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Báb

The Báb (born ʿAlí Muḥammad; /ˈæli mˈhæməd/; Persian: علی محمد; 20 October 1819 – 9 July 1850) was the founder of Bábi Faith, and one of the central figures of the Baháʼí Faith. He was a merchant from Shiraz in Qajar Iran who, in 1844 at the age of 25, began the Bábi Faith. In the next six years, he gradually and progressively revealed his claim in his extensive writings to be a Manifestation of God, of a status as great as Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad, receiving revelations as profound as the Torah, Gospel, and Quran.[1][2][a] This new revelation, he claimed, would release the creative energies and capacities necessary for the establishment of global unity and peace.[4]

The Báb
Born
ʿAlí Muḥammad

(1819-10-20)20 October 1819
Died9 July 1850(1850-07-09) (aged 30)
Cause of deathExecution by firing squad
Resting placeShrine of the Báb
32°48′52″N 34°59′14″E / 32.81444°N 34.98722°E / 32.81444; 34.98722
NationalityIranian
Occupation(s)Merchant
Religious leader
Known forManifestation of God and a central figure in Baháʼí Faith
Founder of Bábism
MovementBábism
SpouseKhadíjih-Sultán (1842–1850)
ChildrenAhmad (1843–1843)
Parent(s)Mirzá Muhammad Ridá (father)
Fátimih Bagum (mother)
RelativesAfnán

He referred to himself by the traditional Muslim title "Báb" (meaning the gate)[b] although it was apparent from the context that he intended by this term a spiritual claim very different from any which had previously been associated with it.[6] He proclaimed that the central purpose of his mission was to prepare for the coming of a spiritual luminary greater than himself–the promised one of the world’s great religions; he referred to this promised deliverer as "he whom God will make manifest".[7] The Báb was the "gateway" to this messianic figure, whose message would be carried throughout the world.[8]

The Báb composed numerous letters and books in which he abrogated Islamic laws and traditions, establishing a new religion and introducing a new social order focused on unity, love, and service to others.[9][5][10] He encouraged the learning of arts and sciences,[11] modernizing education,[12] and improving the status of women.[13] He introduced the concept of progressive revelation, highlighting the continuity and renewal of religion.[14] He also emphasized ethics,[15] independent investigation of truth, and human nobility.[16] Additionally, he provided prescriptions to regulate marriage, divorce, and inheritance, and set forth rules for a future Bábí society, although these were never implemented.[11] Throughout, the Báb always discussed his own revelation and laws in the context of the aforementioned promised figure. Unlike previous religions, which sporadically alluded to promised figures, the primary focus of the Bayan, the foundational text of the Bábí faith, was to prepare for the arrival of the promised one.[17]

The Báb was born in Shiraz on 20 October 1819, to a family of sayyids of Husaynid lineage, most of whom were engaged in mercantile activities in Shiraz and Bushehr.[18] Though he was popular among the lower classes, the poor and the urban merchants, artisans and some villagers,[19] he faced opposition from the orthodox clergy and the government, which eventually executed him and thousands of his followers, who were known as Bábís.[20][c]

When the Báb was executed for apostasy, he was tied up in a public square in Tabriz and faced a firing squad of 750 rifles. Following the first volley, the Báb was discovered to be missing and later found and returned to the square. He was eventually killed by the second volley. Accounts differ on the details, but all agree that the first volley failed to kill him.[d] This widely documented event increased interest in his message.[22] His remains were secretly stored and transported until they were interred in 1909 into the shrine built for them by ʻAbdu'l-Bahá on the slopes of Mount Carmel.

To Baháʼís, the Báb fills a similar role as Elijah in Judaism or John the Baptist in Christianity: a forerunner or founder of their own religion.[23] Adherence to the Báb as a divine messenger has survived into modern times in the form of the 8-million-member Baháʼí Faith,[24] whose founder, Baháʼu'lláh, claimed in 1863 to be the fulfillment of the Báb's prophecy. The majority of Bábí adherents converted and became Baháʼís by the end of the 19th century.[25] The Baháʼís considered him as a Manifestation of God, like Adam, Abraham, Moses, Zoroaster, Krishna, the Buddha, Jesus, Muhammad and Baháʼu'lláh.[26]

Background edit

Early life edit

 
Calligraphic exercise of the Báb written before ten years old.

The Báb was born on 20 October 1819 (1 Muharram 1235 AH/27 Mehr 1198 SH), in Shiraz to a middle-class merchant of the city and given the name ʿAlí Muḥammad.[23] He was a Sayyid, descendant of Muhammad, with both parents tracing their lineage through Husayn ibn Ali.[27] His father was Muhammad Riḍá, and his mother was Fátimih (1800–1881), a daughter of a prominent Shiraz merchant. She later became a Baháʼí. His father died when he was quite young, and his maternal uncle Hájí Mírzá Siyyid ʿAlí, a merchant, reared him.[28][29]

In Shiraz, his uncle sent him to a maktab primary school, where he remained for six or seven years.[18] In contrast to the formal, orthodox theology which dominated the school curriculum of the time, which included the study of jurisprudence and Arabic grammar, the Báb from a young age felt inclined towards unconventional subjects like mathematics and calligraphy, which were little studied. The Bab's preoccupation with spirituality, creativity and imagination also angered his teachers and was not tolerated in the atmosphere of the 19th-century Persian school system.[30] This led the Báb to become disillusioned with the education system, he later instructs adults to treat children with dignity, to allow children to have toys and engage in play[31] and to never show anger or harshness to their students.[32]

Sometime between the ages 15 and 20 he joined his uncle in the family business, a trading house, and became a merchant in the city of Bushehr, Iran, near the Persian Gulf.[28] As a merchant, he was renowned for his honesty and trustworthiness in his business, which was focused on trade with India, Oman, and Bahrain.[33] Some of his earlier writings suggest that he did not enjoy the business and instead applied himself to the study of religious literature.[18]

Marriage edit

In 1842, at age 23 and following his mother's wishes, he married 20-year-old Khadíjih-Sultán Bagum (1822–1882), the daughter of a prominent merchant in Shíráz.[34] The marriage proved a happy one, though their only child — a boy named Ahmad — died the year he was born (1843)[35] and Khadijih never conceived again. The young couple occupied a modest house in Shiraz along with the Báb's mother. Later, Khadijih became a Baháʼí.[35]

Shaykhi movement edit

In the 1790s in Iraq, Shaykh Ahmad (1753–1826) began a religious school of thought within Shia Islam. His followers, who became known as Shaykhis, were expecting the imminent return of divine guidance through the appearance of the Mahdi, the Hidden Imam, or a deputy of the Hidden Imam. He took a less-literalist approach to Islamic teachings, for example teaching that the material body of Muhammad did not ascend during the Mi'raj,[36] and that the expected Resurrection of the Dead was spiritual in nature.[37] Shaykh Ahmad came into conflict with the orthodox Shia theologians of the time and was denounced as an infidel in 1824.[38]

After Shaykh Ahmad's death, leadership passed to Kazim Rashti (1793–1843), and emphasis was placed on the year 1260 AH (1844 CE), one thousand years lunar years after the twelfth Imam went into occultation.[39] In 1841 the Báb went on pilgrimage to Iraq and stayed for seven months mostly in and around Karbala,[40] where he attended lectures of Kazim Rashti.[40] As of his death in December 1843, Kazim Rashti counselled his followers to leave their homes to seek the Mahdi, who, according to his prophecies, would soon appear.[28] One of these followers, Mullá Husayn, after keeping vigil for 40 days in a mosque, travelled to Shiraz, where he met the Báb.[41]

Personality and appearance edit

Sources commonly describe the Báb as gentle, precocious, or gifted with great intelligence.[23] One of his contemporary followers described him as:

...very taciturn, and [he] would never utter a word unless it was absolutely necessary. He did not even answer our questions. He was constantly absorbed in his own thoughts, and was preoccupied with repetition of his prayers and verses. He is described as a handsome man with a thin beard, dressed in clean clothes, wearing a green shawl and a black turban.[e]

An Irish physician described him as "a very mild and delicate-looking man, rather small in stature and very fair for a Persian, with a melodious soft voice, which struck me much".[42] Shoghi Effendi notes "the gentle, the youthful and irresistible person of the Báb" and praises him as being "matchless in His meekness, imperturbable in His serenity, magnetic in His utterance"[43] This personality has been described as having "captivated many of those who met him".[44]

Life as a religious leader edit

The Báb's mission as a religious leader began with a dream in which he drank seven drops of blood dripping from the lacerated throat of Imam Husayn — a significant martyr and symbol of sacrifice in Shia Islam.[34][33] Although previously inclined toward sharing the Qur'an, it was after this dream that he was able to write his own verses and prayers, claiming divine inspiration. In April 1844, his wife Khadijih became the first to believe in his revelation.[45]

Declaration to Mullá Husayn edit

 
The room where the Declaration of the Báb took place on the evening of 22 May 1844, in his house in Shiraz.

The Báb's first religiously inspired experience, claimed and witnessed by his wife, is dated to about the evening of 3 April 1844.[45] The Báb's first public connection with his sense of a mission came with the arrival of Mullá Husayn in Shiraz. On the night of 22 May Mullá Husayn was invited by the Báb to his home[f] where Mullá Husayn told him of his search for the possible successor to Kazim Rashti, the Promised One. The Báb claimed this, and to be the bearer of divine knowledge.[18] Mullá Husayn became the first to accept the Báb's claims to be an inspired figure and a likely successor to Kazim Rashti.[28][18] The Báb had replied satisfactorily to all of Mullá Husayn's questions and had written in his presence, with extreme rapidity, a long tafsir, commentary, on surah "Yusuf", known as the Qayyúmu'l-Asmáʼ and considered the Báb's first revealed work.[28] The date has been adopted as a Baháʼí Holy Day.

Letters of the Living edit

Mullá Husayn became the Báb's first disciple. Within five months, seventeen other disciples of Kazim Rashti recognized the Báb as a Manifestation of God.[46] Among them was a woman, Fátimih Zarrín Táj Barag͟háni, a poet, who later received the name of Táhirih, the Pure. These 18 disciples later became known as the Letters of the Living (each soul containing one letter of the Spirit of God, which combine to form the Word) and given the task of spreading the new faith (understood as the return or continuation of the one Faith of Abraham) across Iran and Iraq.[18] The Báb emphasized the spiritual station of these 18 individuals, who, along with himself, made the first "Unity" of his religion[47] according to the Arabic term wāḥid, unity, that has a numerical value of 19 using abjad numerals. The Báb's book, the Persian Bayán, gives the metaphorical identity of the Letters of the Living as the Fourteen Infallibles of Twelver Shiʿi Islam: Muhammad, the Twelve Imams, and Fatimah, and the four archangels,[47] paralleling the first followers of Christ.

Travels and imprisonment edit

After the eighteen Letters of the Living recognized him, the Báb and Quddús left on a pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina, the sacred cities of Islam.[18] At the Kaaba in Mecca, the Báb publicly claimed to be the Qa'im,[48] and wrote to the Sharif of Mecca, the Custodian of the Kaaba, proclaiming his mission. After their pilgrimage, the Báb and Quddús returned to Bushehr, where they last saw each other. Quddús' travel to Shiraz brought the Báb's claim to the attention of the governor, Husayn Khan, who tortured Quddús and summoned the Báb to Shiraz in June 1845. The Imam-Jum'ih of Shiraz questioned Báb about his claims. He denied that he was the representative of the Qá'im or an intermediary to the faithful; the Báb later repeated the same in front of a congregation at the Vakil Mosque.[49] This renunciation saved him from immediate execution.[50] According to Abbas Amanat in conformity with his own policy of prudence during the early stages of his mission, the Báb wrote a statement, apparently under pressure, renouncing his claims to the position of Bábiya (gatehood) and disowning those who advocated such beliefs about him.[51]

The Báb was placed under house arrest at the home of his uncle until a cholera epidemic broke out in the city in September 1846.[18] Once released he departed for Isfahan. There, many came to see him at the house of the Imam-Jum'ih, who became sympathetic. After an informal gathering where the Báb debated the local clergy and displayed his speed in producing instantaneous verses, his popularity soared.[52] After the death of the governor of Isfahan, Manouchehr Khan Gorji, his supporter, pressure from the clergy of the province led to Mohammad Shah Qajar ordering the Báb to Tehran in January 1847.[53] After spending several months in a camp outside Tehran, and before the Báb could meet the Shah, the Prime Minister sent the Báb to Tabriz in the northwestern corner of the country, to his confinement.[18]

 
Fortress of Maku, Iran (2008)

After 40 days in Tabriz, the Báb transferred to the fortress of Maku, Iran in the province of Azerbaijan near the Turkish border. During his incarceration there, the Báb began his most important work, the Persian Bayán, that remained unfinished. Because of the Báb's growing popularity in Maku, even the governor of Maku converting, the prime minister transferred him to the fortress of Chihríq in April 1848.[28] There too the Báb's popularity grew, and his jailors relaxed restrictions on him.

Trial in Tabríz edit

In June 1848, the Báb was brought from Chihríq to Tabríz to face trial for apostasy in front of a body of Islamic clergy. On the way, he spent 10 days in the town of Urmia, where the only known portrait of him was made, a copy of which was later sent to Baháʼu'lláh and is still held in the International Archives at the Baháʼí World Centre.[54]

The trial, attended by the Crown Prince, occurred in July 1848 and involved numerous local clergy. They questioned the Báb about the nature of his claims, his teachings, and demanded that he produce miracles to prove his divine authority. They admonished him to recant his claims. There are nine extant eyewitness reports of the trial, of which several may originate from an earlier source. Six of the reports are from Muslim accounts and portray the Báb in an unfavorable light.[55] There are 62 questions found in the nine sources, however eighteen occur in one source, fifteen in two, eight in three, five in four, thirteen in five, and three in six. Not including "yes" and "he did not answer", only thirty-five answers remain, of which ten occur in one source, eight in two, six in three, three in four, two in five, five in six. Only one answer is found in all nine eyewitness sources, where the Báb states that "I am that person you have been awaiting for one thousand years."[55]

The trial did not bring a decisive result. Some clergy called for capital punishment, but the government pressured them to issue a lenient judgement because the Báb was popular. The government asked medical experts to declare the Báb insane to prevent his execution. It is also likely that the government as a face-saving measure and to appease the religious clergy may have spread rumours that the Báb recanted.[56]

The Shaykh al-Islām, a champion of the anti-Bábist campaign, not at the Báb's trial, issued a conditional death sentence if the Báb was found to be sane. A fatwa was issued establishing the Báb's apostasy and stated, "The repentance of an incorrigible apostate is not accepted, and the only thing which has caused the postponement of thy execution is a doubt as to thy sanity of mind."[56]

The crown prince's physician, William Cormick, examined the Báb and complied with the government's request to find grounds for clemency.[55] The physician's opinion saved the Báb from execution for a time, but the clergy insisted that he face corporal punishment instead, so the Báb suffered foot whipping – 20 lashes to the bottoms of his feet.[56]

The unsigned and undated official government report states that because of his harsh beating, the Báb orally and in writing recanted, apologized, and stated that he would not continue to advance claims of divinity.[57] The document of his alleged recantation was written shortly after his trial in Tabriz.[55] Some authors theorise that the assertions were made to embarrass the Báb and undermine his credibility with the public, and that the language of this document is very different from the Báb's usual style, and so prepared by the authorities.[56]

Orientalist Edward Granville Browne received copies of the trial documents from Hippolyte Dreyfus-Barney [fr], the first French Baha'i. A facsimile of the recantation is published in Browne's Materials for the Study of the Babi Religion, where he states, "[The document], unsigned and undated, was claimed to be in the Báb's handwriting and consists of a complete recantation and renunciation of any superhuman claim which he may have advanced or have appeared to advance. There is nothing to show to whom it is addressed, or whether it is the recantation referred to in the last paragraph of the [government report] or another. The handwriting, though graceful, is not easily legible..."[58] But Amanat considers the document, which has no signature and date, to be fabricated. According to Amanat the document does not match the writing style of the Báb and was forged by the government officials of Tabriz to discredit him and please the Shah.[59] Amanat believes that in the best scenario, the document may have been prepared by the government officials, but the Báb refused to sign it.[59] He stood his ground despite great pressure to recant and gain his freedom.[60][61][62] Consequently he was executed by a firing squad in public in Tabriz to crush the Bábí movement and to display the restored power of the Qajar government under the new minister, Amir Kabir.[60]

After the trial, the Báb was ordered back to the fortress of Chehríq.

