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Ibn al-Jawzi

ʿAbd al-Raḥmān b. ʿAlī b. Muḥammad Abu 'l-Faras̲h̲ b. al-Jawzī,[5] often referred to as Ibn al-Jawzī (Arabic: ابن الجوزي, Ibn al-Jawzī; ca. 1116 – 16 June 1201) for short, or reverentially as Imam Ibn al-Jawzī by some Sunni Muslims, was a Muslim jurisconsult, preacher, orator, heresiographer, traditionist, historian, judge, hagiographer, and philologist[5] who played an instrumental role in propagating the Hanbali school of orthodox Sunni jurisprudence in his native Baghdad during the twelfth-century.[5] During "a life of great intellectual, religious and political activity,"[5] Ibn al-Jawzi came to be widely admired by his fellow Hanbalis for the tireless role he played in ensuring that that particular school – historically, the smallest of the four principal Sunni schools of law – enjoy the same level of "prestige" often bestowed by rulers on the Maliki, Shafi'i, and Hanafi rites.[5]

Imam Ibn al-Jawzī
A depiction of Baghdad from 1808, taken from the print collection in Travels in Asia and Africa, etc. (ed. J. P. Berjew, British Library); Ibn al-Jawzī spent his entire life in this city in the twelfth-century.
Jurisconsult, Preacher, Traditionist;
Shaykh of Islam, Orator of Kings and Princes, Imam of the Hanbalites
Venerated inSunni Islam, but particularly in the Hanbali school of jurisprudence
Major shrineGreen Cement Tomb at Baghdad, Iraq
Ibn al-Jawzī
TitleShaykh al-Islam[1]
Personal
Bornc. 510 AH/1116 CE
Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate, now Iraq
Died12 Ramadan 597 AH/16 June 1201 (aged approximately 84)
Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate, now Iraq
ReligionIslam
EraIslamic golden age
DenominationSunni
JurisprudenceHanbali
Main interest(s)History, Tafsir, Hadith, Fiqh
Notable work(s)Daf' Shubah al-Tashbih
Muslim leader

Ibn al-Jawzi received a "very thorough education"[5] during his adolescent years, and was fortunate to train under some of that era's most renowned Baghdadi scholars, including Ibn al-Zāg̲h̲ūnī (d. 1133), Abū Bakr al-Dīnawarī (d. 1137–8), Sayyid Razzāq Alī Jīlānī (d. 1208), and Abū Manṣūr al-Jawālīkī (d. 1144–5).[6] Although Ibn al-Jawzi's scholarly career continued to blossom over the next few years, he became most famous during the reign of al-Mustadi (d. 1180), the thirty-third Abbasid caliph, whose support for Hanbalism allowed Ibn al-Jawzi to effectively become "one of the most influential persons" in Baghdad, due to the caliph's approval of Ibn al-Jawzi's public sermonizing to huge crowds in both pastoral and urban areas throughout Baghdad.[7] In the vast majority of the public sermons delivered during al-Mustadi's reign, Ibn al-Jawzi often presented a stanch defense of the prophet Muhammad's example, and vigorously criticized all those whom he considered to be schismatics in the faith.[7] At the same time, Ibn al-Jawzi's reputation as a scholar continued to grow due to the substantial role he played in managing many of the most important universities in the area,[7] as well as on account of the sheer number of works he wrote during this period.[7] As regards the latter point, it is important to note that part of Ibn al-Jawzi's legacy rests on his reputation for having been "one of the most prolific writers" of all time,[5] with later scholars like Ibn Taymīyyah (d. 1328) studying over a thousand works written by Ibn al-Jawzi during their years of training.[5] As scholars have noted, Ibn al-Jawzi's prodigious corpus, "varying in length" as it does,[5] touches upon virtually "all the great disciplines" of classical Islamic study.[5]

Life edit

Ibn al-Jawzi was born between 507 and 12 H./1113-19 CE to a "fairly wealthy family"[5] in Baghdad, which "descended from Abu Bakr",[8][9] His parents proceeded to give their son a "thorough education"[10] in all the principal disciplines of the period,[10] whence Ibn al-Jawzi had the good fortune of studying under such notable scholars of the time as Ibn al-Zāghūnī (d. 1133), Abū Bakr al-Dīnawarī (d. 1137–8), Shaiykh Saiyed Razzaq Ali Gilani (d. 1208), Abū Manṣūr al-Jawālīkī (d. 1144–5), Abu 'l-Faḍl b. al-Nāṣir (d. 1155), Abū Ḥakīm al-Nahrawānī (d. 1161) and Abū Yaʿlā the Younger (d. 1163).[10][6] Additionally, Ibn al-Jawzi began to be heavily influenced by the works of other scholars he read but whom he had never met personally, such as Abu Nu`aym (d. 1038), a Shafi'i Ashari mystic, al-Khatib al-Baghdadi (d. 1071), a Hanbali who had changed to Shafi'ism, and the prominent Hanbali thinker Ibn `Aqīl (d. ca. 1120), whom Ibn al-Jawzi would both praise and criticize in his later writings.[10] He was an adherent of the Ashari school of dialectical theology, an aspect of his thought that would later distinguish him from many of his fellow Hanbali thinkers,[11] In his early works he criticized speculation in theology, in particular modernizing trends among the Sufis.[11]

