Home Classical, Ancient Near Eastern & Egyptian Studies I. Opposition To Sufism In Safavid Iran: A Debate Between Mulla Muhammad-Tahir Qummi And Mulla Muhammad-Taqi Majlisi
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I. Opposition To Sufism In Safavid Iran: A Debate Between Mulla Muhammad-Tahir Qummi And Mulla Muhammad-Taqi Majlisi

  • Ata Anzali
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The Empires of the Near East and India
This chapter is in the book The Empires of the Near East and India
© 2019 Columbia University Press

© 2019 Columbia University Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Editor’s Note xi
  4. Editor’s Acknowledgments xiii
  5. Introduction 1
  6. Part I. The Religious Landscape
  7. 1. Converts, Apostates, And Polytheists
  8. Introduction 8
  9. I. Confessions Of An Armenian Convert: The I‘Tirafnama Of Abkar (ʿali Akbar) Armani 11
  10. II. Conversion, Apostasy, And Relations Between Muslims And Non-Muslims: Fatwas Of The Ottoman Shaykh Al-Islams 32
  11. III. The Night Debates At Jahangir’s Court: ʿabd Al-Sattar’s Majalis-I Jahangiri 55
  12. 2. Heretics, Polytheists, And The Path Of The Righteous
  13. Introduction 77
  14. I. The Shiʿa Path Of The Righteous: The Strength Of Akhbarism In Safavid Iran 79
  15. II. Ottoman Religious Rulings Concerning The Safavids: Ebussuud Efendi’s Fatwas 97
  16. III. A Mughal Debate About Jain Asceticism 107
  17. 3. The Zealot, The Sufi, And The Quest For Spiritual Transcendence
  18. Introduction 125
  19. I. Opposition To Sufism In Safavid Iran: A Debate Between Mulla Muhammad-Tahir Qummi And Mulla Muhammad-Taqi Majlisi 128
  20. II. The Worldview Of A Sufi In The Ottoman Realm: Hakiki And His Book Of Guidance 150
  21. III. Sufism And The Divine Law: Ahmad Sirhindi’s Ruminations 160
  22. Part II. Political Culture
  23. 4. Conceptions of Sovereignty: The Poet, the Scholar, and the Court Sufi
  24. Introduction 176
  25. I. The Safavid Claim to Sovereignty According to a Court Bureaucrat 179
  26. II. Kingship and Legitimacy in the Sixteenth- Century Ottoman Empire 193
  27. III. The Millennial and Saintly Sovereignty of Emperor Shah Jahan According to a Court Sufi 205
  28. 5. The King’s Deathbed: Coronation, Execution, and Fratricide
  29. Introduction 219
  30. I. In the Shadow of Shah ʿAbbas: The Succession of Shah Safi (r. 1629–1642) 221
  31. II. The Ottoman Conception of Sovereignty and Succession: Mustafa Ali’s Essence of History (Kunh al-Akhbar) 228
  32. III. The Way of Tradition and the Path of Innovation: Aurangzeb and Dara Shukuh’s Struggle for the Mughal Throne 240
  33. 6. A Tale of Three Cities: Diplomacy and Conquest
  34. Introduction 263
  35. I. Imperial Geopolitics and the Otiose Quest for Qandahar 265
  36. II. The Ottoman Conquest of Buda(pest): Sultan Suleiman’s Imperial Letter of Victory 280
  37. III. The Mughal Conquest of Chittor: Study of Akbar’s Letter of Victory 287
  38. Part III. Philosophical Inquiries
  39. 7. Philosophy as a Way of Life
  40. Introduction 302
  41. I. The Many Faces of Philosophy in the Safavid Age 305
  42. II. Philosophia Ottomanica: Jalal al-Din Davani on Establishing the Existence of the Necessary Being 319
  43. III. Philosophy and Legal Theory: The Musallam al-thubut of Muhibballah al-Bihari and Its Commentary by ʿAbd al-ʿAli Bahr al-ʿUlum 336
  44. 8. Lettrists, Alchemists, and Astrologers: The Occult Sciences
  45. Introduction 345
  46. I. The Occult Sciences in Safavid Iran 348
  47. II. A Commentary on The Secret of Ta-Ha by the Pseudo-Eşrefoǧlu Rumi 366
  48. III. The Occult Sciences at the Mughal Court During the Sixteenth Century 384
  49. Part IV. Literature and the Arts
  50. 9. Three Poets and the Three Literary Climes
  51. Introduction 402
  52. I. Selections from the Poetry of Muhtasham Kashani 406
  53. II. The Poet ʿAzmizade Haleti and the Transformation of Ottoman Literature in the Seventeenth Century 428
  54. III. Mughal Sanskrit Literature: The Book of War and the Treasury of Compassion 450
  55. 10. Royal Patronage: A College, Poets, and the Making of an Imperial Secretary
  56. Introduction 479
  57. I. The Leading Religious College in Early Modern Iran: Madrasa-yi Sultani and Its Endowment 481
  58. II. Imperial Patronage of Literature in the Ottoman World, 1400–1600 493
  59. III. A Letter of Advice from a Mughal Gentleman to His Son 505
  60. 11. Painters, Calligraphers, and Collectors
  61. Introduction 523
  62. I. Reading a Painting: Sultan-Muhammad’s The Court of Gayumars 525
  63. II. The Making of a Legendary Calligrapher: Textual Portraits of Sheikh Hamdullah 539
  64. III. Deccani Seals and Scribal Notations: Sources for the Study of Indo-Persian Book Arts and Collecting (c. 1400–1680) 554
  65. Bibliography 597
  66. Contributors 643
  67. Index 647
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