Abstract
This paper presents an in-depth analysis of the domestication of Muslim women during the Umayyad period (660-750 A.D). Umayyad was the first dynasty which ruled over the Muslim Empire without any partition of the caliphate. The paper attempts to explore the general condition of the society of Umayyad and how the political and social status of the Muslim women transformed through the passage of time in 92 years. The social condition of women under caliphs shows how some misogynist elements of that time put restrictions on Muslim women regarding their political participation and increasing social and economic freedom under the growing influences of foreign elements as well as economic prosperity. Further, the paper explored the process of domestication of women, its causes, impacts and women’s point of view on this domestication. The males’ perspective was also discussed. The study suggests that the process of domestication could be seen in three stages i.e. complete freedom, limited freedom and complete domestication of Muslim women. The research is qualitative in its nature and based in historicalanalytical design. The approach is empirical and relates to the critical social science school of thought.

Ra’ana Malik, Saud-ul-Hassan Khan Rohilla. (2018) From Activism to Domestication of Muslim Women under Umayyad, Journal of the Punjab University Historical Society, Volume 31, Issue 2.
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