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Raḥmāniyya

(1,204 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S.
, Algerian Ṣūfī order ( ṭarīḳa ) called after Muḥammad b. ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Gas̲h̲tulī al-D̲j̲urd̲j̲urī al-Azharī Abū Ḳabrayn, who died in 1208/1793-4. It is a branch of the K̲h̲alwatiyya [ q.v.] and is said to have at one time been called Bakriyya after Muṣṭafā al-Bakrī al-S̲h̲āmī. At Nafṭa [ q.v.], in Tunisia, and some other places it is called ʿAzzūziyya after Muṣṭafā b. Muḥammad b. ʿAzzūz. …

Čis̲h̲tīya

(753 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Indian Order or Caste of faḳīrs, founded according to some by one Abū Isḥāḳ, descended in the ninth generation from ʿAlī, who migrating from Asia Minor, settled at Čis̲h̲t, a village of Ḵh̲urāsān, or, in another account, settled in Syria and was buried at Acre; according to others by Banda Nawāz, who is buried at Kalbarga; according to others by Ḵh̲…

Baibars

(313 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, al-Manṣūrī al-Ḵh̲aṭaʾī, (about 645—725), Mamlūk minister and historian. Ḳalāūn, who purchased and manumitted him, promoted him to the governorship of Kerak, whence he was dismissed by the Sulṭān Ḵ…

Zain al-Dīn

(250 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
Abū Bakr Muḥammad b. Muḥammad al-Ḵh̲awāfī, founder of an order called after him Zainīya, which traced itself to Ḏj̲unaid, was born in 757 (1356) at Ḵh̲awāf (between Bus̲h̲and̲j̲ and Zuzan) in Ḵh̲urāsān, and was buried in 838 (1435) at the village Mālīn (two parasangs from Herāt), whence his remains were transferred to Darwīs̲h̲ābād, and thence to the ʿĪdgāh of Herāt, where a mosque was built over them. He obtained authorization ( id̲j̲āza) in Egypt ¶ from Nūr al-Dīn ʿAbd al…

Hamad̲h̲ānī

(640 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
(358—398) Abu ’l-Faḍl Aḥmad b. al-Ḥusain b. Yaḥyā b. Saʿīd b. Bis̲h̲r, called Badiʿ al-Zamān, poet and elegant writer. He studied at his native place Hamad̲h̲ān with the grammarian Aḥmad b. Fāris and others, and in 380 went to Raiy, where he for a time secured the favour of the Ṣāḥib b. ʿAbbād, thence to Ḏj̲urd̲j̲ān where he found a patron in Abū Saʿīd Muḥammad b. Manṣūr. In 382 he went to Nīsābūr, which he reached destitute, having been attacked by brigands on the way; he was less warmly received than he had hoped by Abū Bakr Ḵh̲wārizmī, the leading adīb of the time, and was presently invited…

Saʿdīya

(930 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
or Ḏj̲ibāwīya, an order of dervishes named after the founder Saʿd al-Dīn al-d̲j̲ibāwī, i. e. of Ḏj̲ibā, “between the Hawrān and Damascus”. His death-date is variously given as 700 and 736 a. h.; and the accounts which we have of him are clearly fabulous. According to the Ḵh̲ulāṣat al-At̲h̲ar, i. 34, his father was the S̲h̲aik̲h̲ Yūnus al-S̲h̲aibānī, a pious man, whom in his youth he disobeyed, becoming a leader of banditti in the Ḥawrān; owing, however, to his father’s prayers he was favoured with a vision which resulted in his conversion. The authority followed by Depont and Coppolani makes him practise severe asceticism, and visit various sanctuaries, including Mekka; after this he returned to …

Raws̲h̲anīya

(1,443 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Afg̲h̲ān sect founded by Bāyazīd b. ʿAbd Allāh, who took the title Pīr-i Rawg̲h̲an: called by their enemies Tārīkiān. …

