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Ibn Arabi

Ibn ʿArabī (Arabic: ابن عربي, ALA-LC: Ibn ʻArabī‎; full name: أبو عبد الله محـمـد بن العربي الطائي الحاتمي, Abū ʻAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn al-ʻArabī al-Ṭāʼī al-Ḥātimī; 1165–1240),[3] was an Arab Andalusian Muslim scholar, mystic, poet, and philosopher, extremely influential within Islamic thought. Out of the 850 works attributed to him, some 700 are authentic while over 400 are still extant. His cosmological teachings became the dominant worldview in many parts of the Muslim world.[4]

Ash-Shaykh al-Akbar
Muḥyī ad-Dīn

Ibn ʿArabī
ابن عربي
Born28 July 1165
Died16 November 1240(1240-11-16) (aged 75)
EraMedieval philosophy
RegionMiddle Eastern philosophy
SchoolFounder of Akbariyya
Main interests
Arabic name
Personal (Ism)Muḥammad
Patronymic (Nasab)ibn ʿAlī ibn Muḥammad ibn ʿArabī
Teknonymic (Kunya)Abū ʿAbd Allāh
Epithet (Laqab)Ibn ʿArabī
Toponymic (Nisba)al-Ḥātimī aṭ-Ṭāʾī

His traditional titular is Muḥyīddīn (Arabic: محيي الدين; The Reviver of Religion).[5][6][7] After he died, and specifically among practitioners of Sufism, he was renowned by the honorific title Shaykh al-Akbar (Arabic: الشيخ الأكبر).[8] This, in turn, was the name from which the "Akbarian" school of Sufism derived its name, making him known as Doctor Maximus (The Greatest Teacher) in medieval Europe.[9] Ibn ʿArabī is considered as a saint by some scholars and Muslim communities.[10][11]

Biography

Ibn ʿArabī born in Murcia, Al-Andalus on the 17th of Ramaḍān 560 AH (28 July 1165 AD),[3] or other sources suggested 27th of Ramaḍān 560 AH (5 August 1165 AD).[7] His first name is Muhammad,[8] but later called 'Abū 'Abdullāh (mean: the father of Abdullāh)—according to classical Arabic tradition—after he had a son. In some of his works, Ibn ‘Arabî referred to himself with fuller versions of his name as Abû ‘Abdullâh Muhammad ibn ‘Alî ibn al-‘Arabî al-Tâ’î al-Hâtimî,[3][8] where the last three names indicating his noble Arab lineage. And indeed, Hâtim al-Tây’î was well known as a poet of pre-Islamic Arabia[7] from the South Arabian tribe of Tayyi (now Yemen).[12]

Family

Ibn ʿArabī's maternal ancestry was North African Berber.[13] In his Futūḥāt al-Makkīyah, he writes of a deceased maternal uncle, Yahya ibn Yughan al-Sanhaji, a prince of Tlemcen who abandoned wealth for an ascetic life after encountering a Sufi mystic.[14] Whereas his paternal ancestry came from Yemen and belongs to one of the oldest Arab strains in Andalusia. His paternal ancestors emigrated very early to Andalusia, probably during the second wave of the Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula.[7]

His father, ‘Ali ibn Muḥammad, served in the Army of Ibn Mardanīsh, the ruler of Murcia.[3] When Murcia fell to the Almohad Caliphate in 1172, Ibn Mardanīsh did not survive the defeat and was killed in battle, leading to his father pledging allegiance to the Almohad Caliph Abū Ya’qūb Yūsuf I.[7] At that time Ibn ʿArabī was only 7 years old, and his family relocated from Murcia to Seville to serve the new ruler.[7]

Ibn ʿArabī had three wives. He married Maryam, a woman from an influential family,[3] when he was still a young adult and lived in Andalusia. Maryam also shared his aspiration to follow the Sufi path, as quoted by Austin in Sufis of Andalusia:

"My saintly wife, Maryam bint Muhammad binti Abdun, said, ‘I have seen in my sleep someone whom I have never seen in the flesh, but who appears to me in my moments of (spiritual) ecstasy. He ask me whether I was aspiring to the Way, to which I replied that I was, but that I did not know by what means to arrive at it. He then told me that I would come to it through five things: trust, certainty, patience, resolution and veracity.’ Thus she offered her vision to me (for my consideration) and I told her that was indeed the method of the Folk (Sufis). I myself have never seen one with that degree of mystical experience."[15]

When Ibn ʿArabī stayed in Anatolia for several years, according to various Arabic and Persian sources, he married the widow of Majduuddin and took charge of the education of his young son, Sadruddin al-Qunawi.[7] Ibn ʿArabī also mentioned his third wife in his writings, the mother of his son Imāduddin, to whom he bequeathed the first copy of Futūḥāt al-Makkīyah.[7]

The First Vision

 
Seville, where Ibn Arabi spent most of his life and education

Ibn ʿArabī grew up at the ruling court and received military training.[3] As he confessed in Futūḥāt al-Makkīyah, he preferred playing in military camp with his friends rather than reading a book. However, it was when he was a teenager that he experienced his first vision (fanā); and later he wrote of this experience as "the differentiation of the universal reality comprised by that look".[16]

His father, on noticing a change in him, had mentioned this to philosopher and judge, Ibn Rushd (Averroes),[16] who asked to meet Ibn Arabi. Ibn Arabi said that from this first meeting, he had learned to perceive a distinction between formal knowledge of rational thought and the unveiling insights into the nature of things. He then adopted Sufism and dedicated his life to the spiritual path.[16] When he later moved to Fez, in Morocco, Mohammed ibn Qasim al-Tamimi became his spiritual mentor.[17] In 1200 he took leave from one of his most important teachers, Shaykh Abu Ya'qub Yusuf ibn Yakhlaf al-Kumi, then living in the town of Salé.[18]

Pilgrimage to Mecca

Ibn Arabi left Andalusia for the first time at age 36 and arrived at Tunis in 1193.[contradictory][7] After a year in Tunisia, he returned to Andalusia in 1194. His father died soon after Ibn Arabi arrived at Seville. When his mother died some months later he left Andalusia for the second time and travelled with his two sisters to Fez, Morocco in 1195. He returned to Córdoba, Andalusia in 1198, and left Andalusia crossing from Gibraltar for the last time in 1200.[7] While there, he received a vision instructing him to journey east. After visiting some places in the Maghreb, he left Tunisia in 1201 and arrived for the Hajj in 1202.[19] He lived in Mecca for three years, and there began writing his work Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya (الفتوحات المكية), The Meccan Illuminations—only part of which has been translated into English by various scholars such as Eric Winkel.[20]

Journey north

 
Medieval list of Ibn Arabi's books.

After spending time in Mecca, he traveled throughout Syria, Palestine, Iraq and Anatolia. In 1204, Ibn Arabi met Shaykh Majduddīn Isḥāq ibn Yūsuf (شيخ مجد الدين إسحاق بن يوسف), a native of Malatya and a man of great standing at the Seljuk court. This time Ibn Arabi was travelling north; first they visited Medina and in 1205 they entered Baghdad. This visit offered him a chance to meet the direct disciples of Shaykh ‘Abd al-Qādir Jīlānī. Ibn Arabi stayed there only for 12 days because he wanted to visit Mosul to see his friend ‘Alī ibn ‘Abdallāh ibn Jāmi’, a disciple of the mystic Qaḍīb al-Bān (471-573 AH/1079-1177 AD; قضيب البان).[21] There he spent the month of Ramaḍan and composed Tanazzulāt al-Mawṣiliyya (تنزلات الموصلية), Kitāb al-Jalāl wa’l-Jamāl (كتاب الجلال والجمال, "The Book of Majesty and Beauty") and Kunh mā lā Budda lil-MurīdMinhu.[22]

Return south

In the year 1206, Ibn Arabi visited Jerusalem, Mecca and Egypt. It was his first time that he passed through Syria, visiting Aleppo and Damascus.

Later in 1207 he returned to Mecca where he continued to study and write, spending his time with his friend Abū Shujā bin Rustem and family, including Niẓām.[22]

The next four to five years of Ibn Arabi's life were spent in these lands and he also kept travelling and holding the reading sessions of his works in his own presence.[23]

Final years

 
Opening pages of the Konya manuscript of the Meccan Revelations, handwritten by Ibn Arabi.
 
Ibn Arabi's tomb in Damascus

After leaving Andalusia for the last time at the age of 33 (1198 AD) and wandering in Islamic world for about 25 years, at the age of 58 Ibn Arabi chose Damascus as his final home and dedicated his life for teaching and writing.[7] In this city, he composed Fushūsh Al-Ḥikam in 1229[12] and finalized two manuscripts of Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya in 1231 and 1234.[7]

Ibn Arabi died on 22 Rabī‘ al-Thānī 638 AH (16 November 1240) at the age of seventy-five. His was buried in the Banu Zaki cemetery, family cemetery of the nobles of Damascus, on Qasiyun Hill, Salihiyya, Damascus.[24]

After his death, Ibn Arabi's teachings quickly spread throughout the Islamic world. His writings were not limited to the Muslim elites, but made their way into other ranks of society through the widespread reach of the Sufi orders. Arabi's work also popularly spread through works in Persian, Turkish, and Urdu. Many popular poets were trained in the Sufi orders and were inspired by Arabi's concepts.[25]

Others scholars in his time like al-Munawi, Ibn 'Imad al-Hanbali and al-Fayruzabadi all praised Ibn Arabi as ''A righteous friend of Allah and faithful scholar of knowledge'', ''the absolute mujtahid without doubt'' and ''the imam of the people of shari'a both in knowledge and in legacy, the educator of the people of the way in practice and in knowledge, and the shaykh of the shaykhs of the people of truth though spiritual experience (dhawq) and understanding''.[26]

Islamic law

Although Ibn Arabi stated on more than one occasion that he did not blindly follow any one of the schools of Islamic jurisprudence, he was responsible for copying and preserving books of the Zahirite or literalist school, to which there is fierce debate whether or not Ibn Arabi followed that school.[27][28] Ignaz Goldziher held that Ibn Arabi did in fact belong to the Zahirite or Hanbali school of Islamic jurisprudence.[29] Hamza Dudgeon claims that Addas, Chodkiewizc, Gril, Winkel and Al-Gorab mistakenly attribute to Ibn ʿArabī non-madhhabism.[30]

On an extant manuscript of Ibn Ḥazm, as transmitted by Ibn ʿArabī, Ibn ʿArabī gives an introduction to the work where he describes a vision he had:

“I saw myself in the village of Sharaf near Siville; there I saw a plain on which rose an elevation. On this elevation the Prophet stood, and a man whom I did not know, approached him; they embraced each other so violently that they seemed to interpenetrate and become one person. Great brightness concealed them from the eyes of the people. ‘I would like to know,’ I thought, ‘who is this strange man.’ Then I heard some one say: ‘This is the traditionalist ʿAlī Ibn Ḥazm.’ I had never heard Ibn Ḥazm’s name before. One of my shaykhs, whom I questioned, informed me that this man is an authority in the field of science of Hadeeth.”

