IS proclaimed its self-described caliphate on June 29, 2014, urging Muslims worldwide to pledge allegiance to its Iraqi leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, renamed Caliph Ibrahim.
Vowing to make "the West and the East... Submit", IS has expanded its territory throughout northern and western Iraq and eastern and northern Syria.
It now controls some 300,000 square kilometres, terrifying residents with a gruesome brutality that analysts say has become central to its existence.
"More than anything, it's this psychological warfare that has allowed Daesh to establish itself in the eyes of the West as the incarnation of the absolute threat."
IS emerged from a one-time Iraqi affiliate of Al-Qaeda known as the Islamic State in Iraq.
The group expanded into Syria with the country's descent into wartime chaos and, after a failed bid to merge with Al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate, began gobbling up territory on both sides of the border.
In Syria the group controls nearly all of Raqa province and most of the eastern Deir Ezzor province, with its rich oil resources.
In May alone, IS seized the Iraqi city of Ramadi in Anbar province and also the famed ancient city of Palmyra in Syria.
But it has also suffered setbacks, losing the Iraqi city of Tikrit and the Syrian border town of Tal Abyad to local ground forces fighting the jihadist group, backed by a US-led coalition carrying out air strikes.
Mass slaughter has become one of its hallmarks, documented in photos and videos shared gleefully by its supporters.
In June 2014, its fighters captured and executed as many as 1,700 young, mostly Shiite recruits from the Speicher military base near Tikrit.
In Syria, the group has carried out similar retribution against opponents including the Sunni Shaitat tribe, murdering an estimated 700 of its members after they rose up.
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