. The South Arabian gods in Aksum included Dhat-Himyam and Dhat-Ba'adan. A stone later reused for the church of Enda-Cerqos at Melazo mentions these gods. Hawbas is also mentioned on an altar and sphinx in Dibdib. The name of Nrw who is mentioned in Aksum inscriptions is related to that of the South Arabian god Nawraw, a deity of stars.

Transition to Judaism

The Himyarite kings radically opposed polytheism in favor of Judaism, beginning officially in 380. The last trace of polytheism in South Arabia, an inscription commemorating a construction project with a polytheistic invocation, and another, mentioning the temple of Ta’lab, all date from just after 380 (the former dating to the rule of the king Dhara’amar Ayman, and the latter dating to the year 401–402). The rejection of polytheism from the public sphere did not mean the extinction of it altogether, as polytheism likely continued in the private sphere.

Central Arabia

The Kinda tribe's chief god was Kahl, whom their capital Qaryat Dhat Kahl (modern Qaryat al-Faw) was named for. His name appears in the form of many inscriptions and rock engravings on the slopes of the Tuwayq, on the walls of the souk of the village, in the residential houses and on the incense burners. An inscription in Qaryat Dhat Kahl invokes the gods Kahl, Athtar al-Shariq and Lah.

Hejaz

According to Islamic sources, the Hejaz region was home to three important shrines dedicated to al-Lat, al-’Uzza and Manat. The shrine and idol of al-Lat, according to the Book of Idols, once stood in Ta'if, and was primarily worshipped by the Banu Thaqif tribe. Al-’Uzza's principal shrine was in Nakhla and she was the chief-goddess of the Quraysh tribe. Manāt's idol, reportedly the oldest of the three, was erected on the seashore between Medina and Mecca, and was honored by the Aws and Khazraj tribes. Inhabitants of several areas venerated Manāt, performing sacrifices before her idol, and pilgrimages of some were not considered completed until they visited Manāt and shaved their heads.

In the Muzdalifah region near Mecca, the god Quzah, who is a god of rains and storms, was worshipped. In pre-Islamic times pilgrims used to halt at the "hill of Quzah" before sunrise. Qusai ibn Kilab is traditionally reported to have introduced the association of fire worship with him on Muzdalifah.

Various other deities were venerated in the area by specific tribes, such as the god Suwa' by the Banu Hudhayl tribe and the god Nuhm by the Muzaynah tribe.

Historiography

The majority of extant information about Mecca during the rise of Islam and earlier times comes from the text of the Quran itself and later Muslim sources such as the prophetic biography literature dealing with the life of Muhammad and the Book of Idols. Alternative sources are so fragmentary and specialized that writing a convincing history of this period based on them alone is impossible. Several scholars hold that the sīra literature is not independent of the Quran but has been fabricated to explain the verses of the Quran. There is evidence to support the contention that some reports of the sīras are of dubious validity, but there is also evidence to support the contention that the sīra narratives originated independently of the Quran. Compounding the problem is that the earliest extant Muslim historical works, including the sīras, were composed in their definitive form more than a century after the beginning of the Islamic era. Some of these works were based on subsequently lost earlier texts, which in their turn recorded a fluid oral tradition. Scholars do not agree as to the time when such oral accounts began to be systematically collected and written down, and they differ greatly in their assessment of the historical reliability of the available texts.

Role of Mecca and the Kaaba

A drawing of the Kaaba's black stone in fragmented form, front and side illustrations.

The Kaaba, whose environs were regarded as sacred (haram), became a national shrine under the custodianship of the Quraysh, the chief tribe of Mecca, which made the Hejaz the most important religious area in north Arabia. Its role was solidified by a confrontation with the Christian king Abraha, who controlled much of Arabia from a seat of power in Yemen in the middle of the sixth century. Abraha had recently constructed a splendid church in Sana'a, and he wanted to make that city a major center of pilgrimage, but Mecca's Kaaba presented a challenge to his plan. Abraha found a pretext for an attack on Mecca, presented by different sources alternatively as pollution of the church by a tribe allied to the Meccans or as an attack on Abraha's grandson in Najran by a Meccan party. The defeat of the army he assembled to conquer Mecca is recounted in detail by the Islamic tradition and is also alluded to in the Quran and pre-Islamic poetry. After the battle, which probably occurred around 565, the Quraysh became a dominant force in western Arabia, receiving the title "God's people" (ahl Allah) according to Islamic sources, and formed the cult association of ḥums, which tied members of many tribes in western Arabia to the Kaaba.

