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1-999 AD
70 AD:
Titus of Rome laid siege to Jerusalem. The fiercely defended Temple
eventually fell, and with it the whole city. Seeking a complete and
enduring victory, Titus ordered the total destruction of the
Herodian Temple. A new city named Aelia was built by the Romans on
the ruins of Jerusalem, and a temple dedicated to Jupitor rose up.
313 AD: Palestine received special attention when the Roman
emperor Constantine I legalized Christianity. His mother, Helena,
visited Jerusalem, and Palestine, as the Holy Land, became a focus
of Christian pilgrimage. A golden age of prosperity, security, and
culture followed. Most of the population became Hellenized and
Christianized.
324 AD: Constantine of Byzantium marched on Aelia. He rebuilt
the city walls and commissioned the Church of the Holy Sepulchre,
and opened the city for Christian pilgrimage.

29-614 AD: Byzantine (Roman) rule was interrupted, however,
by a brief Persian occupation and ended altogether when Muslim Arab
armies led by Sallahuddin Ayubi invaded Palestine and captured
Jerusalem in AD 638.

638 AD: The Arab conquest began 1300 years of Muslim presence
in what then became known as Filastin. Eager to be rid of their
Byzantine overlords and aware of their shared heritage with the
Arabs, the descendants of Ishmael, as well as the Muslims reputation
for mercy and compassion in victory, the people of Jerusalem handed
over the city after a brief siege. They made only one condition,
that the terms of their surrender be negotiated directly with the
Khalif 'Umar in person. 'Umar entered Jerusalem on foot. There was
no bloodshed. There were no massacres. Those who wanted to leave
were allowed to, with all their goods. Those who wanted to stay were
guarantee protection for their lives, their property and places of
worship.
Palestine was holy to Muslims because the Prophet Muhammad had
designated Jerusalem as the first qibla (the direction Muslims face
when praying) and because he was believed to have ascended on a
night journey to heaven from the the old city of Jerusalem (al-Aqsa
Mosque today) , where the Dome of the Rock was later built.
Jerusalem became the third holiest city of Islam. The Muslim rulers
did not force their religion on the Palestinians, and more than a
century passed before the majority converted to Islam. The remaining
Christians and Jews were considered People of the Book. They were
allowed autonomous control in their communities and guaranteed
security and freedom of worship. Such tolerance was rare in the
history of religion. Most Palestinians also adopted Arabic and
Islamic culture. Palestine benefited from the empires trade and from
its religious significance during the first Muslim dynasty.
750 AD: The power shifted to Baghdad with the Abbasids,
Palestine became neglected. It suffered unrest and successive
domination by Seljuks, Fatimids, and European Crusaders. It shared,
however, in the glory of Muslim civilization, when the Muslim world
enjoyed a golden age of science, art, philosophy, and literature.
Muslims preserved Greek learning and broke new ground in several
fields, all of which later contributed to the Renaissance in Europe.
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