Browse All
All (8725) | Subject Entries (5783) | Biographies (1904) | Chaptered Works (345) | Primary Sources (465) | Images & Maps (639) |
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Displaying: i j - ibn
I῾jāz (Subject Entry)
See Qur'ān . ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World
I Love My Country (1939) (Primary Source)
Penned during his detention at Sultanahmet Jail, the Istanbul prison reserved for intellectuals and dissidents, I Love My Country is a representative work of ...
By: Nâzım Hikmet
Ibadah (Subject Entry)
Worship; acts of devotion; service; pl. ibadat . The religious duties of worship incumbent on all Muslims when they come of age and are ...
Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
‘Ibādāt (Subject Entry)
See Sharīʿah . ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam and Politics
Ibāḍī Dynasties (Subject Entry)
The sect known as the Ibāḍīyah emerged from among the moderate Khārijīs in Basra who associated with Jābir ibn Zayd (d. before ah 104 ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Ibadi Dynasty (Subject Entry)
Omani dynasty. Over the past twelve centuries, the Ibadi community of Oman has elected sixty-one imams of different dynasties. Ibadi political power in Oman ...
Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
Ibāḋī Dynasty (Subject Entry)
The moderate sect of Khārijī origin known as the Ibāḋīyah was introduced into Oman first through access to the many Omani tribes settling in ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World
Ibadi School of Law (Subject Entry)
The Ibāḍīs are today the only survivors of the early Islamic sect known as the Khārijites ( Khawārij ). They form the main part ...
Source: The [Oxford] Encyclopedia of Islam and Law
Ibadis (Subject Entry)
Moderate subsect of Khariji Islam founded in the eighth century. Has its strongest presence in Oman, but is also found in North Africa and ...
Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
Ibāḋīyah (Subject Entry)
A moderate sect known as Ibāḋīyah (or Abāḋīyah ), which finds its origin in the Khārijī division of Islam, originated late in the first ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World
Ibāḍīyah (Subject Entry)
A moderate sect known as Ibāḍīyah (or Abāḍīyah), which finds its origin in the Khārijī division of Islam, originated late in the first century ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Iblis (Subject Entry)
See Satan ...
Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
Iblīs (Biography)
See Satan . ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World
Iblīs (Subject Entry)
See Satan . ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Ibn (Subject Entry)
Son. Also written as bin . Often used as the first part of the patronymic for males, followed by the name of the father, ...
Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
Ibn Abd al-Wahhab, Muhammad (Biography)
(d. 1791 ) Saudi Arabian conservative theologian, Hanbali jurist, reformer, and ideologue of the Wahhabi movement. Proclaimed the necessity of returning directly to the ...
Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
Ibn ῾Abd Al‐wahhāb, Muḥammad (Biography)
( 1703 – 1791 ), Saudi Arabian conservative theologian and reformer. Born in al‐῾Uyaynah in Najd, Ibn ῾Abd al‐Wahhāb belonged to a prestigious family ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World
Ibn Abd Allah, Muhammad Ahmad (Biography)
(d. 1885 ) Sudanese militant revivalist and reformer. Proclaimed himself Mahdi (divinely appointed guide) in 1881 . Led a jihad against the Egyptians and ...
Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
Ibn Abdin, Muhammad Amin ibn Umar (Biography)
(d. 1836 ) Syrian scholar. Trained in Shafii jurisprudence but eventually became known as a scholar of Hanafi jurisprudence. Worked outside the official Ottoman ...
Source: The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
Ibn al-Arabi (Biography)
1165 – 1240 Sufi mystic and writer Muhyi al-Din ibn al-Arabi, known as “the greatest shaykh,” was a mystic spiritual guide and poet who ...
Source: The Islamic World: Past and Present