— Goldziher, The Ẓāhirīs: Their Doctrine and Their History (1971)

Goldziher says, “The period between the sixth (hijri) and the seventh century seems also to have been the prime of the Ẓāhirite school in Andalusia.”[31]

Ibn Arabi did delve into specific details at times, and was known for his view that religiously binding consensus could only serve as a source of sacred law if it was the consensus of the first generation of Muslims who had witnessed revelation directly.[32]

Ibn Arabi also expounded on Sufi Allegories of the Sharia building upon previous work by Al-Ghazali and al-Hakim al-Tirmidhi.[33]

Al-Insān al-kāmil

The doctrine of perfect man (Al-Insān al-Kāmil) is popularly considered an honorific title attributed to Muhammad having its origins in Islamic mysticism, although the concept's origin is controversial and disputed.[34] Arabi may have first coined this term in referring to Adam as found in his work Fusus al-hikam, explained as an individual who binds himself with the Divine and creation.[35]

Taking an idea already common within Sufi culture, Ibn Arabi applied deep analysis and reflection on the concept of a perfect human and one's pursuit in fulfilling this goal. In developing his explanation of the perfect being, Ibn Arabi first discusses the issue of oneness through the metaphor of the mirror.[36]

In this philosophical metaphor, Ibn Arabi compares an object being reflected in countless mirrors to the relationship between God and his creatures. God's essence is seen in the existent human being, as God is the object and human beings the mirrors. Meaning two things; that since humans are mere reflections of God there can be no distinction or separation between the two and, without God the creatures would be non-existent. When an individual understands that there is no separation between human and God they begin on the path of ultimate oneness. The one who decides to walk in this oneness pursues the true reality and responds to God's longing to be known. The search within for this reality of oneness causes one to be reunited with God, as well as, improve self-consciousness.[36]

The perfect human, through this developed self-consciousness and self-realization, prompts divine self-manifestation. This causes the perfect human to be of both divine and earthly origin. Ibn Arabi metaphorically calls him an Isthmus. Being an Isthmus between heaven and Earth, the perfect human fulfills God's desire to be known. God's presence can be realized through him by others. Ibn Arabi expressed that through self manifestation one acquires divine knowledge, which he called the primordial spirit of Muhammad and all its perfection. Ibn Arabi details that the perfect human is of the cosmos to the divine and conveys the divine spirit to the cosmos.[36]

Ibn Arabi further explained the perfect man concept using at least twenty-two different descriptions and various aspects when considering the Logos.[36] He contemplated the Logos, or "Universal Man", as a mediation between the individual human and the divine essence.[37]

Ibn Arabi believed Muhammad to be the primary perfect man who exemplifies the morality of God.[38] Ibn Arabi regarded the first entity brought into existence was the reality or essence of Muhammad (al-ḥaqīqa al-Muhammadiyya), master of all creatures, and a primary role-model for human beings to emulate. Ibn Arabi believed that God's attributes and names are manifested in this world, with the most complete and perfect display of these divine attributes and names seen in Muhammad. Ibn Arabi believed that one may see God in the mirror of Muhammad. He maintained that Muhammad was the best proof of God and, by knowing Muhammad, one knows God.[39]

Ibn Arabi also described Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and all other prophets and various Anbiya' Allah (Muslim messengers) as perfect men, but never tires of attributing lordship, inspirational source, and highest rank to Muhammad.[39][40] Ibn Arabi compares his own status as a perfect man as being but a single dimension to the comprehensive nature of Muhammad.[40] Ibn 'Arabi makes extraordinary assertions regarding his own spiritual rank, but qualifying this rather audacious correlation by asserting his "inherited" perfection is only a single dimension of the comprehensive perfection of Muhammad.[40]

Reaction

The reaction of Ibn 'Abd as-Salam, a Muslim scholar respected by both Ibn Arabi's supporters and detractors, has been of note due to disputes over whether he himself was a supporter or detractor. He was known by the title of Sultan al-'Ulama, the Sultan of scholars, was a famous mujtahid, Ash'ari theologian, jurist and the leading Shafi'i authority of his generation.[41] As such, the figure of Ibn 'Abd al-Salam was claimed by each faction of the Ibn-'Arabi controversy due to his impeccable record as a staunch champion of the shari'a.[42]

Ibn Taymiyyah's report was based on the authority of two reliable transmitters, Abu Bakr b. Salar and Ibn Daqiq al-'Id. According to it, Ibn 'Abd al-Salam declared Ibn 'Arabi "a master of evil" and "a disgusting man", who "professed the eternity of the world and did not proscribe fornication."[43] This severe verdict, whose authenticity Ibn Taymiyyah considered to be beyond doubt, was pronounced by Ibn 'Abd al-Salam upon his arrival in Egypt in 639/1241- that is, one year after the death of the Greatest Master.[44] The versions of the story furnished by al-Safadi, a cautious supporter of Ibn 'Arabi, and al-Dhahabi, his bitter critic, and teacher of al-Safadi, are especially helpful in placing Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's censure into a meaningful historical framework. Both al-Safadi and al-Dhahabi insisted that they read the story recorded in Ibn Sayyid al-Nas's own hand. And yet, their versions vary. Both variants describe Ibn Daqiq al-'Id's astonishment at his teacher's sharp critique of the acclaimed wali, which caused him to ask for proof of Ibn 'Arabi's lies. Ibn 'Abd al-Salam obliged by the following reply (in al-Safadi's recension):[45] "He used to deny [the possibility] of marriage between human beings and the jinn, since, according to him, the jinn are subtle spirits, whereas human beings are solid bodies, hence the two cannot unite. Later on, however, he claimed that he had married a woman from the jinnfolk, who stayed with him for a while, then hit him with a camel's bone and injured him. He used to show us the scar on his face which, by that time, had closed."[46] In al-Dhahabi's rendition: "He [Ibn 'Arabi] said: I married a she-jinni, and she blessed me with three children. Then it so happened that I made her angry and she hit me with a bone that caused this scar, whereupon she departed and I have never seen her again since."[47] The authenticity of Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's disparagement of Ibn 'Arabi seems to find support in his "Epistle on the [Saintly] Substitutes and the [Supreme] Succor" (Risala fil-'abdal wal-ghawth)[48]

On the other hand, another narration in praise of Ibn 'Arabi by al-Izz is reported by 'Abd al-Ghaffar al-Qusi, al-Fayruzabadi, al-Qari al-Baghdadi, al-Suyuti, al-Sha'rani, al-Maqqari, Ibn al-'Imad, and some other supporters of the Greatest Master. Despite minor variations in their accounts, all of them cite the same source: lbn 'Abd al-Salam's unnamed servant or student. In al-Qusi's redaction, Ibn 'Abd al Salam and his servant were passing by Ibn 'Arabi, who instructed his disciples in the Great Umayyad Mosque of Damuscus. Suddenly, the servant recalled that Ibn 'Abd al-Salam had promised to reveal to him the identity of the supreme saint of the epoch, the "Pole of the Age". The question caught Ibn 'Abd al-Salam off guard. He paused hesitantly for a moment, then pointed in the direction of Ibn 'Arabi, saying: "He is the Pole!" "And this in spite of what you have said against him?" asked the servant. Ibn 'Abd al-Salam ignored this remark and simply repeated his reply.[49] In al-Fayruzabadi's version of the story, Ibn 'Abd al-Salam is presented as a secret admirer of the Greatest Master who was fully aware of the latter's exalted status in the Sufi hierarchy. However, as a public figure, Ibn 'Abd al-Salam was careful to conceal his genuine opinion of the controversial Sufi in order to "preserve the outward aspect of the religious law". In so doing, he, according to al-Fayruzabadi, shrewdly avoided an inevitable confrontation with the "jurists," who viewed Ibn 'Arabi as a heretic.[50]

The importance of Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's ambiguous evaluation of the Greatest Master for the subsequent polemic is further attested by the detailed treatment of this story in al-Fasi's massive biographical dictionary, "The Precious Necklace" (al-'lqd al-thamin). A bitter critic of Ibn 'Arabi's monistic views, al-Fasi rejected the Sufi version of the story as sheer fabrication. Yet, as a scrupulous muhaddith, he tried to justify his position through the methods current in hadith criticism:[51] "I have a strong suspicion that this story was invented by the extremist Sufis who were infatuated with Ibn 'Arabi. Thereupon the story gained wide diffusion until it reached some trustworthy people, who accepted it in good faith .... My suspicion regarding the authenticity of this story has grown stronger because of the unfounded supposition that Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's praise of Ibn 'Arabi had occurred simultaneously with his censure of him. Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's statement that he censured Ibn 'Arabi out of concern for the shari'a inescapably implies that Ibn 'Arabi enjoyed a high rank in the same moment as Ibn 'Abd al-Salam was censuring him. Such a blunder could not have happened to any reliable religious scholar, let alone to someone as knowledgeable and righteous as Ibn 'Abd al-Salam. Anyone who suspects him of this makes a mistake and commits a sin [by holding him responsible for] mutually contradictory statements .... One may try to explain Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's praise of Ibn 'Arabi, if it indeed took place, by the fact that [Ibn 'Abd al-Salam] was hesitating between praise and censure, because at the time he spoke Ibn 'Arabi's state had changed for the better. If so, there is no contradiction in Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's words. Were we to admit that the praise really occurred, it was nevertheless abrogated by Ibn Daqiq al-'Id's report concerning lbn 'Abd al-Salam's [later] condemnation of lbn 'Arabi. For Ibn Daqiq al-'Id could only hear Ibn 'Abd al-Salam in Egypt, that is, a few years after Ibn 'Arabi's death. This cannot be otherwise because he ... was educated at Qus, where he had studied the Maliki madhhab, until he mastered it completely. Only then he came to Cairo to study the Shafi'i madhhab and other sciences under Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's guidance. ... His departure could only take place after 640, by which time Ibn 'Arabi had already been dead. ... Now, Ibn 'Abd al-Salam's praise, as the story itself testifies, occurred when Ibn 'Arabi was still alive. For did he not point to [Ibn 'Arabi], when that individual [the servant] asked him about the Pole or the [greatest] saint of the age?"[52]