The Kaaba, Allah, and Hubal

According to tradition, the Kaaba was a cube-like, originally roofless structure housing a black stone revered as a relic. The sanctuary was dedicated to Hubal (Arabic: هبل), who, according to some sources, was worshiped as the greatest of the 360 idols the Kaaba contained, which probably represented the days of the year. Ibn Ishaq and Ibn Al-Kalbi both report that the human-shaped idol of Hubal made of precious stone (agate, according to the Book of Idols) came into the possession of the Quraysh with its right hand broken off and that the Quraysh made a hand of gold to replace it. A soothsayer performed divination in the shrine by drawing ritual arrows, and vows and sacrifices were made to assure success. Marshall Hodgson argues that relations with deities and fetishes in pre-Islamic Mecca were maintained chiefly on the basis of bargaining, where favors were expected in return for offerings. A deity's or oracle's failure to provide the desired response was sometimes met with anger.

Different theories have been proposed regarding the role of Allah in Meccan religion. According to one hypothesis, which goes back to Julius Wellhausen, Allah (the supreme deity of the tribal federation around Quraysh) was a designation that consecrated the superiority of Hubal (the supreme deity of Quraysh) over the other gods. However, there is also evidence that Allah and Hubal were two distinct deities. According to that hypothesis, the Kaaba was first consecrated to a supreme deity named Allah and then hosted the pantheon of Quraysh after their conquest of Mecca, about a century before the time of Muhammad. Some inscriptions seem to indicate the use of Allah as a name of a polytheist deity centuries earlier, but we know nothing precise about this use. Some scholars have suggested that Allah may have represented a remote creator god who was gradually eclipsed by more particularized local deities. There is disagreement on whether Allah played a major role in the Meccan religious cult. No iconic representation or idol of Allah is known to have existed.

Other deities

The three chief goddesses of Meccan religion were al-Lat, Al-‘Uzzá, and Manāt, who were called the daughters of Allah. Egerton Sykes meanwhile states that Al-lāt was the female counterpart of Allah while Uzza was a name given by Banu Ghatafan to the planet Venus.

Other deities of the Quraysh in Mecca included Manaf, Isaf and Na’ila. Although the early Arab historian Al-Tabari calls Manaf (Arabic: مناف) "one of the greatest deities of Mecca", very little information is available about it. Women touched his idol as a token of blessing, and kept away from it during menstruation. Gonzague Ryckmans described this as a practice peculiar to Manaf, but according to the Encyclopedia of Islam, a report from Ibn Al-Kalbi indicates that it was common to all idols. Muhammad's great-great-grandfather's name was Abd Manaf which means "slave of Manaf". He is thought by some scholars to be a sun-god. The idols of Isāf and Nā'ila were located near the Black Stone with a talbiyah performed to Isāf during sacrifices. Various legends existed about the idols, including one that they were petrified after they committed adultery in the Kaaba.

The pantheon of the Quraysh was not identical with that of the tribes who entered into various cult and commercial associations with them, especially that of the hums. Christian Julien Robin argues that the former was composed principally of idols that were in the sanctuary of Mecca, including Hubal and Manaf, while the pantheon of the associations was superimposed on it, and its principal deities included the three goddesses, who had neither idols nor a shrine in that city.

Political and religious developments

The second half of the sixth century was a period of political disorder in Arabia and communication routes were no longer secure. Religious divisions were an important cause of the crisis. Judaism became the dominant religion in Yemen while Christianity took root in the Persian Gulf area. In line with the broader trends of the ancient world, Arabia yearned for a more spiritual form of religion and began believing in afterlife, while the choice of religion increasingly became a personal rather than communal choice. While many were reluctant to convert to a foreign faith, those faiths provided intellectual and spiritual reference points, and the old pagan vocabulary of Arabic began to be replaced by Jewish and Christian loanwords from Aramaic everywhere, including Mecca. The distribution of pagan temples supports Gerald Hawting's argument that Arabian polytheism was marginalized in the region and already dying in Mecca on the eve of Islam. The practice of polytheistic cults was increasingly limited to the steppe and the desert, and in Yathrib (later known as Medina), which included two tribes with polytheistic majorities, the absence of a public pagan temple in the town or its immediate neighborhood indicates that polytheism was confined to the private sphere. Looking at the text of the Quran itself, Hawting has also argued that the criticism of idolaters and polytheists contained in Quran is in fact a hyperbolic reference to other monotheists, in particular the Arab Jews and Arab Christians, whose religious beliefs were considered imperfect. According to some traditions, the Kaaba contained no statues, but its interior was decorated with images of Mary and Jesus, prophets, angels, and trees.

