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Dr. Hussain S. Imam , MD - Free Doctor Profile - Internal Medicine,... healthgrades.com | Syed Imam - Faculty - Department of Pharmacology - School of Medicine -... pharmacology.uthscsa.edu |
[edit] Early ImamsIsmāʿīlīs share the following Imāms with the Twelver Shīʿah: 1. ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib (علي إبن ابي طالب), died 661 CE [edit] SplitsThe Ismāʿīlīs split with the Twelvers over the succession to the Imām Jaʿfar, whose designated heir Ismāʿīl had predeceased him. Whereas Twelvers eventually settled for Ismāʿīl's brother Musa, Ismāʿīlīs insist on the succession of Ismāʿīl and his son Muhammad ibn Ismāʿīl. 6. Ismāʿīl (إسماعيل إبن جعفر), Jaʿfar's son and designated heir, predeceased his father in 755 but accepted as Imām by the Ismāʿīlīs. Several Ismāʿīlī groups believed Muhammad to be the Mahdi, who had withdrawn into occultation and would return again. One group propagated their faith from their bases in Syria through Dāʿiyyūn ("Callers to Islām"), the first of which was Abdallah al-Akbar. In 899, the fourth Da'i announced that he himself was the Imam, starting the Fatimid dynasty. This caused a split between his followers and those disputing his claim and clinging to Muhammad. The Fatimid's most notable opponents were the Qarmatians. [edit] FatimidsIn the Fatimid (and subsequently Ismaili) tradition, the Imamat was held by: 8. Wafi Ahmad, 1st Da'i of the Ismaili mission, according to Ismaili tradition son of Muhammad
17. ʿAlī az-Zāhir li-Iʿzāz Dīnillāh, son of al-Hakim, 7th Fatimid Caliph, died 1036.
[edit] MustaʿlīThe Mustaʿlī recognized as the rightful Imam: 19. Aḥmad al-Mustaʿlī, son of al-Mustansir, 9th Fatimid Caliph, died 1101 Amir died without an heir and was succeeded as Caliph by his cousin Al-Hafiz. The Mustaʿlī split into the Hafizi, who accepted him and his successors as Imam, and the Tayyibi, who believed that Amir's purported son At-Tayyib was the rightful Imam and had gone into occultation: [edit] TayyibiThe Tayyibi branch continues to this day. [edit] Hafizi21. Al-Hafiz, 11th Fatimid Caliph, died 1149. With him ended the Fatimid dynasty and the Hafizi branch. [edit] NizariThe Nizārī recognized as the rightful Imam: 19. Nizār ibn al-Mustanṣir billāh, son of al-Mustansir, died in prison 1094 Some Nizari, later also known as Hashshashin (Assassins), had earlier occupied a fortress of Alamut and proclaimed the grandson, who had reportedly escaped, and his descendants as hidden Imams: 20. Al-Hādī (escapted to Alamut with a Nizari Dai - Abul Hasan Saidi, remained concealed from public) After the fall of Alamut, the Nizari split into groups, each recognizing descendants of the Imams of Alamut. The surviving group follows: In Syria, some Nizari groups survived in their strongholds. Most notable among the Imams recognized by them was Shamsu-d-Dīn Muḥammad Shah, who in 1374 had temporarily regained Alamut. His descendants lived in Soltaniye, Azerbaijan until the Safavids in 1522 expelled Imam Shah Taher Hoseini. The Imam emigrated to India. The Syrian Nizari lost contact to their Imam in 1796. In 1887 they send messengers to India, but since they could not locate any descendants, most Syrian Nizari recognized Aga Khan III as their Imam. However, a small minority, located in Masyaf and the mountains of al-Qadmus, cling to the previous lineage. In Iran, small Nizari groups survived and centred around Imams in the village Angodan near Mahallat. Since the end of the 15th century, the following Imams are known: 29. Qāsim Shāh [edit] References
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