Further reading: Abu Hamid al-Ghazali, The Remem-
brance of Death and the Afterlife (Kitab dhikr al-mawt
wa-ma bdahu): Book XL of the Revival of the Religious
Sciences (Ihya ulum al-din). Translated by T. J. Winter
(Cambridge: Islamic Texts Society, 1995); Jane Idle-
man Smith and Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad, The Islamic
Understanding of Death and Resurrection (Albany: State
University of New York Press, 1981).
fitna
(Arabic: punishment by trial,
temptation)
The term fitna has several meanings. In the con-
text of early Islamic history, it refers to one of sev-
eral armed conflicts, or civil wars, that occurred
within the Muslim community (
umma
) during
the seventh and eighth centuries. These wars led
to the establishment of the U
mayyad
c
aliphate
in d
amascUs
, the rise of the k
haWariJ
sectarian
movement, the schism between the Sunnis and
the Shiis, and the founding of the a
bbasid
c
aliph
-
ate
in b
aghdad
. The first fitna occurred when
the caliph U
thman
ibn
a
FFan
was assassinated
in 656 by a group of dissidents from e
gypt
who
were angry with the favoritism he had shown to
members of his clan, the Abd Shams, a prominent
branch of the q
Uraysh
tribe in m
ecca
. Uthman’s
successor, a
li
ibn
a
bi
t
alib
, m
Uhammad
’s cousin,
declined to avenge his death, which earned him
the enmity of Uthman’s supporters, including
Muhammad’s wife a
isha
bint
a
bi
b
akr
and some
leading c
ompanions
oF
the
p
rophet
. Ali defeated
these opponents at the Battle of the Camel that
same year, but this only led to a clash with
Muawiya ibn Abi Sufyan (d. 680), a close relative
of Uthman, and Muawiya’s Syrian Arab supporters
at the Battle of Siffin in 657. This confrontation
ended with an arbitrated peace that left the ques-
tion of leadership in the Muslim community unre-
solved until 661, when Ali was assassinated by the
Khawarij, a dissident faction that had opposed
Ali’s peace agreement with Muawiya at Siffin. The
first fitna ended in 661, with Muawiya becoming
caliph
, inaugurating the reign of the Syrian-based
Umayyad Caliphate (661–750).
The second fitna occurred when h
Usayn
ibn
a
li
, grandson of Muhammad, rebelled against the
Umayyads and was killed with a group of loyal
supporters at k
arbala
, Iraq, in 680. The tragic
story of his death as a martyr has since assumed a
place of central importance in the religious life of
the Shia, and it is remembered by them annually
during their a
shUra
rituals. Other factions in the
early Muslim empire also rebelled at this time,
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