Proclamation edit

 
The Báb stood on this pulpit in the Masjid-i-Vakíl, addressing the populace of Shiraz in September 1846

In his early writings (1844–1847), the Báb appears to identify himself as a gate (báb), a reference to the Four Deputies of the Hidden Imam, the last of whom went into occultation in 941 CE. In his later writings, the Báb more explicitly proclaimed his station as that of the Hidden Imam and a new messenger from God.[63][64]

The nature of the Báb's different claims and how they were understood to various groups is complicated. Detractors argue that the changing claims represent the Báb's own changing aspirations, while supporters describe the issue as a prudent and gradual disclosure of a coherent identity.[65] For example, the Báb's first writing was designed in the same style as the Qur'an, something that would have been easily recognized at the time as a claim to revelation.[65] Saiedi writes:

His early writings prior to His exile to Maku are ambiguous about His real claim in order to prepare the people for the subsequent unveiling of His true station.[64]

According to Manuchehri, the approach of laying claim to a lower position was intended to create a sense of anticipation for the appearance of the Hidden Imam, as well to avoid persecution and imprisonment, because a public proclamation of mahdi status could bring a swift penalty of death. In the early months of his public declarations, the adoption of a cautious policy had essentially achieved maximum attention with minimum controversy.[50]

The gradual unfolding of claims caused some confusion, both among the public and for some of his followers. Some early believers saw him as a messenger from God with divine authority, and this resulted in disagreement within the Bábí community.[50] Even though the Báb had intended to convey his message with discretion, many of his followers such as Táhirih openly declared the coming of the promised Hidden Imam and Mahdi.[50]

The Qayyūm al-asmā, the first major work of the Báb, identifies its author as a Messenger of God, in the line of Moses, Jesus, Muhammad and those who had preceded them. This commentary is addressed to the whole of humankind, with many references to the peoples of the earth, and of the rulers of East and West, inviting them to accept a new, “wondrous” Cause of spiritual and social renewal.[66] In many places in this commentary, Siyyid-Ali Muhammad referred to himself by the traditional Muslim title “Báb” (Gate) although it was apparent from the context that he intended by this term a spiritual claim very different from any which had previously been associated with it.[6] At one level, his use of the title “Gate” was designed to lessen the challenging impact of his claim to be an independent Messenger of God, while at another, for those who grasped the implications of his claims, this title pointed to his role as the forerunner or “Gate of Ba”—a reference to Baha’u’llah, the promised universal messenger anticipated by the world’s major scriptures.[67][g]

Execution edit

 
The barrack square in Tabriz, where the Báb was executed

In mid-1850 a new prime minister, Amir Kabir,[68] ordered the execution of the Báb, probably because of various Bábí insurrections' defeats and because the movement's popularity appeared to be waning. The Báb was brought back to Tabriz from Chehriq for an execution by firing squad. The night before his execution, while being conducted to his cell, a young Bábí, Muhammad-Ali (Anis) from Zonuz, begged for martyrdom with him, then was immediately arrested and placed in the same cell as the Báb.

On the morning of 9 July 1850 (28 Sha'ban 1266 AH), the Báb was taken to the courtyard of the barracks where he was imprisoned. Thousands of people gathered to watch his execution. The Báb and Anis were suspended on a wall and a large firing squad of soldiers prepared to shoot.[18] Numerous eye-witness reports, including those of Western diplomats, recount the result.[h] The order was given to fire. Accounts differ on the details, but all agree that the first volley failed to kill the Báb; the bullets had instead cut the rope suspending them from the wall.[i] A second firing squad was brought in and a second order to fire given. This time the Báb was killed.[18] In Bábí and Baháʼí tradition, the failure of the first volley to kill the Báb is believed to be a miracle. The remains of the Báb and Anis were thrown into a ditch and assumed eaten by dogs, an action condemned by Justin Sheil, then British Minister in Tehran.[18]

The remains were clandestinely rescued by a handful of Bábís and then hidden. Over time the remains were secretly transported according to the instructions of Baháʼu'lláh and then ʿAbdu'l-Bahá by way of Isfahan, Kirmanshah, Baghdad, Damascus, Beirut, and then by sea to Acre on the plain below Mount Carmel in 1899.[69] On 21 March 1909, the remains were interred in a special tomb, the Shrine of the Báb, erected for this purpose by ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, on Mount Carmel in present-day Haifa, Israel. In its vicinity, the Baháʼí World Centre welcomes visitors to tour the gardens.

Teachings and legacy edit

At the heart of the teachings of the Báb was a call for the reconciliation of all members of the human family, marking the advent of a new stage in human history:[70][71] "be as the leaves and fruit of the same tree, that haply ye may become a source of comfort to one another… It behooveth you all to be one indivisible people…".[72] A universal ethical perspective was thus emphasized by the Báb, including the moral imperative of making no distinction between believers and nonbelievers and of recognizing the objective needs of others.[73] The intent of these teachings was to lay the basis “for the revolutionary transformation of humankind.”[74]

Ultimately, the Bab explained that human happiness and well-being was dependent on treating other human beings in accord with the Golden Rule, especially refraining from causing others sadness, and in bringing all things, whether in nature or man-made, to a state of perfection, a process of imbuing all things with beauty and spiritual purpose.[75][76] In this way, civilization itself becomes a sacred undertaking; a task that can only be understood, the Bab indicates, by fixing one’s “gaze on the Order of Baha’u’llah.”[77] As underscored by Saiedi, “the wider importance of the Bab’s writings lie in their inextricable relation to those of Baha’u’llah…”[78]

The teachings of the Báb offer new interpretations of the notions of God, religion, and prophets, and reinterpret religious concepts such as heaven, hell, and resurrection accordingly.[79] Progressive revelation, continuity, and renewal of religion,[14] modernizing education,[12] improving the status of women,[13] abolishing the priesthood,[16] and emphasizing ethics,[15] independent investigation of truth, and human nobility are among the key teachings of the Báb.[16] Another fundamental focus of his teachings is his emphasis on the advent of a messianic figure, whom he frequently refers to as "he whom God shall make manifest."[80] The Báb consistently discusses his own revelation and laws in the context of this promised figure. Unlike previous religions where references to promised figures were only occasional and hinted at through allusions, the main focus of the Bayan, the mother book of the Bábí dispensation, is preparing the way for "he whom God shall make manifest."[17]

Key Principles edit

A core Bábí belief is the concept of continuous and evolving religion.[81] God progressively reveals himself through prophets, and as humanity advances, divine teachings become more comprehensive and sophisticated.[82] Each religion arises in response to the specific social needs of its time, surpassing its predecessor but ultimately leading to the emergence of a still more perfect religion.[83][14] These prophets are seen as perfect reflections of God in the world.[14] He emphasizes the unity of prophets, comparing them to mirrors reflecting the same sun (God).[14] Additionally, the Báb asserts that divine revelation is an ongoing process, with new prophets appearing throughout history.[14]

The Báb reinterprets resurrection not as the end of the world but as the decline of an old religion and its revival through a new revelation. He uses the metaphor of seasons to explain this cyclical progression.[79] He argues that just as a tree dies in winter but reemerges in spring, so too do religions experience periods of decline and renewal.[79] This concept embraces historical change and human agency, promoting a forward-looking perspective.[79]

The Báb views religion as a dynamic phenomenon resulting from the interaction between God's will and humanity's historical stage. He rejects the traditional view of religion as an absolute and unchanging imposition of God's will.[14] Religion, like humanity, is a dynamic and progressive reality.[14]

Unlike earlier religions with occasional hints of future prophets, the Bábí scripture, the Bayan, revolves around a messianic figure greater than himself, referred to as "He Whom God Shall Make Manifest."[17] The Báb positions his own mission as preparing the way for this promised one.[80] This figure is described as possessing all divine attributes and having authority equal to God's.[84] The Báb encourages independent investigation to recognize the promised one based on their character and actions, not external factors.[85] He warns against rejecting the promised one based on the Bábí scriptures, mirroring how past religions opposed new prophets.[85]

The Báb emphasizes the inherent capacity of humans to think critically and engage in independent investigation of truth.[16] He abolishes the clergy and emphasizes the words of revelation, not miracles, as the true test of a prophet's legitimacy. He removes the power structure of priests and prohibits congregational prayer led by clerics, arguing that worship requires no human mediation.[16] He views the clergy as a major cause of religious corruption.[12]

The Báb strongly advocates for rationality, science, and efficient education.[12] He envisions a progressive society built on well-organized schools, teaching ethics, respect for diverse opinions, scientific inquiry, and the role of women in society. He encourages the learning of natural sciences and proposes educational reforms like eliminating archaic topics and using simpler language.[12]

The Bábí faith significantly improved the lives of women compared to prevailing norms.[13][86] He generally treats women and men equally in his laws,[13] alleviating burdens imposed by Islamic law.[13] He discourages polygamy, forbids forced marriage and concubinage, and grants women greater control over their lives.[86] He encourages women's education and sees them as equals to men in the eyes of God.[87] His support for Táhirih, a leading female disciple who challenged social norms, further exemplifies his commitment to improving women's rights.[13]

The Báb emphasizes forgiveness, kindness, and doing good to others, even those who wrong you. He advocates for personal improvement, environmental preservation, and creating a beautiful and prosperous society.[15] He forbids violence and promotes peaceful coexistence through kindness and gentle manners.[12] Overall, the Báb envisioned a community centered on unity, love, service, and the rejection of violence.[15]

Succession edit

 
Shrine of the Báb, Haifa

Because of the prominent social position of Bahá'u'lláh, a leading Bábi figure of the time, and that a death warrant had already been once issued against him (by Mohammad Shah shortly before the king's death), great care was taken to avoid putting him in the spotlight.[88] Even the Báb's letters to Bahá'u'lláh came in the name of his younger brother Mírzá Yahyá.[3] The danger that threatened Bahá'u'lláh was from Amir Kabir.[89] According to Saiedi, if Amir Kabir knew about the key role that Bahá'u'lláh was playing in the Bábí community, he would have him executed.[89] Bahá'u'lláh, Mírzá Yahyá and one of the Báb's secretaries had reached an agreement that in order to protect Bahá'u'lláh, the younger brother would be recognized as the figurehead of the Bábí community and would be kept in hiding out of harm’s way.[3][88] This would leave Bahá’u’lláh freer to continue his activities as a leading Bábí.[88] Accordingly the Báb sent a letter to Mírzá Yahyá naming him to nominal leadership pending the imminent appearance of the Promised One, commonly referred to as ‘Him Whom God shall make manifest’ by the Báb.[90][91] At the time Mírzá Yahyá, still a teenager, had never demonstrated leadership in the Bábí movement, and was still living in the house of his older brother, Baháʼu'lláh.[89] According to Amanat, it seems very unlikely that Mírzá Yahyá, a young man who was no more than 18 years old in could have been directly the focus of the Báb attention, especially in the situation where the Báb was prohibited from communicating with his followers in the prisons of Maku and Chihriq.[92]

Unlike earlier religions in which references to future promised figures were occasional and only in hints and allusions, the entirety of the Bayan, the mother book of the Bábí dispensation, is essentially a discourse on a messianic figure, even greater than himself, that the Báb refers to as "he Whom God shall make manifest". The Báb always discusses his own revelation and laws in the context of this promised figure.[17] The essence and purpose of the Báb's own mission, as he always stressed, was to prepare the people for the advent of him.[80] The Báb describes this messianic figure as the origin of all divine attributes, and states that his command is equivalent to God's command.[84] He asks his followers to independently investigate and look for the promised one, and recognize him out of his own intrinsic reality, works and attributes, and not due to any reasons external to him.[85] He even warns them not to be deprived of the promised one by arguing against him from the works of the Báb, the same way the followers of the previous religions opposed the next prophet while citing their holy scriptures.[85] Furthermore, the Báb speaks of the imminence of the advent of the promised one and refers to the time of his advent as year nine and nineteen.[93]

In 1863, nineteen years after the Báb declared his mission, Baha'u'llah, in the company of his companions in Iraq, and later in 1866 in Edirne, in a more publicized manner, claimed to be the figure promised by the Báb.[94] Most of the Bábí community accepted him and later became known as Baha'is. [95]

For a small group of Bábís who did not recognize Baháʼu'lláh, Mírzá Yahyá remained their leader until his death in 1912, they became known as Azalis or Azali Bábís. Azali successorship remains disputed. Baháʼí sources report that 11 of the 18 "witnesses" appointed by Mírzá Yahyá to oversee the Bábí community became Baháʼís, as his son did. The man allegedly appointed by Mírzá Yahyá to succeed him, Hadí Dawlat-Abádí, later publicly recanted his faith in the Báb and Mírzá Yahyá.[96][97] Today Baháʼís have several million followers, while estimates of the number of Azalís are generally around one thousand in Iran,[98][99] and any organization of theirs seems to have ceased to exist.[100]

Commemorations in the Baháʼí Faith edit

In the Baháʼí calendar the events of the birth, declaration and death of the Báb are commemorated by Baháʼí communities on a yearly basis.[101] At the centennial of the declaration of the Báb to Mulla Husayn in May 1944, the Baháʼís had a viewing of the portrait of the Báb during the celebrations held at the Baháʼí House of Worship (Wilmette, Illinois).[102] Speaking at the event were Dorothy Beecher Baker, Horace Holley, and others.

The notion of "twin Manifestations of God" is a concept fundamental to Baháʼí belief, describing the relationship between the Báb and Baháʼu'lláh. Both are considered Manifestations of God in their own right, having each founded separate religions (Bábism and the Baháʼí Faith) and revealed their own holy scriptures. To Baháʼís, however, the missions of the Báb and Baháʼu'lláh are inextricably linked: The Báb's mission was to prepare the way for the coming of Him whom God shall make manifest, who eventually appeared in the person of Baháʼu'lláh. Both the Báb and Baháʼu'lláh are revered as central figures of the Baháʼí Faith. A parallel is made between Baháʼu'lláh and the Báb as between Jesus and John the Baptist.[103]

Impact edit

Abdu'l Baha summarises the Báb's impact: "Alone, He undertook a task that can scarcely be conceived... This illustrious Being arose with such power as to shake the foundations of the religious laws, customs, manners, morals, and habits of Persia, and instituted a new law, faith, and religion."[104] He has been compared to Martin Luther.

