Encyclopedia of Islam



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Shiism

  

623  J




death, and Abu Bakr (r. 632–634) became the first 

caliph


 (successor to the Prophet) of the Muslim 

community. This consensual understanding of 

legitimate 

aUthority

 eventually became identified 

with the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates, and 

the Sunni branch of Islam.

In 656 Ali finally became the caliph after the 

assassination of U

thman


 

ibn


 a

FFan


 (r. 644–656), 

the third caliph, and he established his capital 

in the city of Kufa in i

raq


. Ali’s legitimacy, how-

ever, was contested by his Meccan rivals. He 

successfully defeated three of his major oppo-

nents—a


isha

 (Muhammad’s widow) and Talha 

and al-Zubayr (respected c

ompanions

 

oF

 



the

p

rophet



)—at the Battle of the Camel in southern 

Iraq. He was then forced to confront Muawiya ibn 

Abi Sufyan (d. 680), the leader of the Umayyad 

clan of the q

Uraysh

. Ali and Muawiya fought until 



the conflict was settled by arbitration at Siffin, 

which left some of Ali’s supporters, known as the 

k

haWariJ


 (separatists), discontented. One of them 

assassinated Ali in Kufa in 661. Ali’s son Hasan 

agreed to recognize Muawiya as the next caliph, 

and Muwawiya founded the U

mayyad

  c


aliphate

with Damascus as its capital in 661. Consequently, 

Ali’s second son, Husayn, launched a campaign 

to win back the caliphate, but he was killed in 

680, together with many of his supporters, by an 

Umayyad army at k

arbala

 while traveling to join 



his supporters in Kufa.

The historical split between Sunnis and Shiis 

can therefore be traced to what was originally a 

political dispute over succession to leadership in 

the Muslim community. However, much of what 

scholars know about this period of Islamic history 

is based on accounts told from Sunni points of 

view that prevailed several centuries later. Scholars, 

therefore, have an incomplete understanding of 

Shiism’s development in the early period. During 

the ninth century the Shia began to maintain that 

Ali and his heirs, known as the Imams, had suf-

fered martyrdom at the hands of unjust and corrupt 

Sunni Muslim rulers. The unfortunate outcome 

of Shii political expectations and Shii belief in the 

just cause of their Imams eventually evolved into 

the distinctive Shii belief in sanctification through 

the deaths of the infallible Imams and belief in a 

messianic redeemer, known as the i

mam


  m

ahdi


,

who would come in the endtimes. The shift in the 

worldview of the Shii movement occurred gradu-

ally between the seventh and 10th centuries, and 

it was probably influenced by Jewish and Christian 

beliefs in 

martyrdom

 and messianic redemption 

circulating in the Middle East at the time.

The fate of the Imams, coupled with a history 

of periodic persecution, led many Shii groups to 

develop a doctrine that allowed for pious conceal-

ment, known as taqiyya, of their true Shii identity 

for self-protection. a

shUra

, the commemoration of 



the death of Husayn at Karbala during Muharram

the first month in the Islamic lunar year, began to be 

observed as the most important Shii holiday during 

the 10th century, under the protection of the Shii 

Buyid dynasty that ruled in the name of the Abbasid 

caliph. In addition to belief in the return of a hidden 

imam in the endtimes, most of the Shia also main-

tained that the Imams would intercede for the righ-

teous on J

Udgment


 d

ay

. Another identifying trait of 



Shiism that developed in this period was devotion 

to Muhammad and his descendants through Ali and 

Fatima, known as the People of the House (

ahl

 

al

-

bayt

). Sunnism also has held the prophet Muham-

mad’s family in high regard, but its understanding of 

Islam has given greater importance to the 

sharia

. In 


the Sunni understanding of the sharia, it is Muham-

mad and his Companions who have precedence, 

rather than his family per se.

An estimated 12 to 15 percent of the world’s 

Muslim population today belongs to the Shii 

branch of Islam, equal to between 156 and 195 

million adherents (out of a total of around 1.3 

billion Muslims). Almost all Shiis belong to one 

of three major sects, basically distinguished from 

each other according to which Imams they recog-

nize and which they do not. Each tradition has 

also developed its own specific doctrines, rites, 

and concepts of authority (for details, see entries 

for each tradition). The largest tradition is known 

as t

Welve


-i

mam


 s

hiism


, and its followers are called 

the Twelvers, the Ithnaashariyya, and the Imamis. 

They recognize Musa al-Kazim (d. 799), the son 

of J


aaFar

 

al



-s

adiq


 (d. 765) as the seventh Imam, 

K  624  



Shiism


and they believe that the 12th Imam, m

Uham


-

mad


 

al

-m



Untazar

  (b. 868), entered concealment 

as a boy in 874. His concealment will end only 

when God allows, just before Judgment Day. The 

Twelve-Imam Shia follow their own legal tradi-

tion, which is divided into Akhbari (traditional-

ist) and Usuli (rationalist) Schools. They now 

comprise an estimated 90 percent of the world’s 

Shii population, and they are majorities in i

ran


(89 percent), Iraq (60 percent), Bahrain (70 per-

cent), and Azerbaijan (85 percent). There are also 

Twelve-Imam Shii minority populations in Leba-

non, eastern Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, United 

Arab Emirates, a

Fghanistan

, Tajikistan, p

akistan


,

and i


ndia

, as well as sizeable immigrant commu-

nities in Europe and the United States.

The second sect Shii is known as i

smaili

 s

hiism



(also called the Seveners and the Sabiyya). The 

Ismailis recognize Ismail (d. 760), Jaafar al-Sadiq’s 

first son, as the rightful seventh Imam instead of 

Musa al-Kazim, as claimed by the Twelve-Imam 

Shia. The F

atimid


 

dynasty


 that ruled in North 

Africa and Egypt from 909 to 1171 claimed to be 

caliph-imams descended from Ismail, and they 

gave rise to the two major Ismaili sects known as 

the Mustalis and Nizaris. Fatimid missionaries, 

known as dais, spread the doctrines of Ismaili Shi-

ism to y

emen


, Syria, Iran, and India. Because of 


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