Creed

His best-known book, entitled 'al-Futuhat al-Makkiyya' (The Meccan Victories or Illuminations) which begins with a statement of doctrine (belief) about which al-Safadi (d. 764/1363) said: "I saw (read) that (al-Futuhat al-Makkiyya) from beginning to end. It consists of the doctrine of Abu al-Hasan al-Ash'ari without any difference (deviation) whatsoever."[53][54]

Works

 
Page from Ibn Arabi's six-volume Dīwān, copied by the author. Khalili Collection of Islamic Art

Some 800 works are attributed to Ibn Arabi, although only some have been authenticated. Recent research suggests that over 100 of his works have survived in manuscript form, although most printed versions have not yet been critically edited and include many errors.[55] A specialist of Ibn 'Arabi, William Chittick, referring to Osman Yahya's definitive bibliography of the Andalusian's works, says that, out of the 850 works attributed to him, some 700 are authentic while over 400 are still extant.[56]

  • The Meccan Illuminations (Al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya), his largest work in 37 volumes originally and published in 4 or 8 volumes in modern times, discussing a wide range of topics from mystical philosophy to Sufi practices and records of his dreams/visions. It totals 560 chapters. In modern editions it amounts to some 15 000 pages.[57]
  • The Ringstones of Wisdom (also translated as The Bezels of Wisdom), or Fusus al-Hikam. Composed during the later period of Ibn 'Arabi's life, the work is sometimes considered his most important and can be characterized as a summary of his teachings and mystical beliefs. It deals with the role played by various prophets in divine revelation.[58][59][60] The attribution of this work (Fusus al-Hikam) to Ibn Arabi is debated and in at least one source[61] is described as a forgery and false attribution to him reasoning that there are 74 books in total attributed to Sheikh Ibn Arabi of which 56 have been mentioned in "Al Futuhat al-Makkiyya" and the rest mentioned in the other books cited therein. However many other scholars accept the work as genuine.[62][63]
  • The Dīwān, his collection of poetry spanning five volumes, mostly unedited. The printed versions available are based on only one volume of the original work.
  • The Holy Spirit in the Counselling of the Soul (Rūḥ al-quds), a treatise on the soul which includes a summary of his experience from different spiritual masters in the Maghrib. Part of this has been translated as Sufis of Andalusia, reminiscences and spiritual anecdotes about many interesting people whom he met in al-Andalus.
  • Contemplation of the Holy Mysteries (Mashāhid al-Asrār), probably his first major work, consisting of fourteen visions and dialogues with God.
  • Divine Sayings (Mishkāt al-Anwār), an important collection made by Ibn 'Arabī of 101 hadīth qudsī
  • The Book of Annihilation in Contemplation (K. al-Fanā' fi'l-Mushāhada), a short treatise on the meaning of mystical annihilation (fana).
  • Devotional Prayers (Awrād), a widely read collection of fourteen prayers for each day and night of the week.
  • Journey to the Lord of Power (Risālat al-Anwār), a detailed technical manual and roadmap for the "journey without distance".
  • The Book of God's Days (Ayyām al-Sha'n), a work on the nature of time and the different kinds of days experienced by gnostics
  • The Astounding Phoenix regarding the Seal of Saints and the Sun of the West (Arabic: عنقاء مغرب في معرفة ختم الأولياء وشمس المغرب, ALA-LC: ʻAnqāʼ al-Mughrib fī Maʻrifat Khatm al-Awliyāʼ wa-Shams al-Maghrib), a book on the meaning of sainthood and its culmination in Jesus and the Mahdī
  • The Universal Tree and the Four Birds (al-Ittihād al-Kawnī), a poetic book on the Complete Human and the four principles of existence
  • Prayer for Spiritual Elevation and Protection ('al-Dawr al-A'lā), a short prayer which is still widely used in the Muslim world
  • The Interpreter of Desires (Tarjumān al-Ashwāq), a collection of nasībs which, in response to critics, Ibn Arabi republished with a commentary explaining the meaning of the poetic symbols. (1215)
  • Divine Governance of the Human Kingdom (At-Tadbidrat al-ilahiyyah fi islah al-mamlakat al-insaniyyah).
  • The Four Pillars of Spiritual Transformation (Hilyat al-abdāl) a short work on the essentials of the spiritual Path

The Meccan Illuminations (Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya)

According to Claude Addas, Ibn Arabi began writing Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya after he arrived in Mecca in 1202. After almost thirty years, the first draft of Futūḥāt was completed in December 1231 (629 AH), and Ibn Arabi bequeathed it to his son.[64] Two years before his death, Ibn ‘Arabī embarked on a second draft of the Futūḥāt in 1238 (636 AH),[64] of which included a number of additions and deletions as compared with the previous draft, that contains 560 chapters. The second draft, the more widely circulated version, was bequeathed to his disciple, Sadr al-Din al-Qunawi. There are many scholars attempt to translate this book from Arabic into other languages, but there is no complete translation of Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya to this day.

The Bezels of Wisdom (Fuṣūṣ al-Ḥikam)

There have been many commentaries on Ibn 'Arabī's Fuṣūṣ al-Ḥikam: Osman Yahya named more than 100 while Michel Chodkiewicz precises that "this list is far from exhaustive."[65] The first one was Kitab al-Fukūk written by Ṣadr al-Dīn al-Qunawī who had studied the book with Ibn 'Arabī; the second by Qunawī's student, Mu'ayyad al-Dīn al-Jandi, which was the first line-by-line commentary; the third by Jandī's student, Dawūd al-Qaysarī, which became very influential in the Persian-speaking world. A recent English translation of Ibn 'Arabī's own summary of the Fuṣūṣ, Naqsh al-Fuṣūṣ (The Imprint or Pattern of the Fusus) as well a commentary on this work by 'Abd al-Raḥmān Jāmī, Naqd al-Nuṣūṣ fī Sharḥ Naqsh al-Fuṣūṣ (1459), by William Chittick was published in Volume 1 of the Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi Society (1982).[66]

Critical editions and translations of Fuṣūṣ al-Ḥikam

The Fuṣūṣ was first critically edited in Arabic by 'Afīfī (1946) that become the standard in scholarly works. Later in 2015, Ibn al-Arabi Foundation in Pakistan published the Urdu translation, including the new critical of Arabic edition.[67]

The first English translation was done in partial form by Angela Culme-Seymour[68] from the French translation of Titus Burckhardt as Wisdom of the Prophets (1975),[69] and the first full translation was by Ralph Austin as Bezels of Wisdom (1980).[70] There is also a complete French translation by Charles-Andre Gilis, entitled Le livre des chatons des sagesses (1997). The only major commentary to have been translated into English so far is entitled Ismail Hakki Bursevi's translation and commentary on Fusus al-hikam by Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi, translated from Ottoman Turkish by Bulent Rauf in 4 volumes (1985–1991).

In Urdu, the most widespread and authentic translation was made by Shams Ul Mufasireen Bahr-ul-uloom Hazrat (Muhammad Abdul Qadeer Siddiqi Qadri -Hasrat), the former Dean and Professor of Theology of the Osmania University, Hyderabad. It is due to this reason that his translation is in the curriculum of Punjab University. Maulvi Abdul Qadeer Siddiqui has made an interpretive translation and explained the terms and grammar while clarifying the Shaikh's opinions. A new edition of the translation was published in 2014 with brief annotations throughout the book for the benefit of contemporary Urdu reader.[71]

In fiction

In the Turkish television series Diriliş: Ertuğrul, Ibn Arabi was portrayed by Ozman Sirgood.[72] In 2017, Saudi Arabian novelist Mohammed Hasan Alwan won the International Prize for Arabic Fiction for his novel A Small Death, a fictionalized account of Ibn Arabi's life.[73]

See also

References

Sources

As of this edit, this article uses content from "A Concise biography of Ibn 'Arabi", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.

