10 results on '"Chiisme"'
Search Results
2. Le druzisme prémoderne en Syrie : émergence du droit druze et des premières institutions religieuses.
- Author
-
Halawi, Wissam Halabi
- Subjects
- *
DRUZE scholars , *RELIGIOUS doctrines , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *ISLAMIC studies , *ISLAMIC law - Abstract
Les premiers traités du Canon druze dont la rédaction remonte au Ve/XIe siècle jettent les bases d’une doctrine religieuse nouvelle et ébauchent succinctement et de manière souvent ambigüe les préceptes moraux, mais aussi juridiques et juridictionnels auxquels les adeptes devaient désormais se soumettre, les lois (šarāʾiʿ) antérieures ayant été abrogées par la Volonté divine. Les savants druzes du IXe/XVe siècle, notamment l’émir al-Sayyid (m. 884/1479) et ses disciples, tentèrent d’expliquer ces traités afin d’établir des principes juridico-religieux adaptés à leur milieu rural et des règles destinées à organiser le fonctionnement interne de la communauté des adeptes. L’historiographie traditionnelle considère toutefois que seul al-Sayyid est l’architecte de ce « renouveau druze » ; par conséquent, elle lui confère le statut de plus grand réformateur druze de tous les temps et lui attribue un ensemble d’écrits théologiques et juridiques que les initiés observent scrupuleusement depuis lors. Or, une lecture critique de ce corpus inédit datant en partie de la fin du IXe/XVe siècle révèle que l’émergence des premières institutions druzes, religieuses et judiciaires, ainsi que la théorisation et la systématisation du droit druze sont postérieures à l’action sayyidienne. The Epistles of the Druze Canon, written in the 5th/11th century, lay down the foundations for a new religious doctrine, and give a brief and sometimes ambiguous outline of the moral, juridical and judicial precepts to which believers should submit henceforth, all previous legal doctrines (šarāʾiʿ) having been abrogated by the divine Will. Premodern Druze scholars, especially the Emir al-Sayyid (d. 884/1479) and his disciples, attempted to explain these canonical treatises with the aim of establishing legal and religious principles adapted to their rural milieu and posing rules designed to organise the community. Traditional Druze historiography considers the Emir al-Sayyid to be the only and greatest Druze reformer of all time, the “architect” of Druze renaissance in sum, and falsely attributes to him a collection of theological and legal writings (the “Great Exegeses”) which are scrupulously applied by religious people up to the present day. However, a critical examination of this unpublished corpus (dating from the latter part of the 9th/15th century) shows however that the Druze legal theory, as well as the first religious and judiciary Druze institutions emerged after the death of al-Sayyid. This article is in French. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. ‘Western seminary’: On transnational Shiite higher education in Britain.
- Author
-
Van Den Bos, Matthijs
- Subjects
- *
SHIITES , *TRANSNATIONAL education , *ISLAM , *EUROPEAN citizenship , *ISLAMIC universities & colleges , *EDUCATION & religion , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *HIGHER education - Abstract
In this article the author delves beneath the surface of Shiite higher education in Britain to discover whether it constitutes a case for ‘European Islam’. Juxtaposing the theorisation of Islam in Europe with a commonly unrelated body of scholarship on education and citizenship, it examines a paradox of integrative blending and foreign frames. Understanding Western Shiite education requires recognition of both local identity and transnational ties, as well as the relationships between them. The author focuses on the Shiite Al-Mahdi Institute and the Islamic College in Britain, analysing on the one hand their local profiles, defined by efforts to engage with their Western environment, and on the other hand their organic foreign embedding, whether through state ties or links to educational and religious establishments. Dumont’s concept of hierarchy as ‘encompassment of the contrary’ is invoked to account for this paradoxical relationship, from which emerges a scale of differences between the two institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Demon in Potentiality and the Devil in Actuality: Two Principles of Evil according to 4th/10th Century Ismailism.