The Bábí movement had a major impact on religious and social thought in 19th century Iran. Christopher de Bellaigue, writing about the Enlightenment period in the Islamic world, wrote:

The Babi movement, which began in the 1840s, went on to become an important catalyst of social progressiveness in mid-nineteenth-century Iran, promoting interreligious peace, social equality between the sexes and revolutionary anti-monarchism... it went on to present a vision of modernity that was based on secularism, internationalism, and the rejection of war. It is this vision which has enabled it to survive to the present day - as Bahá'ísm - in pockets and communities peopled by five million souls, and which qualifies it for inclusion in any narrative about modernisation in the Middle East.[25]

Writings edit

The Báb affirms that the verses revealed by a Manifestation of God are the greatest proof of His mission and the writings of the Báb comprise over two thousand tablets, epistles, prayers, and philosophical treatises. These writings form part of Bahá'í scripture, particularly his prayers, which are often recited individually as well as in devotional gatherings.[105] The works of the Báb have also excited scholarly interest and analysis. Elham Afnan describes the writings of the Báb as having "restructured the thoughts of their readers, so that they could break free from the chains of obsolete beliefs and inherited customs".[106] Jack McLean notes the novel symbolism of the Báb's works, observing that "The universe of the Báb's sacred writings is pervasively symbolic. Numbers, colors, minerals, liquids, the human body, social relationships, gestures, deeds, language (letters and words), and nature itself are all mirrors or signs that reflect the profounder reality of the names and attributes (asmá va sifát) of God".[105] The Báb's works are characterised by linguistic innovation, including many neologisms whenever he found existing theological terms inadequate.[105] Free association and stream-of-consciousness-style composition are marked features of some works.[107] Several scholars have identified the continual repetition of particular words or phrases of religious importance to be a distinct feature throughout the Báb's writings.[108] The Báb himself categorised his writings into five modes: divine verses, prayers, commentaries, rational discourse—written in Arabic—and the Persian mode, which encompasses the previous four.[106] Scholars have noted commonalities between the Báb's writings and those of Western philosophers such as Hegel,[109] Kant[110] and James Joyce[111]

Most of the writings of the Báb have been lost, however. The Báb himself stated they exceeded five hundred thousand verses in length; the Quran, in contrast, is 6300 verses in length. If one assumes 25 verses per page, that would equal 20,000 pages of text.[112] Nabíl-i-Zarandí, in The Dawn-breakers, mentions nine complete commentaries on the Quran, revealed during the Báb's imprisonment at Maku, which have been lost without a trace.[113] Establishing the true text of the works that are still extant, as already noted, is not always easy, and some texts will require considerable work. Others, however, are in good shape; several of the Báb's major works are available in the handwriting of his trusted secretaries.[114]

Most works were revealed in response to specific questions by Bábís. This is not unusual; the genre of the letter has been a venerable medium for composing authoritative texts as far back as Paul the Apostle. Three quarters of the chapters of the New Testament are letters, were composed to imitate letters, or contain letters within them.[j] Sometimes the Báb revealed works very rapidly by chanting them in the presence of a secretary and eyewitnesses.

The Archives Department at the Baháʼí World Centre currently holds about 190 Tablets of the Báb.[115] Excerpts from several principal works have been published in the only English-language compilation of the Báb's writings: Selections from the Writings of the Báb. Denis MacEoin, in his Sources for Early Bābī Doctrine and History, gives a description of many works; much of the following summary is derived from that source. In addition to major works, the Báb revealed numerous letters to his wife and followers, many prayers for various purposes, numerous commentaries on verses or chapters of the Quran, and many khutbihs or sermons (most of which were never delivered). Many of these have been lost; others have survived in compilations.[116]

The Báb has been criticized for his inconsistent use of correct and incorrect Arabic grammar in his religious works, though in his Arabic letters he made very few mistakes.[117] A reason for this inconsistency could be to distinguish those who could not see past the outer form of the words from those that could understand the deeper meaning of his message.[117] The Báb in his Treatise on Grammar, emphasised that Arabic grammar must be taught as an outer symbol of the spiritual grammar of the universe.[118]

Three Stages edit

The writings of the Báb have been described in terms of different typologies, including chronologically and thematically.[119] The Báb himself divides his writings into two stages: the first stage, where for purposes of preparation and prudence, the subtleties of his claims and teachings were veiled and consequently not appreciated by the hearts and minds of the people around him; and a later stage, where he openly declared that he was not only the promised Twelfth Imam of Shiah Islam, but a Prophet who has brought a new world religion, prophesied by Torah, Gospel and the Quran.[1] This new revelation, he claimed, would release the creative energies and capacities necessary for the establishment of global unity and peace.[4]

The Báb's teachings can be further understood as having three broad stages, each with a dominant thematic focus. His earliest teachings are primarily defined by his interpretation of the Quran and hadith, which recast common understandings of theological belief in light of a new hermenutics emphasizing the unity of God and his prophets and of all people. [119] Rather than revealing new religious laws, early Bábí doctrine "focuses on the inner and mystical meanings of religious law" and "turning ritual action into a spiritual journey"[120] These themes continue in later years, but a shift takes place where his emphasis moves to philosophical elucidation, and finally to legislative pronouncements.

In the second philosophical stage, the Báb gives an explanation of the metaphysics of being and creation, and in the third legislative stage his mystical and historical principles unite[121] as the Báb's writings gain a historical consciousness.[122] and clearly establish the principle of Progressive Revelation.[123]

The Báb discusses many fundamental issues in religion in this second stage including how to recognize spiritual truth, the nature of the human being, the meaning of faith, the nature of good deeds, the preconditions of spiritual journey and the question of the eternality or origination of the world. The realization of “true justice” in the world, and the central role of religion in attaining such justice, is another major focus of this stage. He even, in his Treatise on Singing, explores the philosophy of music, “where like every other human action, singing becomes moral or immoral depending on the intention of the actor and the function of the act.”[124]

In 1848 the Báb's teachings changed with a clear abrogation of Islamic law and the introduction of his own set of doctrines and practices.[18] A radical thesis was offered: religion is not to be understood as the unending imposition of the Will of God on humans, but rather the “product of the interaction of the will of God with the historical stage of the development of humanity.”[119] As human understanding and action undergoes change, so too is religion an unfolding and progressive phenomenon. The Persian Bayan, the principal scriptural work of the Báb during this period, openly proclaims the inception of a new religion. The Báb's legal system included details for marriage, burial, pilgrimage, prayer, and other practices that appear designed for a future Bábí state or to be implemented by He whom God shall make manifest, the promised universal messenger of God who is mentioned throughout the Báb's writings. All these laws were contingent on the approval of “Him Whom God shall make manifest” and thus their importance lied in the spiritual meaning which they symbolized: the recognition of Him Whom God shall make manifest in the next divine revelation.[63]

Writings before his declaration edit

 

The Báb's Tafsir on Surah al-Baqara was started by the Báb in November or December 1843, some six months before declaring his mission. The first half was completed by February or March 1844; the second half was revealed after the Báb's declaration. It is the only work of the Báb's revealed before his declaration that has survived intact. It also sheds light on the Báb's attitude toward Twelver beliefs.[125] His wife also refers to important episodes before his declaration.[126]

Shiraz, May – September 1844 edit

  • The first chapter of the Qayyúmu'l-Asmáʼ ("Tafsir on the Surah Yusuf")[citation needed] was written by the Báb on the evening of 22 May 1844 when he made his declaration to Mullá Husayn. The entire work, which is several hundred pages in length and is considered to be revelation by Baháʼís, required forty days to write; it is one of the Báb's longer Arabic works. It was widely distributed in the first year of the Bábí movement, functioning as something of a Quran or Bible for the Bábís. In the book the Báb states his claim to be a Manifestation of God, though the claim is disguised with other statements that he is the servant of the Hidden Imám.[127] Táhirih translated the work into Persian.
  • Sahífih-yi-makhzúnih, revealed before his departure for Mecca in September 1844, and consists of a collection of fourteen prayers, mostly to be recited on specific holy days and festivals. Its content remained within the expectations of Islam.[128]

Pilgrimage, September 1844 – June 1845 edit

During his 9+12-month pilgrimage to Mecca, the Báb composed many works:

  • Khasá'il-i-sabʿih: A work composed by the Báb on his sea journey back to Bushehr after his pilgrimage, which listed some regulations to be followed by the Bábí community. A copy of the manuscript probably still exists in Iran.[129]
  • Kitáb-i-Rúḥ ("Book of the Spirit"): This book contains 700 or 900 verses and was written while the Báb was sailing back to Bushehr from pilgrimage. The original was nearly destroyed when the Báb was arrested. Several manuscript copies are extant.[130]
  • Sahífih baynu'l-haramayn ("Treatise Between the Two Sanctuaries"): This Arabic work was written while the Báb traveled from Mecca to Medina in early 1845 and is in response to questions posed to him by a prominent Shaykhí leader.[131]
  • Kitáb-i-Fihrist ("The Book of the Catalogue"): A list of the Báb's works, composed by the Báb himself after he returned from pilgrimage to Mecca, 21 June 1845. It is a bibliography of his earliest writings.[132]

Bushehr and Shiraz, March 1845 – September 1846 edit

The Báb was in Bushehr March through June 1845, then in Shiraz.

  • Sahífih-yi-Jaʿfariyyih: The Báb wrote this treatise to an unknown correspondent in 1845. Over a hundred pages in length, it states many of his basic teachings, especially in relation to some Shaykhi beliefs.[133]
  • Tafsír-i-Súrih-i-Kawthar ("Tafsir on the Surah al-Kawthar"): The Báb wrote this commentary for Yahyá Dárábí Vahíd while he was in Shiraz; it is the most important work revealed during the Shiraz period. Though the surah is only three verses in length, being the shortest in the Quran, the commentary on it is over two hundred pages in length. The work was widely distributed, and at least a dozen early manuscripts are extant.[134][135]

Isfahan, September 1846 – March 1847 edit

  • Nubuvvih khásish: This work, of fifty pages' length, was revealed in two hours in response to a question by Governor Manouchehr Khan Gorji. It discusses the special prophethood of Muhammad, an important subject discussed in debates between Muslims and Christians.[136][52][137]
  • Tafsír-i-Súrih-i-va'l-ʿasr (Commentary on the Surah al-ʿAṣr): This is one of the two important works the Báb penned in Isfahan. It was written spontaneously and publicly in response to a request by Mir Sayyid Muhammad, the chief cleric of the city; much of it was written in one evening, to the astonishment to those present.[138]

Maku, late summer 1847 – May 1848 edit

The Báb left Isfahan in March 1847, sojourned outside Tehran several months, then was sent to a fortress at Maku, Iran, close to the Turkish border. It witnessed the composition of some of the Báb's most important works.

  • Persian Bayán: This is undoubtedly the most important work of the Báb and contains a mature summary of his teachings. It was composed in Maku in late 1847 or early 1848. The work consists of nine chapters titled váhids or "unities", which in turn are usually subdivided into nineteen bábs or "gates"; the one exception is the last unity, which has only ten bábs. The Báb explained that it would be the task of "He Whom God shall make manifest" to complete the work; Baháʼís believe Baháʼu'lláh's Kitáb-i-Íqán to be the completion of the Bayán. Each unity begins with an Arabic summary of its contents, which makes it easier to read than many of the Báb's works. Extracts of this work are published in Selections from the Writings of the Báb; A. L. M. Nicolas translated the entire work into French in four 150-page volumes.[139]
  • Arabic Bayán: This is the shorter and less important of the two Bayáns. It consists of eleven váhids or "unities", each with nineteen bábs or "gates". It offers a succinct summary of the Báb's teachings and laws. It was composed at Maku in late 1847 or early 1848.[140]
  • Dalá'il-i-Sab'ih ("Seven Proofs"): There are two works by this name, the longer one in Persian, the shorter one in Arabic; both were composed in Maku in late 1847 or early 1848. Nicholas called the Persian Seven Proofs "the most important of the polemical works that issued from the pen of Sayyid ʿAlí Muhammad".[141] The work was written to either a non-Bábí or to a follower whose faith had been shaken, but the recipient's identity is unknown.[citation needed] The Arabic text summarizes the seven proofs found in the Persian text.

C͟hihríq, May 1848 – July 1850 edit

The Báb spent two years in Chehriq, except for his brief visit to Tabriz for his trial. The works he produced there were more esoteric or mystical and less thematically organized.[142] Two major books were produced, in addition to many minor works:

  • Kitabu'l-Asmáʼ ("The Book of Names"): This is an extremely long book about the names of God. It was penned during the Báb's last days at Chehriq, before his execution. The various manuscript copies contain numerous variations in the text; the book will require considerable work to reconstruct its original text.[143]
  • Kitáb-i-panj sha'n ("Book of Five Grades"): Having been composed in March and April 1850, this is one of the Báb's last works. The book consists of eighty-five sections arranged in seventeen groups, each under the heading of a different name of God. Within each group are five "grades", that is, five different sorts of sections: verses, prayers, homilies, commentaries, and Persian language pieces. Each group was sent to a different person and was composed on a different day. Thus the work is a kind of miscellany of unrelated material. Some of the sections represent further exposition of basic themes in the Báb's teachings; others consists of lengthy iterations of the names of God, and variations on their roots.[144]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although, it was clear from Qayyūm al-asmā, the first work of the Báb after his declaration, that he claimed to be a recipient of divine revelation. As a matter of fact Mullá ʻAlíy-i-Bastámí the second disciple of the Báb was condemned jointly by an assembled group of Shiite and Sunny clerics on a charge of heresy in Iraq in 1844 (the year of the declaration of the Báb), because he believed in the author of a work (Qayyūm al-asmā) that claimed to be a revelation of God.[3]
  2. ^ The term Báb (/bɑːb/; Arabic: باب; meaning "Gate" or "Door", is a reference to the deputy of the Hidden Imam[5]
  3. ^ In three instances where Bábís were besieged and under attack by the Iranian army, they defended themselves. Eventually almost all of them were massacred. The Báb never permitted Jihad and taught his followers to be peaceful and not convert by the sword.[11][20][21]
  4. ^ Some accounts say Anís succumbed to death on the first volley, another that the Báb was dispatched by a sword. The bullets had cut the rope suspending them from the wall. See Firuz Kazemzadeh, Kazem Kazemzadeh, and Howard Garey, "The Báb: Accounts of His Martyrdom", in World Order, vol. 8, no. 1 (Fall, 1973), 32. All accounts, even the Muslim ones, concur that the Báb survived the first volley.
  5. ^ Hajji Muhammad Husayn, quoted in Amanat 1989, pp. 132–133.
  6. ^ Mullá Husayn was met at the gate of Shiraz by the Báb, they knew each other from having met previously in Karbala.
  7. ^ The statement made by the Bab in first disclosing his claim to Mulla Husyan describes himself not only as the Messenger of God, but especially as the “Remembrance of God” and the “Proof of God” which unequivocally referred to the long-expected Hidden Imam. [3]
  8. ^ Sir Justin Shiel, Queen Victoria's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary in Tehran, wrote to Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, the British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, on 22 July 1850, regarding the execution. The letter, is found in its original form as document F.O. 60/152/88 in the archives of the Foreign Office at the Public Records Office in London.
  9. ^ Some accounts say Anís succumbed to death on the first volley, another that the Báb was dispatched by a sword. See Firuz Kazemzadeh, Kazem Kazemzadeh, and Howard Garey, "The Báb: Accounts of His Martyrdom", in World Order, vol. 8, no. 1 (Fall, 1973), 32. All accounts, even the Muslim ones, concur that the Báb survived the first volley.
  10. ^ On letters as a medium of composition of the New Testament, see Norman Perrin, The New Testament: An Introduction, Proclamation and Parenesis, Myth and History (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovitch, 1974), 96–97.

