Martin Professor of Islamic Studies and History of Religions Emory University, Atlanta Associate Editors Sạd Amir Arjomand Professor of Sociology State University of New York, Stony Broo
Trang 2Encyclopedia ofIslamand the Muslim World
Trang 3Editorial Board
Editor in Chief
Richard C Martin
Professor of Islamic Studies and History of Religions
Emory University, Atlanta
Associate Editors
Sạd Amir Arjomand
Professor of Sociology State University of New York, Stony Brook
Marcia Hermansen
Professor of Theology Loyola University, Chicago
Trang 4Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World
Editor in Chief Richard C Martin
Volume 1 A-L
Trang 5Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World
Editor in Chief Richard C Martin
Volume 2 M-Z, Index
Trang 6Encyclopedia of Islam
Richard C Martin, Editor in Chief
© 2004 by Macmillan Reference USA.
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Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim world / edited by Richard C.
Martin.
p cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-02-865603-2 (set) — ISBN 0-02-865604-0 (v 1) — ISBN 0-02-865605-9 (v 2)
1 Islam—Encyclopedias I Martin, Richard C.
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Trang 7Introduction ix
List of entries xiii
List of contributors xxiii
Synoptic outline of entries xxxi
List of maps xxxv
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ISLAM AND THE MUSLIM WORLD Glossary 749
Appendix: Genealogies and Timelines 755
Index 785
Trang 8Editorial and Production Staff
Trang 10i x
A growing number of scholars and pundits have declared that the twenty-first century will be theera of Islam Such predictions, whether intended in a positive or negative light, err in failing toappreciate the spread and influence of Islam during the past millennium and a half, especially onthe continents of Asia and Africa Nonetheless, events during the first decade of the newmillennium have underscored the importance of knowing about Islamic history and understand-ing the great diversity and richness of Muslim social, cultural, and religious practices Suicidebomber attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington,D.C., on September 11, 2001, killed over three thousand persons These tragic events and themedia coverage of the aftermath as well as of the two wars subsequently fought in the Muslimcountries of Afghanistan and Iraq have dramatically shown how little is known in the West aboutIslam and the Muslim world Islam is, and has been for nearly fifteen centuries, a global religiousand political phenomenon Muslim networks of communication, from the annual pilgrimage toMecca to the vast new power of the World Wide Web, have enabled Muslims to establishpostmodern identities in a rapidly changing world, while at the same time preserving and
reinvigorating a variety of time-honored traditions and practices The Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World is a sourcebook of information about Islam, its past and present, addressed to
students and general readers as the twenty-first century begins its first decade
The Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World presents in two volumes some 504 articles,
alphabetically arranged, in incremental lengths generally of 200, 500, 1,000, 3,000, and 5,000words The work of some 500 scholars appears in these pages, carefully reviewed and edited in acommon style for easy access by readers who may presently have limited or no knowledge ofIslam It has also been prepared as a teaching and learning resource for teachers and students,from the high school grades through university The alphabetical ordering of articles that follow,
in the List of Articles, will enable readers to locate topics of interest quickly A synoptic outline of
the contents of the Encyclopedia, found within the frontmatter on pages xxxi–xxxiv, provides
readers with an overview by topic and subtopic of the range and kinds of information presented in
the main body of the Encyclopedia Approximately 170 photographs, drawings, maps, and charts
appear throughout the two volumes A glossary in the back matter of volume two, which lists
commonly used Arabic and other Islamic terms, such as sharia, or “Islamic law,” will enable
general readers to determine quickly the meaning of essential but perhaps less familiar terms inIslamic studies
The Encyclopedia is truly an international work that reflects the diversity of ideas and practices
that have characterize the Islamic world throughout its history This diversity is reflected amongthe editors who organized and compiled this work and the scores of scholars who wrote thearticles contained in it The associate editors’ national origins are Canada, Iran, and South Africa;their religious affiliations or backgrounds include Sunni and Shiite Islam; and their scholarlytraining has been in sociology, the history of religions, and Islamic studies An even greater
Trang 11I n t r o d u c t i o n
diversity exists among the contributing scholars who live and teach in North America, Europe,
Africa, and Asia, including the Middle East They represent the fields of history, philosophy,
religious studies, anthropology, sociology, political science, and the fine arts, among others In its
totality, then, this work represents a broad expanse of scholarly knowledge about Islam, accessible
in two volumes
Islam increasingly is recognized as a vital force in the contemporary world, a source ofcollective social identity, and religious expression for over one billion people around the world,
who comprise a fifth of the global population Public interest in learning about Islam is a very
recent phenomenon, however Events of the past few decades have generated a demand for
information about Islam on an unprecedented scale in the history of Islamic studies in the West
In negative terms, these events include violence: the colonial and postcolonial encounters
between Europeans and Muslims in Asia and Africa, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
Hindu-Muslim clashes in South Asia, Serbian ethnic cleansing of Hindu-Muslim populations in the Balkans, and
the heavily televised American-led wars in the Gulf, Afghanistan, and Iraq In positive terms, the
recent years have seen productive Muslim diaspora communities emerge in Europe and the
Americas, Islamic patterns of democracy and civil society develop in some countries in Africa and
Asia, and venues of dialogue arise among Muslims, Jews, and Christians about their common
moral and social concerns as well as their differences That non-Muslims are learning more about
Islam and their Muslim neighbors through tools like this encyclopedia must also be counted as a
positive turn, and a much-needed one
Scholars, journalists, and writers of all sorts have responded robustly to this newly recognizedimportance of Islam and the Muslim world, thus creating a wealth of information about Islam
now available in bookstores, libraries, and newsstands around the world More significant for
readers of this work, the Internet hosts an expanding plethora of Web sites on Islamic teachings,
practices, sectarian groups, and organizations Many Web sites are sponsored by Muslim
scholars, organizations, and institutions and provide authentic, and sometimes competing,
information about Islamic beliefs and practices Unfortunately, others offer hostile
interpreta-tions of Islam The Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World is designed to help students and
general readers cope with this growing demand and almost overwhelming supply of information
The decision to call this work the Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World was made after
considering other, less felicitous alternatives The editors wanted to produce a work that was
about Islamic cultures, religion, history, politics, and the like as well as the people who have
identified with Islam over the past fourteen centuries For the scope of the social and cultural
aspects of the subject matter of the Encyclopedia, the editors chose the phrase “Muslim World.”
The label “Muslim World” is not meant to suggest that diversity and variety are lacking in what
Muslims think, believe, and do as Muslims Nor is the Muslim World as represented in this work
to be thought of as separate from the rest of the world Indeed, it will be clear to readers of articles
on virtually all topics included below that Islamic history and Muslim people have been deeply
and richly engaged in and interacting with world history and are perhaps even more so in the
modern world, as the late Marshall G S Hodgson so persuasively argued in his monumental
three-volume work, The Venture of Islam: Conscience and History in a World Civilization (1974).