Raḥmānīya

(1,061 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Algerian Order ( ṭarīḳa) called after Muḥammad b. ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Gus̲h̲tulī al-Ḏj̲urd̲j̲urī al-Azharī Abū Ḳabrain, who died 1208 (1793—1794). It is a branch of the Ḵh̲alwatīya and is said to have at one time been called Bakrīya after Muṣṭafā al-Bakrī al-S̲h̲āmī. At Nefta, in Tunisia, and some other places it is called ʿAzzūzīya after Muṣṭafā b. Muḥammad b. ʿAzzūz. Life of the Founder. His family belonged to the tribe Ait Smāʿīl, part of the confederation Gas̲h̲tula…

Naḳs̲h̲band

(618 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Muḥammad b. Muḥammad Bahāʾ al-Dīn al-Buk̲h̲ārī (717—791 = 1317—1389), founder of the Naḳs̲h̲bandī Order. His name, which signifies “painter” is interpreted as “drawing incomparable pictures of the Divine Science” (J. P. Brown, The Darvishes, 2nd ed., p. 142) or more mystically as “holding the form of real perfection in the heart” ( Miftāḥ al-Maʿīya quoted by Ahlwardt, Berlin Catalogue, N°. 2188). The title al-S̲h̲āh which is given him in a dirge cited in the Ras̲h̲aḥāt means “spiritual leader”. The nisba al-Uwaisī implies that his system resembled that of Uwais al-Ḳaranī. His Acta were collected by one of …

al-Ḥarīrī

(1,378 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S. | Pellat, Ch.
(sometimes Ibn al-Ḥarīrī in Yāḳūt), Abū Muḥammad al-Ḳāsim b. ʿAlī b. Muḥammad b. ʿUt̲h̲mān b. al-Ḥarīrī al-Baṣrī , Arabic poet and philologist known principally for his Maḳāmāt . Born in 446/1054, probably to a landed family living at al-Mas̲h̲ān, near Baṣra, where he spent his childhood, he commenced his studies at Baṣra; his biographers agree that he studied under al-Faḍl b. Muḥammad al-Ḳaṣabānī, but the latter is said to have died in 444/1052 (see Yāḳūt, Udabāʾ , xvi, 218; al-Suyūṭī, Bug̲h̲ya , 373; al-Ṣafadī, Nakt , 227), so that there is a discrepancy …

al-Bāk̲h̲arzī

(300 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S.
, abu ’l-ḥasan (or abu ’l-ḳāsim ) ʿalī b. ḥasan b. ʿalī b. abi ’l-ṭayyib , Arab poet and anthologist, a native of Bāk̲h̲arz. After receiving a good education in his father’s house, he studied in particular S̲h̲āfiʿī fiḳh and, at Nīsābūr, attended the lectures of al-D̲j̲uwaynī (ʿAbd Allāh b. Yūsuf [ q.v.], where he made the acquaintance of al-Kundurī [ q.v.]; the latter, when he became wazīr , took him to Bag̲h̲dād as a secretary; previously, he had for some time been an official at Baṣra. Subsequently, he was admitted to the chancellery, an…

Ḥarīrī

(694 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
(born 446, died 6 Red̲j̲eb 516), Abū Muḥammad al-Ḳāsim b. ʿAlī b. Muḥammad b. al-Ḥarīrī, grammarian and elegant writer, …

K̲h̲aṭṭābīya

(647 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, name of a sect reckoned among the S̲h̲īʿite extremists ( g̲h̲ulāt), called after Abu ’l-Ḵh̲aṭṭab Muḥammad b. Abī Zainab al-Asadī al-Ad̲j̲daʿ, who is said to have asserted the immanence ( ḥulūl) of the deity in the Imām Ḏj̲aʿfar al-Ṣādiḳ (83—148 = 702—765) and afterwards in himself. He obtained a following in al-Kūfa, where he was attacked by ʿĪsā b. Mūsā, who was governor for some years till 147 = 764/765; he armed his followers with stones, reeds and knives, assuring them that these would prevail against the …

Ḳādirīya

(3,439 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Order ( ṭarīḳa) of dervishes called after ʿAbd al-Ḳādir al-Ḏj̲īlānī [q. v.]. 1. Origin. ʿAbd al-Ḳādir (ob. 561 = 1166) was the principal of a school ( madrasa) of Ḥanbalite Law and a