Ibn al-Jawzi began his career proper during the reign of al-Muqtafi (d. 1160), the thirty-first caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate, whose Hanbali vizier, Ibn Hubayra (d. 1165), served as a patron of Ibn al-Jawzi's scholarship.[10] Beginning his scholarly career as a teaching assistant to his mentor Abū Ḥakīm al-Nahrawānī, who taught Hanbali jurisprudence in two separate schools, Ibn al-Jawzi succeeded al-Nahrawānī as "master of these two colleges" after the latter's death in 1161.[10][12] A year or so prior to this, however, Ibn al-Jawzi had already begun his career as a preacher, as Ibn Hubayra had given him free rein to deliver his passionate sermons every Friday in the vizer's own house.[13] After al-Muqtafi's death, the succeeding caliph, al-Mustanjid (d. 1170), called upon Ibn al-Jawzi to preach his sermons in the Caliph's Palace mosque – one of the most prominent houses of worship in the whole of Baghdad – during the three military interventions of the Fatimid Dynasty in the city.[10] In these sermons, Ibn al-Jawzi is said to have "vigorously defended the prophetic precedent and criticized, not only all those whom he considered to be schismatics, but also the jurists who were too blindly attached to their own schools of law."[10]

During the reign of the succeeding Abbasid caliph, al-Mustadi (d. 1180), Ibn al-Jawzi began to be recognized "as one of the most influential persons in Baghdad."[10] As this particular ruler was especially partial to Hanbalism,[10] Ibn al-Jawzi was given free rein to promote Hanbalism by way of his preaching throughout Baghdad.[10] The numerous sermons Ibn al-Jawzi delivered from 1172 to 1173 cemented his reputation as the premier scholar in Baghdad at the time; indeed, the scholar soon began to be so appreciated for his gifts as an orator that al-Mustadi even went so far as to have a special dais (Arabic dikka) constructed specially for Ibn al-Jawzi in the Palace mosque.[10] Ibn al-Jawzi's stature as a scholar only continued to grow in the following years.[10]

By 1179, Ibn al-Jawzi had written over one hundred and fifty works and was directing five colleges in Baghdad simultaneously.[5] It was at this time that he told al-Mustadi to engrave an inscription onto the widely venerated tomb of Ibn Hanbal (d. 855) – the revered founder of the Hanbali rite – which referred to the famed jurist as "Imām."[14] After the ascendancy of the new caliph, al-Nasir (d. 1235), to the Abbasid throne, Ibn al-Jawzi initially maintained amicable relations with the state power by way of his friendship with the caliph's Hanbali vizier, Ibn Yūnus (d. 1197).[5] However, after the latter's dismissal and arrest – for unknown reasons – the caliph appointed as his successor the Shia Ibn al-Ḳaṣṣāb (d. ca. 1250).[5] Although the reasons for the matter remain unclear in the historical record,[5] al-Nasir eventually sentenced Ibn al-Jawzi to live under house arrest for five years.[5] One of the possible reasons for this may be that Ibn al-Jawzi's relationship with the caliph had soured after the scholar had written a direct refutation of the ruler's policy in a particular matter.[5] After five years in exile, Ibn al-Jawzi was eventually set free due to the pleading of al-Nasir's mother, whom the various chronicles describe as "a very devout woman" who pleaded with her son to free the famous scholar.[5] Soon after his return to Baghdad, however, Ibn al-Jawzi died, being seventy-four years old.[5]

Views and thought edit

Polemics edit

Ibn al-Jawzi was a noted polemicist,[5] and often attacked with great zeal the works of all those whom he deemed to be heretical innovators in the religion.[5] His criticisms of other schools of thought appears most prominently in Talbīs Iblīs (The Devil's Delusion), "one of the major works of Hanbali polemic,"[5] in which he staunchly critiqued not only numerous sects outside Sunni Islam, such as the Mutazilites and the Kharijites, but also particular schools of thought within Sunnism whom he believed had strayed from the right path.[5] Due to some of Ibn al-Jawzi's remarks against some of the "wayward Sufis" of his time in this work, contemporary Muslim movements opposed to traditional Sufism, such as Salafism and Wahhabism, often cite the work as evidence of their position in the present day.[5] Despite this, scholars have noted how Ibn al-Jawzi never actually attacks Sufism as such, but always makes a clear distinction in his works "between an older purer Sufism" and what he deems to be corruptions in Sufi practice.[11] It is clear that Ibn al-Jawzi never intended his attacks on certain Sufi groups contemporaneous with him to constitute a condemnation of Sufism as a whole.[5]

Relics edit

Ibn al-Jawzi was an avid supporter of using the relics of Muhammad in personal devotion, and supported the seeking of blessing through them in religious veneration. This is evident from his approved citing of a tradition narrated by Ibn Hanbal's son Abdullah, who recalled his father's devotion towards the Prophet's relics thus: "I saw my father take one of the Prophet's hairs, place it over his mouth, and kiss it. I may have seen him place it over his eyes, and dip it in water and then drink the water for a cure."[15] In the same way, Ibn al-Jawzi also commended Ibn Hanbal for having drunk from the Prophet's bowl (technically a "second-class" relic) in order to seek blessings from it.[15]

Saints edit

Ibn al-Jawzi supported the orthodox and widespread classical belief in the existence of saints, as is evident from his major work on the lives of the early Muslim Sufi saints entitled Sifat al-ṣafwa (The Characteristic of the Elect) – actually an abridgment of Abu Nu`aym's (d. 1038) Ḥilyat al-awliyāʼ (The Adornment of the Saints)[5] – in which he explicitly praises such important Sufis as Hasan of Basra (d. 728), Ibrahim ibn Adham (d. ca. 782), Sufyan al-Thawri (d. 778), Rabi`a Basri (d. 801), Ma`ruf Karkhi (d. ca. 820), and Bishr the Barefoot (d. ca. 850), among many others.[5] While Ibn al-Jawzi did criticize charlatans who masquerade as holy men, he unreservedly states that true "saints do not violate" orthodox belief, practice, and law.[16] Regarding saints, Ibn al-Jawzi said:

The saints and the righteous are the very purpose of all that exists (al-awliya wa-al-salihun hum al-maqsud min al-kawn): they are those who learned and practiced with the reality of knowledge... Those who practice what they know, do with little in the world, seek the next world, remain ready to leave from one to the other with wakeful eyes and good provision, as opposed to those renowned purely for their knowledge."[17]

Sufism edit

Ibn al-Jawzi evidently held that Sufism or tasawwuf was an integral aspect of Islamic practice. As has been noted by scholars, his Talbīs Iblīs, which criticizes innovations in all the major Islamic sciences including tafsir and fiqh, is by no means a rejection of Sufism as a whole.[18] On the contrary, the Hanbali jurist wrote many books on the merits of the early mystics and saints, including Manaqib Rabi`a al-`Adawiyya, Manaqib Ma`ruf al-Karkhi, Manaqib Ibrahim ibn Adham, Manaqib Bishr al-Hafi, and others.[18] Ibn al-Jawzi was also a staunch supporter of the teachings of Ghazali, and many of the former's works dealing with Sufism are influenced by Ghazali's most famous work, the Iḥyāʾ ʿulūm al-dīn.[18] As a matter of fact, Ibn al-Jawzi frequently adopted the actual "methodology and language of" Ghazali in his own works, in addition to writing about the same subject matter.[18] Among the topics Ibn al-Jawzi covered in his mystical works were: the meaning of passionate longing for God; the taking of one's nafs to account for its deeds; the berating of the nafs for its shortcomings; and the castigating of the nafs.[18]

Creed edit

Ibn al-Ahdal [ar] (d. 855/1451) in his Kashf al-Ghata' 'an Haqa'iq al-Tawhid (Arabic: كشف الغطاء عن حقائق التوحيد) considered him one of the Athari scholars along with 'Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani. However, unlike other Hanbalis, he did not totally reject the mutakalimun and accepted Kalam and Ta'wil when needed depending on the person.[19]

Theology edit

Ibn al-Jawzi is famous for the theological stance that he took against other Hanbalites of the time, in particular Ibn al-Zaghuni and al-Qadi Abu Ya'la. He believed that these and other Hanbalites had gone to extremes in affirming God's Attributes, so much so that he accused them of tarnishing the reputation of Hanbalites and making it synonymous with extreme anthropomorphism (likening God to his creation). Ibn al-Jawzi stated that,

"They believed that He has a form and a face in addition to His Self. They believed that He has two eyes, a mouth, a uvula and molars, a face which is light and splendor, two hands, including the palms of hands, fingers including the little fingers and the thumbs, a back, and two legs divided into thighs and shanks."[20]

And he continued his attack on Abu Ya'la by stating that, "Whoever confirms that God has molars as a divine attribute, has absolutely no knowledge of Islam."[21]

Ibn al-Jawzi's most famous work in this regard is his Bāz al‐ašhab al‐munqadd 'alà muhālifī al‐madhab (The Gray Falcon Which Attacks the Offenders of the [Hanbalī] School).[20]

God is neither inside nor outside the Universe edit

Ibn Jawzi states, in As-Sifat, that God neither exists inside the world nor outside of it.[22] To him, "being inside or outside are concomitant of things located in space" i.e. what is outside or inside must be in a place, and, according to him, this is not applicable to God.[22] He writes:

Both [being in a place and outside a place] along with movement, rest, and other accidents are constitutive of bodies ... The divine essence does not admit of any created entity [e.g. place] within it or inhering in it.[22]

 
Front cover of Al-Radd 'Ala al-Muta'assib al-'Anid al-Mani' Min Thamm Yazid published by Dar ul-Kutub al-Ilmiyah

Works edit

Ibn al-Jawzi is perhaps the most prolific author in Islamic history. Al-Dhahabi states: "I have not known anyone amongst the 'ulama to have written as much as he (Ibn al-Jawzi) did.[2] Recently, Professor Abdul Hameed al-Aloojee, an Iraqi scholar conducted research on the extent of ibn al Jawzi's works and wrote a reference work in which he listed Ibn al Jawzees's works alphabetically, identifying the publishers and libraries where his unpublished manuscripts could be found. Some have suggested that he is the author of more than 700 works.[4]

In addition to the topic of religion, Ibn al-Jawzi wrote about medicine as well. Like the medicinal works of Al-Suyuti, Ibn al-Jawzi's book was almost exclusively based on Prophetic medicine rather than a synthesis of both Islamic and Greek medicine like the works of Al-Dhahabi. Ibn al-Jawzi's work focused primarily on diet and natural remedies for both serious ailments such as rabies and smallpox and simple conditions such as headaches and nosebleeds.[23]