The growing demand for accessible knowledge about Islam in recent decades has produced anumber of histories, encyclopedias, and dictionaries that serve different purposes In addition to
Hodgson’s comprehensive historical essay on Islamic civilization, The Cambridge History of Islam
(1970) brought together substantial treatments of historical periods and geographical regions of
Islamic societies Another important and even older work that is widely used by scholars is the
ongoing project known as the Encyclopaedia of Islam The first edition was published in four
volumes in Leiden (1908–1938); the second and much larger edition recently reached its
completion in twice as many volumes with a significantly expanded list of contributing scholars;
and the third edition is now being planned The Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World brings
to general readers in accessible form the rich tradition of serious scholarship on Islam and Muslim
peoples found in the Cambridge History and the Encyclopaedia of Islam, and it addresses information
about Islam in the twenty-first century that is not discussed in the older sources More recently,
Trang 12I n t r o d u c t i o n
the Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World (1995) appeared in four volumes The focus of
this latter work is, as the title suggests, on Islam in the modern world, generally dated from the
beginning the eighteenth century through the last decade of the twentieth The Encyclopedia of
Islam and the Muslim World by contrast seeks to contextualize contemporary Islam within the
longer history of Islam, and it includes discussion of significant world events involving the Islamic
world over the past decade
In preparing this new resource on Islam, the editors sought to frame some of the traditional as
well as the more recent aspects of Islam in newer categories Thus, for example, readers will find
articles covering “Material Culture,” “Vernacular Islam,” “Identity, Muslim,” “Secularism,”
“Disputation,” and “Expansion of Islam.” A major feature of the Encyclopedia is the large number
of brief biographical sketches (nearly two hundred) of major figures in Islamic history, men and
women, past and present The editors also included articles on several important and sometimes
contested ethical and social issues, including “Ethnicity,” “Gender,” “Homosexuality,” “Human
Rights,” and “Masculinities,” along with the more traditional entries on gender (usually
concentrating on the feminine roles) and marriage The events of September 11, 2001, occurred
after the Table of Contents was prepared and authors were commissioned to write the articles
Nonetheless, new articles on “Terrorism,” “Usama bin Ladin,” and “al-Qaida,” among others,
were added
History, of course, will continue to unfold for humankind worldwide, including Muslims The
Encyclopedia includes a number of interpretive articles, such as “Ethics and Social Issues,” which
provide frameworks for understanding ongoing events in Islamic history
Editorial style is a matter of great importance in a work such as the Encyclopedia Readers can
easily get lost in technical terms and diacritical marks on words borrowed from Arabic and
Persian Integrating work from a great number of scholars from around the world, each with
differing practices in academic expression and in transliterating Islamic languages into Latin
letters, presented some challenges to the academic editors and the editorial staff at Macmillan
To make things easier on readers, especially for those not initiated into the argots of Islamic
technical terms, the editors decided to minimize the diacritical marks on loanwords from Arabic,
Persian, Urdu, Turkish, and other Islamic languages We encouraged authors and copy editors to
romanize those Islamic terms that have made it into the English language, such as jihad, hajj, and
Ramadan, as evidenced by their inclusion in modern dictionaries such as Webster’s Third New
International Dictionary Where it seemed helpful, editors supplied brief parenthetical definitions
and identifications, both in the text and in the Glossary
The people who made this project possible brought great ideas to it, are extremely talented
and competent, and were wonderful to work with Hélène Potter, Macmillan’s Director of New
Product Development, designed the project and brought to it a considerable knowledge about
Islam More than an industry leader, Hélène became first and foremost a friend and colleague
She is an accomplished professional with an uncanny understanding of the knowledge industry
she serves Corrina Moss, an Assistant Editor with Macmillan, worked on the project throughout
and kept in touch daily on editorial matters large and small To Corrina went the unpleasant task,
pleasantly administered, of keeping the associate editors and especially me on task Elly
Dickason, who was the publisher in 2000 when this project was approved, and Jonathan Aretakis,
chief copy editor, also deserve expressions of praise and gratitude—Elly for supporting the
project from the moment she reviewed it, and Jonathan for making sure the articles are factually
and stylistically appropriate
My colleagues Sạd Arjomand, Marcia Hermansen, and Abdulkader Tayob served as
Associ-ate Editors The associAssoci-ate editors brought broad vision and detailed knowledge to their tasks of
helping to organize the contents of the Encyclopedia, and I am indebted to them for making my
own knowledge limitations less problematic in producing it Rochelle Davis, a specialist in Arabic
and Islamic studies, served as Assistant Editor, responsible for reading page proofs and preparing
the Glossary However, she contributed much more to the Encyclopedia, with an eye for
grammatical and content errors that greatly improved the penultimate draft My friend and
Trang 13I n t r o d u c t i o n
colleague of many years, John Voll, Editorial Consultant, kindly advised Hélène Potter and me of
matters we should consider in the formative stages of planning the Encyclopedia, and he
contributed several important articles to it
On behalf of Sạd, Marcia, Abdulkader, Rochelle, and John, I would like to dedicate thisproject to our many Muslim and non-Muslim colleagues around the world, with whom we share
the task of teaching and writing about Islam in a high-tech, troubled world that needs to know
more about itself To that end we hope this work will help disseminate useful knowledge about
one of the world’s great civilizations to those who have a desire and need to know
Richard C Martin Creston, North Carolina August 15, 2003
Trang 14Abd al-Qadir, Amir
Peter von Sivers
Abd al-Rahman Kawakibi
Sohail H Hashmi
Abd al-Razzaq al-Sanhuri
Khaled Abou El-Fadl
Abd al-Wahhab, Muhammad Ibn
M Sait ÖzervarliAbu ‘l-Qasem KashaniMohammad H Faghfoory
AdaTahir Fuzile SitotoAdab
Barbara D MetcalfAdhan
Muneer Goolam FareedAfghani, Jamal al-DinSohail H HashmiAfrica, Islam inDavid RobinsonAfrican Culture and IslamAbdin Chande
Aga KhanAzim NanjiAhl al-BaytJuan Eduardo CampoAhl-e Hadis / Ahl al-HadithBarbara D MetcalfAhl al-Hadith
R Kevin JaquesAhl al-KitabStephen CoryAhmad Ibn Ibrahim al-GhaziRoman Loimeier
Ahmad Ibn IdrisKnut S VikørAhmadiyyaAvril A PowellAhmad Khan, (Sir) SayyidDavid LelyveldAhmad, Mirza GhulamAvril A Powell
AishaSa’diyya ShaikhAkbar
Gregory C KozlowskiAkhbariyya
Robert GleaveAkhlaq
Azim Nanji
AliDiana SteigerwaldAligarh
David LelyveldAllah
Daniel C PetersonAmerican Culture and IslamIhsan Bagby
Americas, Islam in theSylviane Anna DioufAndalus, al-
Aaron HughesAngels
Peter Lamborn Wilson
Trang 15M Sait ÖzervarliBasri, Hasan al-Rkia E CornellBath Party
F Gregory Gause IIIBazargan, MehdiMazyar LotfalianBedouin
Rochelle DavisBida
Nico J G KapteinBin Ladin, UsamaRichard C MartinBiography and HagiographyMarcia HermansenBiruni, al-
Marcia HermansenBody, Significance ofBrannon M WheelerBourghiba, HabibJohn RuedyBukhara, Khanate and Emirate ofFlorian Schwarz