Arabia

(8,766 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S. | Kratschkowsky, Ign.
C. Arabia under Islām. Both internal and external causes have since the last date (1876) worked changes in the peninsula, the geography of which has been markedly advanced by a number of intrepid explorers, especially St. John Philby, R. E. Cheeseman, Bertram Thomas, D. Van der Meulen and H. Von Wissmann. The regions traversed by the last three of these, the “Empty Quarter” and the independent sulṭānates of Ḥaḍramawt, have indeed been little affected; though even in the latter the motor-car is showi…

Tid̲j̲ānīya

(1,352 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
(the forms Tid̲j̲d̲j̲ānī, Tid̲j̲īnī occur also), order founded by Abu ’l-ʿAbbās Aḥmad b. Muḥammad b. al-Muk̲h̲tār b. Sālim al-Tid̲j̲d̲j̲ānī (1150—1230 = 1737—1815). 1. Life of the Founder. This person was born at ʿAin Māḍī, a village 72 kil. W. of Lag̲h̲uat, 28 E. of Tahmut. His family were the Awlād Sīdī S̲h̲aik̲h̲ Muḥammad, and his parents both died of plague in 1166 (1753). After pursuing his studies at his native place, he went to Fez in 1171 (1758) to continue them, thence to Abyad, where he stayed five years, t…

Abū Ḥaiyān

(973 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
ʿAlī b. Muḥammed b. al-ʿAbbās al-Tawḥīdī (so called either after an ancestor who sold a sort of date called tawḥīd, ¶ or in the sense ,upholder of pure monotheismʿ), jurist, philosopher, Ṣūfī, and compiler of miscellanies, lived in the fourth (10th) century. Little was preserved of his biography, but from documents quoted by Yāḳūt it appears that he was alive in Rad̲j̲ab 400 (Feb. 1010), and that he died at the age of more than eighty. His home was placed by different authorities at Nīs̲h̲āpūr, S̲h̲īrāz, or Wā siṭ. Much of his life was spent in Bagdad, where he studied grammar under Abū Saʿīd al-Sīrāfī, and ʿAlī b. ʿĪsā al-Rumānī, S̲h̲āfiʿite law under Abū Ḥāmid al-Marwarūd̲h̲ī and Abū Bekr al-S̲h̲āfiʿī. At a late period of his life he …

Abū Tammām

(851 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
Ḥabīb b. Aws, poet and anthologist, born in 180 or 188 (796 or 804), and his birth-place is said to have been Ḏj̲āsim, a village near Damascus…

Sunbulīya

(497 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, a branch of the Ḵh̲alwatī Order, named after Sunbul Sinān al-Dīn Yūsuf, whose birth-place is variously given as Bolou and Marsuan. His death-date is given in the Ḳāmūs al-ʿAlām as 936 (1529/1530); according however to al-S̲h̲aḳāʾiḳ al-Nuʿmānīya (transl. Rescher, 1927, p. 224, 225) he died before 929 (1522/1523); and this author, who was a contemporary, mentions him among the S̲h̲aik̲h̲s of the reign of Bāyazīd II (died 918= 1512), wherein he is followed by the author of the Tād̲j̲ al-Tawarīk̲h̲ (Constantinople 1279, ii. 595), who is half a century later. On the other hand…

ʿAbd al-Ḳādir

(2,067 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
al-Ḏj̲īlī (Gīlānī) Muḥyi ’l-Dīn Abū Muḥammed b. Abī Ṣāliḥ Zengi Dōst, preacher and Ṣūfī, after whom the Ḳādirī order is named, born in 470 (1077-1078), died in 561 (1166). The numerous biographies of this personage teem with fictions, out of which some history may be gleaned. Thus his pedigree is traced on the father’s side to al-Ḥasan, grandson of the Prophet, in the direct line. But this is co…

