What Is a Crescent Sign?

The crescent moon is an astronomical phenomenon, meaning that on the first day of each month of the lunar calendar, when the moon moves between the sun and the earth, the moon faces the earth in a dark side, and rises and falls with the sun. Nothing about the moon.

[xn yuè]
Dictionary explanation:
The curved moon that appears at the beginning of each lunar month; also refers to the full moon on the fifteenth day of the lunar month
explain in detail
The curved moon that appears every month on the lunar calendar.
Southern Dynasty

Crescent symbol meaning

The "Crescent Moon" is a religious symbol of Islamic countries. It is a paraphrase of Arabic "Hilal", originally referring to the first quarter moon, commonly known as the crescent moon. Astronomically called "Shuo" refers to the phases of the moon as the moon passes between the sun and the earth. Its symbolic meaning is ascension, rebirth, happiness, auspiciousness, initial light, and new time, which means that the crescent moon symbolizes Islam and created a new time for human civilization. [2]

Crescent Origin

Many countries around the world have crescent and star motifs on their flags, such as Algeria, Comoros, Malaysia,
mosque
Maldives, Mauritania, Pakistan, Tunisia and Turkey. Regardless of the differences in the details of these patterns, the common point is that they are identified by the new moon as an Islamic country. We also find that crescent crests are usually erected at the top of mosques around the world to indicate that this is an Islamic building and event venue. In addition, the humanitarian international rescue agency that rescues the wounded is not called the Red Cross in Islamic countries but the Red Crescent. All these indicate that the crescent moon symbolizes Islam.
In the era of Muhammad's revival of Islam, Islam was not directly linked to the crescent. Moon worship has existed in many primitive tribes, and the Arab region is no exception. In the distant past, there is the custom of moon worship near the Middle East. The worship of the moon was even more serious in the Arabian Peninsula before the revival. After the Islamic revival, the moon also played a role in Islam. Qur'an 2: 189: 'The new moon is the time of personnel and pilgrimage'. Ramadan begins on the day when the new moon appears, and fasting is also timed by the grandmother who looks up at the moon to see the new moon. And Muhammad * said that the miracle of two moons is also closely related to the moon. Nevertheless, the moon is not a symbol of Islam. Because Islam does not worship any idols, Allah is the only God it worships. It is the creation of all things, mastering the past, present and future, omnipresent, omnipotent, omniscient but invisible, without shadow. In this way there are no signs of worship in the mosque, and there is a revelation in the Qur'an to abandon the worship of the moon. Therefore, there was no crescent sign on either the military flag or the top of the mosque.
In orthodox caliphs, [632--661] and Omayyad and Abbasids {661 --- 1258} also showed no signs of a crescent symbol of Islam. The caliphate strictly obeyed the Qur'an and the Hadith. Although the Umayyad dynasty held up the white flag and the Abbas dynasty played a black flag, there were no crescent patterns on the black and white flags. No crescent moon could be seen in the mosque. Although the Arab hero Saladin recaptured the holy city of Elyssalem from the European Crusaders in 1187 and removed the golden cross of the Crusader on the roof of the Dome of the Temple, the crescent was not installed. Therefore, some Western scholars have described the crusader's eastward invasion as a cross to the crescent moon. The crescent moon did not represent Islam at the time.
The crescent moon symbolizes that there is no so-called "European source" for Islam. As early as 340 BC, Byzantium was considered to be the result of the intervention of Luna Carter after the scourge of a war, and it was a symbol of Byzantium with a crescent moon and stars as a memorial. During the Crusades, many knights returning to France had won the Crescent Medal, Charles I of Naples and the Kingdom of Sicily, and French Anjo René (1464) also created the Crescent Medal. But these have nothing to do with the crescent symbol of Islam. It is also nonsense to say that the Moors or Saracens who conquered and ruled Spain equated the crescent with Islam.
The true combination of the crescent moon and Islam is mainly attributed to the Turks. The Turks are descended from the West Turkic people who moved westward from the Mongolian steppe to Central Asia. They live on nomads, of which they are divided into several branches and local Residents are gradually integrating. The Turkish tribes have a custom of totem worship. They regard ram horns as worship objects and place them on tops of flagpoles and tent pillars. The Turkic branch migrated from Central Asia to West Asia in the early 13th century and initially attached to the Turkish Sultanate of Roma. The collapse of the Sultanate of Roma in 1242. This Turk was founded under the leadership of Ottoman (1282 --- 1326), and it was called Ottoman Turk in history. They established the New Central Army under the rule of Orhan (1326 --- 1360). In addition to the horse's tail, the crest pattern appeared on the flag. This is probably related to their worship of ram horns. Since the ram horns resemble a crescent moon, the crescent moon on the banner is likely to represent ram horns. We cannot make a conclusion about the combination of the crescent moon and Islam. Although the Turks have been worshipping Islam for a long time, the pattern on the flag mainly represents military and political allegations, and it is unlikely to represent religious belief.
The combination of crescent and Islam began in the 16th century. In 1453, Mohammed II s territories, Erqi s army, seized King s Dante, changed the city s Hagia Sophia to a mosque, and dismantled the cross on the church, but there was no evidence of a crescent moon instead. It was not more than a century later that Selim II (1566--1574) built a 30-meter-diameter bronze crescent moon on the vault. Since then, this practice has been widely promoted in Ottoman Turkistan, which crosses Europe, Asia, and Africa. Crescents have appeared in large numbers on mosques and other Islamic buildings. As a result, Islam is naturally associated with the crescent and becomes a symbol of Islam.
Although the marriage of the crescent moon and Islam is clear, there are still many puzzling mysteries. First, the exact time when Turkey unified the two was not clear; second, the meaning of the Turkis' crescent moon over the mosque vault was not fully known; again, a few stars along the crescent moon symbolize Islam Teaching, where did this practice begin? All of this remains to be explored.
However, there is one point that needs to be explained: the fundamental principle of the Islamic faith is "all things are not Lords, and the only God, Muhammad, is the Messenger of God." Therefore, Islam does not allow any form of totem worship. The "Crescent Moon" is merely a sign of Islam and has no actual worship significance.

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