Bukhari, Asma AfsaruddinBuraq
al-Carel BertramCairo
Aslam Farouk-AlliCaliphate
Muhammad Qasim Zaman
CalligraphySheila S BlairJonathan M BloomCapitalism
Timur KuranCartography and GeographyKaren C Pinto
Central Asia, Islam inDevin DeWeeseCentral Asian Culture and IslamDevin DeWeese
ChildhoodElizabeth Warnock FerneaChristianity and IslamPatrice C BrodeurCircumcisionKathryn KuenyClothingCharlotte JirousekCoinage
Abdullah SaeedColonialismJamal MalikCommunismRichard C Campany, Jr
Conflict and Violence
A Rashied OmarConversionPeter B ClarkeCrusadesWarren C SchultzDar al-HarbJohn KelsayDar al-IslamJohn KelsayDawaDavid WesterlundChrister HedinTorsten JansonDawla
Sohail H HashmiDeath
Juan Eduardo CampoDeoband
Barbara D Metcalf
Trang 16Muneer Goolam Fareed
East Asia, Islam in
Jacqueline M Armijo
East Asian Culture and Islam
Jacqueline M Armijo
Economy and Economic Institutions
Nora Ann Colton
Iqtidar Alam Khan
Empires: Mongol and Il-Khanid
Haggai ErlichEthnicityAmal RassamEunuchsJane HathawayEuropean Culture and IslamJorgen S Nielsen
Europe, Islam inJorgen S NielsenExpansionFred M DonnerFadlallah, Muhammad HusaynMazyar Lotfalian
FalsafaParviz MorewedgeFarrakhan, LouisAminah Beverly McCloudFasi, Muhammad Allal al-David L JohnstonFatima
Ursula GüntherFatwa
Daniel C PetersonFedaiyan-e IslamFakhreddin AzimiFeminism
Ghazala AnwarFez
Claudia GazziniFitna
Sandra S CampbellFundamentalismSohail H HashmiFutuwwa
Reeva Spector SimonGasprinskii, Ismail Bay
A Uner TurgayGender
Zayn R Kassam
GenealogyMarcia HermansenGhannoushi, Rashid al-Gudrun KrämerGhayba(t)Robert GleaveGhazali, al-Ebrahim MoosaGhazali, Muhammad al-Qamar-ul HudaGhazali, Zaynab al-Ursula GüntherGlobalizationSạd Amir ArjomandGrammar and LexicographyKees Versteegh
Greek CivilizationOliver LeamanHadith
Harald MotzkiHajj Salim Suwari, al-Abdulkader TayobHaj Umar al-Tal, al-Abdin ChandeHallaj, al-Herbert W MasonHAMAS
Tamara SonnHaremEtin AnwarHaron, AbdullahShamil JeppieHasan
Michael M J FischerHashemi-Rafsanjani, Ali-AkbarMajid Mohammadi
HealingAbdullahi Osman El-TomHeresiography
Aaron HughesHijra
Rizwi FaizerHijri CalendarAhmad S Dallal
Trang 17Hinduism and Islam
Juan Eduardo Campo
Hospitality and Islam
Khalid Yahya Blankinship
Hukuma al-Islamiyya, al- (Islamic
R Kevin JaquesIbn MajaAsma AfsaruddinIbn RushdOliver LeamanIbn SinaShams C InatiIbn TaymiyyaJames PavlinIdentity, MuslimDaniel C PetersonIjtihad
Muneer Goolam FareedIkhwan al-MusliminDavid L JohnstonIkhwan al-SafaAzim NanjiImamMuhammad Qasim ZamanImamate
Robert GleaveImamzadahAnne H BetteridgeInternet
Bruce B LawrenceMiriam CookeIntifadaPhilip MattarIqbal, MuhammadDavid LelyveldIran, Islamic Republic ofNancy L StockdaleIshraqi SchoolSeyyed Hossein NasrIslam and IslamicJohn O VollIslam and Other ReligionsPatrice C BrodeurIslamicate Society
R Kevin Jaques
Islamic JihadNajib GhadbianIslamic Salvation FrontDavid L JohnstonIslamic Society of North America
R Kevin JaquesIsmail I, ShahSholeh A QuinnJafar al-SadiqLiyakatali TakimJahannamJuan Eduardo CampoJahiliyya
Rizwi FaizerJamaat-e IslamiJamal MalikJami
Muneer Goolam FareedJamil al-Amin, ImamEdward E Curtis IVJamiyat-e Ulama-e HindJamal Malik
Jamiyat-e Ulama-e IslamJamal Malik
Jamiyat-e Ulama-e PakistanJamal Malik
JannaJuan Eduardo CampoJevdet Pasha
Linda T DarlingJihad
Sohail H HashmiJinnah, Muhammad AliRasul Bakhsh RaisJudaism and IslamGordon D NewbyKalam
Parviz MorewedgeKano
Thyge C BroKaraki, Shaykh AliRula Jurdi AbisaabKarbala
Diana Steigerwald
Trang 18John WalbridgeMahdi
Marcia HermansenMahdi, Sadiq al-John O VollMahdist State, MahdiyyaShamil Jeppie
MahrZiba Mir-HosseiniMajlis
Sạd Amir ArjomandMajlisi, Muhammad BaqirRula Jurdi AbisaabMakassar, Shaykh Yusuf
R Michael FeenerMalcolm X
Edward E Curtis IVMalik, Ibn AnasJonathan E BrockoppMamun, al-
Muhammad Qasim ZamanManar, Manara
Sheila S BlairJonathan M BloomManicheanismElton L DanielMansa MusaOusmane KaneMarja al-TaqlidRobert GleaveMarriageZiba Mir-HosseiniMartyrdomDaniel W Brown
Marwa, MuhammadPaula StilesMarwanRizwi FaizerMasculinitiesMarcia HermansenMashhad
Rasool JafariyanMasjid
Patrick D GaffneyMaslaha
Richard C MartinMaterial CultureHassan MwakimakoMaturidi, al-
M Sait ƯzervarliMaududi, Abu l-Ala
Jamal MalikMazalimOsman TastanMazruiRandall L PouwelsMedicine
Gail G HarrisonOsman M GalalMihna
Muhammad Qasim ZamanMihrab
Sheila S BlairJonathan M BloomMilitary RaidRizwi FaizerMinbar (Mimbar)Richard T AntounMinorities: DhimmisPatrick FrankeMinorities: Offshoots of IslamRobert Gleave
MiraclesMarcia HermansenMiraj
Frederick ColbyMichael SellsModernismCharles Kurzman
Trang 19L i s t o f E n t r i e s
Modernity
Javed Majeed
Modernization, Political:
Administra-tive, Military, and Judicial Reform
Aslam Farouk-Alli
Modernization, Political:
Authoritari-anism and Democratization
Muhammad Reza Shah PahleviStephanie Cronin
Muhammad, Warith DeenEdward E Curtis IVMuharram
David PinaultMuhasibi, al-Rkia E CornellMuhtasibRobert GleaveMujahidinAmin TarziMulla SadraSeyyed Hossein NasrMurjiites, MurjiaShalahudin KafrawiMusic
Munir BekenMuslim ibn al-HajjajAsma AfsaruddinMuslim Student Association ofNorth America
Aminah Beverly McCloudMutazilites, MutazilaShalahudin KafrawiNader Shah AfsharJohn R PerryNahdlatul Ulama (NU)Nelly van Doorn-HarderNaini, Mohammad HosaynMohammad H FaghfooryNajaf
Mazyar LotfalianNar
Juan Eduardo CampoNasai, al-
Asma AfsaruddinNationalism: ArabNancy L Stockdale
Nationalism: IranianFakhreddin AzimiNationalism: Turkish
A Uner TurgayNation of IslamAminah Beverly McCloudNawruz
Anne H BetteridgeNazzam, al-
M Sait ÖzervarliNetworks, MuslimBruce B LawrenceMiriam CookeNikah
Ziba Mir-HosseiniNiyabat-e ammaRobert GleaveNizam al-MulkWarren C SchultzNizari
Azim NanjiNur MovementBerna TuramNuri, FazlallahMohammad H FaghfooryNursi, Said
A Uner TurgayOrganization of the IslamicConference
Qamar-ul HudaOrientalismQamar-ul HudaPakistan, Islamic Republic ofRasul Bakhsh Rais
Pan-ArabismSohail H HashmiPan-Islam
Sohail H HashmiPan-TuranismTouraj AtabakiPasdaranMajid MohammadiPersian Language and LiteratureFranklin D Lewis
Trang 20Qadhdhafi, Muammar
al-Ali Abdullatif Ahmida
Qadi (Kadi, Kazi)
Kamran AghaieRefah PartisiLinda T DarlingReform: Arab Middle East andNorth Africa
Sohail H HashmiReform: IranHossein KamalyReform: Muslim Communities of theRussian Empire
Allen J FrankReform: South AsiaAhrar AhmadReform: Southeast AsiaMark R WoodwardReligious Beliefs
R Kevin JaquesReligious InstitutionsAbdulkader TayobRepublican BrothersJohn O VollRevolution: Classical IslamSạd Amir ArjomandRevolution: IslamicRevolution in IranKristian AlexanderRevolution: ModernSạd Amir ArjomandReza Shah
Stephanie CroninRiba
Timur KuranRida, RashidSohail H HashmiRitual
Gerard WiegersRumi, JalaluddinFranklin D LewisRushdie, SalmanAmir HussainSadat, Anwar al-Joel Gordon
SadrAndrew J NewmanSadr, Muhammad Baqir al-Majid MohammadiSadr, Musa al-Majid MohammadiSahara
F Ghislaine LydonSaint
Arthur F BuehlerSaladin
Warren C SchultzSalafiyya
John O VollSaleh bin AllawiAbdin ChandeSaudi Dynasty
F Gregory Gause IIISayyid
Robert GleaveScience, Islam andAaron HughesSecularism, IslamicCharles KurzmanSecularizationMahmood MonshipouriShafii, al-
Christopher MelchertShaltut, MahmudSohail H HashmiSharia
Jonathan E BrockoppShariati, Ali
Behrooz Ghamari-TabriziSharif
Robert GleaveSharit Shangalaji, Reza-QoliPaula Stiles
Shaykh al-IslamRobert GleaveShaykhiyyaPaula StilesShia: EarlyDevin J Stewart
Trang 21F Gregory Gause III
South Asia, Islam in
Scott A Kugle
South Asian Culture and Islam
Perween Hasan
Southeast Asia, Islam in
Nelly van Doorn-Harder
Southeast Asian Culture and Islam
Nelly van Doorn-Harder
Kathryn KuenyTahmasp I, ShahSholeh A QuinnTajdid
John O VollTalibanAmin TarziKimberly McCloudTanzimat
Linda T DarlingTaqiyya
Robert GleaveTaqlid
Robert GleaveTariqa
Carl W ErnstTasawwufCarl W ErnstTaziyaKamran AghaieTerrorismJuan Eduardo CampoCaleb ElfenbeinThaqafi, Mukhtar al-Christopher MelchertTimbuktu
