IbāḍīyahIslamic sect

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  • founding of Beni Isguene ( in Beni Isguene )

    ...central Algeria, in the Sahara. The name is derived from Berber words meaning “the sons of those who keep the faith.” Beni Isguene was founded in the middle of the 11th century by the Ibāḍīyah, a Berber Muslim heretical sect originally from Tiaret. Beni Isguene’s town walls were restored in 1860, and according to tradition it is a sacred town. Strangers are not...

  • interpretation of Islamic law ( in Sharīʿah: Later developments )

    ...among my community is a sign of the bounty of Allāh.” But outside the four schools of Sunnī, or orthodox, Islām stand the minority sects of the Shīʿah and the Ibāḍīs whose own versions of the Sharīʿah differ considerably from those of the Sunnīs. Shīʿī law in particular grew out of a fundamentally...

  • sect of Khārijites ( in Khārijite )

    ...the Azāriqah of Basra were the most extreme subsect, separating themselves from the Muslim community and declaring death to all sinners and their families. The more moderate subsect of the Ibāḍīyah, however, survived into the 20th century in North Africa, Oman, and Zanzibar, with about 500,000 members.

    in Islām: The Khawārij )

    A moderate group of the Khawārij, the Ibāḍīs, avoided extinction, and its members are to be found today in North Africa and in Oman and other parts of East Africa, including Zanzibar Island. The Ibāḍīs do not believe in aggressive methods and, throughout medieval Islām, remained dormant. Because of the interest of 20th-century Western scholars...

  • views on taqiya ( in taqiya )

    The Shīʿites, the minority branch of Islām, made taqiya a fundamental tenet because of their suffering from persecution and political defeats throughout their history. The Ibāḍīyah (a Muslim sect found in eastern Africa, southern Algeria, and Oman) called for prudent fear and avoidance of foolish and unnecessary martyrdom and regarded taqiya as a basic...

history of

  • Arabia ( in Arabia, history of: Oman )

    In the last decades of the 7th century the Ibāḍites (Ibāḍīyah), regarded as a moderate Khārijite sect, conquered southern Arabia, established a Kindite imam in Hadhramaut, occupied Sanaa, and took Mecca and Medina, before the Umayyads drove them back to Hadhramaut. Oman had early become Khārijite; the first Ibāḍite imam,...

  • North Africa ( in North Africa: Khārijite Berber resistance to Arab rule )

    ...sect. The Berber rebels achieved an astounding military success against the Arab army. By 742 they had taken control of the whole of Algeria and were threatening Kairouan. In the meantime the Ibāḍiyyah, who constituted the moderate branch of the Khārijite sect, had taken control of Tripolitania by converting the Berber tribes living there, especially the Hawwāra...

  • Oman ( in Oman: Religion )

    The overwhelming majority of Omanis are Muslims. The Ibāḍī branch of Islam, a moderate Khārijite group, claims the most adherents. In belief and ritual, Ibāḍism is close to Sunni Islam (the major branch of Islam), differing in its emphasis on an elected, rather than a hereditary, imam as the spiritual and temporal leader of the Ibāḍī...

    in Oman: The Ibāḍī imamate )

    The Ibāḍī imamate, which arrived in the mid-8th century, unified Oman politically. The country’s mountains and geographic isolation provided a refuge for the Ibāḍīs (Ibāḍiyyah), who proceeded to convert the leading tribal clans to their sect. The new Ibāḍī state was headed by an elected imam who served as both temporal...

  • Ouargla ( in Wargla )

    ...Algeria. It is situated on the western edge of a sabkha (large, enclosed basin) in the Sahara. One of the oldest settlements in the Sahara was made by the Ibāḍīyah, a Muslim heretical sect, at nearby Sedrata in the 10th century (ruins remain). In the 11th century they were attacked by Sunnite Muslims and fled to Ghardaïa, 118...

Citations

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"Ibāḍīyah." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 09 Jan. 2009 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/280515/Ibadiyah>.

APA Style:

Ibāḍīyah. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 09, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/280515/Ibadiyah

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