Ibn al-Ḥad̲j̲d̲j̲ād̲j̲

(427 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
Abu ʿAbd Allāh al-Ḥusain b. Aḥmad b. Muḥammad b. Ḏj̲aʿfar, poet of the Būyid period. He belonged to a family which was engaged in the public service, and was himself trained by Abū Isḥāḳ Ibrāhīm al-Ṣābiʾ in secretarial work. He found however that he could earn more by verse, and became an encomiast of the most important among his contemporaries, especially ʿIzz al-Dawla Bak̲h̲tiyār, who appointed him to the office of muḥtasib or censor in Bag̲h̲dād; a most unsuitable appointment, since this poet specialized in obscenity, and indeed against one of the headings in the Paris abridgment of his Dī…

Mewlānā Hunkiār

(158 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, a title of the head of the Mawlawl Order [see mawlawīya]. The second word is the Turkish form of the Persian k̲h̲udāwandg i ār, the equivalent of mawlā, which according to Aflākī ( Saints des Derviches Tourneurs

K̲h̲urramīya

(918 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, a sect whose name is derived by Samʿānī from the Persian word k̲h̲urram “agreeable”, on the ground that they regarded everything that was agreeable as lawful; but it is more likely to be derived from Ḵh̲urram, a district of Ardabīl, where the sect may have arisen. According to Masʿūdī, Murūd̲j̲, vi. 186, they came into prominence after the execution of Abū Muslim of Ḵh̲orāsān in 136 a. h., but while some of them denied that he was dead and foretold his return “to spread justice in the world”, others maintained the Imamate of his daughter Fāṭima, whence they got the names Muslimīya and Fāṭimīya. …

al-Buḥturī

(1,634 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Abū ʿUbāda al-Walīd b. ʿUbaid, Arabic poet and anthologist of the third century (204—284 approximately). His nisba signifies member of the Buḥtur clan of the tribe Ṭaiʾ, whose glories he frequently celebrates. His birthplace was Manbid̲j̲ (or, according to one account a village near Manbid̲j̲ called Zardafna), ¶ and of Manbid̲j̲ he often speaks as his home; here he ultimately acquired property, which seems to have been inherited by his son T̲h̲ābit, who was living there in Iṣṭak̲h̲rī’s trnre. The woman who forms the subject of his erotic prologues in the greater number of cases was one ʿAlwa of Butyās near Ḥalab, daughter of Zuraiḳa; in a poem addressed to al-Fatḥ b. Ḵh̲aḳān (i. 44) he speaks of her (outside the prologue) as “his friend and the joy of his heart” whom he had left behind in Syria; and in…

Dasūḳī or Dusūḳī

(571 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Ibrāhīm b. Abi ’l-Mad̲j̲d ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz (or ʿAbd al-Mad̲j̲īd) (633—676 = 1235-1236—1277-1278), native of Dusūḳ, a village of Lower Egypt in the G̲h̲arbīya District; founder of the Dusūḳī Order. According to the commentator on his Ḥizb (Ḥasan S̲h̲amma, Masarrat al-Ainain bi-S̲h̲arḥ Ḥizb Abi ’l-ʿAinain, Cairo n.d.), his father came from a village Mrḳs (Marcus?) on the opposite bank of the Nile, and was himself ¶ a walī; his mother was daughter of another walī Abu ’l-Fatḥ al-Wāsiṭī. He is said to have studied S̲h̲āfiʿī jurisprudence before he followed the Ṣūfīs, to hav…

Nūrbak̲h̲s̲h̲īya

(952 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, religious sect or order called after Muḥammad b. Muḥammad b. ʿAbd Allāh, called Nūrbak̲h̲s̲h̲ (795—869 a. h.). 1. Life of the founder. Of this person there is a detailed biography in the work Mad̲j̲ālis al-Muʾminīn of Nūr Allāh al-S̲h̲ustarī (Bodleian MS., Ous. 366; see also Brit. Mus. Catalogue of Persian MSS.), chiefly based on a work ( tad̲h̲kira) by Muḥammad b. Muḥammad al-Samarḳandī. His father was born in Ḳaṭīf, and his grandfather in al-Ḥass, whence in some g̲h̲azals he styles himself Laḥsawī. His father migrated to Ḳāʾin in Ḳuhistān, where his son was born. The …