Tomb edit

The tomb of Ibn Al-Jawzi is located at Baghdad, Iraq. The tomb is a simple green cement slab surrounded by rocks, and a paper sign on it indicating it is the tomb. In 2019 rumors spread about the tomb being removed after a photo was released showing the removal of the tomb. However, the Iraqi officials denied it.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Al-Dhahabi, Siyar A'lam al-Nubala'.
  2. ^ a b c . October 22, 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-10-22.
  3. ^ Robinson:2003:XV
  4. ^ a b . Sunnah.org. Archived from the original on 2020-02-22. Retrieved 2013-11-28.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Laoust, H., "Ibn al-D̲j̲awzī", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs.
  6. ^ a b Ibn Rajab, Dhayl ʿalā Ṭabaqāt al-ḥanābila, Cairo 1372/1953, i, 401
  7. ^ a b c d Ibn Rajab, Dhayl ʿalā Ṭabaqāt al-ḥanābila, Cairo 1372/1953, i, 404–405
  8. ^ Ibn al-Jawzi, Sincere Counsel to the Seekers of Sacred Knowledge, Daar Us-Sunnah Publications Birmingham (2011), p. 88
  9. ^ Ibn Rajab, Dhayl ʿalā Ṭabaqāt al-ḥanābila, Cairo 1372/1953, i, 399–434;Merlin Swartz, Ibn al-Jawzī’s Kitāb al-Quṣṣāṣ wa-’l-mudhakkirīn, Recherches publiées sous la direction de l’Institut de lettres orientales de Beyrouth, Série 1, Pensée arabe et musulmane, 47 (Beirut: Dar el-Machreq, 1971), 15.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Laoust, H., "Ibn al-D̲j̲awzī", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, ed. P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs.
  11. ^ a b c Boyle, J.A. (January 1, 1968). The Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. 5: The Saljuq and Mongol Periods (Volume 5). Cambridge University Press. p. 299. Talbis Iblis, by the Ash'ari theologian Ibn al-Jawzi, contains strong attacks on the Sufis, though the author makes a distinction between an older purer Sufism and the "modern" one,
  12. ^ Ibn Rajab, Dhayl ʿalā Ṭabaqāt al-ḥanābila, Cairo 1372/1953, i, 404
  13. ^ Ibn Rajab, Dhayl ʿalā Ṭabaqāt al-ḥanābila, Cairo 1372/1953, i, 402
  14. ^ Ibn Kat̲h̲īr, Bidāya, Cairo 1351-8/1932-9, xii, 28–30
  15. ^ a b Ibn al-Jawzī, The Life of Ibn Hanbal, XXIV.2, trans. Michael Cooperson (New York: New York University Press, 2016), p. 89
  16. ^ Jonathan A. C. Brown, "Faithful Dissenters: Sunni Skepticism about the Miracles of Saints," Journal of Sufi Studies 1 (2012), p. 162
  17. ^ Ibn al-Jawzi, Sifat al-safwa (Beirut ed. 1989/1409) p. 13, 17.
  18. ^ a b c d e "Error404".
  19. ^ Ibn al-Ahdal (1964). Ahmad Bakīr Mahmud (ed.). Kashf al-Ghata' 'an Haqa'iq al-Tawhid كشف الغطاء عن حقائق التوحيد (PDF) (in Arabic). Tunisia: Tunisian General Labour Union. p. 83. وكل هؤلاء الذين ذكرنا عقائدهم من أئمة الشافعية سوى القرشي والشاذلي فمالكيان أشعريان. ولنتبع ذلك بعقيدة المالكية وعقيدتين للحنفية ليعلم أن غالب أهل هذين المذهبين على مذهب الأشعري في العقائد، وبعض الحنبلية في الفروع يكونون على مذهب الأشعري في العقائد كالشيخ عبد القادر الجيلاني وابن الجوزي وغيرهما رضي الله عنهم. وقد تقدم وسيأتي أيضاً أن الأشعري والإمام أحمد كانا في الاعتقاد متفقين حتى حدث الخلاف من أتباعه القائلين بالحرف والصوت والجهة وغير ذلك فلهذا لم نذكر عقائد المخالفين واقتصرنا على عقائد أصحابنا الأشعرية ومن وافقهم من المالكية والحنفية رضي الله عنهم. فأما عقيدة المالكية فهي تأليف الشيخ الإمام الكبير الشهير أبي محمد عبد الله بن أبي زيد المالكي ذكرها في صدر كتابه الرسالة
  20. ^ a b Holtzman, Livnat. ""Does God Really Laugh?" – Appropriate and Inappropriate Descriptions of God in Islamic Traditionalist Theology" (PDF). Bar‐Ilan University, Ramat Gan. p. 188.
  21. ^ Holtzman, Livnat. ""Does God Really Laugh?" – Appropriate and Inappropriate Descriptions of God in Islamic Traditionalist Theology" (PDF). Bar‐Ilan University, Ramat Gan. p. 191.
  22. ^ a b c Swartz, Merlin. A Medieval Critique of Anthropomorphism, pg. 159. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 2001.
  23. ^ Emilie Savage-Smith, "Medicine." Taken from Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science, Volume 3: Technology, Alchemy and Life Sciences, pg. 928. Ed. Roshdi Rasheed. London: Routledge, 1996. ISBN 0-415-12412-3
  24. ^ Swartz, Merlin. A Medieval Critque of Anthropomorphism. Brill, 2001
  25. ^ ابن الجوزي، عبد الرحمن بن علي بن محمد،; الحرش، سليمان بن مسلم (2007). آداب الحسن البصري وزهده ومواعظه (in Arabic). دمشق: دار النوادر،. OCLC 4770455870.
  26. ^ "Zad al-Masir fi Ilm al-Tafsir 8 vol.4 books".
  27. ^ "شفق نيوز". شفق نيوز.

