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Ottoman Puritanism and its Discontents: Ahmad al-Rumi al-Aqhisari and the Qadizadelis

Part of the Oxford Theology and Religion Monographs series
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Ottoman Puritanism and Its Discontents: Ahmad al-Aqhisari and the Qadizadelis considers the emergence of a new activist Sufism in the Muslim world from the sixteenth century onwards, which emphasized personal responsibility for putting God's guidance into practice.

Mustapha Sheikh focuses specifically on developments at the centre of the Ottoman Empire, but also considers both how they might have beeninfluenced by the wider connections and engagements of learned and holy men and how their influence might have been spread from the Ottoman Empire to South Asia in particular.

The immediate focus is on the QA a A zA deli movement which flourished in Istanbul from the 1620s to the 1680sand which inveighed against corrupt scholars and heterodox Sufis.

Up to now this movement has been seen as proto-WahhA bA , proto-fundamentalist or otherwise retrograde.

By studying the relationship between Aa mad al-RA mA al-A qa ia A rA 's magisterial MajA lis al-abrA r and QA a A zA deli beliefs, Sheikh places both author and the movement in an Ottoman, a anafA , and Sufimilieu.

Moreover, the study suggests that the impact of the MajA lis al-abrA r on the QA a A zA delis had the outcome in the second half of the seventeenth century of increasing the violence of their activists, a development which ultimately led to their downfall.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0192508091 / 9780192508096
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
03/11/2016
English
189 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%