Citations edit

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  2. ^ Stockman 2020, pp. 2–3.
  3. ^ a b c d Cole 1998, p. 28.
  4. ^ a b Saiedi 2021, p. 36–38.
  5. ^ a b de Bellaigue 2018, p. 135, 141.
  6. ^ a b Hatcher & Martin 1998, p. 7.
  7. ^ Lawson & Ghaemmaghami 2012, p. 19.
  8. ^ Hatcher & Martin 1998, p. 25.
  9. ^ Hartz 2009, p. 24.
  10. ^ Stockman 2020, p. 5.
  11. ^ a b c Hartz 2009, p. 29.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Abdolmohammadi 2024, p. 102–126.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Momen 2012.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Saiedi 2021, p. 34.
  15. ^ a b c d Stockman 2020, p. 9.
  16. ^ a b c d e Saiedi 2021, p. 36.
  17. ^ a b c d Saiedi 2008, pp. 344
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m MacEoin 1988.
  19. ^ Stockman 2020, p. 3.
  20. ^ a b Stockman 2020, p. 7.
  21. ^ Walbridge 2022, p. 339–362.
  22. ^ Hartz 2009, p. 35.
  23. ^ a b c Ghaemmaghami 2022, p. 17.
  24. ^ Smith 2021, p. 509.
  25. ^ a b de Bellaigue 2018, p. 140.
  26. ^ Smith 2000, p. 231: "Manifestations of God".
  27. ^ Balyuzi 1973, p. 32.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Bausani 1999.
  29. ^ Balyuzi 1973, pp. 30–41.
  30. ^ Amanat 1989, p. 114.
  31. ^ Saiedi 2008, p. 305.
  32. ^ Saiedi 2008, pp. 206.
  33. ^ a b de Bellaigue 2018, p. 141.
  34. ^ a b Ghaemmaghami 2022, p. 18.
  35. ^ a b Balyuzi 1981.
  36. ^ Adamson 2009, p. 436.
  37. ^ Smith 2000, p. 312.
  38. ^ Britannica 2022c.
  39. ^ Warburg 2006, pp. 121–123.
  40. ^ a b Balyuzi 1973, p. 41.
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  44. ^ Momen & Lawson 2011.
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  46. ^ BBC 2009.
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  50. ^ a b c d Manuchehri 2000.
  51. ^ Amanat 1989, p. 255.
  52. ^ a b Amanat 1989, p. 257.
  53. ^ Amanat 1989, p. 258.
  54. ^ Ghaemmaghami 2022, p. 24.
  55. ^ a b c d MacEoin 1997.
  56. ^ a b c d Amanat 1989, pp. 390–393.
  57. ^ Browne 1918.
  58. ^ Browne 1918, p. 256.
  59. ^ a b Amanat 1989, p. 392.
  60. ^ a b Amanat 2019, p. 244–5.
  61. ^ Ross 1901.
  62. ^ Melton 2011, p. 74.
  63. ^ a b Warburg 2006, p. 144.
  64. ^ a b Saiedi 2022, p. 31.
  65. ^ a b Smith 2000, p. 58.
  66. ^ Lawson & Ghaemmaghami 2012, p. 8.
  67. ^ Lawson & Ghaemmaghami 2012, p. 14.
  68. ^ Effendi 1944, p. 52.
  69. ^ Effendi 1944, pp. 273–289.
  70. ^ Lawson 2012, p. 135–157.
  71. ^ Saiedi 2021, p. 35.
  72. ^ the Báb.
  73. ^ Saiedi 2021, p. 37.
  74. ^ Lambden 2010, p. 301–304.
  75. ^ Saiedi 2008, p. 314.
  76. ^ Saiedi 2008, p. 322.
  77. ^ Saiedi 2000, pp. 294–295.
  78. ^ Saiedi 2000, p. 28.
  79. ^ a b c d Amanat 2017, p. 239.
  80. ^ a b c Saiedi 2008, p. 1
  81. ^ Amanat 1989, p. 245.
  82. ^ Saiedi 2008, p. 254
  83. ^ Saiedi 2008, p. 256
  84. ^ a b Smith 2013, p. 180.
  85. ^ a b c d Saiedi 2008, pp. 290–291
  86. ^ a b Zabihi-Moghaddam 2023, p. 705.
  87. ^ Keddie 1981, p. 46.
  88. ^ a b c Momen 2021, p. 42.
  89. ^ a b c Saiedi 2008, p. 349.
  90. ^ Taherzadeh 2000, pp. 92–93.
  91. ^ Saiedi 2008, pp. 344–345.
  92. ^ Amanat & Vahman 2016, p. 15.
  93. ^ Saiedi 2008, pp. 348–57
  94. ^ Smith 2000, pp. 180–181.
  95. ^ Amanat 2017, p. 246.
  96. ^ Effendi 1944, p. 233.
  97. ^ Momen 1991, p. 99.
  98. ^ MacEoin 1987.
  99. ^ Britannica 2011.
  100. ^ Warburg 2006, p. 177.
  101. ^ Smith 2000, pp. 182–183.
  102. ^ Astley-Cock 1944.
  103. ^ Buck 2004.
  104. ^ Afnan 2019, p. 5.
  105. ^ a b c Martin 1995.
  106. ^ a b Afnan 2019, p. 3.
  107. ^ MacEoin 1988b.
  108. ^ Behmardi & McCants 2007.
  109. ^ Saiedi 2008, p. 246.
  110. ^ Saiedi 2008, p. 303.
  111. ^ Lawson 2015.
  112. ^ MacEoin 1992, p. 15.
  113. ^ MacEoin 1992, p. 88.
  114. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 12–15.
  115. ^ Universal House of Justice 2002.
  116. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 15–40.
  117. ^ a b McCants 2002.
  118. ^ Saiedi 2008, p. 205.
  119. ^ a b c Saiedi 2021, p. 29–39.
  120. ^ Saiedi 2008, pp. 30.
  121. ^ Saiedi 2008, pp. 27–28.
  122. ^ Stockman 2010.
  123. ^ Saiedi 2008, pp. 241.
  124. ^ Saiedi 2008, pp. 34–35.
  125. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 46–47.
  126. ^ Momen 2007.
  127. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 55–57.
  128. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 59–60.
  129. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 61–63.
  130. ^ MacEoin 1992, p. 61.
  131. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 60–61.
  132. ^ MacEoin 1992, p. 65.
  133. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 66–67.
  134. ^ MacEoin 1992, p. 71.
  135. ^ Nabíl-i-Zarandí 1932, pp. 174–176.
  136. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 76–77.
  137. ^ Nabíl-i-Zarandí 1932, pp. 202–04.
  138. ^ MacEoin 1992, p. 76.
  139. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 83–85.
  140. ^ MacEoin 1992, p. 85.
  141. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 85–88.
  142. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 88–94.
  143. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 91–92.
  144. ^ MacEoin 1992, pp. 93–95.

References edit

Baháʼí source material edit

  • Afnan, Elham (2019). A Twofold Mission: Some Distinctive Characteristics of the Person and Teachings of the Báb. Bahá'í World.
  • Effendi, Shoghi (1944). God Passes By. Wilmette, Illinois: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. ISBN 0-87743-020-9. Retrieved 21 February 2007.
  • Lambden, Stephen N. (2010). "Review of Gate of the Heart: Understanding the Writings of the Báb. Bahʾí Studies Series, vol. 1". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 130 (2): 301–304. ISSN 0003-0279.
  • Martin, Douglas (1995). The Mission of the Báb: Retrospective, 1844–1944. The Bahá’í World. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  • Nabíl-i-Zarandí (1932). The Dawn-Breakers: Nabíl's Narrative. Translated by Effendi, Shoghi (Hardcover ed.). Wilmette, Illinois: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. ISBN 0-900125-22-5. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  • Universal House of Justice (2002). "Classification of the Bahá'í Sacred Texts". Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  • the Báb. "Báb, The Book of Names (Kitáb-i-Asmá') (excerpt)". Ocean Of Lights. Retrieved 24 March 2024.

Encyclopedias edit

Other resources edit

  • Afnan, Mirza Habibu'llah (2008). The Genesis of the Bâbí-Baháʼí Faiths in Shíráz and Fárs. Translated by Rabbani, Ahang. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-17054-4.
  • Amanat, Abbas (1989). Resurrection and Renewal: The Making of the Babi Movement in Iran, 1844–1850. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-2098-6.
  • Amanat, Abbas (2019). Iran : a modern history. New Haven. pp. 244–5. ISBN 978-0-300-24893-7. OCLC 1090852958.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Astley-Cock, John (23 May 1944). "Baha'i Temple is dedicated at Centennial". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. p. 15. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  • Balyuzi, H.M. (1973). The Báb: The Herald of the Day of Days. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-048-9.
  • Balyuzi, H.M. (1981). Khadijih Bagum, the Wife of the Báb. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-100-0.
  • BBC (2009). "The Báb". BBC. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  • Behmardi, Vahid; McCants, William (2007). "A Stylistic Analysis of the Báb's Writings". Online Journal of Baha'i Studies. 1: 114–136. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  • de Bellaigue, Christopher (2018). The Islamic Enlightenment: The Modern Struggle Between Faith and Reason. London: Vintage. ISBN 978-0-099-57870-3.
  • Browne, E.G. (1918) [reprinted 1961, 2013]. Materials for the study of the Bábí Religion. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-41238-5. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  • Buck, Christopher (August 2004). "The eschatology of globalization: the multiple-messiahship of Baháʼulláh revisited" (PDF). In Moshe Sharon (ed.). Studies in Modern Religions and Religious Movements and the Babi/Baha'i Faiths. Mumen Book Series, Studies in the history of religions. Vol. CIV. Brill Academic Publishers. pp. 143–173. ISBN 90-04-13904-4.
  • Eschraghi, Armin (2012). "Undermining the Foundations of Orthodoxy: Some Notes on the Báb's Sharia (Sacred Law)". In Lawson; Ghaemmaghami (eds.). A Most Noble Pattern: Collected Essays on the Writings of the Báb. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-85398-556-3. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  • Ghaemmaghami, Omid (2022). "Ch. 2: The Life of the Bab". In Stockman, Robert H. (ed.). The World of the Bahá'í Faith. Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge. pp. 17–28. ISBN 978-1-138-36772-2.
  • Hartz, Paula (2009). World Religions: Baha'i Faith (3rd ed.). New York: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 978-1-60413-104-8.
  • Lawson, Todd (2015). "Joycean Modernism in a Nineteenth-Century Qurʼan Commentary?". In Chehabi; Neville (eds.). Erin and Iran: Cultural Encounters between the Irish and the Iranians. Boston: Foundation & Center for Hellenic Studies.
  • MacEoin, Denis (1992). The Sources for Early Bābī Doctrine and History. Leiden: Brill Publishers. ISBN 90-04-09462-8.
  • MacEoin, Denis (May 1997). "The Trial of the Bab: Shiʿite Orthodoxy Confronts its Mirror Image". Occasional Papers in Shaykhi, Babi and Baha'i Studies. 1. Retrieved 2 July 2006.
  • MacEoin, Denis (2009). The Messiah of Shiraz: Studies in Early and Middle Babism. Iran Studies. Vol. 3. Leiden: Brill Publishers. ISBN 978-90-04-17035-3.
  • Manuchehri, Sepehr (2000). "Taqiyyah (Dissimulation) in the Babi and Bahá'í Religions". Australian Bahá'í Studies. 2. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
  • Manuchehri, Sepehr (2004). "Will and Testament: Translation and Commentary". Baha'i Library Online. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  • McCants, William (2002). "Arabic Grammar of the Bab, The". Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  • McLean, Jack (2009). "Review of: Gate of the Heart: Understanding the Writings of the Báb". Bahai-Library.com. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  • Momen, Moojan, ed. (1987). Selections from the Writings of E.G. Browne on the Bábí and Baháʼí Religions. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-247-3. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  • Momen, Moojan (1991). "The Cyprus Exiles". Bahá'í Studies Bulletin.
  • Momen, Moojan (2007). "Messianic Concealment and Theophanic Disclosure" (PDF). Online Journal of Baháʼí Studies. 1: 71–88. ISSN 1177-8547.
  • Momen, Moojan; Lawson, Todd (2 November 2011). "The Bab". World Religions: Belief, Culture, and Controversy. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-Clio.
  • Saiedi, Nader (2008). Gate of the heart : understanding the writings of the Báb. [Waterloo, Ont.] ISBN 978-1-55458-056-9. OCLC 904293009.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Saiedi, Nader (2022). "Ch. 3: The Writings and Teachings of the Bab". In Stockman, Robert H. (ed.). The World of the Bahá'í Faith. Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge. pp. 29–39. ISBN 978-1-138-36772-2.
  • Smith, Peter (2022). "Ch. 41: The History of the Bábí and Bahá'í Faiths". In Stockman, Robert H. (ed.). The World of the Bahá'í Faith. Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge. pp. 501–512. doi:10.4324/9780429027772-48. ISBN 978-1-138-36772-2. S2CID 244705793.
  • Stockman, Robert (August 2010). "Review of: Gate of the Heart: Understanding the Writings of the Báb". Nova Religio. 14 (1): 124–127. doi:10.1525/nr.2010.14.1.124. ISSN 1092-6690. OCLC 4635424978. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  • Warburg, Margit (2006). Citizens of the world: a history and sociology of the Bahaʹis from a globalisation perspective. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-474-0746-1. OCLC 234309958.
  • Lawson, Todd (31 December 2012), "The Baha'i Tradition", Fighting Words, University of California Press, doi:10.1525/california/9780520258310.003.0006, retrieved 25 March 2024
  • Saiedi, Nader (26 November 2021), "The Writings and Teachings of the Báb", The World of the Bahá'í Faith (1 ed.), London: Routledge, doi:10.4324/9780429027772-5, ISBN 978-0-429-02777-2, retrieved 25 March 2024
  • Smith, Peter (26 November 2021), "The History of the Bábí and Bahá'í Faiths", The World of the Bahá'í Faith (1 ed.), London: Routledge, doi:10.4324/9780429027772-48, ISBN 978-0-429-02777-2, retrieved 26 March 2024
  • Momen, Moojan (26 November 2021), "Bahá'u'lláh", The World of the Bahá'í Faith (1 ed.), London: Routledge, doi:10.4324/9780429027772-6, ISBN 978-0-429-02777-2, S2CID 223413894, retrieved 17 March 2023
  • Amanat, Abbas (2017). Iran: a modern history. New Haven London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11254-2.
  • Hatcher, W.S.; Martin, J.D. (1998). The Baháʼí Faith: The Emerging Global Religion. San Francisco: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-87743-264-3.
  • Keddie, Nikki R. (1981). Roots of revolution : an interpretive history of modern Iran. Yann Richard. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-02606-4. OCLC 7554626.
  • Lawson, Todd; Ghaemmaghami, Omid (2012). A Most Noble Pattern: Collected Essays on the Writings of the Báb, 'Alí Muhammad Shírází (1819-1850). George Ronald. ISBN 978-0-85398-556-3.
  • Ross, E. Denison (1 April 1901). Babism. JSTOR. The North American Review.
  • Saiedi, Nader (2000). Logos and Civilization - Spirit, History, and Order in the Writings of Baháʼu'lláh. USA: University Press of Maryland. ISBN 1883053609. OL 8685020M.
  • Smith, Peter (1 October 2013). A Concise Encyclopedia of the Bahá'í Faith. Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-1-78074-480-3.
  • Stockman, Robert H. (2020). The Bahá'í faith, violence, and non-violence. Cambridge elements. Cambridge New York (N.Y.): Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-70627-8.
  • Cole, Juan Ricardo (1998). Modernity and the millennium: the genesis of the Baha'i faith in the nineteenth-century Middle East. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-11080-4. OCLC 37884893.
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2 February 2024). "The Social and Political Thought of Sayyed ʿ⁠Ali Moḥammad Širāzi, the Bāb". Eurasian Studies. 21 (1). doi:10.1163/24685623-20230144. ISSN 2468-5623. S2CID 267413538.
  • Lambden, Stephen N. (2008). "Review of Gate of the Heart: Understanding the Writings of the Báb. Bahʾí Studies Series, vol. 1". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 130 (2). ISSN 0003-0279.
  • Zabihi-Moghaddam, Siyamak (2023). "The Bāb on the Rights of Women". Religions. 14 (6). doi:10.3390/rel14060705. ISSN 2077-1444.
  • Amanat, Abbas; Vahman, Fereydun (2016). "Az Tehran ta Akka (Persian) | Program in Iranian Studies". iranianstudies.macmillan.yale.edu. Retrieved 20 February 2024.
  • Walbridge, John (1 January 2022). "The Babi Uprising in Zanjan: Causes and Issues". Iranian Studies. 29 (3–4): 339–362. doi:10.1080/00210869608701854. ISSN 0021-0862.