To counter the effects of anarchy, the institution of sacred months, during which every act of violence was prohibited, was reestablished. During those months, it was possible to participate in pilgrimages and fairs without danger. The Quraysh upheld the principle of two annual truces, one of one month and the second of three months, which conferred a sacred character to the Meccan sanctuary. The cult association of hums, in which individuals and groups partook in the same rites, was primarily religious, but it also had important economic consequences. Although, as Patricia Crone has shown, Mecca could not compare with the great centers of caravan trade on the eve of Islam, it was probably one of the most prosperous and secure cities of the peninsula, since, unlike many of them, it did not have surrounding walls. Pilgrimage to Mecca was a popular custom. Some Islamic rituals, including processions around the Kaaba and between the hills of al-Safa and Marwa, as well as the salutation "we are here, O Allah, we are here" repeated on approaching the Kaaba are believed to have antedated Islam. Spring water acquired a sacred character in Arabia early on and Islamic sources state that the well of Zamzam became holy long before the Islamic era.

Advent of Islam

Persian miniature depicting the destruction of idols during the conquest of Mecca; here Muhammad is represented as a flame.

According to Ibn Sa'd, the opposition in Mecca started when the prophet of Islam, Muhammad, delivered verses that "spoke shamefully of the idols they (the Meccans) worshiped other than Himself (God) and mentioned the perdition of their fathers who died in disbelief". According to William Montgomery Watt, as the ranks of Muhammad's followers swelled, he became a threat to the local tribes and the rulers of the city, whose wealth rested upon the Kaaba, the focal point of Meccan religious life, which Muhammad threatened to overthrow. Muhammad's denunciation of the Meccan traditional religion was especially offensive to his own tribe, the Quraysh, as they were the guardians of the Kaaba.

The conquest of Mecca around 629–630 AD led to the destruction of the idols around the Kaaba, including Hubal. Following the conquest, shrines and temples dedicated to deities were destroyed, such as the shrines to al-Lat, al-’Uzza and Manat in Ta’if, Nakhla and al-Qudayd respectively.

North Arabia

Less complex societies outside South Arabia often had smaller pantheons, with the patron deity having much prominence. The deities attested in north Arabian inscriptions include Ruda, Nuha, Allah, Dathan, and Kahl. Inscriptions in a North Arabian dialect in the region of Najd referring to Nuha describe emotions as a gift from him. In addition, they also refer to Ruda being responsible for all things good and bad.

The Safaitic tribes in particular prominently worshipped the goddess al-Lat as a bringer of prosperity. The Syrian god Baalshamin was also worshipped by Safaitic tribes and is mentioned in Safaitic inscriptions.

Religious worship amongst the Qedarites, an ancient tribal confederation that was probably subsumed into Nabataea around the 2nd century AD, was centered around a polytheistic system in which women rose to prominence. Divine images of the gods and goddesses worshipped by Qedarite Arabs, as noted in Assyrian inscriptions, included representations of Atarsamain, Nuha, Ruda, Dai, Abirillu and Atarquruma. The female guardian of these idols, usually the reigning queen, served as a priestess (apkallatu, in Assyrian texts) who communed with the other world. There is also evidence that the Qedar worshipped al-Lat to whom the inscription on a silver bowl from a king of Qedar is dedicated. In the Babylonian Talmud, which was passed down orally for centuries before being transcribed c. 500 AD, in tractate Taanis (folio 5b), it is said that most Qedarites worshiped pagan gods.

Aramaic stele inscription of Tayma dedicated to the god Salm

The Aramaic stele inscription discovered by Charles Hubert in 1880 at Tayma mentions the introduction of a new god called Salm of hgm into the city's pantheon being permitted by three local gods – Salm of Mahram who was the chief god, Shingala, and Ashira. The name Salm means "image" or "idol".

