Results 1 to 10 of about 123 (101)
Sufism in The Sense of Folk Medicine in Ottoman Society
Until the deep-rooted reforms started during the Selim III era, the Ottoman health system was based on the value series of the Seljuk era. The health institutions of the era, named Dârüşşifâ, bimarhâne and timarhâne, were not official state institutions.
Zekeriya Işık
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Orchestrating Sufism: The Transculturation of Ottoman Aesthetic Traditions in Indonesian Muslims
This article provides an understanding of the aesthetic relationship between the Ottoman and Indonesia. Turkey was instrumental in Islamization and political support for Indonesia.
Sunarto Sunarto, Robby Habiba Abror
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POLITICS OF SUFISM IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Sufi orders and brotherhoods have extensively contributed the reproduction and transformation of the social and political formation in the Ottoman Empire besides their significance in cultural and intellectual life. Contrary to the previous scholarship which identifies Sufi orders as unchanged and timeless religious movements during the medieval times,
Talha Köseoglu
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Socio-political role of Sufism in Egypt before and after the Ottoman conquest of 1517
The article presents a comparative analysis of Sufism as one of the most important sides of the Muslim religion in the Mamluk and Ottoman periods of Egyptian history. The aim of the study is to trace the changes in various aspects of the mystical-ascetic
Tamara A. Ryzhenkova
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This book examines Sufism in Ottoman Egypt in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Contrary to the traditional historiography that interpreted these two centuries as a period of stagnation and/or decline for Sufism and Sufi scholars, Rachida Chih ...
Talha Murat
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Ibn ‘Arabi’s Influence on Ottoman Sufism in Üftade’s Views
As a great figure, Ibn ‘Arabi’s thoughts greatly influenced the Sufis who came after him. In fact, some researchers in the field of Sufism say that there are new characteristics that have emerged in the history of Sufism after Ibn ‘Arabi, namely ...
Ahmad Munji, Semih Çeyhan
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Rumi's relationship with the Ottoman government from the time of Mustafa I to the end of the Ottoman period [PDF]
Rumi was one of the most powerful and important sects in the Ottoman Empire, which operated based on the customs and principles of Sufism. By adapting to the political and religious principles of the Ottoman Empire, Rumi established a deep connection ...
masumeh dorsar
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Putting out the candle: Sufism and the orgy libel in late Ottoman and modern Turkey
This article examines a religious libel, well-known in Turkish as ‘putting out the candle’ (mum söndürmek), that levels the accusation of orgiastic activities against Bektashi Sufis and Kızılbaş-Alevis. Dating back to at least the second century B.C.E. the accusation of debauchery following the extinguishing of candles has had a long and varied history
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The Impact of Bektashi Penetration on the Ottoman Empire
This article aims to explain the role of Bektashi Sufism. It was practiced for centuries in the Ottoman Empire and is considered a branch of the Ja’fari school of Shia.
Meirison Meirison +3 more
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The Problem of Describing the Books Called Munteha by the Yazidjizade Brothers
Yazidjioghlu Muhammed Efendi (d. 855/1451) and Ahmad Bidjan (d. 870/ after 1466) are two representative names in Ottoman Sufism history. Their written works were read and commented on literally and even translated into other languages both in and out of ...
Mehmet Bilal Yamak, Tuba Bozbey
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