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Messianic Hopes and Mystical Visions - The Nurbakhshiya Between Medieval and Modern Islam (Hardcover, New)
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Messianic Hopes and Mystical Visions - The Nurbakhshiya Between Medieval and Modern Islam (Hardcover, New)
Series: Studies in Comparative Religion
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Messianic Hopes and Mystical Visions tells the story of the
Nurbakhshiya, an Islamic messianic movement that originated in
fifteenth-century central Asia and Iran and survives to the present
in Pakistan and India. In the first full-length study of the sect,
Shahzad Bashir illumines the significance of messianism as an
Islamic religious paradigm and illustrates its centrality to any
discussion of Islamic sectarianism. By tracing Nurbakhshi activity
in the Middle East and central and southern Asia through more than
five centuries, Bashir brings to view the continuities and
disruptions within Islamic civilization across regions and over
time. Bashir effectively captures the way Nurbakhshis have
understood and debated the meaning of their tradition in various
geographical and temporal contexts. Bashir provides a detailed
biography of the movement's founder, Muhammad Nurbakhsh (d. 1464).
Born to a Twelver Shi'i family, Nurbakhsh declared himself the
mahdi, or the Muslim messiah, as an adept of the Kubravi Sufi order
under the influence of the teachings of the great Sufi master Ibn
al-'Arabi (d. 1240). Nurbakhsh's religious worldview, which Bashir
treats in depth in this volume, offers a new window onto the
intellectual world of the late medieval Islamic East. Although
Nurbakhsh met with limited success as a claimant to the title of
mahdi during his lifetime, his movement prospered after his death
as his disciples remained active in Timurid and Safavid Iran,
central Asia, and Ottoman Anatolia. Bashir analyzes the spread of
the Nurbakhshiya as well as its greatest sociopolitical triumph -
transplantation into Kashmir in the late fifteenth and early
sixteenth centuries, from where the movement extended into
neighboring Ladakh and Baltistan. Making use of previously
unexamined sources, Bashir recounts every phase of Nurbakshi
history, paying particular attention to the reinterpretation and
adjustment of the tradition in each local context.
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