Ousmane KaneTouba
Lucy CreeveyTraditionalism
R Kevin JaquesTranslationLamin SannehTravel and TravelersThyge C BroTribe
Amal Rassam
Turabi, Hasan John O VollTusi, Muhammad Ibn al-Hasan(Shaykh al-Taifa)
al-Robert GleaveTusi, Nasir al-DinZayn R KassamUlema
Robert Gleave
UmarKhalid Yahya BlankinshipUmma
Abdullah SaeedUmm KulthumVirginia DanielsonUnited States, Islam in theEdward E Curtis IVUrdu Language, Literature,and Poetry
Christopher ShackleUsuliyya
Ahmad Kazemi Moussavi
Uthman Dan FodioRoman Loimeier
Uthman ibn AffanRizwi FaizerVeilingGhazala AnwarLiz McKayVelayat-e FaqihRobert GleaveVernacular IslamJoyce Burkhalter FlueckigerWahdat al-Wujud
William C ChittickWahhabiyya
Sohail H HashmiWajib al-WujudShams C InatiWali Allah, ShahMarcia HermansenWaqf
Gregory C KozlowskiWazifa
Mansur Sefatgol
Trang 22Zand, Karim KhanJohn R PerryZanzibar, Saidi Sultanate ofAbdin Chande
ZarAdeline MasquelierZaytuna
Claudia Gazzini
Trang 23List of Contributors
Rula Jurdi Abisaab
University at Akron, OH
Karaki, Shaykh Ali
Majlisi, Muhammad Baqir
Khaled Abou El-Fadl
University of California, Los
Ange-les, Law School
Abd al-Razzaq al-Sanhuri
Black Hills State University, SD
Reform: South Asia
Ali Abdullatif Ahmida
University of New England
Qadhdhafi, Muammar
al-Iqtidar Alam Khan
Aligarh Historians Society, Aligarh
India
Empires: Mogul
Sultanates: Delhi
Kristian AlexanderUniversity of Utah
Revolution: Islamic Revolution in Iran
Richard T AntounState University of New York,Binghamton
Minbar (Mimbar)
Ghazala AnwarUniversity of Canterbury, NewZealand
Feminism Veiling
Etin AnwarHamilton College, NY
Harem Women, Public Roles of
Sạd Amir ArjomandState University of New York,Stony Brook
Globalization Majlis Monarchy Revolution: Classical Islam Revolution: Modern Sultanates: Seljuk
Jacqueline M ArmijoStanford University
East Asia, Islam in East Asian Culture and Islam
Touraj AtabakiUniversity of Utrecht, TheNetherlands
Khiva, Khanate of Pan-Turanism
Khalil AthaminaBirzeit Univeristy, Palestine
Kunti, Mukhtar
al-Fakhreddin AzimiUniversity of Connecticut
Fedaiyan-e Islam Mosaddeq, Mohammad Nationalism: Iranian
Ihsan BagbyUniversity of Kentucky
American Culture and Islam
Henning L BauerUniversity of California, Los Ange-les, NELC
Empires: Sassanian
Munir BekenUniversity of Washington
Music
Jonathan BerkeyDavidson College
Education
Carel BertramUniversity of Texas, Austin
Buraq
Anne H BetteridgeUniversity of Arizona
Imamzadah Nawruz
Anna BigelowLoyola Marymount University
Hinduism and Islam
Trang 24Bard College, Annandale, NY
Malik, Ibn Anas
Sharia
Patrice C Brodeur
Connecticut College
Christianity and Islam
Islam and Other Religions
Fitna
Juan Eduardo CampoUniversity of California, SantaBarbara
Ahl al-Bayt Arab League Death Hinduism and Islam Jahannam
Janna Mojahedin-e Khalq Nar
Terrorism
Abdin ChandeSidwell Friends School, Washing-ton, D.C
African Culture and Islam Haj Umar al-Tal, al- Saleh bin Allawi (Jamal al Layl) Zanzibar, Saidi Sultanate of
William C ChittickState University of New York,Stony Brook
Ibn Arabi Wahdat al-Wujud
Peter B ClarkeKing’s College, University ofLondon
Conversion Moravids
Frederick ColbyDuke University
Internet
Rkia E CornellUniversity of Arkansas
Basri, Hasan Muhasibi, al- Rabia of Basra
al-Stephen CoryUniversity of California, SantaBarbara
Ahl al-Kitab
Lucy CreeveyUniversity of Connecticut,Torrington
Bamba, Ahmad Touba
Stephanie CroninUniversity College, Northampton,England
Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi Reza Shah
Edward E Curtis IVUniversity of North Carolina,Chapel Hill
Jamil al-Amin, Imam Malcolm X
Muhammad, Elijah Muhammad, Warith Deen United States, Islam in the
Farhad DaftaryInstitute of Ismaili Studies, London
Assassins Shia: Ismaili
Ahmad S DallalStanford University
Astrology Astronomy Hijri Calendar
Suleman DangorUniversity of Durban, South Africa
Muawiya
Elton L DanielUniversity of Hawaii
Manicheanism
Virginia DanielsonHarvard University
Umm Kulthum
Linda T DarlingUniversity of Arizona
Erbakan, Necmeddin Jevdet Pasha Kemal, Namek Political Organization Refah Partisi Tanzimat
Trang 25Central Asia, Islam in
Central Asian Culture and Islam
Sylviane Anna Diouf
New York University
Americas, Islam in the
Fred M Donner
University of Chicago
Expansion
Nadia Maria El Cheikh
American University of Beirut,
Abdullahi Osman El-Tom
National University of Ireland
Abu ‘l-Qasem Kashani
Naini, Mohammad Hosayn
Nuri, Fazlallah
Rizwi FaizerIndependent Scholar, Canada
Abu Bakr Hijra Jahiliyya Marwan Military Raid Muhammad Sukayna Uthman ibn Affan
Muneer Goolam FareedWayne State University, MI
Adhan Dietary Laws Dua Ijtihad Jami
Mufti
Aslam Farouk-AlliUniversity of Cape Town, SouthAfrica
Cairo Holy Cities Modernization, Political: Administra- tive, Military, and Judicial Reform
R Michael FeenerUniversity of California, Riverside
Makassar, Shaykh Yusuf
Leonor FernandesAmerican University in Cairo,Egypt
Khanqa (Khanaqa, Khanga)
Michael M J FischerMassachusetts Institute ofTechnology
Hasan Husayn
Joyce Burkhalter FlueckigerEmory University
Vernacular Islam
Allen J FrankIndependent Scholar
Reform: Muslim Communities of the Russian Empire
Anne-Sophie FroehlichDer Spiegel, Germany
Modernization, Political: anism and Democratization
Authoritari-Osman M GalalUniversity of California, Los Ange-les, School of Public Health
Medicine
Patrick FrankeMartin-Luther-Universität,Germany
Minorities: Dhimmis
Patrick D GaffneyUniversity of Notre Dame
Khutba Masjid
Gene GarthwaiteDartmouth College
Khan
F Gregory Gause IIIUniversity of Vermont, Burlington
Bath Party Saudi Dynasty Socialism
Claudia GazziniPrinceton University
Abd al-Hamid Ibn Badis Fez
Madani, Abbasi Zaytuna
Najib GhadbianUniversity of Arkansas
Islamic Jihad
Behrooz Ghamari-TabriziGeorgia State University
Abd al-Karim Sorush Mojtahed-Shabestari, Mohammad Motahhari, Mortaza
Shariati, Ali
Robert GleaveUniversity of Bristol, England
Akhbariyya Ayatollah (Ar Ayatullah) Ghayba(t)
Hilli, Allama Hilli, Muhaqqiq al- Hisba
al-Hojjat al-Islam Imamate Marja al-Taqlid Minorities: Offshoots of Islam Muhtasib
Trang 26Abd al-Hamid Kishk (Shaykh)
Abd al-Nasser, Jamal
Muhammad Ali, Dynasty of
Sadat, Anwar
al-Sebastian Günther
University of Toronto, Canada
Rashid, Harun
University of California, Los
Ange-les, School of Public Health
Medicine
Perween Hasan
Dhaka University, Bangladesh
South Asian Culture and Islam
Sohail H Hashmi
Mount Holyoke College, MA
Abd al-Rahman Kawakibi
Abd al-Wahhab, Muhammad Ibn
Abduh, Muhammad
Afghani, Jamal al-Din
Banna, Hasan
Rida, Rashid Shaltut, Mahmud Qutb, Sayyid Wahhabiyya
Mona HassanPrinceton University
Baghdad
Jane HathawayOhio State University
Eunuchs
Christer HedinStockholm University, Sweden
Dawa
Robert W HefnerBoston University
Muhammadiyya (Muhammadiyah)
Marcia HermansenLoyola University, Chicago
Biography and Hagiography Biruni, al-
Genealogy Mahdi Masculinities Miracles Rahman, Fazlur Wali Allah, Shah
Annie C HigginsUniversity of Chicago
Kharijites, Khawarij
Carole HillenbrandUniversity of Edinburgh, Scotland
Sultanates: Ayyubid
Konrad HirschlerUniversity of London, England
Historical Writing
Qamar-ul HudaBoston College
Ghazali, Muhammad Organization of the Islamic Conference
al-Orientalism
Aaron HughesUniversity of Calgary, Canada
Andalus,
al-Asabiyya Heresiography Science, Islam and
Amir HussainCalifornia State University,Northridge
Rushdie, Salman
Shams C InatiVillanova University, Pennsylvania
Ibn Sina Wajib al-Wujud
Torsten JansonLund University, Sweden
Dawa
Rasool JafariyanIndependent Scholar
Hosayniyya Mashhad Qom
R Kevin JaquesIndiana University, Bloomington
Ahl al-Hadith Ibn Khaldun Islamicate Society Islamic Society of North America Religious Beliefs
Shirk Traditionalism
Shamil JeppieUniversity of Cape Town, SouthAfrica
Haron, Abdullah Mahdist State, Mahdiyya
Charlotte JirousekCornell University, Ithaca, NY
Clothing
David L JohnstonYale University
