Arabic progressed from the language of the mosque to establish itself permanently as the common vernacular of the people only in countries that had previously spoken some related language, one that belonged to the Afro-Asiatic (or Hamito-Semitic) family.The Arab conquests after the death of Muhammad spread Islam thousands of miles across Africa, into southern Spain, and to the east into Afghanistan. The long term consquences were that Arabic persisted where, only where, and everywhere people already spoke a language from the Afro-Asiatic family, the single exception is the Hausa speaking peoples of central Africa, who adopted Islam, but only used Arabic for religious purposes.
This Afro-Asiatic zone included the Fertile Crescent, where Arabic replaced Aramaic; Egypt, where it overwhelmed Coptic; Libya and Tunisia, where it finally supplanted Berber and erased - or merged into - Punic; and the Maghreb (the north of modern Algeria and Morocco), where it also pushed Berber back into a set of smaller pockets. The tiny island of Malta, too, which had a Punic background from its origins in the Carthaginian empire, became Arabic-speaking after Arab conquest in 870 AD, belying its millennium of control from Rome since 218 BC. The area of permanent Arabic advance also included, at the margin, and rather later, a more southerly zone in Africa, Mauritania in the west, and Chad and Sudan in the east; here Arabic spread later through trade contacts, and would have replaced some Chadic and Cushitic languages.1
Ironically, the march of Islam seems to have supported the spread of Persian out to the east; the Arab conquests in what had been Buddhist central Asia in the eighth century spread Persian, at the expense of local languages, especially Sogdian. Presumably most of the troops were from the east of Iran, where Persian was still the lingua franca. That is why Tajikistan, and the north-western half of Afghanistan, is Persian speaking to this day. And when five hundred years later an Islamic army penetrated into India beyond, and set up the Delhi Sultanate, it brought Persian rather than Arabic in its wake.Starting with their presence in the mid 1600s, the British East India Company, and later the Colonial adminstration, used Persian as a government language into the nineteenth century.4
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