The Midianites, a people referred to in the Book of Genesis and located in north-western Arabia, may have worshipped Yahweh. An Egyptian temple of Hathor continued to be used during the Midianite occupation of the site, although images of Hathor were defaced suggesting Midianite opposition. They transformed it into a desert tent-shrine set up with a copper sculpture of a snake.

The Lihyanites worshipped the god Dhu-Ghabat and rarely turned to others for their needs. Dhu-Ghabat's name means "he of the thicket", based on the etymology of gabah, meaning forest or thicket. The god al-Kutba', a god of writing probably related to a Babylonian deity and perhaps was brought into the region by the Babylonian king Nabonidus, is mentioned in Lihyanite inscriptions as well. The worship of the Hermonian gods Leucothea and Theandrios was spread from Phoenicia to Arabia.

According to the Book of Idols, the Tayy tribe worshipped al-Fals, whose idol stood on Jabal Aja, while the Kalb tribe worshipped Wadd, who had an idol in Dumat al-Jandal.

Nabataeans

Further information: Nabataean religion
Relief of Dushara, National Museum of Damascus

The Nabataeans worshipped primarily northern Arabian deities. Under foreign influences, they also incorporated foreign deities and elements into their beliefs.

The Nabataeans' chief-god is Dushara. In Petra, the only major goddess is Al-‘Uzzá, assuming the traits of Isis, Tyche and Aphrodite. It is unknown if her worship and identity is related to her cult at Nakhla and others. The Nabatean inscriptions define Allāt and Al-Uzza as the "bride of Dushara". Al-Uzza may have been an epithet of Allāt in the Nabataean religion according to John F. Healey.

Outside Petra, other deities were worshipped; for example, Hubal and Manat were invoked in the Hejaz, and al-Lat was invoked in the Hauran and the Syrian desert. The Nabataean king Obodas I, who founded Obodat, was deified and worshipped as a god. They also worshipped Shay al-Qawm, al-Kutba', and various Greco-Roman deities such as Nike and Tyche. Maxime Rodinson suggests that Hubal, who was popular in Mecca, had a Nabataean origin.

Nike holding up a bust of Atargatis, crowned as Tyche and encircled by the signs of the zodiac. Amman Museum copy of Nabataean statue, 100 AD.

The worship of Pakidas, a Nabataean god, is attested at Gerasa alongside Hera in an inscription dated to the first century A.D. while an Arabian god is also attested by three inscriptions dated to the second century.

The Nabataeans were known for their elaborate tombs, but they were not just for show; they were meant to be comfortable places for the dead. Petra has many "sacred high places" which include altars that have usually been interpreted as places of human sacrifice, although, since the 1960s, an alternative theory that they are "exposure platforms" for placing the corpses of the deceased as part of a funerary ritual has been put forward. However, there is, in fact, little evidence for either proposition.

Religious beliefs of Arabs outside Arabia

Palmyra was a cosmopolitan society, with its population being a mix of Aramaeans and Arabs. The Arabs of Palmyra worshipped al-Lat, Rahim and Shamash. The temple of al-Lat was established by the Bene Ma'zin tribe, who were probably an Arab tribe. The nomads of the countryside worshipped a set of deities, bearing Arab names and attributes, most prominent of them was Abgal, who himself is not attested in Palmyra itself. Ma'n, an Arab god, was worshipped alongside Abgal in a temple dedicated in 195 AD at Khirbet Semrin in the Palmyrene region while an inscription dated 194 AD at Ras esh-Shaar calls him the "good and bountiful god". A stele at Ras esh-Shaar shows him riding a horse with a lance while the god Saad is riding a camel. Abgal, Ma'n and Sa'd were known as the genii.

The god Ashar was represented on a stele in Dura-Europos alongside another god Sa'd. The former was represented on a horse with Arab dress while the other was shown standing on the ground. Both had Parthian hairstyle, large facial hair and moustaches as well as similar clothing. Ashar's name is found to have been used in a theophoric manner among the Arab-majority areas of the region of the Northwest Semitic languages, like Hatra, where names like "Refuge of Ashar", "Servant of Ashar" and "Ashar has given" are recorded on an inscription.

In Edessa, the solar deity was the primary god around the time of the Roman Emperor Julian and this worship was presumably brought in by migrants from Arabia. Julian's oration delivered to the denizens of the city mentioned that they worshipped the Sun surrounded by Azizos and Monimos whom Iamblichus identified with Ares and Hermes respectively. Monimos derived from Mu'nim or "the favourable one", and was another name of Ruda or Ruldaiu as apparent from spellings of his name in Sennacherib's Annals.

