Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 April 2009
The formative period of Imami Shiʿism from the mid-8th century to the mid-10th century remains obscure in many respects. This study is an attempt to organize the historical information about the period around a central problematic: the twin crisis of the nature of the Imamate and the succession to this office. The crisis of the Imamate and the efforts to resolve it serve as a focal point for constructing a conceptually coherent overview of these two formative centuries from a sociohistorical perspective. This perspective requires that the endeavors to create a stable system of authority in Imami Shiʿism be considered in the context of the social change and politics of the early ʿAbbasid era: ʿAlid–ʿAbbasid relations, massive conversion of the population of Iran to Islam, and the dialogue and competition between Shiʿism and other contemporary religious and intellectual trends and movements. Our approach suggests a new periodization of the early history of Imami Shiʿism.
Author's note: I am grateful to Professor Wilferd Madelung for his comments on an earlier draft of this article.
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125 Bābūya, Ibn, Kamāl, 92–93Google Scholar; English trans., Arjomand, “Imam Absconditus.”.
126 Muhammad was hardly an outlandish name. One of the splinter groups after the death of Imam Hasan al-ʿAskari believed that he had appointed as his successor an adult son, named Muhammad, who was under cover from fear of his uncle Jaʿfar. Another small splinter group in the Sawad of Kufa denied that the son's name was Muhammad and called him ʿAli (al-Qummī, Ashʿarī, Maqālāt, 114Google Scholar).
127 Iqbāl, (Khāndān, 110–11)Google Scholar does not reject this report outright, but considers it a possible earlier opinion. If our analysis is correct, it is Abu Sahl's later view.
128 See Arjomand, “Consolation of Theology.”
129 See Iqbāl's, carefully documented account in Khāndān, 115–16Google Scholar.
130 Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 247Google Scholar.
131 Iqbāl, , Khāndān, 113–14Google Scholar. Hallaj was eventually executed in 922.
132 Klemm, , “Vier sufarāʾ,” 141–42Google Scholar.
133 Ibid., 132–41.
134 Ibn Ruh al-Nawbakhti was, according to one report, a relatively junior figure, one of the ten representatives of Ibn al-ʿAmri in Baghdad. He must, however, also have worked for Ibn al-ʿAmri as a secretary at the bureau of the Imam because one of the decrees issued by the hidden imam to curse one of Ibn al-ʿAmri's opponents appeared in his hand (Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 245Google Scholar).
135 Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 227;Google ScholarIqbāl, , Khāndān, 215–16Google Scholar. As Klemm, (“Vier Sufarā-ʾ,” 138Google Scholar, esp. n. 63) correctly observes, Umm Kulthum's grandson is the chief source for this period.
136 Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 227–28;Google ScholarIqbāl, , Khāndān, 216Google Scholar.
137 Bābūya, Ibn, Kamāl, 504Google Scholar.
138 Ibid., 509; Ṭūsī, Ghayba, 195–96.
139 After Shalmaghani's defection, Ibn Ruh was asked what the Shiʿa were to do with his books “as our houses are full of them” (Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 239Google Scholar). We know from a question answered by the Sharif al- Murtada that Shalmaghani's legal manuals were still in use a century later (Rasāʿil al-sharīf al-Murtaḍā [Qumm: Dār al-Qurʾān, 198?] 1:279)Google Scholar.
140 Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 239Google Scholar; Iqbāl, , Khāndān, 230–34Google Scholar.
141 Ibid., 218.
142 Arjomand, , Shadow of God, 43Google Scholar, citing Tūsī, , Ghayba, 241Google Scholar.
143 Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 250Google Scholar. On the late Zoroastrian political oracles, see Kippenberg, “Mittelpersischen Traditionen,” 64–70Google Scholar.
144 Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 147–50Google Scholar.
145 Ibid., 220–21; Klemm, , “Vier Sufarāʾ,” 133Google Scholar.
146 Modarressi, , Crisis, 78–79, 82–83Google Scholar.
147 Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 227, 248–50Google Scholar; Iqbāl, , Khāndān, 215, 232–34Google Scholar.
148 Bābūya, Ibn, Kamāl, 516Google Scholar. The editor notes (n. 1) that the variant tāmma (complete) is found in some copies of the manuscript. The latter variant is the one given in Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 243Google Scholar.
149 Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 254–56Google Scholar.
150 Bābūya, Ibn, Kamāl, 516Google Scholar; Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 243Google Scholar.
151 Bābūya, Ibn, Kamāl, 3Google Scholar.
152 Kohlberg, E., “From Imāmiyya to Ilhnāʿashariyya,” Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 39 (1976)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Modarressi, , Crisis, 97–98Google Scholar. The sense of doubt pervades the short sections on the Lord of the House (ṣāḥib al-dār) and the occultation in Kulayni's Kāfi (1:117–20Google Scholar), and in dating one report, Kulayni uses the term perplexity (ḥayra) instead of occultation (ghayba) as the beginning of the period (2:470)Google Scholar. A rescript issued by the secretariat at the holy seat in response to a certain Ibn Abi Ghanim similarly speaks of the believers’ “doubt and perplexity (ḥayra) concerning those in authority” (Ṭūsī, , Ghayba, 173Google Scholar).
153 Bābūya, Ibn, Kamāl, 87–93Google Scholar.
154 Arjomand, “Consolation of Theology.”