Further reading edit

  • Browne, Edward Granville (1987). "A Summary of the Persian Bayan". In Momen, Moojan (ed.). Selections from the Writings of E.G. Browne on the Bábí and Baháʼí Religions. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-247-3. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
  • BBC (2009). "The Báb". BBC. Retrieved 13 December 2022.

External links edit

  • Images of archival materials related to the Báb
  • Works by Báb at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Báb at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Writings of the Báb at Baháʼí Reference Library

báb, village, slovakia, nitra, district, born, ʿalí, muḥammad, persian, علی, محمد, october, 1819, july, 1850, founder, faith, central, figures, baháʼí, faith, merchant, from, shiraz, qajar, iran, 1844, began, faith, next, years, gradually, progressively, revea. For the village in Slovakia see Bab Nitra District The Bab born ʿAli Muḥammad ˈ ae l i m oʊ ˈ h ae m e d Persian علی محمد 20 October 1819 9 July 1850 was the founder of Babi Faith and one of the central figures of the Bahaʼi Faith He was a merchant from Shiraz in Qajar Iran who in 1844 at the age of 25 began the Babi Faith In the next six years he gradually and progressively revealed his claim in his extensive writings to be a Manifestation of God of a status as great as Moses Jesus and Muhammad receiving revelations as profound as the Torah Gospel and Quran 1 2 a This new revelation he claimed would release the creative energies and capacities necessary for the establishment of global unity and peace 4 SiyyidThe BabShrine of the Bab in Haifa IsraelBornʿAli Muḥammad 1819 10 20 20 October 1819Shiraz IranDied9 July 1850 1850 07 09 aged 30 Tabriz IranCause of deathExecution by firing squadResting placeShrine of the Bab32 48 52 N 34 59 14 E 32 81444 N 34 98722 E 32 81444 34 98722NationalityIranianOccupation s MerchantReligious leaderKnown forManifestation of God and a central figure in Bahaʼi FaithFounder of BabismMovementBabismSpouseKhadijih Sultan 1842 1850 ChildrenAhmad 1843 1843 Parent s Mirza Muhammad Rida father Fatimih Bagum mother RelativesAfnan He referred to himself by the traditional Muslim title Bab meaning the gate b although it was apparent from the context that he intended by this term a spiritual claim very different from any which had previously been associated with it 6 He proclaimed that the central purpose of his mission was to prepare for the coming of a spiritual luminary greater than himself the promised one of the world s great religions he referred to this promised deliverer as he whom God will make manifest 7 The Bab was the gateway to this messianic figure whose message would be carried throughout the world 8 The Bab composed numerous letters and books in which he abrogated Islamic laws and traditions establishing a new religion and introducing a new social order focused on unity love and service to others 9 5 10 He encouraged the learning of arts and sciences 11 modernizing education 12 and improving the status of women 13 He introduced the concept of progressive revelation highlighting the continuity and renewal of religion 14 He also emphasized ethics 15 independent investigation of truth and human nobility 16 Additionally he provided prescriptions to regulate marriage divorce and inheritance and set forth rules for a future Babi society although these were never implemented 11 Throughout the Bab always discussed his own revelation and laws in the context of the aforementioned promised figure Unlike previous religions which sporadically alluded to promised figures the primary focus of the Bayan the foundational text of the Babi faith was to prepare for the arrival of the promised one 17 The Bab was born in Shiraz on 20 October 1819 to a family of sayyids of Husaynid lineage most of whom were engaged in mercantile activities in Shiraz and Bushehr 18 Though he was popular among the lower classes the poor and the urban merchants artisans and some villagers 19 he faced opposition from the orthodox clergy and the government which eventually executed him and thousands of his followers who were known as Babis 20 c When the Bab was executed for apostasy he was tied up in a public square in Tabriz and faced a firing squad of 750 rifles Following the first volley the Bab was discovered to be missing and later found and returned to the square He was eventually killed by the second volley Accounts differ on the details but all agree that the first volley failed to kill him d This widely documented event increased interest in his message 22 His remains were secretly stored and transported until they were interred in 1909 into the shrine built for them by ʻAbdu l Baha on the slopes of Mount Carmel To Bahaʼis the Bab fills a similar role as Elijah in Judaism or John the Baptist in Christianity a forerunner or founder of their own religion 23 Adherence to the Bab as a divine messenger has survived into modern times in the form of the 8 million member Bahaʼi Faith 24 whose founder Bahaʼu llah claimed in 1863 to be the fulfillment of the Bab s prophecy The majority of Babi adherents converted and became Bahaʼis by the end of the 19th century 25 The Bahaʼis considered him as a Manifestation of God like Adam Abraham Moses Zoroaster Krishna the Buddha Jesus Muhammad and Bahaʼu llah 26 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Early life 1 2 Marriage 1 3 Shaykhi movement 1 4 Personality and appearance 2 Life as a religious leader 2 1 Declaration to Mulla Husayn 2 2 Letters of the Living 2 3 Travels and imprisonment 2 4 Trial in Tabriz 2 5 Proclamation 3 Execution 4 Teachings and legacy 4 1 Key Principles 4 2 Succession 4 3 Commemorations in the Bahaʼi Faith 4 4 Impact 5 Writings 5 1 Three Stages 5 2 Writings before his declaration 5 3 Shiraz May September 1844 5 4 Pilgrimage September 1844 June 1845 5 5 Bushehr and Shiraz March 1845 September 1846 5 6 Isfahan September 1846 March 1847 5 7 Maku late summer 1847 May 1848 5 8 C hihriq May 1848 July 1850 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Citations 9 References 9 1 Bahaʼi source material 9 2 Encyclopedias 9 3 Other resources 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground editEarly life edit nbsp Calligraphic exercise of the Bab written before ten years old The Bab was born on 20 October 1819 1 Muharram 1235 AH 27 Mehr 1198 SH in Shiraz to a middle class merchant of the city and given the name ʿAli Muḥammad 23 He was a Sayyid descendant of Muhammad with both parents tracing their lineage through Husayn ibn Ali 27 His father was Muhammad Riḍa and his mother was Fatimih 1800 1881 a daughter of a prominent Shiraz merchant She later became a Bahaʼi His father died when he was quite young and his maternal uncle Haji Mirza Siyyid ʿAli a merchant reared him 28 29 In Shiraz his uncle sent him to a maktab primary school where he remained for six or seven years 18 In contrast to the formal orthodox theology which dominated the school curriculum of the time which included the study of jurisprudence and Arabic grammar the Bab from a young age felt inclined towards unconventional subjects like mathematics and calligraphy which were little studied The Bab s preoccupation with spirituality creativity and imagination also angered his teachers and was not tolerated in the atmosphere of the 19th century Persian school system 30 This led the Bab to become disillusioned with the education system he later instructs adults to treat children with dignity to allow children to have toys and engage in play 31 and to never show anger or harshness to their students 32 Sometime between the ages 15 and 20 he joined his uncle in the family business a trading house and became a merchant in the city of Bushehr Iran near the Persian Gulf 28 As a merchant he was renowned for his honesty and trustworthiness in his business which was focused on trade with India Oman and Bahrain 33 Some of his earlier writings suggest that he did not enjoy the business and instead applied himself to the study of religious literature 18 Marriage edit In 1842 at age 23 and following his mother s wishes he married 20 year old Khadijih Sultan Bagum 1822 1882 the daughter of a prominent merchant in Shiraz 34 The marriage proved a happy one though their only child a boy named Ahmad died the year he was born 1843 35 and Khadijih never conceived again The young couple occupied a modest house in Shiraz along with the Bab s mother Later Khadijih became a Bahaʼi 35 Shaykhi movement edit In the 1790s in Iraq Shaykh Ahmad 1753 1826 began a religious school of thought within Shia Islam His followers who became known as Shaykhis were expecting the imminent return of divine guidance through the appearance of the Mahdi the Hidden Imam or a deputy of the Hidden Imam He took a less literalist approach to Islamic teachings for example teaching that the material body of Muhammad did not ascend during the Mi raj 36 and that the expected Resurrection of the Dead was spiritual in nature 37 Shaykh Ahmad came into conflict with the orthodox Shia theologians of the time and was denounced as an infidel in 1824 38 After Shaykh Ahmad s death leadership passed to Kazim Rashti 1793 1843 and emphasis was placed on the year 1260 AH 1844 CE one thousand years lunar years after the twelfth Imam went into occultation 39 In 1841 the Bab went on pilgrimage to Iraq and stayed for seven months mostly in and around Karbala 40 where he attended lectures of Kazim Rashti 40 As of his death in December 1843 Kazim Rashti counselled his followers to leave their homes to seek the Mahdi who according to his prophecies would soon appear 28 One of these followers Mulla Husayn after keeping vigil for 40 days in a mosque travelled to Shiraz where he met the Bab 41 Personality and appearance edit Sources commonly describe the Bab as gentle precocious or gifted with great intelligence 23 One of his contemporary followers described him as very taciturn and he would never utter a word unless it was absolutely necessary He did not even answer our questions He was constantly absorbed in his own thoughts and was preoccupied with repetition of his prayers and verses He is described as a handsome man with a thin beard dressed in clean clothes wearing a green shawl and a black turban e An Irish physician described him as a very mild and delicate looking man rather small in stature and very fair for a Persian with a melodious soft voice which struck me much 42 Shoghi Effendi notes the gentle the youthful and irresistible person of the Bab and praises him as being matchless in His meekness imperturbable in His serenity magnetic in His utterance 43 This personality has been described as having captivated many of those who met him 44 Life as a religious leader editThe Bab s mission as a religious leader began with a dream in which he drank seven drops of blood dripping from the lacerated throat of Imam Husayn a significant martyr and symbol of sacrifice in Shia Islam 34 33 Although previously inclined toward sharing the Qur an it was after this dream that he was able to write his own verses and prayers claiming divine inspiration In April 1844 his wife Khadijih became the first to believe in his revelation 45 Declaration to Mulla Husayn edit nbsp The room where the Declaration of the Bab took place on the evening of 22 May 1844 in his house in Shiraz The Bab s first religiously inspired experience claimed and witnessed by his wife is dated to about the evening of 3 April 1844 45 The Bab s first public connection with his sense of a mission came with the arrival of Mulla Husayn in Shiraz On the night of 22 May Mulla Husayn was invited by the Bab to his home f where Mulla Husayn told him of his search for the possible successor to Kazim Rashti the Promised One The Bab claimed this and to be the bearer of divine knowledge 18 Mulla Husayn became the first to accept the Bab s claims to be an inspired figure and a likely successor to Kazim Rashti 28 18 The Bab had replied satisfactorily to all of Mulla Husayn s questions and had written in his presence with extreme rapidity a long tafsir commentary on surah Yusuf known as the Qayyumu l Asmaʼ and considered the Bab s first revealed work 28 The date has been adopted as a Bahaʼi Holy Day Letters of the Living edit Mulla Husayn became the Bab s first disciple Within five months seventeen other disciples of Kazim Rashti recognized the Bab as a Manifestation of God 46 Among them was a woman Fatimih Zarrin Taj Barag hani a poet who later received the name of Tahirih the Pure These 18 disciples later became known as the Letters of the Living each soul containing one letter of the Spirit of God which combine to form the Word and given the task of spreading the new faith understood as the return or continuation of the one Faith of Abraham across Iran and Iraq 18 The Bab emphasized the spiritual station of these 18 individuals who along with himself made the first Unity of his religion 47 according to the Arabic term waḥid unity that has a numerical value of 19 using abjad numerals The Bab s book the Persian Bayan gives the metaphorical identity of the Letters of the Living as the Fourteen Infallibles of Twelver Shiʿi Islam Muhammad the Twelve Imams and Fatimah and the four archangels 47 paralleling the first followers of Christ Travels and imprisonment edit After the eighteen Letters of the Living recognized him the Bab and Quddus left on a pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina the sacred cities of Islam 18 At the Kaaba in Mecca the Bab publicly claimed to be the Qa im 48 and wrote to the Sharif of Mecca the Custodian of the Kaaba proclaiming his mission After their pilgrimage the Bab and Quddus returned to Bushehr where they last saw each other Quddus travel to Shiraz brought the Bab s claim to the attention of the governor Husayn Khan who tortured Quddus and summoned the Bab to Shiraz in June 1845 The Imam Jum ih of Shiraz questioned Bab about his claims He denied that he was the representative of the Qa im or an intermediary to the faithful the Bab later repeated the same in front of a congregation at the Vakil Mosque 49 This renunciation saved him from immediate execution 50 According to Abbas Amanat in conformity with his own policy of prudence during the early stages of his mission the Bab wrote a statement apparently under pressure renouncing his claims to the position of Babiya gatehood and disowning those who advocated such beliefs about him 51 The Bab was placed under house arrest at the home of his uncle until a cholera epidemic broke out in the city in September 1846 18 Once released he departed for Isfahan There many came to see him at the house of the Imam Jum ih who became sympathetic After an informal gathering where the Bab debated the local clergy and displayed his speed in producing instantaneous verses his popularity soared 52 After the death of the governor of Isfahan Manouchehr Khan Gorji his supporter pressure from the clergy of the province led to Mohammad Shah Qajar ordering the Bab to Tehran in January 1847 53 After spending several months in a camp outside Tehran and before the Bab could meet the Shah the Prime Minister sent the Bab to Tabriz in the northwestern corner of the country to his confinement 18 nbsp Fortress of Maku Iran 2008 After 40 days in Tabriz the Bab transferred to the fortress of Maku Iran in the province of Azerbaijan near the Turkish border During his incarceration there the Bab began his most important work the Persian Bayan that remained unfinished Because of the Bab s growing popularity in Maku even the governor of Maku converting the prime minister transferred him to the fortress of Chihriq in April 1848 28 There too the Bab s popularity grew and his jailors relaxed restrictions on him Trial in Tabriz edit In June 1848 the Bab was brought from Chihriq to Tabriz to face trial for apostasy in front of a body of Islamic clergy On the way he spent 10 days in the town of Urmia where the only known portrait of him was made a copy of which was later sent to Bahaʼu llah and is still held in the International Archives at the Bahaʼi World Centre 54 The trial attended by the Crown Prince occurred in July 1848 and involved numerous local clergy They questioned the Bab about the nature of his claims his teachings and demanded that he produce miracles to prove his divine authority They admonished him to recant his claims There are nine extant eyewitness reports of the trial of which several may originate from an earlier source Six of the reports are from Muslim accounts and portray the Bab in an unfavorable light 55 There are 62 questions found in the nine sources however eighteen occur in one source fifteen in two eight in three five in four thirteen in five and three in six Not including yes and he did not answer only thirty five answers remain of which ten occur in one source eight in two six in three three in four two in five five in six Only one answer is found in all nine eyewitness sources where the Bab states that I am that person you have been awaiting for one thousand years 55 The trial did not bring a decisive result Some clergy called for capital punishment but the government pressured them to issue a lenient judgement because the Bab was popular The government asked medical experts to declare the Bab insane to prevent his