Ziyānīya

(469 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, branch of the S̲h̲ād̲h̲ilī Order, has its headquarters at Ḳenād̲j̲iā; lists of the heads are given by Rinn, loc. cit., Dupont and Coppolani, Confréries, p. 498, and Cour, loc. cit.; ¶ in the second work a specimen is given of the diploma of muḳaddam conferred by the head of the order, with seal. Their practice is said to differ from those of the other S̲h̲ād̲h̲ilīs only in details; their ordinary d̲h̲ikr is reproduced by Rinn, loc. cit., p. 411, and consists in the repetition of certain formulae, a hundred, others a thousand times. Their speciality is the guiding and p…

al-Baṣīr

(261 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Abū ʿAlī al-Faḍl b. Ḏj̲aʿfar b. al-Faḍ…

Wahhābīya

(4,799 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Islāmic community founded by Muḥammad b. ʿAbd al-Wahhāb (1115-1201 = 1703-1787). This name was given to the community by its opponents in the founder’s lifetime, and is used by Europeans; it is not used by its members in Arabia, who call themselves Muwaḥḥidūn “unitarians” and their system ( ṭarīḳa) “Muḥammadan”; they regard themselves as Sunnīs, following the school of Ibn Ḥanbal, as interpreted by Ibn Taimīya, who attacked the cult of saints in many of his writings, especially in a

al-Rifāʿī

(1,078 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Aḥmad b. ʿAlī Abu ’l-ʿAbbās, founder of the Rifāʿī ( ṭarīḳa, died 22nd Ḏj̲umādā I, 578 (Sept. 23, 1183) at Umm ʿAbīda, in the district of Wāsiṭ. The date of his birth is given by some authorities as Muḥarram 500 (Sept. 1106), but others say Rad̲j̲ab 512 (Oct.—Nov. 1118), at Ḳaryat Ḥasan, a village in the district of Baṣra. These places being in the region called al-Baṭāʾiḥ [q. v.], he has the further nisba al-Baṭāʾiḥī; al-Rifāʿī is usually explained as referring to an ancestor Rifāʿa, but by some is supposed to be a tribal name. This ancestor Rifāʿa is said to have migrated from Mecca to Seville in Spain in 317, whence Aḥmad’s grandfather came to Baṣra in 450. Hence he is also called al-Mag̲h̲ribī. Ibn Ḵh̲allikān’s notice of him is meagre; more is given in Ḏh̲ahabī’s

Karrāmīya

(1,216 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, sect, called after Abū ʿAbdallāh Muḥammad b. Karrām (or Karām or Kirām; see Mīzān al-Iʿtidāl, iii. 127, and for further ancestors Ibn al-At̲h̲īr,

S̲h̲ād̲h̲ilīya

(2,333 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, or S̲h̲ād̲h̲alīya, pronounced in Africa S̲h̲ādulīya, Ṣūfī sect called after Abu ’l-Ḥasan ʿAlī b. ʿAbd Allāh al-S̲h̲ād̲h̲ilī, whose title is variously given as Tād̲j̲ al-Dīn and Taḳī al-Dīn (593-656 a.h.). For the life of this personage see the art. al-s̲h̲ād̲h̲ilī. His system. Al-S̲h̲ād̲h̲ilī does not appear to have composed any large work, but many sayiūgs, spells and an ode are ascribed to him, and since some of the first are recorded in the work of his ¶ disciple’s disciple, Tād̲j̲ al-Dīn al-Iskandarī, composed in 694, they may be to some extent genuine (see the art. al-s̲h̲ād̲h̲ilī). The best known of his productions is the Ḥizb al-Baḥr “Incantation of the Sea”, which was reproduced by Ibn Baṭṭūṭa (i. 41), whence the translation is copied by L. Rinn ( Marabouts et Khouan, p. 229). Extra…

