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most salutary   laws that curbed their passions, or violated their customs.   They submitted with reluctance to the religious precepts of the   Koran, the abstinence from wine, the fast of the Ramadan, and   the daily repetition of five prayers; and the alms and tithes,   which were collected for the treasury of Medina, could be   distinguished only by a name from the payment of a perpetual   and ignominious tribute. The example of Mahomet had excited   a spirit of fanaticism or imposture, and several of his rivals   presumed to imitate the conduct, and defy the authority, of the living prophet. At the head of the fugitives and auxiliaries,   the first caliph was reduced to the cities of Mecca, Medina,   and Tayef; and perhaps the Koreish would have restored the   idols of the Caaba, if their levity had not been checked by a   seasonable reproof. "Ye men of Mecca, will ye be the last to   embrace, and the first to abandon, the religion of Islam?" After   exhorting the Moslems to confide in the aid of God and his apostle, Abubeker resolved, by a vigorous attack, to prevent   the junction of the rebels. The women and children were safely   lodged in the cavities of the mountains: the warriors, marching   under eleven banners, diffused the terror of their arms; and   the appearance of a military force revived and confirmed the   loyalty of the faithful. The inconstant tribes accepted, with   humble repentance, the duties of prayer, and fasting, and alms; and, after some examples of success and severity, the   most daring apostates fell prostrate before the sword of the   Lord and of Caled. In the fertile province of Yemanah, between   the Red Sea and the Gulf of Persia, in a city not inferior to   Medina itself, a powerful chief (his

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