The idol of the god al-Uqaysir was, according to the Book of Idols, located in Syria, and was worshipped by the tribes of Quda'a, Lakhm, Judham, Amela, and Ghatafan. Adherents would go on a pilgrimage to the idol and shave their heads, then mix their hair with wheat, "for every single hair a handful of wheat".

A shrine to Dushara has been discovered in the harbour of ancient Puteoli in Italy. The city was an important nexus for trade to the Near East, and it is known to have had a Nabataean presence during the mid 1st century BCE. A Minaean altar dedicated to Wadd evidently existed in Delos, containing two inscriptions in Minaean and Greek respectively.

Bedouin religious beliefs

The Bedouin were introduced to Meccan ritualistic practices as they frequented settled towns of the Hejaz during the four months of the "holy truce", the first three of which were devoted to religious observance, while the fourth was set aside for trade. Alan Jones infers from Bedouin poetry that the gods, even Allah, were less important to the Bedouins than Fate. They seem to have had little trust in rituals and pilgrimages as means of propitiating Fate, but had recourse to divination and soothsayers (kahins). The Bedouins regarded some trees, wells, caves and stones as sacred objects, either as fetishes or as means of reaching a deity. They created sanctuaries where people could worship fetishes.

The Bedouins had a code of honor which Fazlur Rahman Malik states may be regarded as their religious ethics. This code encompassed women, bravery, hospitality, honouring one's promises and pacts, and vengeance. They believed that the ghost of a slain person would cry out from the grave until their thirst for blood was quenched. Practices such as killing of infant girls were often regarded as having religious sanction. Numerous mentions of jinn in the Quran and testimony of both pre-Islamic and Islamic literature indicate that the belief in spirits was prominent in pre-Islamic Bedouin religion. However, there is evidence that the word jinn is derived from Aramaic, ginnaye, which was widely attested in Palmyrene inscriptions. The Aramaic word was used by Christians to designate pagan gods reduced to the status of demons, and was introduced into Arabic folklore only late in the pre-Islamic era. Julius Wellhausen has observed that such spirits were thought to inhabit desolate, dingy and dark places and that they were feared. One had to protect oneself from them, but they were not the objects of a true cult.

Bedouin religious experience also included an apparently indigenous cult of ancestors. The dead were not regarded as powerful, but rather as deprived of protection and needing charity of the living as a continuation of social obligations beyond the grave. Only certain ancestors, especially heroes from which the tribe was said to derive its name, seem to have been objects of real veneration.

Other religions

Abrahamic religions

Judaism

Main article: Judaism in pre-Islamic Arabia
Seal ring from Zafar with writing "Yishaq bar Hanina" and a Torah ark, 330 BC – 200 AD

A thriving community of Jewish tribes existed in pre-Islamic Arabia and included both sedentary and nomadic communities. Jews had migrated into Arabia from Roman times onwards. Arabian Jews spoke Arabic as well as Hebrew and Aramaic and had contact with Jewish religious centers in Babylonia and Palestine. The Yemeni Himyarites converted to Judaism in the 4th century, and some of the Kinda were also converted in the 4th/5th century. Jewish tribes existed in all major Arabian towns during Muhammad's time including in Tayma and Khaybar as well as Medina with twenty tribes living in the peninsula. From tomb inscriptions, it is visible that Jews also lived in Mada'in Saleh and Al-'Ula.

There is evidence that Jewish converts in the Hejaz were regarded as Jews by other Jews, as well as by non-Jews, and sought advice from Babylonian rabbis on matters of attire and kosher food. In at least one case, it is known that an Arab tribe agreed to adopt Judaism as a condition for settling in a town dominated by Jewish inhabitants. Some Arab women in Yathrib/Medina are said to have vowed to make their child a Jew if the child survived, since they considered the Jews to be people "of knowledge and the book" (ʿilmin wa-kitābin). Philip Hitti infers from proper names and agricultural vocabulary that the Jewish tribes of Yathrib consisted mostly of Judaized clans of Arabian and Aramaean origin.

