Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Ghulāt (Arabic: غلاة; lit. "extremists",[1] the adjectival form of ghuluww) is a term used in the theology of Shia Islam to describe some minority Muslim groups who either ascribe divine characteristics to figures of Islamic history (usually a member of the Ahl al-Bayt) or hold beliefs deemed deviant by mainstream Shi'i theology. In later periods, this term was used to describe any Shi'i group not accepted by the Zaydis, orthodox Twelvers, and sometimes the Isma'ilis.[1]
The usage derives from the idea that the importance or the veneration of such a religious figure has been "exaggerated".
History
Traditionally, the first of the ghulāt was Abdullah ibn Saba', who may have denied that Ali had died and predicting his return (rajʿa), which was considered one form of ghuluww. Also, the notion of the Occultation or absence of an Imam who is due to return and establish justice as mahdi seem to have appeared first among the ghulāt.[1] Other positions which seem to have been considered ghuluww by early writers were the (public) condemnation (sabb) of Abu Bakr and Umar as usurpers of Ali's right to be a successor of Muhammad, and the notion that the true Imams were infallible (maʿṣūm).[1]
In later periods, mainstream Shia groups, especially the Imamiyya,[2] have identified three acts that have been judged as "extremism" (ghuluww). These acts of heresy are: the claim that God sometimes takes abode in the bodies of the Imams (ḥulūl), the belief in metempsychosis (tanāsukh), and considering Islamic law to be not obligatory (ibāḥa), similar to antinomianism.[3]
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References
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Further reading
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Ahl us-
Sunnah
wa’l-
Jama’ah |
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Shia Islam |
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Imami
Mahdiist
Shi'ite
Sects in
Islam |
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Muhakkima
(Arbitration) |
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Murji'ah
(Hasan ibn
Muḥāmmad
ibn al-
Hanafiyyah) |
Karrāmīyya |
- Abū ʿAbdillāh Muḥāmmad ibn Karrām ibn Arrāk ibn Huzāba ibn al-Barā’ as-Sijjī
- ʿĀbidīyya (ʿUthmān al-ʿĀbid)
- Dhīmmīyya
- Hakāiqīyya
- Haisamīyya (Abū ʿAbdallāh Muhammad ibn al-Haisam)
- Hīdīyya (Hīd ibn Saif)
- Ishāqīyya (Abū Yaʿqūb Ishāq ibn Mahmashādh)
- Maʿīyya
- Muhājirīyya (Ibrāhīm ibn Muhājir)
- Nūnīyya
- Razīnīyya
- Sauwāqīyya
- Sūramīyya
- Tarā'ifīyya (Ahmad ibn ʿAbdūs at-Tarā'ifī)
- Tūnīyya (Abū Bakr ibn ʿAbdallāh)
- Wāhidīyya
- Zarībīyya
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Other sects |
- Gaylānīyya
- Yūnusīyya
- Gassānīyya
- Tūmanīyya
- Sawbānīyya
- Sālehīyya
- Shamrīyya
- Ubaydīyya
- Ziyādīyya
- Muhammad ibn Ziyād al-Kūfī
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Other Murjīs |
- Al-Harith ibn Surayj
- Sa'id ibn Jubayr
- Hammād ibn Abū Sūlaimān
- Muhārīb ibn Dithār
- Sābit Kutna
- Awn ibn Abdullāh
- Mūsā ibn Abū Kasīr
- Umar ibn Zar
- Salm ibn Sālem
- Hālaf ibn Ayyūb
- Ibrāhim ibn Yousūf
- Nusayr ibn Yahyā
- Ahmad ibn Hārb
- Amr ibn Murrah
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Mu'shabbiha |
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Qadariyah
(Ma'bad
al-Juhani) |
Alevism |
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Muʿtazila
(Rationalism) |
- Mā’marīyya
- Abū Amr (Abū Mu‘tamīr) Muāmmar ibn Abbād as-Sūlamī
- Bishriyya
- Bahshamiyya
- Abū Hāshīm Abdu’s-Salām ibn Muḥāmmad ibn Abdi’l-Wahhāb al-Jubbā'ī
- Huzaylīyya
- Abū’l-Huzayl Muḥāmmad ibn al-Huzayl ibn Abdillāh al-Allāf al-Abdī al-Bāsrī
- Abū Ma‘n Sūmāma ibn Ashras an-Nūmayrī al-Bāsrī al-Baghdādī
- Ikhshīdiyya
- Nazzāmīyya
- Ali al-Aswarī
- Abū Bakr Muḥāmmad ibn Abdillāh ibn Shabīb al-Basrī
- Hābītīyya
- Sumamīyya
- Kā‘bīyya
- Abū’l-Kāsīm Abdullāh ibn Ahmad ibn Māhmūd al-Balhī al-Kā‘bī
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Quranism |
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Independent
Muslim
beliefs |
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- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Encyclopedia Iranica, "ḠOLĀT"
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.