Realizing Islam The Tijaniyya in North Africa and the Eighteenth-Century Muslim World
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: The University of North Carolina Press 2020Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (307 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781469660813
- 9781469660820
- Society and Social Sciences
- Society and culture: general
- Social groups, communities and identities
- Ethnic studies
- History and Archaeology
- History
- African history
- Philosophy and Religion
- Religion and beliefs
- Islam
- Islam: branches and groups
- Islamic groups: Sufis
- Aspects of religion
- Spirituality and religious experience
- Mysticism
- Al-Jawāhir al-maʿānī
- Aḥmad al-Tijānī
- Eighteenth-Century Intellectual History
- Ibrāhim al-Kūrānī
- Islam in Africa
- Islamic Actualization
- Islamic Humanism
- Islamic Intellectual History
- Islamic Renaissance
- Islamic Revivalism
- Islamic Scholarly Renewal
- Islamic esotericism
- Islamic mysticism
- Islamic occult
- Islamic sainthood
- Islamic scholarship in Africa
- Khalwatiyya Sufi Order
- Kūrānī School
- Mawlay Sulayman
- Maḥmūd al-Kurdī
- Muslim scholars and the state in precolonial North Africa
- Muslim scholars of Algeria
- Muslim scholars of Morocco
- Muḥammad al-Sammān
- Muḥammad al-Ḥifnī (Ḥifnāwī)
- Muḥammad Ḥayāt al-Sindī
- Muṣṭafā al-Bakrī
- Neo-Sufism
- Salwat al-anfās
- Sammāniyya Sufi Order
- Scholars of Fez (Fes)
- Sufi gnosis
- Sufism
- Sufism and Islamic law
- Sufism in Africa
- Tijāniyya
- Waḥdat al-wujūd
- al-Jawāhir al-khams
- dreams and visions in Islam
- saintly hierarchy
- seal of saints
- vision of the Prophet Muḥammad
- ʿAbd al-Ghanī al-Nābulusī
- ʿilm al-asrār
- Ḥamdūn Ibn al-Ḥājj
- Ṭarīqa Muḥamm
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The Tijaniyya is the largest Sufi order in West and North Africa. In this unprecedented analysis of the Tijaniyya's origins and development in the late eighteenth century, Zachary Valentine Wright situates the order within the broader intellectual history of Islam in the early modern period. Introducing the group's founder, Ahmad al-Tijani (1737 - 1815), Wright focuses on the wider network in which al-Tijani traveled, revealing it as a veritable global Islamic revival whose scholars commanded large followings, shared key ideas, and produced literature read widely throughout the Muslim world. They were linked through chains of knowledge transmission from which emerged vibrant discourses of renewal in the face of perceived social and political corruption. Wright argues that this constellation of remarkable Muslim intellectuals, despite the uncertainly of the age, promoted personal verification in religious learning. With distinctive concern for the notions of human actualization and a universal human condition, the Tijaniyya emphasized the importance of the realization of Muslim identity. Since its beginnings in North Africa in the eighteenth century, the Tijaniyya has quietly expanded its influence beyond Africa, with significant populations in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and North America.
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