The key role played by Jews in the trade and markets of the Hejaz meant that market day for the week was the day preceding the Jewish Sabbath. This day, which was called aruba in Arabic, also provided occasion for legal proceedings and entertainment, which in turn may have influenced the choice of Friday as the day of Muslim congregational prayer. Toward the end of the sixth century, the Jewish communities in the Hejaz were in a state of economic and political decline, but they continued to flourish culturally in and beyond the region. They had developed their distinctive beliefs and practices, with a pronounced mystical and eschatological dimension. In the Islamic tradition, based on a phrase in the Quran, Arab Jews are said to have referred to Uzair as the son of Allah, although the historical accuracy of this assertion has been disputed.

Jewish agriculturalists lived in the region of Eastern Arabia. According to Robert Bertram Serjeant, the Baharna may be the Arabized "descendants of converts from Christians (Arameans), Jews and ancient Persians (Majus) inhabiting the island and cultivated coastal provinces of Eastern Arabia at the time of the Arab conquest". From the Islamic sources, it seems that Judaism was the religion most followed in Yemen. Ya'qubi claimed all Yemenites to be Jews; Ibn Hazm however states only Himyarites and some Kindites were Jews.

Christianity

Jubail Church in eastern Saudi Arabia. The 4th century remains are thought to be one of the oldest surviving church buildings in the world.
Main article: Christianity in pre-Islamic Arabia

The main areas of Christian influence in Arabia were on the northeastern and northwestern borders and in what was to become Yemen in the south. The north west was under the influence of Christian missionary activity from the Roman Empire where the Ghassanids, a client kingdom of the Romans, were converted to Christianity. In the south, particularly at Najran, a centre of Christianity developed as a result of the influence of the Christian Kingdom of Axum based on the other side of the Red Sea in Ethiopia. Some of the Banu Harith had converted to Christianity. One family of the tribe built a large church at Najran called Deir Najran, also known as the "Ka'ba of Najran". Both the Ghassanids and the Christians in the south adopted Monophysitism.

The third area of Christian influence was on the north eastern borders where the Lakhmids, a client tribe of the Sassanians, adopted Nestorianism, being the form of Christianity having the most influence in the Sassanian Empire. As the Persian Gulf region of Arabia increasingly fell under the influence of the Sassanians from the early third century, many of the inhabitants were exposed to Christianity following the eastward dispersal of the religion by Mesopotamian Christians. However, it was not until the fourth century that Christianity gained popularity in the region with the establishment of monasteries and a diocesan structure.

In pre-Islamic times, the population of Eastern Arabia consisted of Christianized Arabs (including Abd al-Qays) and Aramean Christians among other religions. Syriac functioned as a liturgical language. Serjeant states that the Baharna may be the Arabized descendants of converts from the original population of Christians (Aramaeans), among other religions at the time of Arab conquests. Beth Qatraye, which translates "region of the Qataris" in Syriac, was the Christian name used for the region encompassing north-eastern Arabia. It included Bahrain, Tarout Island, Al-Khatt, Al-Hasa, and Qatar. Oman and what is today the United Arab Emirates comprised the diocese known as Beth Mazunaye. The name was derived from 'Mazun', the Persian name for Oman and the United Arab Emirates. Sohar was the central city of the diocese.

In Nejd, in the centre of the peninsula, there is evidence of members of two tribes, Kinda and Taghlib, converting to Christianity in the 6th century. However, in the Hejaz in the west, whilst there is evidence of the presence of Christianity, it is not thought to have been significant amongst the indigenous population of the area.

Arabicized Christian names were fairly common among pre-Islamic Arabians, which has been attributed to the influence that Syrianized Christian Arabs had on Bedouins of the peninsula for several centuries before the rise of Islam.

Neal Robinson, based on verses in the Quran, believes that some Arab Christians may have held unorthodox beliefs such as the worshipping of a divine triad of God the father, Jesus the Son and Mary the Mother. Furthermore, there is evidence that unorthodox groups such as the Collyridians, whose adherents worshipped Mary, were present in Arabia, and it has been proposed that the Quran refers to their beliefs. However, other scholars, notably Mircea Eliade, William Montgomery Watt, G. R. Hawting and Sidney H. Griffith, cast doubt on the historicity or reliability of such references in the Quran. Their views are as follows:

