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Why Is It Important To Study The Middle East

Why is it important to study crusades?

The Crusades brought Christian Western Europe into prolonged and close contact with the much more sophisticated and advanced civilizations and cultures of the Muslims and Byzantines in the Middle East. The transmission back to Europe of knowledge gained by the Crusaders led first to the High Middle Ages, and ultimately to the Renaissance, which was the beginning of the modern Western world.

How important is fluency in Arabic for a degree in Middle East studies? Is Hebrew important to know? If I am not a great Arabic language student, should I give up on my ME degree from an American university?

I dont think its very important(neither for Hebrew), it's true that a language is very important in cultures but you don't have to know the language to learn about middle East or anyplace else.And NO, don't give up if you really like this field of study; and if you decide that you want to learn Arabic, NOBODY starts out being fluent in any language, just practise you'll reach fluency in the end. :)

Why is the Middle East important to India?

The middle east is extremely important to india . India imports 75% of daily oil needs which is equivalent to around 800,000 barrels per day  . India imports most of this from the middle east countries like Iran and Saudi Arabia , this is their importance in the energy sense . Now in the trade sense all the goods exported to European countries go through the Strait of hormuz and then the Suez canal . Iran controls the Strait of hormuz and Egypt the Suez canal . If Iran blocks the ships and tankers passing through these vital waterways it can cause over expenditure and losses running into billions of dollars and thus loss of foreign currency which India uses to pay for its oil . These are 2 ways in which the middle east is important .

What is the importance of the Middle East?

There are many answers to it, depending on individual, some may take it seriously (Black Ops level seriousness) while other may find it rather trivia.Let’s disect it and investigate futher. Middle East has always been a focus of interest, be it political or non-political (business from oil & gas, trade route, ideological, habitat and etc).Middle East has seen many conflicts even centuries ago, and even in modern era, there are still many ongoing conflicts as an effect perhaps from the past conflicts. These are the List of modern conflicts in the Middle East - Wikipedia .17 countries make up the Middle East(ME) Middle East, and therefore if you asked what is the importance of Middle East, i dont think it will be a short answer.Countries such as Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE to name a few, they are one of the major exporters of oil and gas. Turkey (a member of NATO), to act as a buffer zone against Russia that during the cold war was the place NATO placed their nuclear missiles and pointed it to Nikita Kruschev’s summer dacha.Let’s see, Israel/Palestine places to live, even though the ongoing conflict is making it hard for them to live peacefully. I can go on all day, but the point is, Middle East is a geographical location with 17 other countries and each has its role.The true importance depends on which country you are interested in, and what is your ideology.Importance of countries such as KSA, UAE and etc, oil and gas. Israel, as a place of worship for the three religion of the book. It is also located in the middle of the Earth (technically the Earth is round, there should be no middle). It connects the West and East, North and South, therefore companies such as Emirates, Qatar, eitihad, they dorminate the air travel industries.Ideological importance, the “Arab Spirngs”, although does not originate from the ME, it plays a great role in the ME, and the impact could be seen spreading to other countries. Some leaders/dictators were afraid such movements may threathen their position. The Arab Springs wave spread quickly and dies quickly too. It had a great effect not just in the ME but the whole world. Impact of the AraUb Spring - Wikipedia , just like how the French Revolutioni in the late 18th century impacted the whole world, not just internally.The truth is, the importance of ME depends on your interests, your ideologies and your tolerance for conspiracies. It is impossible to summarize it in Quora, for such an open-ended-question.

What is the importance of studying asian history?

Probably pretty important considering it's in history books, but my history teacher chose to skip the 3 chapters that covered that. So, I think one would be OK without it.

How and why is religion an important aspect of culture to study?

Religion defines so many moral and cultural aspects of humans today, that it itself has become part of history. I mean, take for example the middle east. Unless you knew about the different religions (Islam and Judaism especially there), you would have no idea why there is even a fight for Israel. Moral standards are also based from religion.