Mawlānā K̲h̲ūnkār

(176 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S.
, a title of the head of the Mawlawī order of dervishes [see mawlawiyya ]. The second word is the Turkish form of the Persian k̲h̲udāwandigār , the equivalent of mawlā , which according to Aflākī ( Saints des derviches tourneurs , i, 59) was bestowed on D̲j̲alāl al-Dīn by his father (the ¶ derivation from K̲h̲ūn-kār , Persian “blood-shedder”, must depend on popular etymology). Sāmī in his Ḳāmūs al-aʿlām states that the word, besides used for “Sultan”, “King”, is applied to certain saintly personages, in such combinations as pīr k̲h̲ūnkār or mullā k̲h̲ūnkār . The underlying idea…

al-Rifāʿī

(1,208 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S.
, Aḥmad b. ʿAli , Abu ’l-ʿAbbas, S̲h̲āfiʿī faḳīh by training and founder of the Rifāʿiyya [ q.v.] dervish order. He was born in Muḥarram 500/September 1106 (or, according to other authorities, in Rad̲j̲ab 512/October-November 1118) at Ḳaryat Ḥasan, a village of the Baṭāʾiḥ or marshlands of lower ʿIrāḳ [see al-baṭīḥa ] between Baṣra and Wāsiṭ, whence the nisba sometimes given to him of al-Baṭāʾiḥī, and he died at Umm ʿUbayda in the same region on 22 D̲j̲umādā I 578/23 October 1182 (see Ibn K̲h̲allikān, ed. ʿAbbās, i, 171-2, tr. de Slane, i, 152-3). The nisba al-Rifāʿī…

Ibn al-Ḥad̲j̲d̲j̲ād̲j̲

(907 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S. | Pellat, Ch.
, Abū ʿAbd Allāh al-ʿḤusayn b. Aḥmad b. Muḥammad b. D̲j̲aʿfar b. Muḥammad , a S̲h̲īʿī Arab poet in the time of the Būyids [ q.v.]. Born in Bag̲h̲dād in about 330/941-2, of a family of government officials and secretaries, he completed the traditional studies and was partly trained by Abū Isḥāḳ Ibrāhīm al-Ṣābiʾ (313-84/925-94 [see al-ṣābiʾ ]) who made him take up an administrative career, but he very quickly perceived that his poetic talents could prove more profitable and resigned his post. At first he was connected with the vizier al-Muhallabī [ q.v.] for whom he wrote a panegyric and a satire on al-Mutanabbī (see R. Blachère, Abou ṭ-Ṭayyib al-Motanabbî , Paris 1935, 224-5), and whose death (353/963) he lamented. He next attached himself to the viziers Abu ’l-Faḍl al-ʿAbbās al-S̲h̲īrāzī and Abu ’l-ʿAbbās Muḥammad b. al-ʿAbbās, for whom he acted as a kind of entertainer, and fell out with a ḥād̲j̲ib of ʿIzz al-Dawla [ q.v.] as a result of which he was committed to prison for a time. Shortly afterwards, on the strength of a poem addressed to the last-named, he succeeded in getting himself appointed muḥtasib of Bag̲h̲dād, …

Raws̲h̲aniyya

(1,323 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S. | Bosworth, C.E.
, a mystical and gnostic Islamic sect founded amongst the Afg̲h̲āns of the North-West Frontier region, with centres at e.g. Kāṅīgurām and Tīrāh in Wazīristān, by Bāyazīd b. ʿAbd Allāh Anṣārī of Kāṅīgurām ( ca. 931-80/ ca. 1525-73). He claimed to be, if not actually a Mahdī, at least a hādī or guide towards tawḥīd , the Divine Unity, for his followers. He styled himself pīr-i raws̲h̲an “the divinely-illuminated pīr [ q.v.] “, although his orthodox enemies called him pīr-i tārīkī “the pīr of darkness” and his adherents Tārīkiyān “devotees o…

Ḳādiriyya

(3,408 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S.
, Order ( ṭarīḳa ) of dervishes called after ʿAbd al-Ḳādir al-Ḏj̲īlānī [ q.v.]. 1.—Origin. ʿAbd al-Ḳādir (d. 561/1166) was the principal of a school ( madrasa ) of Ḥanbalī law and a ribāṭ in Bag̲h̲dād. His sermons (collected in al-Fatḥ al-Rabbānī ) were delivered sometimes in the one, sometimes in the other; both were notable institutions in the time of Ibn al-At̲h̲īr, and Yāḳūt ( Irs̲h̲ād al-Arīb , v, 274) records a bequest of books made to the former by a man who died in 572/1176-7. Both appear to have come to an end at the sack of Bag̲h̲…

