Acts of Rebellion and Revolt in the Early Islamic Caliphate_Introduction (original) (raw)
Related papers
Revolts in the Late Medieval Middle East
For transliteration, the chapter uses the IJMES Arabic system, except for terms that are common in English language. For dating, it uses both a Hijri/ Islamic (AH) and Common Era (CE) calendar. 1 A good overview of slave revolts and Bedouin bandits is offered in Carl F.
The Rebellion of Muḥammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyya in 145/762: Ṭālibīs and Early ʿAbbāsīs in Conflict, by Amikam Elad, 2017
First Paragraph: The history of the revolutionary movement of the ʿAlid Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan with his messianic claim of Mahdīship has long attracted the interest of Amikam Elad, and he has published a number of scholarly studies on aspects of it. In the present book, he presents a comprehensive and wide-ranging examination of what he portrays as a rebellion of one branch of the Prophet Muḥammad’s Hāshimī kinship, the ʿAlids, against another branch, the ʿAbbāsids, who had recently established their rule of the Muslim world as caliphs by overthrowing the Umayyad caliphate. Elad bases his history on a collection of the vast amount of relevant Muslim historical reports of both backers and opponents of the rebellion and meticulous analysis of their chains of transmission as well as their contents. Although he rejects many of them as outright forgery or tendentious invention, he accepts some as reliable source material that can be used to reconstruct the course of the events leading up to the bloody conflict and failure of the rebellion.
‘The Caliph Calls You to the Book of God’: Writing to Rebels in the Early Islamic Period
The Medieval Globe, 2023
who commented on an earlier draft, and to the anonymous reviewers for their insightful remarks. All remaining errors of fact or interpretation are, of course, my own. 3 Abou el Fadl, Rebellion and Violence, 32, 325-26. The classic formulation is that of al-Māwardī� , Aḥkām, 100-104; the entire section on internal enemies of the caliphate (including apostates and bandits) covers pages 94-109 (translation in Wahba, Al-Māwardī, 60-71). On the early development of the Islamic law of rebellion, see Abou el Fadl, Rebellion and Violence, 100-233. For the legal distinction between rebels, apostates, and bandits, see also Kraemer, "Apostates."
REBELLION CRIME IN THE İSLAMIC AND OTTOMAN LAW
Rebellion in the Islamic state, also known as bağy is a matter not outdated. Likewise in the legal system, "State of rebellion" and disobedience is a crime punished. In our study, in Islamic and Ottoman law, "Rebellion" by another name "bağy" crimes were investigated. What are the terms of the rebellion crime in Islamic law. According to Islamic law, in case of a justified revolt against the president, these people are not considered rebels. Such an action undertaken against the illegitimate president is always right, it is legitimate. Rebellion, described in the place of Islamic law and the required information is provided.