  • Mircea Eliade argues that Muhammad's knowledge of Christianity "was rather approximative" and that references to the triad of God, Jesus and Mary probably reflect the likelihood that Muhammad's information on Christianity came from people who had knowledge of the Monophysite Church of Abyssinia, which was known for extreme veneration of Mary.
  • William Montgomery Watt points out that we do not know how far Muhammad was acquainted with Christian beliefs prior to the conquest of Mecca and that dating of some of the passages criticizing Christianity is uncertain. His view is that Muhammad and the early Muslims may have been unaware of some orthodox Christian doctrines, including the nature of the trinity, because Muhammad's Christian informants had a limited grasp of doctrinal issues.
  • Watt has also argued that the verses criticizing Christian doctrines in the Quran are attacking Christian heresies like tritheism and "physical sonship" rather than orthodox Christianity.
  • G. R. Hawting, Sidney H. Griffith and Gabriel Reynolds argue that the verses commenting on apparently unorthodox Christian beliefs should be read as an informed, polemically motivated caricature of mainstream Christian doctrine whose goal is to highlight how wrong some of its tenets appear from an Islamic perspective.

Iranian religions

Though they lack any surviving physical evidence, Iranian religions may have existed in pre-Islamic Arabia on account of Sasanian military presence along the Persian Gulf and South Arabia and on account of trade routes between the Hejaz and Iraq. According to Islamic-era sources, Arabs in northeast of the peninsula converted to Zoroastrianism and several Zoroastrian temples were constructed in Najd. There is also evidence of existence of Manichaeism in Arabia as several early sources indicate a presence of "zandaqas" in Mecca, although the term could also be interpreted as referring to Mazdakism. However, according to the most recent research by Tardieu, the prevalence of Manichaeism in Mecca during the 6th and 7th centuries, when Islam emerged, can not be proven. Similar reservations regarding the appearance of Manichaeism and Mazdakism in pre-Islamic Mecca are offered by Trompf & Mikkelsen et al. in their latest work (2018). There is evidence for the circulation of Iranian religious ideas in the form of Persian loan words in Quran such as firdaws (paradise).

Zoroastrianism was also present in Eastern Arabia and Persian-speaking Zoroastrians lived in the region. The religion was introduced in the region including modern-day Bahrain during the rule of Persian empires in the region starting from 250 B.C. It was mainly practiced in Bahrain by Persian settlers. Zoroastrianism was also practiced in the Persian-ruled area of modern-day Oman. The religion also existed in Persian-ruled area of modern Yemen. The descendants of Abna, the Persian conquerors of Yemen, were followers of Zoroastrianism. Yemen's Zoroastrians who had the jizya imposed on them after being conquered by Muhammad are mentioned by the Islamic historian al-Baladhuri. According to Serjeant, the Baharna people may be the Arabized descendants of converts from the original population of ancient Persians (majus) as well as other religions.

Buddhism

There are some Islamic documents that, when describing the state of religion in pre-Islamic Arabia, include a presence of Buddhism. One recurring theme in these depictions is that the Buddhist community was able to store some of their idols in the Kaaba. Rashid al-Din Hamadani (d. 1318), in his Jāmiʾ al-Tawārīkh, says both that Buddhist idols could be found in the Kaaba and that both Arabs and some Persians on the peninsula saw themselves as students of the Buddha. One Islamic miniature from the thirteenth century depicts Muhammad destroying Hindu and Buddhist idols at the Kaaba. Al-Masudi said that Buddhists see the Kaaba as one of their temples. Al-Masudi also depicts the Quraysh tribe of Mecca as having gold-plated deer statues, which were then seen as typical Buddhist symbols. Mostafa Vaziri has speculated about a possible historicity to these descriptions, suggesting that Buddhism reached Arabia through Indian merchants and trade routes. Vaziri also speculates an influence of Buddhist architecture on the design of the Kaaba, such as from the Nawbahār and other Buddhist stupas.

See also

References

Citations

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  204. Garry W. Strompf & Gunner Mikkelsen (2018). The Gnostic World. Routledge. ISBN 978-1138673939. Perhaps the charge of zandaqa functions in this report as a belated rhetorical caricature with no historical substance, much like the employment of congeners 'Manichee' and 'Gnostic' in the vocabulary of christian heresiography. If this is the case, historians can no longer appeal to the testimony of al-Kalbī as undisputable evidence for the proliferation of Manichaen-Doctrine in pre-islamic Mecca.
  205. Ibid Strompf & Mikkelsen et al. This tradition is persistently echoed by later tradents ... whose values as independent witnesses to Manichaean activity in early seventh century Mecca are correspondingly suspect.
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