- Author
-
De Smet, Daniel
- Subjects
- *
DEVIL , *GOOD & evil , *ESOTERICISM , *SALVATION - Abstract
The Kitāb al-Kašf and the Kitāb al-Šaǧara , two 4th/10th century Ismaili works, share a dualistic vision of the world, marked by a continuous struggle between good and evil, light and darkness. Evil is identified with the exoteric religion deprived of its esoteric dimension. It is caused by a satanic pair, typified by Abū Bakr and ʿUmar b. al-Ḫaṭṭāb, the archetypes of the antagonists (aḍdād) opposing the Prophets and their Imams, from Adam to the advent of the Resurrector (al-Qāʾim). Through a personalized reading of selected verses from the Qurʾān, the authors of both works interpret the rejection of ʿAlī's legacy by the first two caliphs as the paradigm of all opposition against the Imām's esoteric knowledge leading to salvation. When ʿUmar represents the principle of evil in se , Abū Bakr stands for the weakness of the largest part of mankind, eager to be induced into error. By introducing into this doctrine the Aristotelian distinction between potentiality and actuality, the Kitāb al-Šaǧara develops an encompassing theory about the dynamics of evil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Dū 1-Nūn al-Miṣrī and Early Islamic Mysticism.
- Author
-
Ebstein, Michael
- Subjects
- *
ISLAMIC mysticism , *SUFI literature , *BIOGRAPHICAL dictionaries , *NEOPLATONISM , *SHI'AH - Abstract
The article analyzes some of the main teachings that are attributed to Du 1-Nün al-Misri (died ca 245/859-860), a prominent figure in the formative period of the Sufi tradition. These teachings are reflected in the many sayings that are ascribed to Dü 1-Nün in Sufi literature, in non-Sufi biographical dictionaries, and in several other medieval Islamic sources, all dating from the 4th/ioth century onwards. The article demonstrates the historical problems related to the figure of Du 1-Nün al-Misri, and, in this context, particular attention is given to the occult tendencies that are attributed to him in various writings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Reasonable to Ridiculous: The Inward Gaze of the Modern Self in Dostoevskii and Vladimir Odoevskii.
- Author
-
Harrison, Lonny
- Subjects
- *
IDENTITY (Philosophical concept) in literature , *TRANSCENDENCE (Philosophy) in literature , *LITERARY realism - Abstract
This article investigates similarities between Vladimir Odoevskii and Fedor Dostoevskii's responses to the modern crisis of identity, a chief concern of both writers. Odoevskii's Schellingian vision of oneness and Dostoevskii's own ideas on unity are placed within a larger framework of the idea of the modern self as articulated by philosopher Charles Taylor and others. For comparison, Odoevskii's presentation of self-transcendence in "The Sylph" is likened to related themes in works by Dostoevskii, particularly "The Dream of a Ridiculous Man." It is found that both authors dramatize the perceived schism between the rational self and intuited higher self that cannot be mended by the analytical reasoning mind, since the latter is seen as the root cause of inner division. In spite of their status as pioneers of Russian realism, both authors present ecstatic vision as the remedial experience through which to gain access to self-knowledge at a transcendent level. The experience of intuitive vision of higher unity in the works examined is expressed by and large in opposition to proponents of rational materialism and positivist views of the modern self. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Cultural Formation in a Theocratic State: The Institutionalization of Shiism in Safavid Iran.
- Author
-
Ashtiani, Ali
- Subjects
- *
INTELLECTUAL life , *SOCIAL sciences & state , *SOCIAL structure ,SAFFARID dynasty - Abstract
Cet article examine le moda de fonctionnement de l'Etat théocratique safavide iranien à partir du 16ème siècle et les manifestations de la vie culturelle en son sein. Car pour comprendre l'Iran contemporain et la genèse de l'Etat iranien moderne, il importe autant de s'informer au sujet des formes du pouvoir safavide, fanatique et dogmatique, que du chiisme. La brutalité culturelle et l'intolérance religieuse d'hier sont de tragiques inclinations toujours présentes dans Iran d'aujourd'hui. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A Concise Numerical Guide for the Perplexed Shiite: Al-Barqī's (d. 274/888 or 280/894) Kitāb al-Aškāl wa-l-qarāʾin.