execution It is also likely that the government as a face saving measure and to appease the religious clergy may have spread rumours that the Bab recanted 56 The Shaykh al Islam a champion of the anti Babist campaign not at the Bab s trial issued a conditional death sentence if the Bab was found to be sane A fatwa was issued establishing the Bab s apostasy and stated The repentance of an incorrigible apostate is not accepted and the only thing which has caused the postponement of thy execution is a doubt as to thy sanity of mind 56 The crown prince s physician William Cormick examined the Bab and complied with the government s request to find grounds for clemency 55 The physician s opinion saved the Bab from execution for a time but the clergy insisted that he face corporal punishment instead so the Bab suffered foot whipping 20 lashes to the bottoms of his feet 56 The unsigned and undated official government report states that because of his harsh beating the Bab orally and in writing recanted apologized and stated that he would not continue to advance claims of divinity 57 The document of his alleged recantation was written shortly after his trial in Tabriz 55 Some authors theorise that the assertions were made to embarrass the Bab and undermine his credibility with the public and that the language of this document is very different from the Bab s usual style and so prepared by the authorities 56 Orientalist Edward Granville Browne received copies of the trial documents from Hippolyte Dreyfus Barney fr the first French Baha i A facsimile of the recantation is published in Browne s Materials for the Study of the Babi Religion where he states The document unsigned and undated was claimed to be in the Bab s handwriting and consists of a complete recantation and renunciation of any superhuman claim which he may have advanced or have appeared to advance There is nothing to show to whom it is addressed or whether it is the recantation referred to in the last paragraph of the government report or another The handwriting though graceful is not easily legible 58 But Amanat considers the document which has no signature and date to be fabricated According to Amanat the document does not match the writing style of the Bab and was forged by the government officials of Tabriz to discredit him and please the Shah 59 Amanat believes that in the best scenario the document may have been prepared by the government officials but the Bab refused to sign it 59 He stood his ground despite great pressure to recant and gain his freedom 60 61 62 Consequently he was executed by a firing squad in public in Tabriz to crush the Babi movement and to display the restored power of the Qajar government under the new minister Amir Kabir 60 After the trial the Bab was ordered back to the fortress of Chehriq Proclamation edit nbsp The Bab stood on this pulpit in the Masjid i Vakil addressing the populace of Shiraz in September 1846 In his early writings 1844 1847 the Bab appears to identify himself as a gate bab a reference to the Four Deputies of the Hidden Imam the last of whom went into occultation in 941 CE In his later writings the Bab more explicitly proclaimed his station as that of the Hidden Imam and a new messenger from God 63 64 The nature of the Bab s different claims and how they were understood to various groups is complicated Detractors argue that the changing claims represent the Bab s own changing aspirations while supporters describe the issue as a prudent and gradual disclosure of a coherent identity 65 For example the Bab s first writing was designed in the same style as the Qur an something that would have been easily recognized at the time as a claim to revelation 65 Saiedi writes His early writings prior to His exile to Maku are ambiguous about His real claim in order to prepare the people for the subsequent unveiling of His true station 64 According to Manuchehri the approach of laying claim to a lower position was intended to create a sense of anticipation for the appearance of the Hidden Imam as well to avoid persecution and imprisonment because a public proclamation of mahdi status could bring a swift penalty of death In the early months of his public declarations the adoption of a cautious policy had essentially achieved maximum attention with minimum controversy 50 The gradual unfolding of claims caused some confusion both among the public and for some of his followers Some early believers saw him as a messenger from God with divine authority and this resulted in disagreement within the Babi community 50 Even though the Bab had intended to convey his message with discretion many of his followers such as Tahirih openly declared the coming of the promised Hidden Imam and Mahdi 50 The Qayyum al asma the first major work of the Bab identifies its author as a Messenger of God in the line of Moses Jesus Muhammad and those who had preceded them This commentary is addressed to the whole of humankind with many references to the peoples of the earth and of the rulers of East and West inviting them to accept a new wondrous Cause of spiritual and social renewal 66 In many places in this commentary Siyyid Ali Muhammad referred to himself by the traditional Muslim title Bab Gate although it was apparent from the context that he intended by this term a spiritual claim very different from any which had previously been associated with it 6 At one level his use of the title Gate was designed to lessen the challenging impact of his claim to be an independent Messenger of God while at another for those who grasped the implications of his claims this title pointed to his role as the forerunner or Gate of Ba a reference to Baha u llah the promised universal messenger anticipated by the world s major scriptures 67 g Execution editMain article Execution of the Bab nbsp The barrack square in Tabriz where the Bab was executed In mid 1850 a new prime minister Amir Kabir 68 ordered the execution of the Bab probably because of various Babi insurrections defeats and because the movement s popularity appeared to be waning The Bab was brought back to Tabriz from Chehriq for an execution by firing squad The night before his execution while being conducted to his cell a young Babi Muhammad Ali Anis from Zonuz begged for martyrdom with him then was immediately arrested and placed in the same cell as the Bab On the morning of 9 July 1850 28 Sha ban 1266 AH the Bab was taken to the courtyard of the barracks where he was imprisoned Thousands of people gathered to watch his execution The Bab and Anis were suspended on a wall and a large firing squad of soldiers prepared to shoot 18 Numerous eye witness reports including those of Western diplomats recount the result h The order was given to fire Accounts differ on the details but all agree that the first volley failed to kill the Bab the bullets had instead cut the rope suspending them from the wall i A second firing squad was brought in and a second order to fire given This time the Bab was killed 18 In Babi and Bahaʼi tradition the failure of the first volley to kill the Bab is believed to be a miracle The remains of the Bab and Anis were thrown into a ditch and assumed eaten by dogs an action condemned by Justin Sheil then British Minister in Tehran 18 The remains were clandestinely rescued by a handful of Babis and then hidden Over time the remains were secretly transported according to the instructions of Bahaʼu llah and then ʿAbdu l Baha by way of Isfahan Kirmanshah Baghdad Damascus Beirut and then by sea to Acre on the plain below Mount Carmel in 1899 69 On 21 March 1909 the remains were interred in a special tomb the Shrine of the Bab erected for this purpose by ʻAbdu l Baha on Mount Carmel in present day Haifa Israel In its vicinity the Bahaʼi World Centre welcomes visitors to tour the gardens Teachings and legacy editMain article Teachings of the Bab At the heart of the teachings of the Bab was a call for the reconciliation of all members of the human family marking the advent of a new stage in human history 70 71 be as the leaves and fruit of the same tree that haply ye may become a source of comfort to one another It behooveth you all to be one indivisible people 72 A universal ethical perspective was thus emphasized by the Bab including the moral imperative of making no distinction between believers and nonbelievers and of recognizing the objective needs of others 73 The intent of these teachings was to lay the basis for the revolutionary transformation of humankind 74 Ultimately the Bab explained that human happiness and well being was dependent on treating other human beings in accord with the Golden Rule especially refraining from causing others sadness and in bringing all things whether in nature or man made to a state of perfection a process of imbuing all things with beauty and spiritual purpose 75 76 In this way civilization itself becomes a sacred undertaking a task that can only be understood the Bab indicates by fixing one s gaze on the Order of Baha u llah 77 As underscored by Saiedi the wider importance of the Bab s writings lie in their inextricable relation to those of Baha u llah 78 The teachings of the Bab offer new interpretations of the notions of God religion and prophets and reinterpret religious concepts such as heaven hell and resurrection accordingly 79 Progressive revelation continuity and renewal of religion 14 modernizing education 12 improving the status of women 13 abolishing the priesthood 16 and emphasizing ethics 15 independent investigation of truth and human nobility are among the key teachings of the Bab 16 Another fundamental focus of his teachings is his emphasis on the advent of a messianic figure whom he frequently refers to as he whom God shall make manifest 80 The Bab consistently discusses his own revelation and laws in the context of this promised figure Unlike previous religions where references to promised figures were only occasional and hinted at through allusions the main focus of the Bayan the mother book of the Babi dispensation is preparing the way for he whom God shall make manifest 17 Key Principles edit Main article Teachings of the Bab Some key teachings A core Babi belief is the concept of continuous and evolving religion 81 God progressively reveals himself through prophets and as humanity advances divine teachings become more comprehensive and sophisticated 82 Each religion arises in response to the specific social needs of its time surpassing its predecessor but ultimately leading to the emergence of a still more perfect religion 83 14 These prophets are seen as perfect reflections of God in the world 14 He emphasizes the unity of prophets comparing them to mirrors reflecting the same sun God 14 Additionally the Bab asserts that divine revelation is an ongoing process with new prophets appearing throughout history 14 The Bab reinterprets resurrection not as the end of the world but as the decline of an old religion and its revival through a new revelation He uses the metaphor of seasons to explain this cyclical progression 79 He argues that just as a tree dies in winter but reemerges in spring so too do religions experience periods of decline and renewal 79 This concept embraces historical change and human agency promoting a forward looking perspective 79 The Bab views religion as a dynamic phenomenon resulting from the interaction between God s will and humanity s historical stage He rejects the traditional view of religion as an absolute and unchanging imposition of God s will 14 Religion like humanity is a dynamic and progressive reality 14 Unlike earlier religions with occasional hints of future prophets the Babi scripture the Bayan revolves around a messianic figure greater than himself referred to as He Whom God Shall Make Manifest 17 The Bab positions his own mission as preparing the way for this promised one 80 This figure is described as possessing all divine attributes and having authority equal to God s 84 The Bab encourages independent investigation to recognize the promised one based on their character and actions not external factors 85 He warns against rejecting the promised one based on the Babi scriptures mirroring how past religions opposed new prophets 85 The Bab emphasizes the inherent capacity of humans to think critically and engage in independent investigation of truth 16 He abolishes the clergy and emphasizes the words of revelation not miracles as the true test of a prophet s legitimacy He removes the power structure of priests and prohibits congregational prayer led by clerics arguing that worship requires no human mediation 16 He views the clergy as a major cause of religious corruption 12 The Bab strongly advocates for rationality science and efficient education 12 He envisions a progressive society built on well organized schools teaching ethics respect for diverse opinions scientific inquiry and the role of women in society He encourages the learning of natural sciences and proposes educational reforms like eliminating archaic topics and using simpler language 12 The Babi faith significantly improved the lives of women compared to prevailing norms 13 86 He generally treats women and men equally in his laws 13 alleviating burdens imposed by Islamic law 13 He discourages polygamy forbids forced marriage and concubinage and grants women greater control over their lives 86 He encourages women s education and sees them as equals to men in the eyes of God 87 His support for Tahirih a leading female disciple who challenged social norms further exemplifies his commitment to improving women s rights 13 The Bab emphasizes forgiveness kindness and doing good to others even those who wrong you He advocates for personal improvement environmental preservation and creating a beautiful and prosperous society 15 He forbids violence and promotes peaceful coexistence through kindness and gentle manners 12 Overall the Bab envisioned a community centered on unity love service and the rejection of violence 15 Succession edit Main article Bahaʼi Azali split nbsp Shrine of the Bab Haifa Because of the prominent social position of Baha u llah a leading Babi figure of the time and that a death warrant had already been once issued against him by Mohammad Shah shortly before the king s death great care was taken to avoid putting him in the spotlight 88 Even the Bab s letters to Baha u llah came in the name of his younger brother Mirza Yahya 3 The danger that threatened Baha u llah was from Amir Kabir 89 According to Saiedi if Amir Kabir knew about the key role that Baha u llah was playing in the Babi community he would have him executed 89 Baha u llah Mirza Yahya and one of the Bab s secretaries had reached an agreement that in order to protect Baha u llah the younger brother would be recognized as the figurehead of the Babi community and would be kept in hiding out of harm s way 3 88 This would leave Baha u llah freer to continue his activities as a leading Babi 88 Accordingly the Bab sent a letter to Mirza Yahya naming him to nominal leadership pending the imminent appearance of the Promised One commonly referred to as Him Whom God shall make manifest by the Bab 90 91 At the time Mirza Yahya still a teenager had never demonstrated leadership in the Babi movement and was still living in the house of his older brother Bahaʼu llah 89 According to Amanat it seems very unlikely that Mirza Yahya a young man who was no more than 18 years old in could have been directly the focus of the Bab attention especially in the situation where the Bab was prohibited from communicating with his followers in the prisons of Maku and Chihriq 92 Unlike earlier religions in which references to future promised figures were occasional and only in hints and allusions the entirety of the Bayan the mother book of the Babi dispensation is essentially a discourse on a messianic figure even greater than himself that the Bab refers to as he Whom God shall make manifest The Bab always discusses his own revelation and laws in the context of this promised figure 17 The essence and purpose of the Bab s own mission as he always stressed was to prepare the people for the advent of him 80 The Bab describes this messianic figure as the origin of all divine attributes and states that his command is equivalent to God s command 84 He asks his followers to independently investigate and look for the promised one and recognize him out of his own intrinsic reality works and attributes and not due to any reasons external to him 85 He even warns them not to be deprived of the promised one by arguing against him from the works of the Bab the same way the followers of the previous religions opposed the next prophet while citing their holy scriptures 85 Furthermore the Bab speaks of the imminence of the advent of the promised one and refers to the time of his advent as year nine and nineteen 93 In 1863 nineteen years after the Bab declared his mission Baha u llah in the company of his companions in Iraq and later in 1866 in Edirne in a more publicized manner claimed to be the figure promised by the Bab 94 Most of the Babi community accepted him and later became known as Baha is 95 For a small group of Babis who did not recognize Bahaʼu llah Mirza Yahya remained their leader until his death in 1912 they became known as Azalis or Azali Babis