Fasi, Muhammad Allal Ikhwan al-Muslimin Islamic Salvation Front
al-Shalahudin KafrawiBinghamton University, NY
Murjiites, Murjia Mutazilites, Mutazila
Trang 27Ahmad Kazemi Moussavi
International Institute of Islamic
Thought and Civilization,
Free University of Berlin, Germany
Ghannoushi, Rashid
al-Hukuma al-Islamiyya, al- (Islamic
Capitalism Property Riba
Charles KurzmanUniversity of North Carolina,Chapel Hill
Liberalism Modernism Modern Thought Secularism, Islamic
John C LamoreauxSouthern Methodist University,Dallas
Dreams
Bruce B LawrenceDuke University
Internet Networks, Muslim
Oliver LeamanUniversity of Kentucky
Greek Civilization Ibn Rushd
David LelyveldWilliam Paterson University,Wayne, NJ
Ahmad Khan, (Sir) Sayyid Aligarh
Iqbal, Muhammad
Franklin D LewisEmory University
Persian Language and Literature Rumi, Jalaluddin
Roman LoimeierUniversity of Bayreuth, Germany
Abu Bakr Gumi Ahmad Ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi
Uthman Dan Fodio
Mazyar LotfalianBerkeley
Abu ‘l-Hasan Bani-Sadr Bazargan, Mehdi Fadlallah, Muhammad Husayn Najaf
F Ghislaine LydonUniversity of California, LosAngeles
Sahara
Akbar MahdiOhio Wesleyan University
Youth Movements
Mohamed MahmoudTufts University, MA
Muhammad Ahmad Ibn Abdullah
Javed MajeedEnglish Scholar
Modernity
Margaret MalamudNew Mexico State University, LasCruces
Khirqa
Jamal MalikUniversity of Erfurt, Germany
Colonialism Jamaat-e Islami Jamiyat-e Ulama-e Hind Jamiyat-e Ulama-e Islam Jamiyat-e Ulama-e Pakistan Maududi, Abu l-Ala
Louise MarlowWellesley College, MA
Political Thought
Richard C MartinEmory University
bin Ladin, Usama Disputation Maslaha Pilgrimage: Ziyara Qaida, al- Wazir
Herbert W MasonBoston University
Hallaj,
al-Adeline MasquelierTulane University, LA
Zar
Philip MattarU.S Institute of Peace, Washing-ton D.C
Husayni, Hajj Amin Intifada
al-Rudi MattheeUniversity of Delaware
Abbas I, Shah Empires: Safavid and Qajar
Trang 28Bab, Sayyed Ali Muhammad
Aminah Beverly McCloud
DePaul University, Chicago
Divorce Mahr Marriage Nikah Polygamy
Majid MohammadiState University of New York,Stony Brook
Hashemi-Rafsanjani, Ali-Akbar Hojjatiyya Society
Khamanei, Sayyed Ali Khoi, Abo l Qasem Komiteh
Pasdaran Sadr, Muhammad Baqir al- Sadr, Musa al-
Mahmood MonshipouriQuinnipiac University, CN
Secularization
Ebrahim MoosaDuke University
Ethics and Social Issues Ghazali, al-
Qadi (Kadi, Kazi)
Parviz MorewedgeRutgers University, NewBrunswick, NJ
Falsafa Kalam Knowledge
Harald MotzkiUniversity of Nijmegen, TheNetherlands
Hadith
Hassan MwakimakoUniversity of Nairobi, Kenya
Material Culture Sultanates: Modern Yahya bin Abdallah Ramiya (Shaykh)
Azim NanjiInstitute of Ismaili Studies, Lon-don, U.K
Aga Khan Akhlaq Ikhwan al-Safa Khojas Nizari
Seyyed Hossein NasrGeorge Washington University
Ishraqi School Mulla Sadra
Gordon D NewbyEmory University
Arabia, Pre-Islam Judaism and Islam
Andrew J NewmanUniversity of Edinburgh, Scotland
Sadr
Jorgen S NielsenUniversity of Birmingham,England
Europe, Islam in European Culture and Islam
A Rashied OmarNotre Dame, IN
Conflict and Violence
Irfan A OmarMarquette University,Milwaukee, WI
Humor
M Sait ÖzervarliCenter for Islamic Studies, Istan-bul, Turkey
Abd al-Jabbar Abu ‘l-Hudhayl al-Allaf Asharites, Ashaira Baqillani, al- Maturidi, al- Nazzam, al-
James PavlinRutgers University, NewBrunswick, NJ
Ibn Taymiyya
John R PerryUniversity of Chicago
Nader Shah Afshar Zand, Karim Khan
Daniel C PetersonBrigham Young University, UT
Allah Fatwa Identity, Muslim
David PinaultSanta Clara University, CA
Muharram Shia: Imami (Twelver)
Trang 29L i s t o f C o n t r i b u t o r s
Karen C Pinto
University of Alberta, Canada
Cartography and Geography
Randall L Pouwels
University of Arkansas
Mazrui
Avril A Powell
School of Oriental and African
Studies, University of London,
Rasul Bakhsh Rais
Quaid-i Azam University, Pakistan
Jinnah, Muhammad Ali
Pakistan, Islamic Republic of
Translation
E M SartainAmerican University in Cairo,Egypt
Suyuti,
al-Irene SchneiderUniversity of Halle, Germany
Pluralism: Legal and Ethno-Religious
Warren C SchultzDePaul University, Chicago
Crusades Nizam al-Mulk Saladin Sultanates: Mamluk
Florian SchwarzRuhr University Bochum, Germany
Bukhara, Khanate and Emirate of
Michael SellsHaverford College, PA
Miraj
Mansur SefatgolUniversity of Tehran, Iran
Mollabashi Wazifa
Christopher ShackleSchool of Oriental and AfricanStudies, University of London,England
Urdu Language, Literature, and Poetry
Sa’diyya ShaikhTemple University, PA
Aisha
William ShepardUniversity of Canterbury,Christchurch, New Zealand
Khalid, Khalid Muhammad
Reeva Spector SimonColumbia University
HAMAS Hizb Allah
Susan A SpectorskyCity University of New York
Ibn Hanbal
Diana SteigerwaldCalifornia State University, LongBeach
Ali Azhar, al- Karbala
Devin J StewartEmory University
Shia: Early
Paula StilesUniversity of St Andrews, Scotland
Marwa, Muhammad Sharit Shangalaji, Reza-Qoli Shaykhiyya
Sibai, Mustafa
al-Nancy L StockdaleUniversity of Central Florida
Iran, Islamic Republic of Khomeini, Ruhollah Nationalism: Arab
Claudia StodteDer Spiegel, Germany
Liberation Movement of Iran Modernization, Political: Authoritari- anism and Democratization
Liyakatali TakimIndependent Scholar
Jafar al-Sadiq Muhammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyya
Amin TarziMonterey Institute of InternationalStudies, CA
Mujahidin Taliban
Osman TastanAnkara University, Turkey
Law Mazalim
Trang 30University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Balkans, Islam in the
Berna Turam
McGill University, Canada
Nur Movement
A Uner Turgay
McGill University, Canada
Ataturk, Mustafa Kemal
Gasprinskii, Ismail Bay
Nahdlatul Ulama (NU)
Southeast Asia, Islam in
Southeast Asian Culture and Islam
Ahmad Ibn Idris
John O VollGeorgetown University
Islam and Islamic Mahdi, Sadiq al- Republican Brothers Salafiyya
Tajdid Turabi, Hasan al- West, Concept of in Islam
Peter von SiversUniversity of Utah
Abd al-Qadir, Amir
John WalbridgeIndiana University, Bloomington
Bahaallah Bahai Faith Libraries Madrasa Suhrawardi, al-
Elizabeth Warnock FerneaUniversity of Texas, Austin
Childhood
Earle WaughUniversity of Alberta, Canada
Dhikr
Mark WegnerTulane University, LA
Succession
David WesterlundUppsala University, Sweden
Dawa
Brannon M WheelerUniversity of Washington
Abu Hanifa Body, Significance of Madhhab
Prophets
Gerard WiegersLeiden University, TheNetherlands
Devotional Life
Ibadat Qibla Ritual
Quintan WiktorowiczRhodes College, TN
Reform: Southeast Asia
Neguin YavariColumbia University
Atabat
Muhammad Qasim ZamanBrown University
Caliphate Imam Mamun, al- Mihna Rashidun
Trang 31Synoptic Outline of Entries
This outline provides a general overview of the conceptual structure of the Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World The outline is organized under nine major categories, which are further
split into twenty-five subcategories The entries are listed alphabetically within each category or subcategory For ease of reference, the same entry may be listed under several categories
Biographies: Political and other
Public Figures
Abbas I, Shah
Abd al-Qadir, Amir
Abd al-Rahman Kawakibi
Abd al-Hamid Kishk (Shaykh)
Abd al-Karim Sorush
Abd al-Nasser, Jamal
Abd al-Razzaq al-Sanhuri
Abu l-Qasem Kashani
Ahmad Ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi
Ahmad Khan, (Sir) Sayyid
Fasi, Muhammad Allal
al-Gasprinskii, Ismail Bay
Ismail I, Shah
Jevdet Pasha
Kemal, Namik
Khalid, Khalid Muhammad
Mahdi, Sadiq al-
Mansa Musa
Marwan
Mosaddeq, Mohammad
Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi
Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj
Nader Shah Afshar
Biographies: Religious and Cultural Figures
Abu Bakr GumiAbu HanifaAbu ’l-Hasan Bani-SadrAbu ’l-Hudhayl al-AllafAfghani, Jamal al-DinAga Khan
Ahmad, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Gran
Ahmad ibn Idris
Aisha
AliBab, Sayyed Ali MuhammadBahaallah