Citations

  1. ^ Ozgur, Koca. Said Nursi's Synthesis of Ash'arite Occasionalism and Ibn 'Arabi's Metaphysical Cosmology: "Diagonal Occasionalism," Modern Science", and "Free Will". UMI Dissertations Publishing. p. 217. ISBN 9781303619793.
  2. ^ Ramin Jahanbegloo, In Search of the Sacred : A Conversation with Seyyed Hossein Nasr on His Life and Thought, ABC-CLIO (2010), p. 59
  3. ^ a b c d e f Chittick, William (Summer 2018). "Ibn Arabi". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford: Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Retrieved 19 July 2018. Ibn 'Arabî referred to himself with fuller versions of his name, such as Abû 'Abdallâh Muhammad ibn 'Alî ibn al-'Arabî al-Tâ'î al-Hâtimî (the last three names indicating his noble Arab lineage)
  4. ^ Ibrahim Kalin, Salim Ayduz The Oxford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Science, and Technology in Islam, Vol. 1 (Oxford University Press, 2014 ISBN 9780199812578), p. 162
  5. ^ Nasr, Hossein (1976). Three Muslim sages : Avicenna, Suhrawardī, Ibn ʻArabī. New York: Caravan Books. ISBN 9780882065007.
  6. ^ Corbin, Henry (2014). Creative Imagination in the Sufism of Ibn Arabi. p. 76. ISBN 9781400853670.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Addas, Claude (2019). Ibn Arabi: The Voyage of No Return (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Islamic Texts Society. ISBN 9781911141402.
  8. ^ a b c Hirtenstein, Stephen. "Names and Titles of Ibn [al-]'Arabī". The Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ Arabi, Ibn (2020). IBN 'ARABI 》 'Doctor Maximus' & 'The Great Master' SELECTED POEMS (Translation & Introduction by Paul Smith). ISBN 978-10-78-41521-7. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  10. ^ Chittick 2007, p. 1.
  11. ^ Al-Suyuti, Tanbih al-Ghabi fi Tanzih Ibn ‘Arabi (p. 17-21)
  12. ^ a b "Ibn al-ʿArabī | Muslim mystic". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  13. ^ Hirtenstein, Stephen (1999). The Unlimited Mercifier: The Spiritual Life and Thought of Ibn 'Arabi. Oxford: Anqa Publishing. p. 32. ISBN 978-1883991296. Like many Andalusians, he came of mixed parentage: his father's name indicates an Arab family, which had probably emigrated to Andalusia in the early years of the Arab conquest, while his mother seems to have come from a Berber family...
  14. ^ Hirtenstein, Stephen C. (September 1999). The Unlimited Mercifier: The Spiritual Life and Thought of Ibn 'Arabi. p. 252. ISBN 978-1905937387.
  15. ^ Austin, R.J.W. (1988). Sufis of Andalusia: The Ruh Al-Quds & Al-Durrat Al-Fakhirah. New Leaf Distributing Company. ISBN 9780904975130.
  16. ^ a b c Chittick 2007, p. 5.
  17. ^ John Renard (18 May 2009). Tales of God's Friends: Islamic Hagiography in Translation. University of California Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-520-25896-9. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  18. ^ Elmore, Gerald T. (1999). Islamic Sainthood in the Fullness of Time: Ibn Al-ʻArabī's Book of the Fabulous Gryphon. Brill. p. 69. ISBN 978-90-04-10991-9.
  19. ^ Chittick 2007, p. 5
  20. ^ "The Futuhat Project". The Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society. 12 January 2020. Retrieved 2022-12-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  21. ^ Testament to Qaḍīb al-Bān's life exists in a manuscript at the University of Baghdad (no. 541).
  22. ^ a b Hirtenstein, Stephen (1999). The Unlimited Mercifier, The Spiritual life and thought of Ibn 'Arabi. Anqa Publishing & White Cloud Press. ISBN 978-0953451326.
  23. ^ Islaahe Nafs ka AAiena e Haq
  24. ^ "Tomb of Ibn al-'Arabi". Qandara: Mediterranian Heritage. Retrieved December 14, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  25. ^ Chittick 2007, p. 2-3.
  26. ^ Ibn, Khafif (1999). Correct Islamic Doctrine/Islamic Doctrine. ISCA. ISBN 978-1-930409-01-9.
  27. ^ Mohammed Rustom, Review of Michel Chodkiewicz's An Ocean without Shore
  28. ^ Hamza Dudgeon, "The Counter-Current Movements of Andalusia and Ibn ʿArabī: Should Ibn ʿArabī be considered a Ẓāhirī?" 2018, Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi Society Vol. 64. https://www.academia.edu/36173562/The_Counter_Current_Movements_of_Andalusia_and_Ibn_%CA%BFArab%C4%AB_Should_Ibn_%CA%BFArab%C4%AB_be_considered_a_%E1%BA%92%C4%81hir%C4%AB
  29. ^ Ignaz Goldziher, The Ẓāhirīs: Their Doctrine and Their History, ed. and trans. by Wolfgang Behn (Leiden: Brill, 1971), 169.
  30. ^ Dudgeon, "The Counter-Current Movements of Andalusia and Ibn ʿArabī: Should Ibn ʿArabī be considered a Ẓāhirī?," 104.
  31. ^ Goldziher, The Ẓāhirīs, 170-171
  32. ^ Chiragh Ali, The Proposed Political, Legal and Social Reforms. Taken from Modernist Islam 1840-1940: A Sourcebook, pg. 281. Edited by Charles Kurzman. New York City: Oxford University Press, 2002.
  33. ^ Hamza Dudgeon, "The Revival of Sharia’s Allegories," 2019 Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi Society Vol. 66. https://www.academia.edu/40585698/The_Revival_of_Sharia_s_Allegories
  34. ^ Chittick, William C. "Ebn al-‘Arabi Mohyi-al- Din Abu ‘Abd-Allah Mohammad Ta’I Hatemi." Encyclopedia Iranica (1996): Web. 3 Apr 2011. <http://iranica.com/articles/ebn-al-arabi 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine>
  35. ^ Fitzpatrick, Coeli; Walker, Adam Hani (2014). Muhammad in History, Thought, and Culture. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. p. 440. ISBN 978-1610691772.
  36. ^ a b c d Little, John T. (January 1987). "Al-Insān Al-Kāmil: The Perfect Man According to Ibn Al-'arabi". The Muslim World. 77 (1): 43–54. doi:10.1111/j.1478-1913.1987.tb02785.x.
  37. ^ Dobie, Robert J.date=17 November 2009 (2010). Logos and Revelation: Ibn 'Arabi, Meister Eckhart, and Mystical Hermeneutics. Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press. p. 225. ISBN 978-0813216775. For Ibn Arabi, the Logos or "Universal Man" was a mediating link between individual human beings and the divine essence.
  38. ^ Fitzpatrick and Walker 2014, p. 445
  39. ^ a b Fitzpatrick and Walker 2014, p. 446
  40. ^ a b c Gregory A. Lipton (2018-04-02), Rethinking Ibn 'Arabi, Oxford University Press, p. 15, ISBN 9780190684518
  41. ^ Bosworth, C.E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W.P.; Lecomte, G. (1997). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Vol. IX (San-Sze) (New ed.). Leiden, Netherlands: Brill. p. 812. ISBN 9004104224.
  42. ^ Knysh, A., 1999. Ibn ʻArabi in the later Islamic tradition. Albany: State University of New York Press, pp.79
  43. ^ Majmūʿat al-rasāʾil wa al-masāʾil, vol. 4, pp. 73 and 75
  44. ^ (Knysh, 1999), p.66
  45. ^ (Knysh, 1999), p.67
  46. ^ Al-Wafi, vol. 4, p. 174
  47. ^ Al-Dhahabi. Mizan, vol. 3, p. 656
  48. ^ (Knysh, 1999), p.72
  49. ^ (Knysh, 1999), p.74
  50. ^ (Knysh, 1999), p.75
  51. ^ (Knysh, 1999), p.76
  52. ^ Al-Fasi. 'lqd, vol. 2, pp. 184-185.
  53. ^ Ibn Khafif (1999). Correct Islamic Doctrine/Islamic Doctrine. Translated by Gibril Fouad Haddad. As-Sunna Foundation of America. p. 4. ISBN 9781930409019.
  54. ^ Gibril Fouad Haddad (2015). The Biographies of the Elite Lives of the Scholars, Imams and Hadith Masters. Zulfiqar Ayub. p. 233.
  55. ^ . Cis-ca.org. Archived from the original on 2008-05-26. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  56. ^ William C. Chittick, Ibn 'Arabi: Heir to the Prophets, Oneworld Publications (2012), p. 7
  57. ^ Michel Chodkiewicz, introduction in The Spiritual Writings of Amir 'Abd al-Kader, SUNY Press (1995), p. 7
  58. ^ Naqvi, S. Ali Raza, THE BEZELS OF WISDOM (Ibn al-'Arabī's Fuṣūṣ al-Ḥikam) by R.W.J. Austin (rev.), Islamic Studies, Vol. 23, No. 2 (Summer 1984), pp. 146-150
  59. ^ Chittick, William C. "The Disclosure of the Intervening Image: Ibn 'Arabî on Death", Discourse 24.1 (2002), pp. 51-62
  60. ^ Almond, Ian. "The Honesty of the Perplexed: Derrida and Ibn 'Arabi on 'Bewilderment'", Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Vol. 70, No. 3 (Sep., 2002), pp. 515-537
  61. ^ Al Futuhat Al Makkiyya, Dar Sader, Beirut, Lebanon, Book 1, pg 7
  62. ^ Chittick, William C. "The Disclosure of the Intervening Image: Ibn 'Arabi on Death" Discourse 24.1 (2002) 51-62
  63. ^ Notes on Fusus ul Hikam, Reynold A. Nicholson, Studies in Islamic Mysticism
  64. ^ a b Addas, Claude. (2000). Ibn ʻArabī, the voyage of no return. Cambridge, CB, UK: Islamic Texts Society. ISBN 0946621748. OCLC 41925362.
  65. ^ Michel Chodkiewicz, An Ocean Without Shore: Ibn Arabi, the Book, and the Law, SUNY Press (1993), p. 59
  66. ^ "Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi Society". Ibnarabisociety.org. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  67. ^ Sultan al-Mansub, Abd al-Aziz; Shahī, Abrar Ahmed, eds. (2015). Fusus al-Hikam. translator: Abrar Ahmed Shahi. Ibn al-Arabi Foundation.
  68. ^ "Angela Culme-Seymour". The Daily Telegraph. February 3, 2012. Archived from the original on 2022-01-12.
  69. ^ Culme-Seymour, A.(tr.)(1975),"The Wisdom of the Prophets", Gloucestershire, U.K.:Beshara Publications
  70. ^ Austin, R.W.J.(tr.)(1980),"Ibn Al'Arabi: The Bezels of Wisdom", Mahwah, NJ: The Paulist Press, ISBN 0-8091-2331-2
  71. ^ Fusus Al Hikam 2015-07-04 at the Wayback Machine, Translated by Muhammad Abdul Qadeer Siddiqui, Annotated by Mohammed Abdul Ahad Siddiqui, 2014 Kitab Mahal, Darbar Market, Lahore, Online Version at guldustah.com
  72. ^ "Osman Soykut Kimdir? - Güncel Osman Soykut Haberleri". www.sabah.com.tr. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
  73. ^ "Saudi wins award for novel on Ibn Arabi". Dawn. 26 April 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2021.