Azali successorship remains disputed Bahaʼi sources report that 11 of the 18 witnesses appointed by Mirza Yahya to oversee the Babi community became Bahaʼis as his son did The man allegedly appointed by Mirza Yahya to succeed him Hadi Dawlat Abadi later publicly recanted his faith in the Bab and Mirza Yahya 96 97 Today Bahaʼis have several million followers while estimates of the number of Azalis are generally around one thousand in Iran 98 99 and any organization of theirs seems to have ceased to exist 100 Commemorations in the Bahaʼi Faith edit See also Bahaʼi Holy Days In the Bahaʼi calendar the events of the birth declaration and death of the Bab are commemorated by Bahaʼi communities on a yearly basis 101 At the centennial of the declaration of the Bab to Mulla Husayn in May 1944 the Bahaʼis had a viewing of the portrait of the Bab during the celebrations held at the Bahaʼi House of Worship Wilmette Illinois 102 Speaking at the event were Dorothy Beecher Baker Horace Holley and others The notion of twin Manifestations of God is a concept fundamental to Bahaʼi belief describing the relationship between the Bab and Bahaʼu llah Both are considered Manifestations of God in their own right having each founded separate religions Babism and the Bahaʼi Faith and revealed their own holy scriptures To Bahaʼis however the missions of the Bab and Bahaʼu llah are inextricably linked The Bab s mission was to prepare the way for the coming of Him whom God shall make manifest who eventually appeared in the person of Bahaʼu llah Both the Bab and Bahaʼu llah are revered as central figures of the Bahaʼi Faith A parallel is made between Bahaʼu llah and the Bab as between Jesus and John the Baptist 103 Impact edit Abdu l Baha summarises the Bab s impact Alone He undertook a task that can scarcely be conceived This illustrious Being arose with such power as to shake the foundations of the religious laws customs manners morals and habits of Persia and instituted a new law faith and religion 104 He has been compared to Martin Luther The Babi movement had a major impact on religious and social thought in 19th century Iran Christopher de Bellaigue writing about the Enlightenment period in the Islamic world wrote The Babi movement which began in the 1840s went on to become an important catalyst of social progressiveness in mid nineteenth century Iran promoting interreligious peace social equality between the sexes and revolutionary anti monarchism it went on to present a vision of modernity that was based on secularism internationalism and the rejection of war It is this vision which has enabled it to survive to the present day as Baha ism in pockets and communities peopled by five million souls and which qualifies it for inclusion in any narrative about modernisation in the Middle East 25 Writings edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Bab The Bab affirms that the verses revealed by a Manifestation of God are the greatest proof of His mission and the writings of the Bab comprise over two thousand tablets epistles prayers and philosophical treatises These writings form part of Baha i scripture particularly his prayers which are often recited individually as well as in devotional gatherings 105 The works of the Bab have also excited scholarly interest and analysis Elham Afnan describes the writings of the Bab as having restructured the thoughts of their readers so that they could break free from the chains of obsolete beliefs and inherited customs 106 Jack McLean notes the novel symbolism of the Bab s works observing that The universe of the Bab s sacred writings is pervasively symbolic Numbers colors minerals liquids the human body social relationships gestures deeds language letters and words and nature itself are all mirrors or signs that reflect the profounder reality of the names and attributes asma va sifat of God 105 The Bab s works are characterised by linguistic innovation including many neologisms whenever he found existing theological terms inadequate 105 Free association and stream of consciousness style composition are marked features of some works 107 Several scholars have identified the continual repetition of particular words or phrases of religious importance to be a distinct feature throughout the Bab s writings 108 The Bab himself categorised his writings into five modes divine verses prayers commentaries rational discourse written in Arabic and the Persian mode which encompasses the previous four 106 Scholars have noted commonalities between the Bab s writings and those of Western philosophers such as Hegel 109 Kant 110 and James Joyce 111 Most of the writings of the Bab have been lost however The Bab himself stated they exceeded five hundred thousand verses in length the Quran in contrast is 6300 verses in length If one assumes 25 verses per page that would equal 20 000 pages of text 112 Nabil i Zarandi in The Dawn breakers mentions nine complete commentaries on the Quran revealed during the Bab s imprisonment at Maku which have been lost without a trace 113 Establishing the true text of the works that are still extant as already noted is not always easy and some texts will require considerable work Others however are in good shape several of the Bab s major works are available in the handwriting of his trusted secretaries 114 Most works were revealed in response to specific questions by Babis This is not unusual the genre of the letter has been a venerable medium for composing authoritative texts as far back as Paul the Apostle Three quarters of the chapters of the New Testament are letters were composed to imitate letters or contain letters within them j Sometimes the Bab revealed works very rapidly by chanting them in the presence of a secretary and eyewitnesses The Archives Department at the Bahaʼi World Centre currently holds about 190 Tablets of the Bab 115 Excerpts from several principal works have been published in the only English language compilation of the Bab s writings Selections from the Writings of the Bab Denis MacEoin in his Sources for Early Babi Doctrine and History gives a description of many works much of the following summary is derived from that source In addition to major works the Bab revealed numerous letters to his wife and followers many prayers for various purposes numerous commentaries on verses or chapters of the Quran and many khutbihs or sermons most of which were never delivered Many of these have been lost others have survived in compilations 116 The Bab has been criticized for his inconsistent use of correct and incorrect Arabic grammar in his religious works though in his Arabic letters he made very few mistakes 117 A reason for this inconsistency could be to distinguish those who could not see past the outer form of the words from those that could understand the deeper meaning of his message 117 The Bab in his Treatise on Grammar emphasised that Arabic grammar must be taught as an outer symbol of the spiritual grammar of the universe 118 Three Stages edit The writings of the Bab have been described in terms of different typologies including chronologically and thematically 119 The Bab himself divides his writings into two stages the first stage where for purposes of preparation and prudence the subtleties of his claims and teachings were veiled and consequently not appreciated by the hearts and minds of the people around him and a later stage where he openly declared that he was not only the promised Twelfth Imam of Shiah Islam but a Prophet who has brought a new world religion prophesied by Torah Gospel and the Quran 1 This new revelation he claimed would release the creative energies and capacities necessary for the establishment of global unity and peace 4 The Bab s teachings can be further understood as having three broad stages each with a dominant thematic focus His earliest teachings are primarily defined by his interpretation of the Quran and hadith which recast common understandings of theological belief in light of a new hermenutics emphasizing the unity of God and his prophets and of all people 119 Rather than revealing new religious laws early Babi doctrine focuses on the inner and mystical meanings of religious law and turning ritual action into a spiritual journey 120 These themes continue in later years but a shift takes place where his emphasis moves to philosophical elucidation and finally to legislative pronouncements In the second philosophical stage the Bab gives an explanation of the metaphysics of being and creation and in the third legislative stage his mystical and historical principles unite 121 as the Bab s writings gain a historical consciousness 122 and clearly establish the principle of Progressive Revelation 123 The Bab discusses many fundamental issues in religion in this second stage including how to recognize spiritual truth the nature of the human being the meaning of faith the nature of good deeds the preconditions of spiritual journey and the question of the eternality or origination of the world The realization of true justice in the world and the central role of religion in attaining such justice is another major focus of this stage He even in his Treatise on Singing explores the philosophy of music where like every other human action singing becomes moral or immoral depending on the intention of the actor and the function of the act 124 In 1848 the Bab s teachings changed with a clear abrogation of Islamic law and the introduction of his own set of doctrines and practices 18 A radical thesis was offered religion is not to be understood as the unending imposition of the Will of God on humans but rather the product of the interaction of the will of God with the historical stage of the development of humanity 119 As human understanding and action undergoes change so too is religion an unfolding and progressive phenomenon The Persian Bayan the principal scriptural work of the Bab during this period openly proclaims the inception of a new religion The Bab s legal system included details for marriage burial pilgrimage prayer and other practices that appear designed for a future Babi state or to be implemented by He whom God shall make manifest the promised universal messenger of God who is mentioned throughout the Bab s writings All these laws were contingent on the approval of Him Whom God shall make manifest and thus their importance lied in the spiritual meaning which they symbolized the recognition of Him Whom God shall make manifest in the next divine revelation 63 Writings before his declaration edit nbsp The Bab s Tafsir on Surah al Baqara was started by the Bab in November or December 1843 some six months before declaring his mission The first half was completed by February or March 1844 the second half was revealed after the Bab s declaration It is the only work of the Bab s revealed before his declaration that has survived intact It also sheds light on the Bab s attitude toward Twelver beliefs 125 His wife also refers to important episodes before his declaration 126 Shiraz May September 1844 edit The first chapter of the Qayyumu l Asmaʼ Tafsir on the Surah Yusuf citation needed was written by the Bab on the evening of 22 May 1844 when he made his declaration to Mulla Husayn The entire work which is several hundred pages in length and is considered to be revelation by Bahaʼis required forty days to write it is one of the Bab s longer Arabic works It was widely distributed in the first year of the Babi movement functioning as something of a Quran or Bible for the Babis In the book the Bab states his claim to be a Manifestation of God though the claim is disguised with other statements that he is the servant of the Hidden Imam 127 Tahirih translated the work into Persian Sahifih yi makhzunih revealed before his departure for Mecca in September 1844 and consists of a collection of fourteen prayers mostly to be recited on specific holy days and festivals Its content remained within the expectations of Islam 128 Pilgrimage September 1844 June 1845 edit During his 9 1 2 month pilgrimage to Mecca the Bab composed many works Khasa il i sabʿih A work composed by the Bab on his sea journey back to Bushehr after his pilgrimage which listed some regulations to be followed by the Babi community A copy of the manuscript probably still exists in Iran 129 Kitab i Ruḥ Book of the Spirit This book contains 700 or 900 verses and was written while the Bab was sailing back to Bushehr from pilgrimage The original was nearly destroyed when the Bab was arrested Several manuscript copies are extant 130 Sahifih baynu l haramayn Treatise Between the Two Sanctuaries This Arabic work was written while the Bab traveled from Mecca to Medina in early 1845 and is in response to questions posed to him by a prominent Shaykhi leader 131 Kitab i Fihrist The Book of the Catalogue A list of the Bab s works composed by the Bab himself after he returned from pilgrimage to Mecca 21 June 1845 It is a bibliography of his earliest writings 132 Bushehr and Shiraz March 1845 September 1846 edit The Bab was in Bushehr March through June 1845 then in Shiraz Sahifih yi Jaʿfariyyih The Bab wrote this treatise to an unknown correspondent in 1845 Over a hundred pages in length it states many of his basic teachings especially in relation to some Shaykhi beliefs 133 Tafsir i Surih i Kawthar Tafsir on the Surah al Kawthar The Bab wrote this commentary for Yahya Darabi Vahid while he was in Shiraz it is the most important work revealed during the Shiraz period Though the surah is only three verses in length being the shortest in the Quran the commentary on it is over two hundred pages in length The work was widely distributed and at least a dozen early manuscripts are extant 134 135 Isfahan September 1846 March 1847 edit Nubuvvih khasish This work of fifty pages length was revealed in two hours in response to a question by Governor Manouchehr Khan Gorji It discusses the special prophethood of Muhammad an important subject discussed in debates between Muslims and Christians 136 52 137 Tafsir i Surih i va l ʿasr Commentary on the Surah al ʿAṣr This is one of the two important works the Bab penned in Isfahan It was written spontaneously and publicly in response to a request by Mir Sayyid Muhammad the chief cleric of the city much of it was written in one evening to the astonishment to those present 138 Maku late summer 1847 May 1848 edit The Bab left Isfahan in March 1847 sojourned outside Tehran several months then was sent to a fortress at Maku Iran close to the Turkish border It witnessed the composition of some of the Bab s most important works Persian Bayan This is undoubtedly the most important work of the Bab and contains a mature summary of his teachings It was composed in Maku in late 1847 or early 1848 The work consists of nine chapters titled vahids or unities which in turn are usually subdivided into nineteen babs or gates the one exception is the last unity which has only ten babs The Bab explained that it would be the task of He Whom God shall make manifest to complete the work Bahaʼis believe Bahaʼu llah s Kitab i Iqan to be the completion of the Bayan Each unity begins with an Arabic summary of its contents which makes it easier to read than many of the Bab s works Extracts of this work are published in Selections from the Writings of the Bab A L M Nicolas translated the entire work into French in four 150 page volumes 139 Arabic Bayan This is the shorter and less important of the two Bayans It consists of eleven vahids or unities each with nineteen babs or gates It offers a succinct summary of the Bab s teachings and laws It was composed at Maku in late 1847 or early 1848 140 Dala il i Sab ih Seven Proofs There are two works by this name the longer one in Persian the shorter one in Arabic both were composed in Maku in late 1847 or early 1848 Nicholas called the Persian Seven Proofs the most important of the polemical works that issued from the pen of Sayyid ʿAli Muhammad 141 The work was written to either a non Babi or to a follower whose faith had been shaken but the recipient s identity is unknown citation needed The Arabic text summarizes the seven proofs found in the Persian text C hihriq May 1848 July 1850 edit The Bab spent two years in Chehriq except for his brief visit to Tabriz for his trial The works he produced there were more esoteric or mystical and less thematically organized 142 Two major books were produced in addition to many minor works Kitabu l Asmaʼ The Book of Names This is an extremely long book about the names of God It was penned during the Bab s last days at Chehriq before his execution The various manuscript copies contain numerous variations in the text the book will require considerable work to reconstruct its original text 143 Kitab i panj sha n Book of Five Grades Having been composed in March and April 1850 this is one of the Bab s last works The book consists of eighty five sections arranged in seventeen groups each under the heading of a different name of God Within each group are five grades that is five different sorts of sections verses prayers homilies commentaries and Persian language pieces Each group was sent to a different person and was composed on a different day Thus the work is a kind of miscellany of unrelated material Some of the sections represent further exposition of