Mawlawiyya

(7,235 words)

Author(s): Yazıcı, T. | Margoliouth, D.S. | Jong, F. de
, a Ṣūfī order or ṭarīḳa , in Turkish Mewlewiyye, modern Mevlevî, which takes its name from the Mawlānā (“Our Master”), the sobriquet of D̲j̲alal al-Dīn Rūmī [ q.v.]. Although not called by this name, it appears that such a ṭarīḳa was formed already in the Mawlānā’s time, and this view is reinforced by the existence of a group of disciples around the Mawlānā, by his concern for their education and by his appointment of deputies to carry out this task during his absences. However, like many ṭuruḳ (e.g. the K̲h̲alwatiyya [ q.v.]), this ṭarīḳa acquired its name at a later stage. There is no definite information that the Mawlānā’s followers were called Mawlawiyya in his own time, but it is known that already at that time, the epithet Mawlānā had replaced the name D̲j̲alāl al-Dīn (see Aflākī, Manāḳib al-ʿārifīn , ed. T. Yazıcı, Ankara 1959-61, ii, 597), and it is therefore probable that his followers were even then called Mawlawiyya. 1. Origins and ritual of the order. An attempt will be made here to demonstrate to what extent the subsequent and relatively develope…

Ḳādiriyya

(3,416 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, confrérie religieuse ( ṭarīḳa), ainsi nommée d’après ʿAbd al-Ḳādir al-Ḏj̲īlānī [ q.v.] 1. — Origine. ʿAbd al-Ḳādir (m. 561/1166) était le directeur d’une école ( madrasa) hanbalite et d’un ribāṭ à Bag̲h̲dād. Ses prédications (recueillies dans al-Fatḥ al-rabbānī) étaient faites tantôt dans la première, tantôt dans le second; c’étaient là deux établissements de premier ordre à l’époque d’Ibn al-At̲h̲īr, et Yāḳūt ( Irs̲h̲ād, V, 274) cite un legs de livres fait à cette école par un homme qui mourut en 572/1176-7. Les deux établissements paraissent avoir été victimes du pillage de Bag̲h̲dād qui eut lieu en 656/1258; jusqu’à cette époque, la direction semble en être restée dans la famille de ʿAbd al-Ḳādir, qui était très nombreuse et très considérée. Dans la Bahd̲j̲at al-asrār, où figure (113-7) une liste exacte de ses descendants, il est dit que le successeur de ʿAbd al-Ḳādir à la tête de la

al-Rifāʿī

(1,244 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S.
, Aḥmad b. ʿAlī, Abū l-ʿAbbās, faḳīh s̲h̲āfiʿite de formation, fondateur de l’ordre de derviches Rifāʿiyya [ q.v.]. Il naquit en muḥarram 500/septembre 1106 (selon d’autres sources en rad̲j̲ab 512/octobre-novembre 1118) à Ḳaryat Ḥasan, un village des Baṭāʿiḥ, région des marécages du bas ʿIrāḳ [voir al-Baṭīḥa] entre Baṣra et Wāsiṭ — de là la nisba d’al-Baṭaʾiḥī qui lui est parfois donnée — et mourut à Umm ʿUbayda, dans la même région, le 22 d̲j̲umādā I 578/23 octobre 1182 (voir Ibn Ḵh̲allikān. éd. ʿAbbās, I, 171-2, trad. de Slane, I, 152-3). La nisb…

al-Ḥarīrī

(1,340 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S. | Pellat, Ch.
(parfois Ibn al-Ḥarīrī chez Yāḳūt), Abū Muḥammad al-Ḳāsim b. ʿAlī b. Muḥammad b. ʿUt̲h̲mān b. al-Ḥarīrī al-Baṣrī, poète et philologue arabe surtout connu par ses Maḳāmāt. Né en 446/1054, sans doute dans une famille de propriétaires fonciers qui demeurait à al-Mas̲h̲ān, près de Baṣra, où il passa son enfance, il fit ses études à Baṣra; ses biographes s’accordent à lui donner pour maître al-Faḍl b. Muḥammad al-Ḳaṣabānī, mais celui-ci serait mort en 444/1052 (voir Yāḳūt,