- Author
-
Vilozny, Roy
- Subjects
- *
SHIITES , *HADITH , *DIDACTICISM , *BUWAYHIDS , *SHIITE religious practice , *CANONIZATION - Abstract
The peculiarity of Kitāb al-Aškāl wa-l-qarāʾin, the opening section in the printed editions of Aḥmad b. Muḥammad al-Barqī's (d. 274/888 or 280/894) Kitāb al-Maḥāsin, is easily discernable: it is sub-divided into chapters bearing numeric titles, from “The Chapter on Three” to “The Chapter on Ten”. Each of these chapters contains various Imamite or prophetic traditions whose message is related in one way or another to the number mentioned in its title. Attempting to shed additional light on the Shiite hadith literature prior to its canonization during the Buwayhid era (334/945-447/1055), this article examines the relationship between style and content within this numerical framework. Being the earliest extant Shiite example of a numerical treatise, the present paper sets out to trace the author's possible sources of inspiration as well as the work's impact on later generations of Shiite scholars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. What Makes a Mahab a Mahab: Zaydī debates on the structure of legal authority.
- Author
-
Haykel, Bernard and Zysow, Aron
- Subjects
- *
LEGAL authorities , *ZAYDIS , *EPONYMS , *POLITICAL science terminology , *ISLAMIC law , *AFFILIATION (Philosophy) - Abstract
Abstract Over the centuries Zaydīs have been called upon to respond to a series of challenges from within and without to the internal cohesion of their tradition. Noting that Zaydīs did not commonly follow the legal opinions of their eponym Zayd b. Alī (d. 112/740), Sunnī critics challenged them to justify their adoption of the label Zaydī. The classical response was provided by the Yemeni imam al-Manūr Abd Allāh b. amza (d. 614/1217), who explained affiliation to Zayd in theological and political terms. Within Zaydism itself, however, disagreement among leading imams on questions of law occasioned dissent among their followers. To counter this threat to unity within their ranks, Zaydī jurists widely adopted the theory that all qualified legal experts (muğtahids), including the Zaydī imams, were equally correct. More technical were the questions that came to surround the character of the legal school (Mahab) that became dominant among Yemeni Zaydīs. These concerned both the source of the legal opinions that made up the doctrine of the school and the related question of the school's structure of authority. These historical and theoretical questions acquired a particular urgency from the 11th/17th century and were popularized with the circulation of Isāq b. Yūsuf's (d. 1173/1760) short poem, Uqūd al-taškīk, which directly challenged Yemeni Zaydīs to clarify their legal identity. Equally challenged was the structure of authority of all the Sunnī Mahabs, and therefore issues raised here pertain to Islamic law more generally. This poem evoked a variety of responses in prose and verse, including a short treatise by the poem's author, al-Tafkīk li-Uqūd al-taškīk. While several respondents sought to affirm the viability of the legal school, others, notably Ibn al-Amīr al-anānī (d. 1182/1769) and Muammad b. Alī al-Šawkānī (d. 1250/1834), argued that it could not be saved. Their objections to traditional legal authority (taqlīd) within Zaydism were widely disseminated by 19th- and 20th-century Muslim reformers interested in undermining the Sunnī schools of law and continue to enjoy great currency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. A Kūfan Jurist in Yemen: Contextualizing Muammad b. Sulaymān al-Kūfī's Kitāb al-Muntaab.
- Author
-
Haider, Najam
- Subjects
- *
ZAYDIS , *INTELLECTUALS , *RITUALISM , *JURISPRUDENCE , *ISLAMIC law - Abstract
Abstract This study explores the intellectual legacy of the Kūfan jurist Muammad b. Sulaymān al-Kūfī (d. early 4th/10th century) who eventually settled in Yemen and was part of the intellectual circle surrounding al-Hādī ilā l-aqq Yayā b. al-usayn (d. 298/911). It offers an analysis of his most important work, Kitāb al--Muntaab, through a singular ritual law case study that focuses on the use of the basmala in the daily prayer. The conclusion points towards the Muntaab's value as a possible conduit for accessing a stream of Kūfan jurisprudence which has not survived into the modern period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.