Bibliography

Books by Ibn Arabi

This is a small selection of his many books.

In Arabic
  • Ibn ‘Arabī. Al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya, Vols. 1–4. Beirut: n.p.; photographic reprint of the old edition of Bulaq 1329/1911 which comprises four volumes each about 700 pages of 35 lines; the page size is 20 by 27cm. Print.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī, Ibrāhīm Madkūr, and ʻUthmān Yaḥyá. Al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya, Vols. 1–14,. al-Qāhirah: al-Hayʼah al-Miṣrīyah al-ʻĀmmah lil-Kitāb, 1972. Print. this is the critical edition by Osman Yahya. This version was not completed, and the 14 volumes correspond to only volume I of the standard Bulaq/Beirut edition.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī, Fuṣūṣ al-Ḥikam. Beirut: Dar al-Kitab al-'Arabī. Print.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī. Sharḥ Risālat Rūḥ Al-quds fī Muḥāsabat Al-nafs. Comp. Mahmud Ghurab. 2nd ed. Damascus: Naḍar, 1994. Print.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī. Inshā’ al-Dawā’ir, Beirut: Dar al-kutub al-‘Ilmiyya. 2004. Print.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī. Rasā’il Ibn ‘Arabī (Ijāza li Malik al-Muẓaffar). Beirut: Dar al-kutub al-‘Ilmiyya, 2001. Print.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī. Rasā'il Ibn al-'Arabî (Kitāb al-Jalāla). Hyberadad-Deccan: Dā’irat al-Ma‘ārif al-‘Uthmāniyya, 1948. Print.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī. Kitāb al Bā’. Cairo: Maktabat al-Qāhira, 1954. Print.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī, Risālat ila Imām al-Rāzī. Hyberadad-Deccan: Dā’irat al-Ma‘ārif al-‘Uthmāniyya, 1948. Print.
In English
  • Ibn, Arabi (1997). Divine Governance of the Human Kingdom. Translated by Tosun Bayrak. Fons Vitae. ISBN 9781887752053.
  • Ibn, Arabi (1992). What the Seeker Needs: Essays on Spiritual Practice, Oneness, Majesty and Beauty, with Ibn ʻArabi's Glossary of 199 Sufi Technical Terms. Translated by Tosun Bayrak. University of Virginia: Threshold Books. ISBN 9780939660414.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī. Nasab al-Khirqa. Trans. Gerald Elmore. Vol. XXVI. Oxford: Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn ‘Arabi Society, 1999. Print.
  • Ibn ‘Arabī. Divine Sayings The Mishkāt Al-Anwār of Ibn 'Arabi. Oxford: Anqa, 2005. Print.
  • Ibn 'Arabi. The Meccan Revelations. Pir Press, 2010

Books about Ibn 'Arabi

  • Addas, Claude, Quest for the Red Sulphur, Islamic Texts Society, Cambridge, 1993. ISBN 0-946621-45-4.
  • Addas, Claude, Ibn Arabi: The Voyage of No Return, Cambridge, 2019 (second edition), Islamic Texts Society. ISBN 9781911141402.
  • Akkach, Samer, Ibn 'Arabî's Cosmogony and the Sufi Concept of Time, in: Constructions of Time in the Late Middle Ages, ed. Carol Poster and Richard Utz. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1997. Pp. 115-42.
  • Titus Burckhardt & Bulent Rauf (translator), Mystical Astrology According to Ibn 'Arabi (The Fons Vitae Titus Burckhardt Series) ISBN 1-887752-43-9
  • Chittick, William C. (2007). Ibn 'Arabi: Heir to the Prophets. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. p. 1. ISBN 978-1851685110.
  • Henry Corbin, Alone with the Alone; Creative Imagination in the Sūfism of IbnʿArabī, Bollingen, Princeton 1969, (reissued in 1997 with a new preface by Harold Bloom).
  • Elmore, Gerald T. Ibn Al-'Arabī’s Testament on the Mantle of Initiation (al-Khirqah). Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn ‘Arabi Society XXVI (1999): 1-33. Print.
  • Elmore, Gerald T. Islamic Sainthood in the Fullness of Time: Ibn Al-‘Arabī's Book of the Fabulous Gryphon. Leiden: Brill, 1999. Print.
  • Hirtenstein, Stephen (1999). The Unlimited Mercifier, The Spiritual life and thought of Ibn 'Arabi. Anqa Publishing & White Cloud Press. ISBN 978-0953451326.
  • Hirtenstein, Stephen, and Jane Clark. Ibn 'Arabi Digital Archive Project Report for 2009 2015-01-02 at the Wayback Machine Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi 1165AD - 1240AD and the Ibn 'Arabi Society. Dec. 2009. Web. 20 Aug. 2010.
  • Knysh, Alexander. Ibn 'Arabi in the Later Islamic Tradition: The making of a polemical image in medieval Islam. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1999.
  • Torbjörn Säfve, "Var inte rädd" ('Do not be afraid'), ISBN 91-7221-112-1
  • Yahia, Osman. Mu'allafāt Ibn ʻarabī: Tārīkhuhā Wa-Taṣnīfuhā. Cairo: Dār al-Ṣābūnī, 1992. Print.
  • Yousef, Mohamed Haj. Ibn 'Arabi - Time and Cosmology (London, Routledge, 2007) (Culture and Civilization in the Middle East).
  • Yūsuf, Muhammad Haj. Shams Al-Maghrib. Allepo: Dār al-Fuṣṣilat, 2006. Print.
  • Kiliç, M.Erol; Caradaş, Cağfer; Kaya, Mahmut (1999). İBNÜ'l-ARABÎ, Muhyiddin - An article published in Turkish Encyclopedia of Islam (in Turkish). Vol. 20 (Ibn Haldun - Ibnu'l Cezeri). Istanbul: TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi. pp. 493–522. ISBN 978-975-389-447-0.

External links

  • Chittick, William. "Ibn Arabi". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Rustom, Mohammed (2014). "Ibn ʿArabī's Letter to Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī: A Study and Translation". Journal of Islamic Studies. 25 (2): 113–137. doi:10.1093/jis/ett071.
  • Ibn Arabi Society page about Ibn Al 'Arabi
  • Ibn Arabi & Mystical Journey:The Journey to the Lord of Power 2006-09-09 at the Wayback Machine (John G. Sullivan, Department of Philosophy at Elon College)
  • Le concept d'amour chez Ibn 'Arabi (in French)
  • Ibnarabi.net - Download Books
  • حكم من يدعي إجماع أهل السنة على تكفير الإمام محيي الدين بن العربي—Dar al-Ifta al-Misriyyah (in Arabic)
  • Ibn ‘Arabi and Wahdat al-Wujud
  • Ibn 'Arabi's poem Tarjuman Al Ashwaq (The Interpreter of Desires), translated by Yasmine Seale and Robin Moger