Bamba, AhmadBanna, Hasan al- Baqillani, al- Basri, Hasan al-Bazargan, Mehdi
Biruni, al- Bukhari, al- Fadlallah, Muhammad Husayn Farrakhan, Louis
Fatima Ghannoushi, Rashid al-Ghazali, al-
Ghazali, Muhammad Ghazali, Zaynab al-Hajj Salim Suwari, al- Haj Umar al-Tal, al-Hallaj, al-
al-Haron, Abdullah Hasan
Hashemi-Rafsanjani, Ali-AkbarHusayn
Husayn, Taha Husayni, Hajj Amin al-Khidr, al-
Karaki, Shaykh AliHilli, Allama al- Hilli, Muhaqqiq al-Ibn Arabi Ibn Battuta Ibn Hanbal Ibn Khaldun Ibn Maja Ibn Rushd Ibn Sina Ibn Taymiyya Iqbal, Muhammad Jafar al-Sadiq Jamil al-Amin, ImamJinnah, Muhammad AliKhamanei, Sayyed AliKhan, Reza of BareillyKhoi, Abol Qasem
Trang 32Malik, Ibn Anas
Majlisi, Muhammad Baqir
Muhammad, Warith Deen
Muhammad Ahmad Ibn Abdullah
Muhammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyya
Sadr, Muhammad Baqir
Sadr, Musa
Thaqafi, Mukhtar
Turabi, Hasan
al-Tusi, Muhammad Ibn al-Hasan
(Shaykh al-Taifa)
Tusi, Nasir al-Din
Umar
Umm Kulthum
Uthman ibn Affan
Yusuf Ali, Abdullah
Culture: Arts, Architecture, and
Dome of the Rock
Khanqah (Khanaqah, Khanga)
Manar, Manara
Material Culture
MihrabTaziyaVernacular Islam
Culture: Disciplines and Fields of Knowledge
Akhlaq AstrologyAstronomy FalsafaKalamLawMedicineMusicTasawwufScience, Islam and
Culture: Concepts
Asabiyya
Ada Adab KnowledgeMadhhabSadr
Culture: Language and Literature
Arabic LanguageArabic LiteratureBiography and Hagiography Grammar and LexicographyPersian Language and LiteratureTranslation
Urdu Language, Literature, andPoetry
Vernacular Islam
Culture: Regional
African Culture and IslamAmerican Culture and Islam Central Asian Culture and Islam East Asian Culture and Islam European Culture and Islam South Asian Culture and IslamSoutheast Asian Culture and Islam
Culture: Other
Dreams EducationIdentity, Muslim Humor in IslamLibrariesRawza-Khani
Family, Ethics and Society
Childhood Conflict and Violence Divorce
EducationEthics and Social Issues
Ethnicity Eunuchs Feminism Gender HaremHealing Homosexuality Hospitality and IslamHuman Rights Mahr
MarriageMasculinitiesMaslahaNikahPolygamyPurdahWomen, Public Roles ofVeiling
Geography: Regions
Americas, Islam in the Africa, Islam inBalkans, Islam in the Central Asia, Islam in East Asia, Islam in Europe, Islam in South Asia, Islam inSoutheast Asia, Islam inUnited States, Islam in theWest, Concept of
Geography: Countries, Cites and Locales
Andalus, al- Arabia, Pre-Islam Baghdad
Bukhara, Khanate and Emirate ofCairo
Ethiopia Fez Holy CitiesIran, Islamic Republic of Kano
LebanonMashhadNajafPakistan, Islamic Republic ofQom
SaharaTimbuktuToubaZanzibarZaytuna
Groups, Organizations, Schools, and Movements: Political
Arab League Awami League Bath Party Communism
Trang 33S y n o p t i c O u t l i n e o f E n t r i e s
Intifada
Khojas
Komiteh
Nahdatul Ulama (NU)
Organization of the Islamic
Groups, Organizations, Schools,
and Movements: Religious
Education LibrariesReligious InstitutionsWaqf
History: Periods, Dynasties, Governments
Arabia, Pre-IslamAyyubids Bukhara, Khanate and Emirate ofColonialism
Empires: Abbasid Empires: ByzantineEmpires: Mongol and Il-Khanid Empires: Mogul
Empires: Ottoman Empires: Safavid and Qajar Empires: SassanianEmpires: Timurid Empires: UmayyadExpansion Hijra Hijri Calendar Khiva, Khanate ofMahdist State, MahdiyyaModernity
MonarchyMoravidsMuhammad Ali, Dynasty ofRashidun
Sultanates: DelhiSultanates: GhaznavidSultanates: MamlukSultanates: ModernSultanates: SeljukTribe
History: Catalysts of Change
Globalization Greek Civilization Internet
Liberation Movement of IranTerrorism
MihnaNetworks, MuslimSuccessionTajdidTravel and Travelers
Law
AdaLawMazalimMuftiMuhtasibPropertyQanun
RibaShariaTaqlid
Politics and Society
Military RaidMinorities: DhimmisMinorities: Offshoots of IslamModernization
MonarchyNationalismPan-ArabismPan-IslamPan-TuranismPasdaran Pluralism: Legal and Ethno-Religious
Pluralism: PoliticalPolitical IslamPolitical OrganizationPolitical ThoughtPolygamyReform: Arab Middle East andNorth Africa
Reform: IranReform: Muslim Communities ofthe Russian Empire
Reform: South AsiaReform: Southeast AsiaRepublican BrothersRevolution: Classical IslamRevolution: Islamic Revolution inIran
Revolution: ModernSaudi DynastySecularizationSuccessionTanzimatVelayat-e Faqih
Religion: Groups, Movements, and Sects
Ahl al-Bayt Ahl al-Hadith Ahl al-Kitab Ahl-e Hadis / Ahl al-HadithAkhbariyya
Babiyya Bahai FaithBedouin Fundamentalism Futuwwa Hojjatiyya SocietyIshraqi SchoolIslamic Salvation Front Jamiyat-e Ulama-e Hind Jamiyat-e Ulama-e Islam Jamiyat-e Ulama-e Pakistan Jamaat-e Islami
Kharijites, Khawarij
Trang 34Niyabat-eammaProphetsQiblaQuranRibaShirkSilsilaSunnaTafsirTaqiyyaTaqlidTasawwufTaziya (Taziye)Wahdat al-WujudWajib al-WujudWazifa
Zar
Religion: Institutions
Azhar, CaliphateDeobandHisbaKhanqa (Khanaqa, Khanga)Madrasa
al-Masjid
Religion: Places and Sites
Atabat Dome of the Rock Hojjatiyya SocietyHoly CitiesHosayniyyaImamzadah Jami
KarbalaMashhadMihrabMinbarNajaf
Religion: Practices and Rituals
Adhan Bida
CircumcisionDawa Devotional Life Dhikr
Dietary Laws Disputation Dua Fatwa Fitna
IbadatIjtihad KhutbaMartyrdomMuharramNawruzPilgrimage: HajjPilgrimage: ZiyaraRitual
Religion: Relations with Muslims
Non-Christianity and Islam Conversion
Crusades GlobalizationHinduism and Islam Islam and Other Religions Judaism and IslamManicheanism
Religion: Titles and Offices
Ayatollah (Ar Ayatullah) Hojjat al-Islam
Imam Islam and Islamic Islamicate Society Khan
MahdiMarja al-TaqlidMolla
MollabashiQadi (Kadi, Kazi)Saint
SayyidSharifShaykh al-IslamWazir
Trang 35List of Maps
Maps accompany the following entries, and are located on the provided pages.
Africa, Islam in 15 Arabia, Pre Islam 52 Balkans, Islam in 102 Balkans, Islam in 103 Crusades 163 Europe, Islam in 237 Expansion 243 Ibn Battuta Volume one color insert Law 408 Law 410 Muhammad 478 Networks 509 South Asia, Islam in 639 Southeast Asia, Islam in 646 Sultanates: Ayyubids 659
Trang 361
ABBAS I, SHAH (1571–1629)
Shah Abbas I, the fifth ruler of the Safavid dynasty, ruled Iran
from 1587 until 1629, the year of his death Shah Abbas came
to power at a time when tribal unrest and foreign invasion had
greatly reduced Iran’s territory Once on the throne he set
out to regain the lands and authority that had been lost by his
immediate successors His defeat of the Uzbeks in the
north-east and the peace he made with the Ottoman Empire, Iran’s
archenemy, enabled Shah Abbas to reform Iran’s military
and financial system He diminished the military power of the
tribes by creating a standing army composed of slave soldiers
who were loyal only to him These so-called ghulams (military
slaves) were mostly Armenians and Georgians captured
dur-ing raids in the Caucasus In order to increase the revenue
needed for these reforms the shah centralized state control,
which included the appointment of ghulams to high
adminis-trative positions
With the same intent he fostered trade by reestablishing
road security and by building many caravan series throughout
the country Under Shah Abbas, Isfahan became Iran’s
capital and most important city, endowed with a new
com-mercial and administrative center grouped around a splendid
square that survives today His genius further manifested
itself in his military skills and his astute foreign policy He
halted the eastward expansion of the Ottomans, defeating
them and taking Baghdad in 1623 To encourage trade and
thus gain treasure, he welcomed European merchants to the
Persian Gulf He also allowed Christian missionaries to settle
in his country, hopeful that this might win him allies among
European powers in his anti-Ottoman struggle Famously
down to earth, Shah Abbas was a pragmatic ruler who could
be cruel as well as generous Rare among Iranian kings, he is
today remembered as a ruler who was concerned about his
own people
A detail from a miniature painting of Abbas I (1571–1629)
appears in the volume one color plates.