Mawlānā K̲h̲ūnkār

(161 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S.
, titre du supérieur de l’ordre de derviches mawlawis [voir Mawlawiyya]. Le second mot est la forme turque du mot persan k̲h̲udāwandigar, équivalent de mawlā, qui, d’après Aflākī ( Saints des derviches tourneurs, I, 59), fut donné à Ḏj…

Raḥmāniyya

(1,231 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, confrérie religieuse ( ṭariḳa) algérienne, qui doit son nom à Muḥammad b. ʿAbd al-Rahmān al-Gas̲h̲tulī al-Ḏj̲urd̲j̲urī al-Azharī Abū Ḳabrayn, (m. 1208/1793-4). C’est une branche des Ḵh̲alwatiyya et elle fut, dit-on, appelée pendant quelque temps Bakriyya d’après Muṣtafā al-Bakrī al-S̲h̲āmī. A Nafṭa [ q.v.], en Tunisie, et dans quelques autres endroits, on l’appelle ʿAzzūziyya, du nom de Muṣṭafā b. Muḥammad b. ʿAzzūz. Vie du fondateur. Sa famille appartenait à la tribu des Ayt Smāʿīl, membre de la confédération des Gas̲h̲tula dans la Kabylie du Ḏj̲urd̲j̲ura; il étudia chez lui, puis à Alger, et se rendit en pèlerinage en 1152/1740; à son retour, il passa quelque temps comme étudiant à al-Azhar, au Caire: c’est là que Muḥammad b. Sālim al-Ḥafnawī (m. 1181/1767: Silk al-Durar, IV, 50) l’initia à l’ordre Ḵh̲alwatī et lui ordonna de le propager dans l’Inde et le Soudan; après une absence de trente ans, il retourna en Algérie et commença sa prédication dans son village natal, où il fonda une

Ibn al-Ḥad̲j̲d̲j̲ād̲j̲

(880 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D.S. | Pellat, Ch.
, Abū ʿAbd Allāh al-Ḥusayn b. Aḥmad b. Muḥammad b. Ḏj̲aʿfar b. Muḥammad, poète arabe s̲h̲īʿite de l’époque des Būyides [

al-Bāk̲h̲arzī

(294 words)

Author(s): Margoliouth, D. S.
, Abū l-Ḥasan (ou Abū l-Ḳāsim) ʿAlī b. Ḥasan b. ʿAlī b. Abī l-Ṭayyib, poète et anthologue arabe originaire de Bāk̲h̲arz. Après avoir reçu une bonne éducation dans sa maison paternelle, il étudia en particulier le fiḳh s̲h̲āfiʿite et assista, à Nīs̲h̲āpūr, aux cours d’al-Ḏj̲uwaynī (ʿAbd Allāh b. Yūsuf), où il fit la connaissance d’aī-Kundurī [ q.v.]; ce dernier, devenu wazīr, le prit à Bag̲h̲dād comme secrétaire; auparavant, il avait…

Mawlawiyya

(6,953 words)

Author(s): Yazıcı, T. | Margoliouth, D.S. | Jong, F. de
, (turc: Mewlewiyye, moderne: Mevlevî) confrérie religieuse ( ṭarīḳa) qui tire son nom de Mawlānā «Notre Maître», surnom de Ḏj̲alāl al-dīn Rūmī [ q.v.] et dont les membres sont appelés par les Européens derviches tourneurs ou danseurs. Bien qu’elle ne soit pas encore désignée ainsi, il semble qu’une ṭarīḳa de ce genre ait été constituée dès l’époque du Mawlānā, et ce point de vue est confirmé par l’existence d’un groupe de disciples autour de Ḏj̲alāl al-dīn, par le souci qu’avait ce dernier de leur éducation et par le fait qu’il désignait des…
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