arabi, confused, with, bakr, arabi, ʿarabī, arabic, ابن, عربي, ʻarabī, full, name, أبو, عبد, الله, محـمـد, بن, العربي, الطائي, الحاتمي, abū, ʻabd, allāh, muḥammad, ʻarabī, Ṭāʼī, Ḥātimī, 1165, 1240, arab, andalusian, muslim, scholar, mystic, poet, philosopher, . Not to be confused with Abu Bakr ibn al Arabi Ibn ʿArabi Arabic ابن عربي ALA LC Ibn ʻArabi full name أبو عبد الله محـمـد بن العربي الطائي الحاتمي Abu ʻAbd Allah Muḥammad ibn al ʻArabi al Ṭaʼi al Ḥatimi 1165 1240 3 was an Arab Andalusian Muslim scholar mystic poet and philosopher extremely influential within Islamic thought Out of the 850 works attributed to him some 700 are authentic while over 400 are still extant His cosmological teachings became the dominant worldview in many parts of the Muslim world 4 Ash Shaykh al AkbarMuḥyi ad DinIbn ʿArabiابن عربيBorn28 July 1165Murcia Taifa of Murcia now Murcia Region of Murcia Spain Died16 November 1240 1240 11 16 aged 75 Ṣaliḥiyya Damascus Ayyubid SultanateEraMedieval philosophy 12th century philosophy 13th century philosophyRegionMiddle Eastern philosophy Islamic philosophySchoolFounder of AkbariyyaMain interestsMysticismNames of GodOntologyPoetrySufi metaphysicsInfluences Abdul Qadir Gilani Abu Madyan Sahl al Tustari Al Hallaj Bayazid Bastami al Tamimi Ibn Masarra Ibn Barrajan Ibn al Arif Ibn Qasi Al GhazaliInfluenced Qunawi Ibn al Farid Sidi Bou Said al Shushtari Hamadani Fairuzabadi al Jili al Suyuti Amuli Mu ayyid al Din al Jandi Isma il bin Sawdakin Ibn Sawrakin Afif al Din al Tilimsani Iraqi Sa d al Din Sa id Farghani Shabestari Abd al Razzaq al Kashani Qayṣari al Fanari Ni matullah Jami Yahya Efendi Bitlisi al Sha rani Mulla Sadra Hamzah Fansuri Abd al Ghani Ahmed Mohammed al Maqqari Ismail Hakki Bursevi Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi Yusuf an Nabhani Shah Waliullah Ibn Ajiba Abdelkader al Alawi Guenon Corbin Valsan Mahmoud Schuon Nurbakhsh Nursi 1 Nasr 2 Naquib al Attas Muhammad Iqbal Ayatollah KhomeiniArabic namePersonal Ism MuḥammadPatronymic Nasab ibn ʿAli ibn Muḥammad ibn ʿArabiTeknonymic Kunya Abu ʿAbd AllahEpithet Laqab Ibn ʿArabiToponymic Nisba al Ḥatimi aṭ ṬaʾiHis traditional titular is Muḥyiddin Arabic محيي الدين The Reviver of Religion 5 6 7 After he died and specifically among practitioners of Sufism he was renowned by the honorific title Shaykh al Akbar Arabic الشيخ الأكبر 8 This in turn was the name from which the Akbarian school of Sufism derived its name making him known as Doctor Maximus The Greatest Teacher in medieval Europe 9 Ibn ʿArabi is considered as a saint by some scholars and Muslim communities 10 11 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family 1 2 The First Vision 1 3 Pilgrimage to Mecca 1 4 Journey north 1 5 Return south 1 6 Final years 2 Islamic law 3 Al Insan al kamil 4 Reaction 4 1 Creed 5 Works 5 1 The Meccan Illuminations Futuḥat al Makkiyya 5 2 The Bezels of Wisdom Fuṣuṣ al Ḥikam 5 2 1 Critical editions and translations of Fuṣuṣ al Ḥikam 6 In fiction 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 8 3 1 Books by Ibn Arabi 8 3 1 1 In Arabic 8 3 1 2 In English 8 3 2 Books about Ibn Arabi 9 External linksBiography EditIbn ʿArabi born in Murcia Al Andalus on the 17th of Ramaḍan 560 AH 28 July 1165 AD 3 or other sources suggested 27th of Ramaḍan 560 AH 5 August 1165 AD 7 His first name is Muhammad 8 but later called Abu Abdullah mean the father of Abdullah according to classical Arabic tradition after he had a son In some of his works Ibn Arabi referred to himself with fuller versions of his name as Abu Abdullah Muhammad ibn Ali ibn al Arabi al Ta i al Hatimi 3 8 where the last three names indicating his noble Arab lineage And indeed Hatim al Tay i was well known as a poet of pre Islamic Arabia 7 from the South Arabian tribe of Tayyi now Yemen 12 Family Edit Ibn ʿArabi s maternal ancestry was North African Berber 13 In his Futuḥat al Makkiyah he writes of a deceased maternal uncle Yahya ibn Yughan al Sanhaji a prince of Tlemcen who abandoned wealth for an ascetic life after encountering a Sufi mystic 14 Whereas his paternal ancestry came from Yemen and belongs to one of the oldest Arab strains in Andalusia His paternal ancestors emigrated very early to Andalusia probably during the second wave of the Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula 7 His father Ali ibn Muḥammad served in the Army of Ibn Mardanish the ruler of Murcia 3 When Murcia fell to the Almohad Caliphate in 1172 Ibn Mardanish did not survive the defeat and was killed in battle leading to his father pledging allegiance to the Almohad Caliph Abu Ya qub Yusuf I 7 At that time Ibn ʿArabi was only 7 years old and his family relocated from Murcia to Seville to serve the new ruler 7 Ibn ʿArabi had three wives He married Maryam a woman from an influential family 3 when he was still a young adult and lived in Andalusia Maryam also shared his aspiration to follow the Sufi path as quoted by Austin in Sufis of Andalusia My saintly wife Maryam bint Muhammad binti Abdun said I have seen in my sleep someone whom I have never seen in the flesh but who appears to me in my moments of spiritual ecstasy He ask me whether I was aspiring to the Way to which I replied that I was but that I did not know by what means to arrive at it He then told me that I would come to it through five things trust certainty patience resolution and veracity Thus she offered her vision to me for my consideration and I told her that was indeed the method of the Folk Sufis I myself have never seen one with that degree of mystical experience 15 When Ibn ʿArabi stayed in Anatolia for several years according to various Arabic and Persian sources he married the widow of Majduuddin and took charge of the education of his young son Sadruddin al Qunawi 7 Ibn ʿArabi also mentioned his third wife in his writings the mother of his son Imaduddin to whom he bequeathed the first copy of Futuḥat al Makkiyah 7 The First Vision Edit Seville where Ibn Arabi spent most of his life and education Ibn ʿArabi grew up at the ruling court and received military training 3 As he confessed in Futuḥat al Makkiyah he preferred playing in military camp with his friends rather than reading a book However it was when he was a teenager that he experienced his first vision fana and later he wrote of this experience as the differentiation of the universal reality comprised by that look 16 His father on noticing a change in him had mentioned this to philosopher and judge Ibn Rushd Averroes 16 who asked to meet Ibn Arabi Ibn Arabi said that from this first meeting he had learned to perceive a distinction between formal knowledge of rational thought and the unveiling insights into the nature of things He then adopted Sufism and dedicated his life to the spiritual path 16 When he later moved to Fez in Morocco Mohammed ibn Qasim al Tamimi became his spiritual mentor 17 In 1200 he took leave from one of his most important teachers Shaykh Abu Ya qub Yusuf ibn Yakhlaf al Kumi then living in the town of Sale 18 Pilgrimage to Mecca Edit Ibn Arabi left Andalusia for the first time at age 36 and arrived at Tunis in 1193 contradictory 7 After a year in Tunisia he returned to Andalusia in 1194 His father died soon after Ibn Arabi arrived at Seville When his mother died some months later he left Andalusia for the second time and travelled with his two sisters to Fez Morocco in 1195 He returned to Cordoba Andalusia in 1198 and left Andalusia crossing from Gibraltar for the last time in 1200 7 While there he received a vision instructing him to journey east After visiting some places in the Maghreb he left Tunisia in 1201 and arrived for the Hajj in 1202 19 He lived in Mecca for three years and there began writing his work Futuḥat al Makkiyya الفتوحات المكية The Meccan Illuminations only part of which has been translated into English by various scholars such as Eric Winkel 20 Journey north Edit Medieval list of Ibn Arabi s books After spending time in Mecca he traveled throughout Syria Palestine Iraq and Anatolia In 1204 Ibn Arabi met Shaykh Majduddin Isḥaq ibn Yusuf شيخ مجد الدين إسحاق بن يوسف a native of Malatya and a man of great standing at the Seljuk court This time Ibn Arabi was travelling north first they visited Medina and in 1205 they entered Baghdad This visit offered him a chance to meet the direct disciples of Shaykh Abd al Qadir Jilani Ibn Arabi stayed there only for 12 days because he wanted to visit Mosul to see his friend Ali ibn Abdallah ibn Jami a disciple of the mystic Qaḍib al Ban 471 573 AH 1079 1177 AD قضيب البان 21 There he spent the month of Ramaḍan and composed Tanazzulat al Mawṣiliyya تنزلات الموصلية Kitab al Jalal wa l Jamal كتاب الجلال والجمال The Book of Majesty and Beauty and Kunh ma la Budda lil MuridMinhu 22 Return south Edit In the year 1206 Ibn Arabi visited Jerusalem Mecca and Egypt It was his first time that he passed through Syria visiting Aleppo and Damascus Later in 1207 he returned to Mecca where he continued to study and write spending his time with his friend Abu Shuja bin Rustem and family including Niẓam 22 The next four to five years of Ibn Arabi s life were spent in these lands and he also kept travelling and holding the reading sessions of his works in his own presence 23 Final years Edit Opening pages of the Konya manuscript of the Meccan Revelations handwritten by Ibn Arabi Ibn Arabi s tomb in Damascus After leaving Andalusia for the last time at the age of 33 1198 AD and wandering in Islamic world for about 25 years at the age of 58 Ibn Arabi chose Damascus as his final home and dedicated his life for teaching and writing 7 In this city he composed Fushush Al Ḥikam in 1229 12 and finalized two manuscripts of Futuḥat al Makkiyya in 1231 and 1234 7 Ibn Arabi died on 22 Rabi al Thani 638 AH 16 November 1240 at the age of seventy five His was buried in the Banu Zaki cemetery family cemetery of the nobles of Damascus on Qasiyun Hill Salihiyya Damascus 24 After his death Ibn Arabi s teachings quickly spread throughout the Islamic world His writings were not limited to the Muslim elites but made their way into other ranks of society through the widespread reach of the Sufi orders Arabi s work also popularly spread through works in Persian Turkish and Urdu Many popular poets were trained in the Sufi orders and were inspired by Arabi s concepts 25 Others scholars in his time like al Munawi Ibn Imad al Hanbali and al Fayruzabadi all praised Ibn Arabi as A righteous friend of Allah and faithful scholar of knowledge the absolute mujtahid without doubt and the imam of the people of shari a both in knowledge and in legacy the educator of the people of the way in practice and in knowledge and the shaykh of the shaykhs of the people of truth though spiritual experience dhawq and understanding 26 Islamic law EditAlthough Ibn Arabi stated on more than one occasion that he did not blindly follow any one of the schools of Islamic jurisprudence he was responsible for copying and preserving books of the Zahirite or literalist school to which there is fierce debate whether or not Ibn Arabi followed that school 27 28 Ignaz Goldziher held that Ibn Arabi did in fact belong to the Zahirite or Hanbali school of Islamic jurisprudence 29 Hamza Dudgeon claims that Addas Chodkiewizc Gril Winkel and Al Gorab mistakenly attribute to Ibn ʿArabi non madhhabism 30 On an extant manuscript of Ibn Ḥazm as transmitted by Ibn ʿArabi Ibn ʿArabi gives an introduction to the work where he describes a vision he