basic themes in the Bab s teachings others consists of lengthy iterations of the names of God and variations on their roots 144 See also editList of Mahdi claimants List of founders of religious traditions Twin Holy BirthdaysNotes edit Although it was clear from Qayyum al asma the first work of the Bab after his declaration that he claimed to be a recipient of divine revelation As a matter of fact Mulla ʻAliy i Bastami the second disciple of the Bab was condemned jointly by an assembled group of Shiite and Sunny clerics on a charge of heresy in Iraq in 1844 the year of the declaration of the Bab because he believed in the author of a work Qayyum al asma that claimed to be a revelation of God 3 The term Bab b ɑː b Arabic باب meaning Gate or Door is a reference to the deputy of the Hidden Imam 5 In three instances where Babis were besieged and under attack by the Iranian army they defended themselves Eventually almost all of them were massacred The Bab never permitted Jihad and taught his followers to be peaceful and not convert by the sword 11 20 21 Some accounts say Anis succumbed to death on the first volley another that the Bab was dispatched by a sword The bullets had cut the rope suspending them from the wall See Firuz Kazemzadeh Kazem Kazemzadeh and Howard Garey The Bab Accounts of His Martyrdom in World Order vol 8 no 1 Fall 1973 32 All accounts even the Muslim ones concur that the Bab survived the first volley Hajji Muhammad Husayn quoted in Amanat 1989 pp 132 133 Mulla Husayn was met at the gate of Shiraz by the Bab they knew each other from having met previously in Karbala The statement made by the Bab in first disclosing his claim to Mulla Husyan describes himself not only as the Messenger of God but especially as the Remembrance of God and the Proof of God which unequivocally referred to the long expected Hidden Imam 3 Sir Justin Shiel Queen Victoria s Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary in Tehran wrote to Henry John Temple 3rd Viscount Palmerston the British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs on 22 July 1850 regarding the execution The letter is found in its original form as document F O 60 152 88 in the archives of the Foreign Office at the Public Records Office in London Some accounts say Anis succumbed to death on the first volley another that the Bab was dispatched by a sword See Firuz Kazemzadeh Kazem Kazemzadeh and Howard Garey The Bab Accounts of His Martyrdom in World Order vol 8 no 1 Fall 1973 32 All accounts even the Muslim ones concur that the Bab survived the first volley On letters as a medium of composition of the New Testament see Norman Perrin The New Testament An Introduction Proclamation and Parenesis Myth and History New York Harcourt Brace Jovanovitch 1974 96 97 Citations edit a b Lawson amp Ghaemmaghami 2012 p 15 Stockman 2020 pp 2 3 a b c d Cole 1998 p 28 a b Saiedi 2021 p 36 38 a b de Bellaigue 2018 p 135 141 a b Hatcher amp Martin 1998 p 7 Lawson amp Ghaemmaghami 2012 p 19 Hatcher amp Martin 1998 p 25 Hartz 2009 p 24 Stockman 2020 p 5 a b c Hartz 2009 p 29 a b c d e f Abdolmohammadi 2024 p 102 126 a b c d e f Momen 2012 a b c d e f g h Saiedi 2021 p 34 a b c d Stockman 2020 p 9 a b c d e Saiedi 2021 p 36 a b c d Saiedi 2008 pp 344 a b c d e f g h i j k l m MacEoin 1988 Stockman 2020 p 3 a b Stockman 2020 p 7 Walbridge 2022 p 339 362 Hartz 2009 p 35 a b c Ghaemmaghami 2022 p 17 Smith 2021 p 509 a b de Bellaigue 2018 p 140 Smith 2000 p 231 Manifestations of God Balyuzi 1973 p 32 a b c d e f Bausani 1999 Balyuzi 1973 pp 30 41 Amanat 1989 p 114 Saiedi 2008 p 305 Saiedi 2008 pp 206 a b de Bellaigue 2018 p 141 a b Ghaemmaghami 2022 p 18 a b Balyuzi 1981 Adamson 2009 p 436 Smith 2000 p 312 Britannica 2022c Warburg 2006 pp 121 123 a b Balyuzi 1973 p 41 Balyuzi 1973 p 13 Balyuzi 1973 p 146 Effendi 1944 p xiv Momen amp Lawson 2011 a b Afnan 2008 pp 20 22 BBC 2009 a b Amanat 1989 p 191 Balyuzi 1973 pp 71 72 Nabil i Zarandi 1932 pp 151 155 a b c d Manuchehri 2000 Amanat 1989 p 255 a b Amanat 1989 p 257 Amanat 1989 p 258 Ghaemmaghami 2022 p 24 a b c d MacEoin 1997 a b c d Amanat 1989 pp 390 393 Browne 1918 Browne 1918 p 256 a b Amanat 1989 p 392 a b Amanat 2019 p 244 5 Ross 1901 Melton 2011 p 74 a b Warburg 2006 p 144 a b Saiedi 2022 p 31 a b Smith 2000 p 58 Lawson amp Ghaemmaghami 2012 p 8 Lawson amp Ghaemmaghami 2012 p 14 Effendi 1944 p 52 Effendi 1944 pp 273 289 Lawson 2012 p 135 157 Saiedi 2021 p 35 the Bab Saiedi 2021 p 37 Lambden 2010 p 301 304 Saiedi 2008 p 314 Saiedi 2008 p 322 Saiedi 2000 pp 294 295 Saiedi 2000 p 28 a b c d Amanat 2017 p 239 a b c Saiedi 2008 p 1 Amanat 1989 p 245 Saiedi 2008 p 254 Saiedi 2008 p 256 a b Smith 2013 p 180 a b c d Saiedi 2008 pp 290 291 a b Zabihi Moghaddam 2023 p 705 Keddie 1981 p 46 a b c Momen 2021 p 42 a b c Saiedi 2008 p 349 Taherzadeh 2000 pp 92 93 Saiedi 2008 pp 344 345 Amanat amp Vahman 2016 p 15 Saiedi 2008 pp 348 57 Smith 2000 pp 180 181 Amanat 2017 p 246 Effendi 1944 p 233 Momen 1991 p 99 MacEoin 1987 Britannica 2011 Warburg 2006 p 177 Smith 2000 pp 182 183 Astley Cock 1944 Buck 2004 Afnan 2019 p 5 a b c Martin 1995 a b Afnan 2019 p 3 MacEoin 1988b Behmardi amp McCants 2007 Saiedi 2008 p 246 Saiedi 2008 p 303 Lawson 2015 MacEoin 1992 p 15 MacEoin 1992 p 88 MacEoin 1992 pp 12 15 Universal House of Justice 2002 MacEoin 1992 pp 15 40 a b McCants 2002 Saiedi 2008 p 205 a b c Saiedi 2021 p 29 39 Saiedi 2008 pp 30 Saiedi 2008 pp 27 28 Stockman 2010 Saiedi 2008 pp 241 Saiedi 2008 pp 34 35 MacEoin 1992 pp 46 47 Momen 2007 MacEoin 1992 pp 55 57 MacEoin 1992 pp 59 60 MacEoin 1992 pp 61 63 MacEoin 1992 p 61 MacEoin 1992 pp 60 61 MacEoin 1992 p 65 MacEoin 1992 pp 66 67 MacEoin 1992 p 71 Nabil i Zarandi 1932 pp 174 176 MacEoin 1992 pp 76 77 Nabil i Zarandi 1932 pp 202 04 MacEoin 1992 p 76 MacEoin 1992 pp 83 85 MacEoin 1992 p 85 MacEoin 1992 pp 85 88 MacEoin 1992 pp 88 94 MacEoin 1992 pp 91 92 MacEoin 1992 pp 93 95 References editBahaʼi source material edit Afnan Elham 2019 A Twofold Mission Some Distinctive Characteristics of the Person and Teachings of the Bab Baha i World Effendi Shoghi 1944 God Passes By Wilmette Illinois Bahaʼi Publishing Trust ISBN 0 87743 020 9 Retrieved 21 February 2007 Lambden Stephen N 2010 Review of Gate of the Heart Understanding the Writings of the Bab Bahʾi Studies Series vol 1 Journal of the American Oriental Society 130 2 301 304 ISSN 0003 0279 Martin Douglas 1995 The Mission of the Bab Retrospective 1844 1944 The Baha i World Retrieved 14 December 2022 Nabil i Zarandi 1932 The Dawn Breakers Nabil s Narrative Translated by Effendi Shoghi Hardcover ed Wilmette Illinois Bahaʼi Publishing Trust ISBN 0 900125 22 5 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Universal House of Justice 2002 Classification of the Baha i Sacred Texts Retrieved 14 December 2022 the Bab Bab The Book of Names Kitab i Asma excerpt Ocean Of Lights Retrieved 24 March 2024 Encyclopedias edit Adamson Hugh C 2009 The A to Z of the Bahaʼi Faith The A to Z Guide Series No 70 Plymouth UK Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6853 3 Ahdieh Hussein 4 September 2015 BABISM iii Babism in Neyriz Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 20 December 2022 Bausani A 1999 Bab Encyclopedia of Islam Leiden The Netherlands Koninklijke Brill NV Azali Encyclopaedia Britannica 28 September 2011 Retrieved 3 January 2021 the Bab Encyclopaedia Britannica 5 July 2022 Retrieved 20 December 2022 Bahaʾ Allah Encyclopaedia Britannica 8 November 2022 Retrieved 20 December 2022 al Aḥsaʾi Encyclopaedia Britannica 1 January 2022 Retrieved 20 December 2022 MacEoin Denis 15 December 1987 updated 18 August 2011 Azali Babism Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 3 January 2021 MacEoin Denis 15 December 1988 updated 18 August 2011 BAB ʿAli Moḥammad Sirazi Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 14 December 2022 MacEoin Denis 15 December 1988a updated 19 August 2011 BABISM Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 20 December 2022 MacEoin Denis 15 December 1988b updated 23 August 2011 Bahaism xii Bahai Literature Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 14 December 2022 Momen Moojan 4 December 2012 Women iv in the works of the Bab and in the Babi Movement Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 31 March 2021 Melton J Gordon 2011 Religious celebrations an encyclopedia of holidays festivals solemn observances and spiritual commemorations Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 206 7 OCLC 754582864 Smith Peter 2000 A Concise Encyclopedia of the Bahaʼi Faith Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1780744803 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Taherzadeh Adib 2000 The Child of the Covenant Oxford UK George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 439 5 Other resources edit Afnan Mirza Habibu llah 2008 The Genesis of the Babi Bahaʼi Faiths in Shiraz and Fars Translated by Rabbani Ahang Brill ISBN 978 90 04 17054 4 Amanat Abbas 1989 Resurrection and Renewal The Making of the Babi Movement in Iran 1844 1850 Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 2098 6 Amanat Abbas 2019 Iran a modern history New Haven pp 244 5 ISBN 978 0 300 24893 7 OCLC 1090852958 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Astley Cock John 23 May 1944 Baha i Temple is dedicated at Centennial Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois p 15 Retrieved 25 October 2017 Balyuzi H M 1973 The Bab The Herald of the Day of Days Oxford UK George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 048 9 Balyuzi H M 1981 Khadijih Bagum the Wife of the Bab Oxford UK George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 100 0 BBC 2009 The Bab BBC Retrieved 13 December 2022 Behmardi Vahid McCants William 2007 A Stylistic Analysis of the Bab s Writings Online Journal of Baha i Studies 1 114 136 Retrieved 14 December 2022 de Bellaigue Christopher 2018 The Islamic Enlightenment The Modern Struggle Between Faith and Reason London Vintage ISBN 978 0 099 57870 3 Browne E G 1918 reprinted 1961 2013 Materials for the study of the Babi Religion Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 41238 5 Retrieved 23 December 2022 Buck Christopher August 2004 The eschatology of globalization the multiple messiahship of Bahaʼullah revisited PDF In Moshe Sharon ed Studies in Modern Religions and Religious Movements and the Babi Baha i Faiths Mumen Book Series Studies in the history of religions Vol CIV Brill Academic Publishers pp 143 173 ISBN 90 04 13904 4 Eschraghi Armin 2012 Undermining the Foundations of Orthodoxy Some Notes on the Bab s Sharia Sacred Law In Lawson Ghaemmaghami eds A Most Noble Pattern Collected Essays on the Writings of the Bab Oxford UK George Ronald p 232 ISBN 978 0 85398 556 3 Retrieved 13 December 2022 Ghaemmaghami Omid 2022 Ch 2 The Life of the Bab In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 17 28 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Hartz Paula 2009 World Religions Baha i Faith 3rd ed New York Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 978 1 60413 104 8 Lawson Todd 2015 Joycean Modernism in a Nineteenth Century Qurʼan Commentary In Chehabi Neville eds Erin and Iran Cultural Encounters between the Irish and the Iranians Boston Foundation amp Center for Hellenic Studies MacEoin Denis 1992 The Sources for Early Babi Doctrine and History Leiden Brill Publishers ISBN 90 04 09462 8 MacEoin Denis May 1997 The Trial of the Bab Shiʿite Orthodoxy Confronts its Mirror Image Occasional Papers in Shaykhi Babi and Baha i Studies 1 Retrieved 2 July 2006 MacEoin Denis 2009 The Messiah of Shiraz Studies in Early and Middle Babism Iran Studies Vol 3 Leiden Brill Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 17035 3 Manuchehri Sepehr 2000 Taqiyyah Dissimulation in the Babi and Baha i Religions Australian Baha i Studies 2 Retrieved 2 December 2022 Manuchehri Sepehr 2004 Will and Testament Translation and Commentary Baha i Library Online Retrieved 13 December 2022 McCants William 2002 Arabic Grammar of the Bab The Retrieved 14 December 2022 McLean Jack 2009 Review of Gate of the Heart Understanding the Writings of the Bab Bahai Library com Retrieved 31 March 2021 Momen Moojan ed 1987 Selections from the Writings of E G Browne on the Babi and Bahaʼi Religions Oxford UK George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 247 3 Retrieved 23 December 2022 Momen Moojan 1991 The Cyprus Exiles Baha i Studies Bulletin Momen Moojan 2007 Messianic Concealment and Theophanic Disclosure PDF Online Journal of Bahaʼi Studies 1 71 88 ISSN 1177 8547 Momen Moojan Lawson Todd 2 November 2011 The Bab World Religions Belief Culture and Controversy Santa Barbara CA ABC Clio Saiedi Nader 2008 Gate of the heart understanding the writings of the Bab Waterloo Ont ISBN 978 1 55458 056 9 OCLC 904293009 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Saiedi Nader 2022 Ch 3 The Writings and Teachings of the Bab In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 29 39 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Smith Peter 2022 Ch 41 The History of the Babi and Baha i Faiths In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 501 512 doi 10 4324 9780429027772 48 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 S2CID 244705793 Stockman Robert August 2010 Review of Gate of the Heart Understanding the Writings of the Bab Nova Religio 14 1 124 127 doi 10 1525 nr 2010 14 1 124 ISSN 1092 6690 OCLC 4635424978 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Warburg Margit 2006 Citizens of the world a history and sociology of the Bahaʹis from a globalisation perspective Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 474 0746 1 OCLC 234309958 Lawson Todd 31 December 2012 The Baha i Tradition Fighting Words University of California Press doi 10 1525 california 9780520258310 003 0006 retrieved 25 March 2024 Saiedi Nader 26 November 2021 The Writings and Teachings of the Bab The World of the Baha i Faith 1 ed London Routledge doi 10 4324 9780429027772 5 ISBN 978 0 429 02777 2 retrieved 25 March 2024 Smith Peter 26 November 2021 The History of the Babi and Baha i Faiths The World of the Baha i Faith 1 ed London Routledge doi 10 4324 9780429027772 48 ISBN 978 0 429 02777 2 retrieved 26 March 2024 Momen Moojan 26 November 2021 Baha u llah The World of the Baha i Faith 1 ed London Routledge doi 10 4324 9780429027772 6 ISBN 978 0 429 02777 2 S2CID 223413894 retrieved 17 March 2023 Amanat Abbas 2017 Iran a modern history New Haven London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11254 2 Hatcher W S Martin J D 1998 The Bahaʼi Faith The Emerging Global Religion San Francisco Harper amp Row ISBN 0 87743 264 3 Keddie Nikki R 1981 Roots of revolution an interpretive history of modern Iran Yann Richard New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 02606 4 OCLC 7554626 Lawson Todd Ghaemmaghami Omid 2012 A Most Noble Pattern Collected Essays on the Writings of the Bab Ali Muhammad Shirazi 1819 1850 George Ronald ISBN 978 0 85398 556 3 Ross E Denison 1 April 1901 Babism JSTOR The North American Review Saiedi Nader 2000 Logos and Civilization Spirit History and Order in the Writings of Bahaʼu llah USA University Press of Maryland ISBN 1883053609 OL 8685020M Smith Peter 1 October 2013 A Concise Encyclopedia of the Baha i Faith Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1 78074 480 3 Stockman Robert H 2020 The Baha i faith violence and non violence Cambridge elements Cambridge New York N Y Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 70627 8 Cole Juan Ricardo 1998 Modernity and the millennium the genesis of the Baha i faith in the nineteenth century Middle East New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 11080 4 OCLC 37884893 Abdolmohammadi Pejman 2 February 2024 The Social and Political Thought of Sayyed ʿ Ali Moḥammad Sirazi the Bab Eurasian Studies 21 1 doi 10 1163 24685623 20230144 ISSN 2468 5623 S2CID 267413538 Lambden Stephen N 2008 Review of Gate of the Heart Understanding the Writings of the Bab Bahʾi Studies Series vol 1 Journal of the American Oriental Society 130 2 ISSN 0003 0279 Zabihi Moghaddam Siyamak 2023 The Bab on the Rights of Women Religions 14 6 doi 10 3390 rel14060705 ISSN 2077 1444 Amanat Abbas Vahman Fereydun 2016 Az Tehran ta Akka Persian Program in Iranian Studies iranianstudies macmillan yale edu Retrieved 20 February 2024 Walbridge John 1 January 2022 The Babi Uprising in Zanjan Causes and Issues Iranian Studies 29 3 4 339 362 doi 10 1080 00210869608701854 ISSN 0021 0862 Further reading editBrowne Edward Granville 1987 A Summary of the Persian Bayan In Momen Moojan ed Selections from the Writings of E G Browne on the Babi and Bahaʼi Religions Oxford UK George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 247 3 Retrieved 20 December 2022 BBC 2009 The Bab BBC Retrieved 13 December 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Bab nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bab Images of archival materials related to the Bab Works by Bab at Project Gutenberg Works by Bab at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Writings of the Bab at Bahaʼi Reference Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bab amp oldid 1218834498, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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