References edit

External links edit

  • Biodata at MuslimScholars.info
  • The Attributes of God 'Abd al-Rahman ibn al-Jawzi trans. Abdullah bin Hamid 'Ali published by Amal Press
  • (in French)
  • (in French)

jawzi, other, uses, disambiguation, ʿabd, raḥmān, ʿalī, muḥammad, faras, jawzī, often, referred, jawzī, arabic, ابن, الجوزي, jawzī, 1116, june, 1201, short, reverentially, imam, jawzī, some, sunni, muslims, muslim, jurisconsult, preacher, orator, heresiographe. For other uses see Ibn al Jawzi disambiguation ʿAbd al Raḥman b ʿAli b Muḥammad Abu l Faras h b al Jawzi 5 often referred to as Ibn al Jawzi Arabic ابن الجوزي Ibn al Jawzi ca 1116 16 June 1201 for short or reverentially as Imam Ibn al Jawzi by some Sunni Muslims was a Muslim jurisconsult preacher orator heresiographer traditionist historian judge hagiographer and philologist 5 who played an instrumental role in propagating the Hanbali school of orthodox Sunni jurisprudence in his native Baghdad during the twelfth century 5 During a life of great intellectual religious and political activity 5 Ibn al Jawzi came to be widely admired by his fellow Hanbalis for the tireless role he played in ensuring that that particular school historically the smallest of the four principal Sunni schools of law enjoy the same level of prestige often bestowed by rulers on the Maliki Shafi i and Hanafi rites 5 Imam Ibn al JawziA depiction of Baghdad from 1808 taken from the print collection in Travels in Asia and Africa etc ed J P Berjew British Library Ibn al Jawzi spent his entire life in this city in the twelfth century Jurisconsult Preacher Traditionist Shaykh of Islam Orator of Kings and Princes Imam of the HanbalitesVenerated inSunni Islam but particularly in the Hanbali school of jurisprudenceMajor shrineGreen Cement Tomb at Baghdad IraqIbn al JawziTitleShaykh al Islam 1 PersonalBornc 510 AH 1116 CEBaghdad Abbasid Caliphate now IraqDied12 Ramadan 597 AH 16 June 1201 aged approximately 84 Baghdad Abbasid Caliphate now IraqReligionIslamEraIslamic golden ageDenominationSunniJurisprudenceHanbaliMain interest s History Tafsir Hadith FiqhNotable work s Daf Shubah al TashbihMuslim leaderInfluenced Abd al Ghani al Maqdisi d 600 AH 2 Sibt ibn al Jawzi d 654 AH 3 Ibn Qudama al Maqdisi 2 Diya al Din al Maqdisi 4 Ibn al Jawzi received a very thorough education 5 during his adolescent years and was fortunate to train under some of that era s most renowned Baghdadi scholars including Ibn al Zag h uni d 1133 Abu Bakr al Dinawari d 1137 8 Sayyid Razzaq Ali Jilani d 1208 and Abu Manṣur al Jawaliki d 1144 5 6 Although Ibn al Jawzi s scholarly career continued to blossom over the next few years he became most famous during the reign of al Mustadi d 1180 the thirty third Abbasid caliph whose support for Hanbalism allowed Ibn al Jawzi to effectively become one of the most influential persons in Baghdad due to the caliph s approval of Ibn al Jawzi s public sermonizing to huge crowds in both pastoral and urban areas throughout Baghdad 7 In the vast majority of the public sermons delivered during al Mustadi s reign Ibn al Jawzi often presented a stanch defense of the prophet Muhammad s example and vigorously criticized all those whom he considered to be schismatics in the faith 7 At the same time Ibn al Jawzi s reputation as a scholar continued to grow due to the substantial role he played in managing many of the most important universities in the area 7 as well as on account of the sheer number of works he wrote during this period 7 As regards the latter point it is important to note that part of Ibn al Jawzi s legacy rests on his reputation for having been one of the most prolific writers of all time 5 with later scholars like Ibn Taymiyyah d 1328 studying over a thousand works written by Ibn al Jawzi during their years of training 5 As scholars have noted Ibn al Jawzi s prodigious corpus varying in length as it does 5 touches upon virtually all the great disciplines of classical Islamic study 5 Contents 1 Life 2 Views and thought 2 1 Polemics 2 2 Relics 2 3 Saints 2 4 Sufism 3 Creed 4 Theology 4 1 God is neither inside nor outside the Universe 5 Works 6 Tomb 7 See also 8 References 9 References 10 External linksLife editIbn al Jawzi was born between 507 and 12 H 1113 19 CE to a fairly wealthy family 5 in Baghdad which descended from Abu Bakr 8 9 His parents proceeded to give their son a thorough education 10 in all the principal disciplines of the period 10 whence Ibn al Jawzi had the good fortune of studying under such notable scholars of the time as Ibn al Zaghuni d 1133 Abu Bakr al Dinawari d 1137 8 Shaiykh Saiyed Razzaq Ali Gilani d 1208 Abu Manṣur al Jawaliki d 1144 5 Abu l Faḍl b al Naṣir d 1155 Abu Ḥakim al Nahrawani d 1161 and Abu Yaʿla the Younger d 1163 10 6 Additionally Ibn al Jawzi began to be heavily influenced by the works of other scholars he read but whom he had never met personally such as Abu Nu aym d 1038 a Shafi i Ashari mystic al Khatib al Baghdadi d 1071 a Hanbali who had changed to Shafi ism and the prominent Hanbali thinker Ibn Aqil d ca 1120 whom Ibn al Jawzi would both praise and criticize in his later writings 10 He was an adherent of the Ashari school of dialectical theology an aspect of his thought that would later distinguish him from many of his fellow Hanbali thinkers 11 In his early works he criticized