See also Empires: Safavid and Qajar.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Matthee, Rudolph P The Politics of Trade in Safavid Iran: Silk for Silver, 1600–1730 Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge Uni-
versity Press, 1999
Savory, Roger Iran under the Safavids Cambridge, U.K.:
Cambridge University Press, 1980
Bahaal-of his teachings Born in Tehran on 23 May 1844, he grew up
in the household of a father committed to the teachings of theBabi movement and consequently shared his father’s fate ofexile and intermittent imprisonment until the Young Turkrevolution of 1909
As a result, Abd al-Baha received little formal educationand had to manage the affairs of his father’s household at avery early age Despite these setbacks, he demonstrated anatural capacity for leadership and a prodigious knowledge ofhuman history and thought
Abd al-Baha corresponded with and enjoyed the respect
of a number of the luminaries of his day, including theRussian author Leo Tolstoy and the Muslim reformer Mu-hammad Abduh He left behind a small portion of what is alarge corpus of still-unexplored writings that include socialcommentaries, interpretations, and elaborations of his fa-ther’s works, mystical treatises, and Quranic and biblicalexegeses
Trang 37A b d a l - H a m i d I b n B a d i s
Upon his release from house imprisonment in 1909, Abd
al-Baha traveled to North Africa, Europe, and North
Amer-ica advocating a number of reforms for all countries,
includ-ing the adoption of a universal auxiliary language, global
collective security, mandatory education, and full legal and
social equality for women and minorities He also warned of a
coming war in Europe and called for a just system of global
government and international courts where disputes between
nations could be resolved peacefully
Abd al-Baha died on 28 November 1921 According to
his will and testament, his eldest grandson, Shoghi Effendi
Rabbani, became the head of the Bahai community and the
sole authorized interpreter of his grandfather and
Abd al-Hamid Ibn Badis was the leader of the Islamic
reformist movement in Algeria and founder of the Association
des Uléma Musulmanes Algériens (AUMA) He was born in
1889 in Constantine, where he also died in 1940 After
receiving a traditional education in his hometown, Ibn Badis
(locally referred to as Ben Badis) studied at the Islamic
University of Zaytuna, in Tunis, from 1908 to 1912 In the
following years he journeyed through the Middle East,
par-ticularly in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, where he came into
contact with modernist and reformist currents of thought
spreading within orthodox Sunni Islam
Ibn Badis became the most prominent promoter of the
Islamic reformist movement in Algeria, first through his
preaching at the mosque of Sidi Lahdar in his hometown,
and, after 1925, through his intensive journalistic activity He
founded a newspaper, Al-Muntaqid (The critic), which closed
after a few months Immediately afterwards, however, he
began a new and successful newspaper, Al-Shihab (The
me-teor), which soon became the platform of the reformist
thinking in Algeria, until its closure in 1939 Through the
pages of Al-Shihab, Ibn Badis spread the Salafiyya movement
in Algeria, presented his Quranic exegesis, and argued the
need for Islamic reform and a rebirth of religion and religious
values within a society that, in his view, had been too
influ-enced by French colonial rule He further argued that the
Algerian nation had to be founded on its Muslim culture and
its Arab identity, and for this reason he is also considered a
precursor of Algerian nationalism He promoted the free
teaching of Arabic language, which had been marginalized
during the years of French rule, and the establishment of free
schools for adults, where traditional Quranic studies could
be taught
In May 1931 he founded the AUMA (also Association ofAlgerian Muslim Ulema), which gathered the country’s lead-ing Muslim thinkers, initially both reformist and conserva-tive, and subsequently only reformist, and served as its presidentuntil his death Whereas the reformist programs promoted
through Al-Shihab had managed to reach an audience limited
to the elite educated class of the country, the AUMA becamethe tool for a nationwide campaign to revive Islam, Arabic,and religious studies, as well as a center for direct social andpolitical action Throughout the country he founded a net-work of Islamic cultural centers that provided the means forthe educational initiatives he advocated and the establish-ment of Islamic youth groups He also spearheaded a cam-paign against Sufi brotherhoods, accusing them of introducingblameworthy innovations to religious practice, and also ofcooperating with the colonial administration He played animportant political role in the formation of the AlgerianMuslim Congress in 1936, which arose in reaction to thevictory of the Popular Front in France, and was activepolitically in the country until his premature death in 1940.Thanks to his activities as leader of the AUMA and to his
writing in Al-Shihab, Ibn Badis is considered by some to be
the most important figure of the Arab-Islamic cultural revival
in Algeria during the 1930s
See also Reform: Arab Middle East and North Africa;
al-he was appointed imam at a Cairo mosque
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Kishk ran afoul of the Nasser regime in 1965 He claimed
he was instructed to denounce Sayyid Qutb, refused, and
subsequently was arrested and tortured in prison In the early
1970s, cassette recordings of his sermons and lessons began
to proliferate throughout Egypt; by the late 1970s he was
arguably the most popular preacher in the Arab world
Attendance at his mosque skyrocketed, reaching 100,000 for
Friday sermons by the early 1980s In September 1981 he was
arrested as part of Anwar al-Sadat’s crackdown on political
opponents, and was in prison when Sadat was assassinated
Upon his release he regained his following He published his
autobiography, The Story of My Days, in 1986 He died a
decade later, in 1996
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Jansen, Johannes J G The Neglected Duty: The Creed of Sadat’s
Assassins and Islamic Resurgence in the Middle East New
York and London: Macmillan, 1986
Kepel, Gilles Muslim Extremism in Egypt: The Prophet and
Pharaoh Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of
Califor-nia Press, 1993
Joel Gordon
ABD AL-JABBAR (935–1025)
Abd al-Jabbar was a Mutazilite theologian and Shafiite
jurist, known as Qadi Abd al-Jabbar b Ahmad al-Hamadani
He was born in Asadabad in Iran about 935, studied kalam
with Abu Ishaq al-Ayyash in Basra, and associated with the
prominent Mutazilite scholar Abu Abdullah al-Basri in
Baghdad Abd al-Jabbar was appointed as chief judge of Rayy
with a great authority over other regions in northern Iran by
the Buyid wazir Sahib b Abbad in 977 Following his
dismissal from the post after the death of Ibn Abbad, he
devoted his life to teaching In 999 he made a pilgrimage to
Mecca through Baghdad, where he spent some time He
taught briefly in Kazvin (1018–1019) and died in 1025 in Ray
As the teacher of the well-known Mutazilites of the
eleventh century, such as Abu Rashid al-Nisaburi, Ibn
Mattawayh, Abu ’l-Husayn al-Basri, and as the master of
Mutazilism in its late period, Abd al-Jabbar elaborated and
expanded the teachings of Bahshamiyya, the subgroup named
after Abu Hashim al-Jubbai He synthesized some of the
Mutazilite views with Sunni doctrine on the relation of
reason and revelation, and came close to the Shiite position
on the question of leadership (imama) He is also a significant
source of information on ancient Iranian and other
monothe-istic religions
Abd al-Jabbar wrote many works on kalam, especially on
the defense of the Quran, and on the Prophet of Islam Some
of his books, including most of his twenty-volume work
al-Mughni, have been published Commentaries on two of his
lost books, Sharh al-usul al-khamsa by Qiwam al-Din Mankdim and al-Muhit bi’l-taklif by Ibn Mattawayh, are also available.
