Results 41 to 50 of about 134 (86)
AbstractBy applying several methods of traditional source criticism to Baytār's Hilya it becomes possible to make this source "speak" and provide some information about its author. It becomes clear that unequal access to wealth and power at Damascus cannot be seen as the major driving force behind the formation of a group of intellectuals who ...
Thomas Eich
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Abstract Initially Salafism/salafiyya was an Islamic reform movement that developed in contrast to the tradition of law schools and to Sufism. It was not only fed by different sources, but its contents were also adopted and appropriated by different Islamic movements of the present.
Amrei Sander
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Neo-Salafiyya – Charakteristik und Attraktivität einer neuen fundamentalistischen Bewegung in Deutschland [PDF]
Rauf Ceylan
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This article questions certain assumptions on the intellectual history of modern Islam and on one of the most influential modern reform movements, the Salafiyya. By looking at the Sufi origins of one of the main Salafī reformers, it relativizes the notion of an inherent anti-Sufism of this reform movement. The article examines how Muhammad ‘Abduh (1849–
Oliver Scharbrodt
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Taste of Modernity: Sufism, Salafiyya and Arabism in Late Ottoman Damascus
Eric Geoffroy, Itzchak Weismann
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Resistance to the Emerging Modern State—The Salafiyya
Itzchak Weismann
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