speculation in theology in particular modernizing trends among the Sufis 11 Ibn al Jawzi began his career proper during the reign of al Muqtafi d 1160 the thirty first caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate whose Hanbali vizier Ibn Hubayra d 1165 served as a patron of Ibn al Jawzi s scholarship 10 Beginning his scholarly career as a teaching assistant to his mentor Abu Ḥakim al Nahrawani who taught Hanbali jurisprudence in two separate schools Ibn al Jawzi succeeded al Nahrawani as master of these two colleges after the latter s death in 1161 10 12 A year or so prior to this however Ibn al Jawzi had already begun his career as a preacher as Ibn Hubayra had given him free rein to deliver his passionate sermons every Friday in the vizer s own house 13 After al Muqtafi s death the succeeding caliph al Mustanjid d 1170 called upon Ibn al Jawzi to preach his sermons in the Caliph s Palace mosque one of the most prominent houses of worship in the whole of Baghdad during the three military interventions of the Fatimid Dynasty in the city 10 In these sermons Ibn al Jawzi is said to have vigorously defended the prophetic precedent and criticized not only all those whom he considered to be schismatics but also the jurists who were too blindly attached to their own schools of law 10 During the reign of the succeeding Abbasid caliph al Mustadi d 1180 Ibn al Jawzi began to be recognized as one of the most influential persons in Baghdad 10 As this particular ruler was especially partial to Hanbalism 10 Ibn al Jawzi was given free rein to promote Hanbalism by way of his preaching throughout Baghdad 10 The numerous sermons Ibn al Jawzi delivered from 1172 to 1173 cemented his reputation as the premier scholar in Baghdad at the time indeed the scholar soon began to be so appreciated for his gifts as an orator that al Mustadi even went so far as to have a special dais Arabic dikka constructed specially for Ibn al Jawzi in the Palace mosque 10 Ibn al Jawzi s stature as a scholar only continued to grow in the following years 10 By 1179 Ibn al Jawzi had written over one hundred and fifty works and was directing five colleges in Baghdad simultaneously 5 It was at this time that he told al Mustadi to engrave an inscription onto the widely venerated tomb of Ibn Hanbal d 855 the revered founder of the Hanbali rite which referred to the famed jurist as Imam 14 After the ascendancy of the new caliph al Nasir d 1235 to the Abbasid throne Ibn al Jawzi initially maintained amicable relations with the state power by way of his friendship with the caliph s Hanbali vizier Ibn Yunus d 1197 5 However after the latter s dismissal and arrest for unknown reasons the caliph appointed as his successor the Shia Ibn al Ḳaṣṣab d ca 1250 5 Although the reasons for the matter remain unclear in the historical record 5 al Nasir eventually sentenced Ibn al Jawzi to live under house arrest for five years 5 One of the possible reasons for this may be that Ibn al Jawzi s relationship with the caliph had soured after the scholar had written a direct refutation of the ruler s policy in a particular matter 5 After five years in exile Ibn al Jawzi was eventually set free due to the pleading of al Nasir s mother whom the various chronicles describe as a very devout woman who pleaded with her son to free the famous scholar 5 Soon after his return to Baghdad however Ibn al Jawzi died being seventy four years old 5 Views and thought editPolemics edit Ibn al Jawzi was a noted polemicist 5 and often attacked with great zeal the works of all those whom he deemed to be heretical innovators in the religion 5 His criticisms of other schools of thought appears most prominently in Talbis Iblis The Devil s Delusion one of the major works of Hanbali polemic 5 in which he staunchly critiqued not only numerous sects outside Sunni Islam such as the Mutazilites and the Kharijites but also particular schools of thought within Sunnism whom he believed had strayed from the right path 5 Due to some of Ibn al Jawzi s remarks against some of the wayward Sufis of his time in this work contemporary Muslim movements opposed to traditional Sufism such as Salafism and Wahhabism often cite the work as evidence of their position in the present day 5 Despite this scholars have noted how Ibn al Jawzi never actually attacks Sufism as such but always makes a clear distinction in his works between an older purer Sufism and what he deems to be corruptions in Sufi practice 11 It is clear that Ibn al Jawzi never intended his attacks on certain Sufi groups contemporaneous with him to constitute a condemnation of Sufism as a whole 5 Relics edit Ibn al Jawzi was an avid supporter of using the relics of Muhammad in personal devotion and supported the seeking of blessing through them in religious veneration This is evident from his approved citing of a tradition narrated by Ibn Hanbal s son Abdullah who recalled his father s devotion towards the Prophet s relics thus I saw my father take one of the Prophet s hairs place it over his mouth and kiss it I may have seen him place it over his eyes and dip it in water and then drink the water for a cure 15 In the same way Ibn al Jawzi also commended Ibn Hanbal for having drunk from the Prophet s bowl technically a second class relic in order to seek blessings from it 15 Saints edit Ibn al Jawzi supported the