See also Kalam; Mutazilites, Mutazila.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Frank, Richard M “The Autonomy of the Human Agent
in the Teaching of Abd al-Gabbar.” Le Museon 95
Brill, 1976
M Sait Özervarli
ABD AL-KARIM SORUSH (1945– )
Abd al-Karim Sorush is the pen-name of Hassan Haj-FarajDabbagh Born in 1945 in Tehran, Sorush attended AlaviHigh School, an alternative school that offered a rigorouscurriculum of Islamic studies in addition to the state-mandated,standardized education in math and sciences He studiedIslamic law and exegesis with Reza Ruzbeh, one of thefounders of the school He attended Tehran University, and
in 1969 graduated with a degree in pharmacology He ued his postgraduate education in history and philosophy ofscience at Chelsea College in London In 1979 he returned toIran after the revolution, and soon thereafter was appointed
contin-by Ayatollah Khomeini to the Cultural Revolution Council
He resigned from this controversial post in 1983
In his most celebrated book, Qabz va Bast-i Teorik-i Shariat (The theoretical constriction and expansion of the sharia), Sorush developed a general critique of dogmatic
interpretations of religion He argued that, when turned into
a dogma, religion becomes ideological and loses its ity He held that religious knowledge is inevitably historicaland culturally contingent, and that it is distinct from religion,the truth of which is solely possessed by God He posited thatculture, language, history, and human subjectivity mediatethe comprehension of the revealed text Therefore, humanunderstandings of the physical world, through science, forinstance, and the changing nature of the shared values ofhuman societies (such as citizenship and social and politicalrights) inform and condition religious knowledge
universal-There was a contradiction between Sorush’s ing of epistemological problems of human knowledge, which
understand-he saw as logical and methodical, and his emphasis on tunderstand-he
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historical contingencies of the hermeneutics of the divine
text This contradiction was resolved in his later writing in
favor of a more hermeneutical approach In his early work, he
was influenced by analytical philosophy and skepticism of a
post-positivist logic, whereas in his later writings he adopted
a more hermeneutical approach to the meaning of the sacred
text In his earlier work he put forward epistemological
questions about the limits and truthfulness of claims
regard-ing knowledge, but in two important later books, Siratha-yi
mustaqim (1998, Straight paths) and Bast-e tajrubih-e Nabavi
(1999, The expansion of the prophetic experience), he
em-phasized the reflexivity and plurality of human
understand-ing In his plural usage of the Quranic phrase “straight
paths,” Sorush offered a radical break with both modernist
and orthodox traditions in Islamic theology
In the 1990s, Sorush emerged as one the most influential
Muslim thinkers in Iran His theology contributed to the
emergence of a generation of Muslim reformers who
chal-lenged the legitimization of the Islamic Republic’s rule based
on divine sources rather than on democratic principles and
popular consent
See also Iran, Islamic Republic of; Khomeini, Ruhollah.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Sadri, Mahmoud, and Sadri, Ahmad, eds Reason, Freedom, &
Democracy in Islam: Essential Writings of Abdolkarim Soroush.
Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2000
Behrooz Ghamari-Tabrizi
ABD AL-NASSER, JAMAL
(1918–1970)
The Egyptian leader who dominated two decades of Arab
history, Jamal Abd al-Nasser was born 15 January 1918, the
son of a postal official Raised in Alexandria and Cairo, he
entered the military academy and was commissioned in 1938
Thereafter, he joined a secret Muslim Brotherhood cell,
where he met fellow dissidents with whom he later founded
the Free Officers On 23 July 1952 the Free Officers seized
power; within a year they outlawed political parties and
established a republic In 1954, they dismissed the figurehead
president Muhammad Najib (Naguib) and repressed all
op-position Elected president in June 1956, Nasser ruled until
his death Under his leadership Egypt remained a one-party
state The ruling party changed names several times; the Arab
Socialist Union, formed in 1962, survived until 1978 when
Nasser’s successor, Anwar al-Sadat, abolished it
A charismatic leader, Nasser drew regional acclaim and
international notoriety for his championship of pan-Arabism
and his leadership role in the Non-Aligned Movement His
popularity soared during the 1956 Suez Crisis, sparked by
Egypt’s nationalization of the Suez Canal Company Thetripartite British-French-Israeli invasion failed to topple hisregime and solidified his reputation Frustrated with the pace
of social and economic reform, in the early 1960s Nasserpromoted a series of socialist decrees nationalizing key sec-tors of industry, agriculture, finance, and the arts Egypt’srelations with the Soviet bloc improved, but Nasser neverturned entirely away from the West In regional affairs theyears after Suez were marked by a series of setbacks TheUnited Arab Republic (1958–1961) ended with Syria’s cessa-tion, and the Yemeni civil war (1962–1967) entangled Egyp-tian troops in a quagmire
Many contend that Nasser never recovered from thedisastrous defeat by Israel in June 1967 Yet he changed theface of Egypt, erasing class privileges, narrowing social gaps,and ushering in an era of optimism If Egyptians fault hisfailure to democratize and debate the wisdom of Arab social-ism or the state’s secular orientation, many still recall hispopulist intentions When he died suddenly of a heart attack
on 28 September 1970, millions accompanied his coffin tothe grave
See also Nationalism: Arab; Pan-Arabism.
During the early nineteenth century, Abd al-Qadir governed
a state in Algeria His family, claiming descent from
Muham-mad, led a Qadiriyya brotherhood center (zawiya) in western
Algeria In 1831 the French conquered the port of Oran fromthe Ottomans Fighting broke out in the Oranais amongthose tribes formerly subjected to Turkish taxes and thoseprivileged to collect them The Moroccan sultan, failing topacify the tribes on his border, designated Abd al-Qadir’sinfluential but aging father as his deputy He, in turn, hadtribal leaders proclaim his son commander of the faithful
(amir al-muminin) in 1832.
The highly educated and well-traveled new amir ated two treaties with France (1834–1837) Happy to cede thejob of tribal pacification to an indigenous leader, the Frenchacknowledged him as the sovereign of western Algeria Abdal-Qadir received French money and arms with which he
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organized an administration, diplomatic service, and supply
services, including storage facilities, a foundry, and textile
workshops, for a standing army of six thousand men
Unfor-tunately, frequent disputes, and even occasional battles,
punc-tured the treaties The final rupture came when Abd
al-Qadir began expanding into eastern Algeria In response, the
French decided on a complete conquest of Algeria and
destroyed Abd al-Qadir’s state (1839–1847), exiling him to
Damascus During his exile, the amir immersed himself in
religious studies He reemerged briefly into the public eye
when riots shook Damascus in July 1860 It was then that
Muslim resentment against perceived advantages enjoyed by
Christians under the Ottoman reform edict of 1839 exploded
into widespread killings and lootings Virtually alone among
the notables of Damascus, Abd al-Qadir shielded Christians
from Muslim attackers
See also Tasawwuf.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Aouli, Smạ; Redjala, Ramdane; and Zoummeroff, Philippe
Abd el-Kader Paris: Fayard, 1994.
Danziger, Raphael Abd al-Qadir and the Algerians: Resistance
to the French and Internal Consolidation New York: Homes
& Meier, 1977
Peter von Sivers
ABD AL-RAHMAN KAWAKIBI
(1849?–1902)
An Arab nationalist and reformer, Abd al-Rahman Kawakibi
was born in Aleppo, Syria, where he was educated and worked
as an official and journalist until being forced by Ottoman
opposition to relocate to Cairo in 1898 He joined the circle
of Arab intellectuals surrounding Muhammad Abduh and
Rashid Rida Kawakibi’s ideas are elaborated in two books,
Tabai istibdad (Characteristics of tyranny) and Umm
al-qura (Mother of cities) In the first, he argues that the
Muslims’s political decline is the result of their straying from
original Islamic principles and the advent of mystical and
fatalist interpretations Such passivity, he argues, plays into
the hands of despotic rulers, who historically have benefited
from false interpretations of Islam The book was a
condem-nation of the rule of the Ottoman Turks, and particularly of
the sultan Abd al-Hamid II A revival of Islamic civilization
could come only after fresh interpretation of law (ijtihad),
educational reforms, and sweeping political change,
begin-ning with the institution of an Arab caliphate in the place of
the Ottoman Turks The theme of renewed Arab leadership
in the Muslim umma is developed in the second book The
title is taken from a Quranic reference to Mecca, where
Kawakibi places a fictional conference of representatives
from various Muslim countries aimed at charting the reform
of Muslim peoples
See also Modernization, Political: Administrative,
Mili-tary, and Judicial Reform; Modernization, Political: Authoritarianism and Democratization; Moderniza- tion, Political: Constitutionalism; Modernization, Political: Participation, Political Movements, and Parties.
1921, he was awarded a scholarship to study law at theUniversity of Lyon in France In France, he wrote twodoctoral dissertations, one on English law and the other onthe subject of the caliphate in the modern age In 1926, al-Sanhuri returned to Egypt where he became a law professor
at the National University (now the Cairo University), andeventually became the dean of the law faculty Because of hisinvolvement in politics, and defense of the Egyptian Consti-tution, he was fired from his post in 1936, and left Egypt tobecome the dean of the Law College in Baghdad
After one year, he returned to Egypt where he held severalhigh-level cabinet posts before becoming the president of theCouncil of State in 1949 Initially, al-Sanhuri supported themovement of the Free Officers who overthrew the Egyptianmonarch in 1952, but because of al-Sanhuri’s insistence on areturn to civilian democratic rule and his defense of civilrights, he was ousted from his position and persecuted After
1954, al-Sanhuri withdrew from politics and focused hisefforts on scholarship and modernizing the civil codes ofseveral Arab countries Al-Sanhuri heavily influenced thedrafting of the civil codes of Egypt, Iraq, Syria, Libya, andKuwait One year before his death in Egypt, al-Sanhuricompleted a huge multivolume commentary on civil law,
called al-Wasit fi sharh al-qanun al-madani, which is still