ABSTRACT

The Ismailis represent an important Shiʿi Muslim community with rich intellectual and literary traditions. The complex history of the Ismailis dates back to the second/eighth century when they separated from other Shiʿi groups under the leadership of their own imams. Soon afterwards, the Ismailis organised a dynamic, revolutionary movement, known as the daʿwa or mission, for uprooting the Sunni regime of the Abbasids and establishing a new Shiʿi caliphate headed by the Ismaili imam. By the end of the third/ninth century, the Ismaili dāʿīs, operating secretly on behalf of the movement, were active in almost every region of the Muslim world, from Central Asia and Persia to Yemen, Egypt and the Maghrib.

This book brings together a collection of the best works from Farhad Daftary, one of the foremost authorities in the field. The studies cover a range of specialised topics related to Ismaili history, historiography, institutions, theology, law and philosophy, amongst other intellectual traditions elaborated by the Ismailis.

The collation of these invaluable studies into one book will be of great interest to the Ismaili community as well to anyone studying Islam in general, or Shiʿi Islam in particular.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |35 pages

Shi‘i communities in history

chapter |18 pages

The study of the Ismailis

Phases and issues

chapter |14 pages

Ismaili daʿwa under the Fatimids

chapter |10 pages

The concept of Hujja in Ismaili thought

chapter |18 pages

ʿAlī in classical Ismaili ­theology

chapter |11 pages

The ‘Order of the Assassins’

J. von Hammer and the orientalist ­misrepresentations of the Nizari Ismailis

chapter |15 pages

Ismaili-Seljuq relations

Conflict and stalemate

chapter |10 pages

Sinān and the Nizārī Ismailis of Syria

chapter |15 pages

Religious identity, ­dissimulation and assimilation

The Ismaili identity