had I saw myself in the village of Sharaf near Siville there I saw a plain on which rose an elevation On this elevation the Prophet stood and a man whom I did not know approached him they embraced each other so violently that they seemed to interpenetrate and become one person Great brightness concealed them from the eyes of the people I would like to know I thought who is this strange man Then I heard some one say This is the traditionalist ʿAli Ibn Ḥazm I had never heard Ibn Ḥazm s name before One of my shaykhs whom I questioned informed me that this man is an authority in the field of science of Hadeeth Goldziher The Ẓahiris Their Doctrine and Their History 1971 Goldziher says The period between the sixth hijri and the seventh century seems also to have been the prime of the Ẓahirite school in Andalusia 31 Ibn Arabi did delve into specific details at times and was known for his view that religiously binding consensus could only serve as a source of sacred law if it was the consensus of the first generation of Muslims who had witnessed revelation directly 32 Ibn Arabi also expounded on Sufi Allegories of the Sharia building upon previous work by Al Ghazali and al Hakim al Tirmidhi 33 Al Insan al kamil EditThe doctrine of perfect man Al Insan al Kamil is popularly considered an honorific title attributed to Muhammad having its origins in Islamic mysticism although the concept s origin is controversial and disputed 34 Arabi may have first coined this term in referring to Adam as found in his work Fusus al hikam explained as an individual who binds himself with the Divine and creation 35 Taking an idea already common within Sufi culture Ibn Arabi applied deep analysis and reflection on the concept of a perfect human and one s pursuit in fulfilling this goal In developing his explanation of the perfect being Ibn Arabi first discusses the issue of oneness through the metaphor of the mirror 36 In this philosophical metaphor Ibn Arabi compares an object being reflected in countless mirrors to the relationship between God and his creatures God s essence is seen in the existent human being as God is the object and human beings the mirrors Meaning two things that since humans are mere reflections of God there can be no distinction or separation between the two and without God the creatures would be non existent When an individual understands that there is no separation between human and God they begin on the path of ultimate oneness The one who decides to walk in this oneness pursues the true reality and responds to God s longing to be known The search within for this reality of oneness causes one to be reunited with God as well as improve self consciousness 36 The perfect human through this developed self consciousness and self realization prompts divine self manifestation This causes the perfect human to be of both divine and earthly origin Ibn Arabi metaphorically calls him an Isthmus Being an Isthmus between heaven and Earth the perfect human fulfills God s desire to be known God s presence can be realized through him by others Ibn Arabi expressed that through self manifestation one acquires divine knowledge which he called the primordial spirit of Muhammad and all its perfection Ibn Arabi details that the perfect human is of the cosmos to the divine and conveys the divine spirit to the cosmos 36 Ibn Arabi further explained the perfect man concept using at least twenty two different descriptions and various aspects when considering the Logos 36 He contemplated the Logos or Universal Man as a mediation between the individual human and the divine essence 37 Ibn Arabi believed Muhammad to be the primary perfect man who exemplifies the morality of God 38 Ibn Arabi regarded the first entity brought into existence was the reality or essence of Muhammad al ḥaqiqa al Muhammadiyya master of all creatures and a primary role model for human beings to emulate Ibn Arabi believed that God s attributes and names are manifested in this world with the most complete and perfect display of these divine attributes and names seen in Muhammad Ibn Arabi believed that one may see God in the mirror of Muhammad He maintained that Muhammad was the best proof of God and by knowing Muhammad one knows God 39 Ibn Arabi also described Adam Noah Abraham Moses Jesus and all other prophets and various Anbiya Allah Muslim messengers as perfect men but never tires of attributing lordship inspirational source and highest rank to Muhammad 39 40 Ibn Arabi compares his own status as a perfect man as being but a single dimension to the comprehensive nature of Muhammad 40 Ibn Arabi makes extraordinary assertions regarding his own spiritual rank but qualifying this rather audacious correlation by asserting his inherited perfection is only a single dimension of the comprehensive perfection of Muhammad 40 Reaction EditThe reaction of Ibn Abd as Salam a Muslim scholar respected by both Ibn Arabi s supporters and detractors has been of note due to disputes over whether he himself was a supporter or detractor He was known by the title of Sultan al Ulama the Sultan of scholars was a famous mujtahid Ash ari theologian jurist and the leading Shafi i authority of his generation 41 As such the figure of Ibn Abd al Salam was claimed by each faction of the Ibn Arabi controversy due to his impeccable record as a staunch champion of the shari a 42 Ibn Taymiyyah s report was based on the authority of two reliable transmitters Abu Bakr b Salar and Ibn Daqiq al Id According to it Ibn Abd al Salam declared Ibn Arabi a master of evil and a disgusting man who professed the eternity of the world and did not proscribe fornication 43 This severe verdict whose authenticity Ibn Taymiyyah considered to be beyond doubt was pronounced by Ibn Abd al Salam upon his arrival in Egypt in 639 1241 that is one year after the death of the Greatest Master 44 The versions of the story furnished by al Safadi a cautious supporter of Ibn Arabi and al Dhahabi his bitter critic and teacher of al Safadi are especially helpful in placing Ibn Abd al Salam s censure into a meaningful historical framework Both al Safadi and al Dhahabi insisted that they read the story recorded in Ibn Sayyid al Nas s own hand And yet their versions vary Both variants describe Ibn Daqiq al Id s astonishment at his teacher s sharp critique of the acclaimed wali which caused him to ask for proof of Ibn Arabi s lies Ibn Abd al Salam obliged by the following reply in al Safadi s recension 45 He used to deny the possibility of marriage between human beings and the jinn since according to him the jinn are subtle spirits whereas human beings are solid bodies hence the two cannot unite Later on however he claimed that he had married a woman from the jinnfolk who stayed with him for a while then hit him with a camel s bone and injured him He used to show us the scar on his face which by that time had closed 46 In al Dhahabi s rendition He Ibn Arabi said I married a she jinni and she blessed me with three children Then it so happened that I made her angry and she hit me with a bone that caused this scar whereupon she departed and I have never seen her again since 47 The authenticity of Ibn Abd al Salam s disparagement of Ibn Arabi seems to find support in his Epistle on the Saintly Substitutes and the Supreme Succor Risala fil abdal wal ghawth 48 On the other hand another narration in praise of Ibn Arabi by al Izz is reported by Abd al Ghaffar al Qusi al Fayruzabadi al Qari al Baghdadi al Suyuti al Sha rani al Maqqari Ibn al Imad and some other supporters of the Greatest Master Despite minor variations in their accounts all of them cite the same source lbn Abd al Salam s unnamed servant or student In al Qusi s redaction Ibn Abd al Salam and his servant were passing by Ibn Arabi who instructed his disciples in the Great Umayyad Mosque of Damuscus Suddenly the servant recalled that Ibn Abd al Salam had promised to reveal to him the identity of the supreme saint of the epoch the Pole of the Age The question caught Ibn Abd al Salam off guard He paused hesitantly for a moment then pointed in the direction of Ibn Arabi saying He is the Pole And this in spite of what you have said against him asked the servant Ibn Abd al Salam ignored this remark and simply repeated his reply 49 In al Fayruzabadi s version of the story Ibn Abd al Salam is presented as a secret admirer of the Greatest Master who was fully aware of the latter s exalted status in the Sufi hierarchy However as a public figure Ibn Abd al Salam was careful to conceal his genuine opinion of the controversial Sufi in order to preserve the outward aspect of the religious law In so doing he according to al Fayruzabadi shrewdly avoided an inevitable confrontation with the jurists who viewed Ibn Arabi as a heretic 50 The importance of Ibn Abd al Salam s ambiguous evaluation of the Greatest Master for the subsequent polemic is further attested by the detailed treatment of this story in al Fasi s massive biographical dictionary The Precious Necklace al lqd al thamin A bitter critic of Ibn Arabi s monistic views al Fasi rejected the Sufi version of the story as sheer fabrication Yet as a scrupulous muhaddith he tried to justify his position through the methods current in hadith criticism 51 I have a strong suspicion that this story was invented by the extremist Sufis who were infatuated with Ibn Arabi Thereupon the story gained wide diffusion until it reached some trustworthy people who accepted it in good faith My suspicion regarding the authenticity of this story has grown stronger because of the unfounded supposition that Ibn Abd al Salam s praise of Ibn Arabi had occurred simultaneously with his censure of him Ibn Abd al Salam s statement that he censured Ibn Arabi out of concern for the shari a inescapably implies that Ibn Arabi enjoyed a high rank in the same moment as Ibn Abd al Salam was censuring him Such a blunder could not have happened to any reliable religious scholar let alone to someone as knowledgeable and righteous as Ibn Abd al Salam Anyone who suspects him of this makes a mistake and commits a sin by holding him responsible for mutually contradictory statements One may try to explain Ibn Abd al Salam s praise of Ibn Arabi if it indeed took place by the fact that Ibn Abd al Salam was hesitating between praise and censure because at the time he spoke Ibn Arabi s state had changed for the better If so there is no contradiction in Ibn Abd al Salam s words Were we to admit that the praise really occurred it was nevertheless abrogated by Ibn Daqiq al Id s report concerning lbn Abd al Salam s later condemnation of lbn Arabi For Ibn Daqiq al Id could only hear Ibn Abd al Salam in Egypt that is a few years after Ibn Arabi s death This cannot be otherwise because he was educated at Qus where he had studied the Maliki madhhab until he mastered it completely Only then he came to Cairo to study the Shafi i madhhab and other sciences under Ibn Abd al Salam s guidance His departure could only take place after 640 by which time Ibn Arabi had already been dead Now Ibn Abd al Salam s praise as the story itself testifies occurred when Ibn Arabi was still alive For did he not point to Ibn Arabi when that individual the servant asked him about the Pole or the greatest saint of the age 52 Creed Edit His best known book entitled al Futuhat al Makkiyya The Meccan Victories or Illuminations which begins with a statement of doctrine belief about which al Safadi d 