orthodox and widespread classical belief in the existence of saints as is evident from his major work on the lives of the early Muslim Sufi saints entitled Sifat al ṣafwa The Characteristic of the Elect actually an abridgment of Abu Nu aym s d 1038 Ḥilyat al awliyaʼ The Adornment of the Saints 5 in which he explicitly praises such important Sufis as Hasan of Basra d 728 Ibrahim ibn Adham d ca 782 Sufyan al Thawri d 778 Rabi a Basri d 801 Ma ruf Karkhi d ca 820 and Bishr the Barefoot d ca 850 among many others 5 While Ibn al Jawzi did criticize charlatans who masquerade as holy men he unreservedly states that true saints do not violate orthodox belief practice and law 16 Regarding saints Ibn al Jawzi said The saints and the righteous are the very purpose of all that exists al awliya wa al salihun hum al maqsud min al kawn they are those who learned and practiced with the reality of knowledge Those who practice what they know do with little in the world seek the next world remain ready to leave from one to the other with wakeful eyes and good provision as opposed to those renowned purely for their knowledge 17 Sufism edit Ibn al Jawzi evidently held that Sufism or tasawwuf was an integral aspect of Islamic practice As has been noted by scholars his Talbis Iblis which criticizes innovations in all the major Islamic sciences including tafsir and fiqh is by no means a rejection of Sufism as a whole 18 On the contrary the Hanbali jurist wrote many books on the merits of the early mystics and saints including Manaqib Rabi a al Adawiyya Manaqib Ma ruf al Karkhi Manaqib Ibrahim ibn Adham Manaqib Bishr al Hafi and others 18 Ibn al Jawzi was also a staunch supporter of the teachings of Ghazali and many of the former s works dealing with Sufism are influenced by Ghazali s most famous work the Iḥyaʾ ʿulum al din 18 As a matter of fact Ibn al Jawzi frequently adopted the actual methodology and language of Ghazali in his own works in addition to writing about the same subject matter 18 Among the topics Ibn al Jawzi covered in his mystical works were the meaning of passionate longing for God the taking of one s nafs to account for its deeds the berating of the nafs for its shortcomings and the castigating of the nafs 18 Creed editIbn al Ahdal ar d 855 1451 in his Kashf al Ghata an Haqa iq al Tawhid Arabic كشف الغطاء عن حقائق التوحيد considered him one of the Athari scholars along with Abd al Qadir al Jilani However unlike other Hanbalis he did not totally reject the mutakalimun and accepted Kalam and Ta wil when needed depending on the person 19 Theology editIbn al Jawzi is famous for the theological stance that he took against other Hanbalites of the time in particular Ibn al Zaghuni and al Qadi Abu Ya la He believed that these and other Hanbalites had gone to extremes in affirming God s Attributes so much so that he accused them of tarnishing the reputation of Hanbalites and making it synonymous with extreme anthropomorphism likening God to his creation Ibn al Jawzi stated that They believed that He has a form and a face in addition to His Self They believed that He has two eyes a mouth a uvula and molars a face which is light and splendor two hands including the palms of hands fingers including the little fingers and the thumbs a back and two legs divided into thighs and shanks 20 And he continued his attack on Abu Ya la by stating that Whoever confirms that God has molars as a divine attribute has absolutely no knowledge of Islam 21 Ibn al Jawzi s most famous work in this regard is his Baz al ashab al munqadd ala muhalifi al madhab The Gray Falcon Which Attacks the Offenders of the Hanbali School 20 God is neither inside nor outside the Universe edit Ibn Jawzi states in As Sifat that God neither exists inside the world nor outside of it 22 To him being inside or outside are concomitant of things located in space i e what is outside or inside must be in a place and according to him this is not applicable to God 22 He writes Both being in a place and outside a place along with movement rest and other accidents are constitutive of bodies The divine essence does not admit of any created entity e g place within it or inhering in it 22 nbsp Front cover of Al Radd Ala al Muta assib al Anid al Mani Min Thamm Yazid published by Dar ul Kutub al IlmiyahWorks editIbn al Jawzi is perhaps the most prolific author in Islamic history Al Dhahabi states I have not known anyone amongst the ulama to have written as much as he Ibn al Jawzi did 2 Recently Professor Abdul Hameed al Aloojee an Iraqi scholar conducted research on the extent of ibn al Jawzi s works and wrote a reference work in which he listed Ibn al Jawzees s works alphabetically identifying the publishers and libraries where his unpublished manuscripts could be found Some have suggested that he is the author of more than 700 works 4 In addition to the topic of religion Ibn al Jawzi wrote about medicine as well Like the medicinal works of Al Suyuti Ibn al Jawzi s book was almost exclusively based on Prophetic medicine rather than a synthesis of both Islamic and Greek medicine like the works of Al Dhahabi Ibn al Jawzi s work focused primarily on diet and natural remedies for both serious ailments such as rabies and smallpox and simple conditions such as headaches and nosebleeds 23 A Great Collection of Fabricated Traditions Arabic الموضوعات الكبرى