Results 31 to 40 of about 3,259 (183)

Muhammad Taqi al-Majlisi and Safavid Shi‘Ism: Akhbarism and Anti-sunni Polemic During the Reigns of Shah ‘Abbas the Great and Shah Safi [PDF]

open access: yes, 2017
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record.The rise of the Akhbari school in the Safavid period has been portrayed as a challenge to both the clerical power of the ʿulamaʾ and ...
Gleave, RM
core   +1 more source

Women's Ijtihad and Lady Amin's Islamic ethics on womanhood and motherhood [PDF]

open access: yes, 2020
Women's position, identity, and value in Islam have been affected by androcentric interpretations of the Qur'an and hadith throughout Islamic history. Women's roles in society, as well as their position vis-a-vis Islamic sources and authority, have been ...
Rahbari, Ladan
core   +1 more source

Critical analysis of Imamate in Gonabadi Sect, focusing on the role of Qutb [PDF]

open access: yesپژوهش‌نامه کلام تطبیقی شیعه
Belief in the Imamate of the Twelve Innocents (peace be upon them) is a definite and certain issue in Gonabadi's Sufi belief. They consider Imamate to be the head of the Muslim religion and system and the foundation of Islam.
jafar maghsoudi   +3 more
doaj   +1 more source

Analysis of the proofs of Imamate in the poems of Ibn Yamin with emphasis on Sunni sources [PDF]

open access: yesپژوهش‌نامه کلام تطبیقی شیعه, 2020
Ibn Yamin, the eighth century Shiite poet, not only expresses his devotion to the Ahl al-Bayt (Peace be upon them) in his poems, but also, as an informed person in theological issues, proves Imamate of Amir al-Mu'minin (the first Imam of the Shiites) and
yaser takfallah, habib karkonbirahgh
doaj   +1 more source

Political Legitimacy as a Consequence of a Theological Approach to Imamate [PDF]

open access: yesحکمت اسرا, 2010
The principle of imamate, as the continuity of prophethood, is the preeminent principle of the Shias. The latter envisage imamate to be properly theological, and thereby as prefiguring politics.
Abu al-Fazl Khurasani
doaj  

The Historical Perspective of Isma’ilis Philosophical Components [PDF]

open access: yesتاریخ نگری و تاریخ نگاری, 2019
In this research, attempts are made to respond to the raised questions in the theoretical philosophy field of History from the Isma'ili intellectuals' point of view represented in their cosmological notions in Isma'ili theology and history of human being.
Ali Babaei Siab   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Overstatement or Understatement; A Critique of the book Maktab dar Farayand e Takamol [PDF]

open access: yesPizhūhish/hā-yi Falsafī- Kalāmī, 2017
In religious teachings of Imamiyyah, both overstatement and understatement about Imams are forbidden, which are rooted in incorrect knowledge of states of Imamate and Imam's existential position in the creation. The present paper criticizes a part of the
Seyyedeh Mona Mousavi
doaj   +1 more source

The Latest Announcement in the Amir Wilaya [PDF]

open access: yesInternational Multidisciplinary Journal of Pure Life, 2016
The farewell sermon, the incident of treachery, and the installation of the Imam, peace be upon him, after the Prophet, may God’s prayers be upon him and his family, as their imam and commander of the believers, did not come out of nowhere.
Fatima Sabbah (Iraq)   +1 more
doaj   +1 more source

Historical study and analysis of the role of expediency in the domination of the caliphate over the Imamate in the formation and administration of the Islamic state from 632 to 634 AD [PDF]

open access: yesپژوهش های تاریخی, 2020
The demise of the Prophet of Islam (PBUH) marked a turning point in the formation of a new political system in the administration of Islamic society. The fledgling Islamic government faced two strategies: Caliphate and Imamate Proponents of each of these
Bbahman Zeinali
doaj   +1 more source

Muslim Diasporas and the Politics of Belonging: Ibadi and Ismaili Pasts and Presents in East Africa

open access: yesReligion Compass, Volume 19, Issue 10-12, October-December 2025.
ABSTRACT This article examines the Ibadi and Ismaili Muslim communities in East Africa—particularly in Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania (including Zanzibar)—and their distinct religious, social, and economic roles. Even as minorities within predominantly Sunni contexts, both groups have shaped the region through migration, commerce, and international ...
Kimberly T. Wortmann
wiley   +1 more source

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