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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: VIR-WAT |
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WAHHABIS , a Mahommedan sect, the followers of Ibn 'Abd ul-Wahhab, who instituted a great
pilgrimage with his father, he spent some further time in the study of law at Medina, and resided for a while at Isfahan, whence he returned to the Nejd to undertake the work
worship given to Mahomet and Mahommedan saints rather than to God, he began a mission to proclaim the simplicity of the early religion founded on the Koran and Sunna (i.e. the manner of life of Mahomet). His mission in his own district
79 The teaching of ul-Wahhab was founded on that of Ibn Taimiyya (1263-1328), who was of the school of Ahmad ibn Hanbal (q.v.). Copies of some of Ibn Taimiyya's works made by ul-Wahhab are now extant in Europe, and show a close WAILLY 245 study of the writer. Ibn Taimiyya, although a Hanbalite by training, refused to be bound by any of the four schools, and claimed the power of a mujtahid, i.e. of one who can give independent decisions. These decisions were based on the Koran, which, like Ibn Hazm (q.v.), he accepted in a literal sense, on the Sunna and Qiyds (analogy). He protested strongly against all the innovations of later times, and denounced as idolatry
pilgrimage to tombs and the in-vocation of saints. The severe simplicity of the Wahhabis has been remarked by travellers in central Arabia. They attack all luxury, loose administration of justice, all laxity against infidels, addiction to wine, impurity and treachery. Under 'Abd ul-Aziz they instituted a form of Bedouin (Bedawi) commonwealth, insisting on the observance of law, the payment of tribute , military conscription for war against the infidel, internal peace and the rigid administration of justice in courts established for the purpose.It is clear that the claim of the Wahhabis to have returned to the earliest form of Islam is largely justified; Burckhardt (vol. ii. p. 1 r 2) says, " The only difference between his (i.e. 11h Wahl-lab's) sect and orthodox Turks, however improperly so termed, is that the Wahabys rigidly follow the same laws
minor points of practice, so that they often appear to observers to be characterized chiefly by a strictness (real or feigned) in such matters as the prohibition of silk for dress, or the use of tobacco, or of the rosary in prayer.End of Article: WAHHABIS If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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