Kitab Akhbar as Sifat 24 Sifatu al Safwah 5 parts reworking of Hilyat al Awliya by Abu Nu aym al Isfahani Adab al Ḥasan al Baṣri wa Zuhduh wa Mawaʿiẓuh آداب الحسن البصري وزهده ومواعظه The Manners of al Hasan al Basri his Asceticism and his Exhortations 25 Zad al Masir fi Ilm al Tafsir 26 Talbis Iblis Tadhkirah Uli Al Basair fi Ma rifah Al Kabair Gharib Al Ḥadith Ahkam Al Nisa Hifdh Al Umr Bahr Al Damou Tomb editThe tomb of Ibn Al Jawzi is located at Baghdad Iraq The tomb is a simple green cement slab surrounded by rocks and a paper sign on it indicating it is the tomb In 2019 rumors spread about the tomb being removed after a photo was released showing the removal of the tomb However the Iraqi officials denied it 27 See also editSibt ibn al Jawzi Ibn Aqil Notable Hanbali Scholars List of Muslim historians Asad MayhaniReferences edit Al Dhahabi Siyar A lam al Nubala a b c IslamicAwakening Com Ibn al Jawzi A Lifetime of Da wah October 22 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 10 22 Robinson 2003 XV a b Ibn Al Jawzi Sunnah org Archived from the original on 2020 02 22 Retrieved 2013 11 28 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Laoust H Ibn al D j awzi in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Edited by P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs a b Ibn Rajab Dhayl ʿala Ṭabaqat al ḥanabila Cairo 1372 1953 i 401 a b c d Ibn Rajab Dhayl ʿala Ṭabaqat al ḥanabila Cairo 1372 1953 i 404 405 Ibn al Jawzi Sincere Counsel to the Seekers of Sacred Knowledge Daar Us Sunnah Publications Birmingham 2011 p 88 Ibn Rajab Dhayl ʿala Ṭabaqat al ḥanabila Cairo 1372 1953 i 399 434 Merlin Swartz Ibn al Jawzi s Kitab al Quṣṣaṣ wa l mudhakkirin Recherches publiees sous la direction de l Institut de lettres orientales de Beyrouth Serie 1 Pensee arabe et musulmane 47 Beirut Dar el Machreq 1971 15 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Laoust H Ibn al D j awzi in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition ed P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs a b c Boyle J A January 1 1968 The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 5 The Saljuq and Mongol Periods Volume 5 Cambridge University Press p 299 Talbis Iblis by the Ash ari theologian Ibn al Jawzi contains strong attacks on the Sufis though the author makes a distinction between an older purer Sufism and the modern one Ibn Rajab Dhayl ʿala Ṭabaqat al ḥanabila Cairo 1372 1953 i 404 Ibn Rajab Dhayl ʿala Ṭabaqat al ḥanabila Cairo 1372 1953 i 402 Ibn Kat h ir Bidaya Cairo 1351 8 1932 9 xii 28 30 a b Ibn al Jawzi The Life of Ibn Hanbal XXIV 2 trans Michael Cooperson New York New York University Press 2016 p 89 Jonathan A C Brown Faithful Dissenters Sunni Skepticism about the Miracles of Saints Journal of Sufi Studies 1 2012 p 162 Ibn al Jawzi Sifat al safwa Beirut ed 1989 1409 p 13 17 a b c d e Error404 Ibn al Ahdal 1964 Ahmad Bakir Mahmud ed Kashf al Ghata an Haqa iq al Tawhid كشف الغطاء عن حقائق التوحيد PDF in Arabic Tunisia Tunisian General Labour Union p 83 وكل هؤلاء الذين ذكرنا عقائدهم من أئمة الشافعية سوى القرشي والشاذلي فمالكيان أشعريان ولنتبع ذلك بعقيدة المالكية وعقيدتين للحنفية ليعلم أن غالب أهل هذين المذهبين على مذهب الأشعري في العقائد وبعض الحنبلية في الفروع يكونون على مذهب الأشعري في العقائد كالشيخ عبد القادر الجيلاني وابن الجوزي وغيرهما رضي الله عنهم وقد تقدم وسيأتي أيضا أن الأشعري والإمام أحمد كانا في الاعتقاد متفقين حتى حدث الخلاف من أتباعه القائلين بالحرف والصوت والجهة وغير ذلك فلهذا لم نذكر عقائد المخالفين واقتصرنا على عقائد أصحابنا الأشعرية ومن وافقهم من المالكية والحنفية رضي الله عنهم فأما عقيدة المالكية فهي تأليف الشيخ الإمام الكبير الشهير أبي محمد عبد الله بن أبي زيد المالكي ذكرها في صدر كتابه الرسالة a b Holtzman Livnat Does God Really Laugh Appropriate and Inappropriate Descriptions of God in Islamic Traditionalist Theology PDF Bar Ilan University Ramat Gan p 188 Holtzman Livnat Does God Really Laugh Appropriate and Inappropriate Descriptions of God in Islamic Traditionalist Theology PDF Bar Ilan University Ramat Gan p 191 a b c Swartz Merlin A Medieval Critique of Anthropomorphism pg 159 Leiden Brill Publishers 2001 Emilie Savage Smith Medicine Taken from Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science Volume 3 Technology Alchemy and Life Sciences pg 928 Ed Roshdi Rasheed London Routledge 1996 ISBN 0 415 12412 3 Swartz Merlin A Medieval Critque of Anthropomorphism Brill 2001 ابن الجوزي عبد الرحمن بن علي بن محمد الحرش سليمان بن مسلم 2007 آداب الحسن البصري وزهده ومواعظه in Arabic دمشق دار النوادر OCLC 4770455870 Zad al Masir fi Ilm al Tafsir 8 vol 4 books شفق نيوز شفق نيوز References edit nbsp Arabic Wikisource has original text related to this article Ibn Al Jawzi Robinson Chase F 2003 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 62936 5External links editBiodata at MuslimScholars info The Attributes of God Abd al Rahman ibn al Jawzi trans Abdullah bin Hamid Ali published by Amal Press The Most Comprehensive Biographical Note of Ibn al Jawzi online in French Importance of attachment to the Qur an by Imam Ibn Al Jawzi in French Refutation of anthropomorphism by Imam Ibn Al JawziPortals nbsp Biography nbsp Islam nbsp Iraq Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ibn al Jawzi amp oldid 1175296692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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