Religion has also shaped today's world, where Europe's past was shaped by teh Church, such as the Inquisition and Crusades. Also, it was due to religious persecution that America was settled by the pilgrims.

Why is it important to study physical geography?

Physical geography is broken into MANY sub-fields like Meteorology (our weather), Climatology (our weather over many many years), Hydrology (our water processes), and Geomorphology (how our earth was shaped and continues to shape itself). There is many more other fields, but just telling you these things, you can see how they effect us.

We study physical geography because it is what we are surrounded by. People live in different regions of this world because of the way our land is, the weather, the natural disasters, and even our view from our backyard. It influences why people live where they are. It is important to know about our world and how to improve it as well as conserve it.

Why is the Ottoman empire important to Europe?

Hello.

The Ottoman Empire shaped the history of Europe through the strong religious and social impacts it had on the population.

In 1453 AD, the Ottoman Empire, led by Mehmed the II, successfully subjugated Constantinople (the capital of the Byzantine Empire). 180 years afterwards, in 1683 AD, the Turks were in control of a large proportion of the Balkans (regions such as Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece and Moldova). They were also advancing rapidly towards Vienna in Austria. All of the aforementioned states were either traditionally Catholic of Orthodox in faith until Ottoman occupation. With the Turkish arrival came the spread of Islam. They utilised Imams (Islamic priests) and built mosques to convert as many people as possible. Middle-Eastern migrants traveled to these recently conquered territories too, for a new life, unique opportunities and the promise of wealth. After many centuries, the whole demographics, culture and religious ideologies of Eastern Europe had dramatically altered. Even to this day, a substantial percentage of Muslims still reside in the Balkans as a result of the Ottomans. Interestingly, Constantinople was renamed to 'Istanbul', and is classed by modern standards as a mega city (any settlement containing over 10 million inhabitants).

Lastly, it is important to note that the Ottoman Sultanate participated as a Central Power in World War I, allied to Germany and the Austrian-Hungarian Empire (despite past conflicts). Through their actions here they could have further changed the development of Europe..But it was not to be, as the Allied forces ultimately defeated them. In 1923 the Ottomans were forced to abolish the monarchy and move to a Republican system. This caused problems in the Middle-East, because now Britain and France needed to manage dominions there. However, that my friend, is another story....

Why is studying Jewish history important to understanding Jesus and his message?

Upon study of the ancient history of Greece, Rome and the Middle East I discovered Rome changed the Jewish Messianic expectations to support their rule. They did this to all their conquered using religion, requiring their gods be added to the others and they gave the old gods new roles. Then I studied Comparative Religion http://www.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/combinedstudies/undergraduate/studyareas/religion/
I don't see how any one can remain a Christian after engaging the enormous evidence within history.
Using either the texts of the Old or New Testament alone as history fails. Nevertheless, the surviving
Jewish writings are more congruent with secular history from Rome and Palestine.
Study the history of Rome, Greece and Judea and you will see that the message of Christianity was not a Jewish message, but created to conquer the Jews with methods they had successfully used to conquer others. After the Roman Empire became Christian with Constantine, they blended all the major festivals. The Romans held a festival on 25 December called “Dies Natalis Solis Invicti, celebrating their own god Sol Invicta.Even the Roman Catholic church was modeled after the old Roman religious power structure with the pontifex maximus becoming the Pope, and their Vestal Virgins becoming the order of nuns. The cult of the Persian sun god Mythras which reached Rome during the first century AD found great following among the army and many see direct parallel to the role of Jesus. He died in the winter for the sins of his people and lived in the underworld until Ishtar would descend to the underworld to resurrect him in the spring. All of the things that the Jews recognize as incompatible with their Messianic hopes, are beliefs one can tie directly to the beliefs of the Roman citizens. Paul was a Roman citizen and traveled to Syria, Turkey, Greece and Italy where his charismatic missionary work converted non Jews into his new religion. This would not have worked where people knew about Judaism. It is important to understand Roman and Jewish history to recognize that the "message" of the composite character of Jesus was used as an effective method to conquer them and then later all of Europe.

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