Saracen
- For the rugby club Saracens see Saracens (rugby club)
The term
Saracen comes from Greek
sarakenoi.
In the early centuries of the
Roman Empire it was used as the name of an
Arab tribe in the
Sinai, apparently taken from the
Arabic word شرقيين sharqiyyin ("easterners").
Later the
Greek-speaking subjects of the Empire applied it to all Arabs. After the rise of
Islam, and specially at the time of the
Crusades, its usage was extended to all
Muslims, particularly those in
Sicily and southern
Italy. In older Western historical
literature, the term "Saracen Empire" was often used to refer to the first Arab
Caliphate, ruled by the
Umayyad and
Abbasid dynasties.
In
Christian polemical writing against Islam, the name was made to mean "those empty of
Sarah" or "not from Sarah", as Arabs were descended from
Hagar.