The textile industry was the industrial sector where the industrial revolution began in Britain and can be considered the prototype of it: abundant and cheap raw material, factories where production was concentrated, constant renewal of technology, market importance, continuous growth and the need for capital. The development of the textile industry was originally due to the pressure of demand for manufactured products due to the increase in population, due to the beginning of the demographic transition, characterized by a clear decrease in mortality and maintenance of high birth rates.
The authors suggest that the Muslim faith spread and endured
in the southern seas trading regions mainly because of the fact that the Muslim
traders has assimilated with the population of which it occurred in the same
time as they are maintaining their faith that are considered to be attractive to
the indigenous people.