764 1363 said I saw read that al Futuhat al Makkiyya from beginning to end It consists of the doctrine of Abu al Hasan al Ash ari without any difference deviation whatsoever 53 54 Works Edit Page from Ibn Arabi s six volume Diwan copied by the author Khalili Collection of Islamic Art Some 800 works are attributed to Ibn Arabi although only some have been authenticated Recent research suggests that over 100 of his works have survived in manuscript form although most printed versions have not yet been critically edited and include many errors 55 A specialist of Ibn Arabi William Chittick referring to Osman Yahya s definitive bibliography of the Andalusian s works says that out of the 850 works attributed to him some 700 are authentic while over 400 are still extant 56 The Meccan Illuminations Al Futuḥat al Makkiyya his largest work in 37 volumes originally and published in 4 or 8 volumes in modern times discussing a wide range of topics from mystical philosophy to Sufi practices and records of his dreams visions It totals 560 chapters In modern editions it amounts to some 15 000 pages 57 The Ringstones of Wisdom also translated as The Bezels of Wisdom or Fusus al Hikam Composed during the later period of Ibn Arabi s life the work is sometimes considered his most important and can be characterized as a summary of his teachings and mystical beliefs It deals with the role played by various prophets in divine revelation 58 59 60 The attribution of this work Fusus al Hikam to Ibn Arabi is debated and in at least one source 61 is described as a forgery and false attribution to him reasoning that there are 74 books in total attributed to Sheikh Ibn Arabi of which 56 have been mentioned in Al Futuhat al Makkiyya and the rest mentioned in the other books cited therein However many other scholars accept the work as genuine 62 63 The Diwan his collection of poetry spanning five volumes mostly unedited The printed versions available are based on only one volume of the original work The Holy Spirit in the Counselling of the Soul Ruḥ al quds a treatise on the soul which includes a summary of his experience from different spiritual masters in the Maghrib Part of this has been translated as Sufis of Andalusia reminiscences and spiritual anecdotes about many interesting people whom he met in al Andalus Contemplation of the Holy Mysteries Mashahid al Asrar probably his first major work consisting of fourteen visions and dialogues with God Divine Sayings Mishkat al Anwar an important collection made by Ibn Arabi of 101 hadith qudsi The Book of Annihilation in Contemplation K al Fana fi l Mushahada a short treatise on the meaning of mystical annihilation fana Devotional Prayers Awrad a widely read collection of fourteen prayers for each day and night of the week Journey to the Lord of Power Risalat al Anwar a detailed technical manual and roadmap for the journey without distance The Book of God s Days Ayyam al Sha n a work on the nature of time and the different kinds of days experienced by gnostics The Astounding Phoenix regarding the Seal of Saints and the Sun of the West Arabic عنقاء مغرب في معرفة ختم الأولياء وشمس المغرب ALA LC ʻAnqaʼ al Mughrib fi Maʻrifat Khatm al Awliyaʼ wa Shams al Maghrib a book on the meaning of sainthood and its culmination in Jesus and the Mahdi The Universal Tree and the Four Birds al Ittihad al Kawni a poetic book on the Complete Human and the four principles of existence Prayer for Spiritual Elevation and Protection al Dawr al A la a short prayer which is still widely used in the Muslim world The Interpreter of Desires Tarjuman al Ashwaq a collection of nasibs which in response to critics Ibn Arabi republished with a commentary explaining the meaning of the poetic symbols 1215 Divine Governance of the Human Kingdom At Tadbidrat al ilahiyyah fi islah al mamlakat al insaniyyah The Four Pillars of Spiritual Transformation Hilyat al abdal a short work on the essentials of the spiritual PathThe Meccan Illuminations Futuḥat al Makkiyya Edit Main article Meccan Revelations According to Claude Addas Ibn Arabi began writing Futuḥat al Makkiyya after he arrived in Mecca in 1202 After almost thirty years the first draft of Futuḥat was completed in December 1231 629 AH and Ibn Arabi bequeathed it to his son 64 Two years before his death Ibn Arabi embarked on a second draft of the Futuḥat in 1238 636 AH 64 of which included a number of additions and deletions as compared with the previous draft that contains 560 chapters The second draft the more widely circulated version was bequeathed to his disciple Sadr al Din al Qunawi There are many scholars attempt to translate this book from Arabic into other languages but there is no complete translation of Futuḥat al Makkiyya to this day Diagram of Plain of Assembly Ard al Hashr on the Day of Judgment from autograph manuscript of Futuhat al Makkiyya ca 1238 photo after Futuhat al Makkiyya Cairo edition 1911 Diagram of Jannat Futuhat al Makkiyya c 1238 photo after Futuhat al Makkiyya Cairo edition 1911 Diagram showing world heaven hell and barzakh Futuhat al Makkiyya c 1238 photo after Futuhat al Makkiyya Cairo edition 1911 The Bezels of Wisdom Fuṣuṣ al Ḥikam Edit There have been many commentaries on Ibn Arabi s Fuṣuṣ al Ḥikam Osman Yahya named more than 100 while Michel Chodkiewicz precises that this list is far from exhaustive 65 The first one was Kitab al Fukuk written by Ṣadr al Din al Qunawi who had studied the book with Ibn Arabi the second by Qunawi s student Mu ayyad al Din al Jandi which was the first line by line commentary the third by Jandi s student Dawud al Qaysari which became very influential in the Persian speaking world A recent English translation of Ibn Arabi s own summary of the Fuṣuṣ Naqsh al Fuṣuṣ The Imprint or Pattern of the Fusus as well a commentary on this work by Abd al Raḥman Jami Naqd al Nuṣuṣ fi Sharḥ Naqsh al Fuṣuṣ 1459 by William Chittick was published in Volume 1 of the Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society 1982 66 Critical editions and translations of Fuṣuṣ al Ḥikam Edit The Fuṣuṣ was first critically edited in Arabic by Afifi 1946 that become the standard in scholarly works Later in 2015 Ibn al Arabi Foundation in Pakistan published the Urdu translation including the new critical of Arabic edition 67 The first English translation was done in partial form by Angela Culme Seymour 68 from the French translation of Titus Burckhardt as Wisdom of the Prophets 1975 69 and the first full translation was by Ralph Austin as Bezels of Wisdom 1980 70 There is also a complete French translation by Charles Andre Gilis entitled Le livre des chatons des sagesses 1997 The only major commentary to have been translated into English so far is entitled Ismail Hakki Bursevi s translation and commentary on Fusus al hikam by Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi translated from Ottoman Turkish by Bulent Rauf in 4 volumes 1985 1991 In Urdu the most widespread and authentic translation was made by Shams Ul Mufasireen Bahr ul uloom Hazrat Muhammad Abdul Qadeer Siddiqi Qadri Hasrat the former Dean and Professor of Theology of the Osmania University Hyderabad It is due to this reason that his translation is in the curriculum of Punjab University Maulvi Abdul Qadeer Siddiqui has made an interpretive translation and explained the terms and grammar while clarifying the Shaikh s opinions A new edition of the translation was published in 2014 with brief annotations throughout the book for the benefit of contemporary Urdu reader 71 In fiction EditMain article Ibn i Arabi fictional character In the Turkish television series Dirilis Ertugrul Ibn Arabi was portrayed by Ozman Sirgood 72 In 2017 Saudi Arabian novelist Mohammed Hasan Alwan won the International Prize for Arabic Fiction for his novel A Small Death a fictionalized account of Ibn Arabi s life 73 See also EditList of Sufis Mujaddid Akbariyya Ivan Agueli Hossein Nasr Mahmud Shabistari Miguel Asin Palacios Ain al Kheil Mosque Ibn al Arif Ibn Masarra Ibn Barrajan Abu l Qasim Ahmad ibn al Husayn ibn QasiReferences EditSources Edit As of this edit this article uses content from A Concise biography of Ibn Arabi which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License but not under the GFDL All relevant terms must be followed Citations Edit Ozgur Koca Said Nursi s Synthesis of Ash arite Occasionalism and Ibn Arabi s Metaphysical Cosmology Diagonal Occasionalism Modern Science and Free Will UMI Dissertations Publishing p 217 ISBN 9781303619793 Ramin Jahanbegloo In Search of the Sacred A Conversation with Seyyed Hossein Nasr on His Life and Thought ABC CLIO 2010 p 59 a b c d e f Chittick William Summer 2018 Ibn Arabi In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 19 July 2018 Ibn Arabi referred to himself with fuller versions of his name such as Abu Abdallah Muhammad ibn Ali ibn al Arabi al Ta i al Hatimi the last three names indicating his noble Arab lineage Ibrahim Kalin Salim Ayduz The Oxford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Science and Technology in Islam Vol 1 Oxford University Press 2014 ISBN 9780199812578 p 162 Nasr Hossein 1976 Three Muslim sages Avicenna Suhrawardi Ibn ʻArabi New York Caravan Books ISBN 9780882065007 Corbin Henry 2014 Creative Imagination in the Sufism of Ibn Arabi p 76 ISBN 9781400853670 a b c d e f g h i j k l Addas Claude 2019 Ibn Arabi The Voyage of No Return 2nd ed Cambridge Islamic Texts Society ISBN 9781911141402 a b c Hirtenstein Stephen Names and Titles of Ibn al Arabi The Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Arabi Ibn 2020 IBN ARABI Doctor Maximus amp The Great Master SELECTED POEMS Translation amp Introduction by Paul Smith ISBN 978 10 78 41521 7 Retrieved 28 February 2022 Chittick 2007 p 1 Al Suyuti Tanbih al Ghabi fi Tanzih Ibn Arabi p 17 21 a b Ibn al ʿArabi Muslim mystic Encyclopedia Britannica Hirtenstein Stephen 1999 The Unlimited Mercifier The Spiritual Life and Thought of Ibn Arabi Oxford Anqa Publishing p 32 ISBN 978 1883991296 Like many Andalusians he came of mixed parentage his father s name indicates an Arab family which had probably emigrated to Andalusia in the early years of the Arab conquest while his mother seems to have come from a Berber family Hirtenstein Stephen C September 1999 The Unlimited Mercifier The Spiritual Life and Thought of Ibn Arabi p 252 ISBN 978 1905937387 Austin R J W 1988 Sufis of Andalusia The Ruh Al Quds amp Al Durrat Al Fakhirah New Leaf Distributing Company ISBN 9780904975130 a b c Chittick 2007 p 5 John Renard 18 May 2009 Tales of God s Friends Islamic Hagiography in Translation University of California Press p 35 ISBN 978 0 520 25896 9 Retrieved 11 February 2012 Elmore Gerald T 1999 Islamic Sainthood in the Fullness of Time Ibn Al ʻArabi s Book of the Fabulous Gryphon Brill p 69 ISBN 978 90 04 10991 9 Chittick 2007 p 5 The Futuhat Project The Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society 12 January 2020 Retrieved 2022 12 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Testament to Qaḍib al Ban s life exists in a manuscript at the University of Baghdad no 541 a b Hirtenstein Stephen 1999 The Unlimited Mercifier The Spiritual life and thought of Ibn Arabi Anqa Publishing amp White Cloud Press ISBN 978 0953451326 Islaahe Nafs ka AAiena e Haq Tomb of Ibn al Arabi Qandara Mediterranian Heritage Retrieved December 14 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Chittick 2007 p 2 3 Ibn Khafif 1999 Correct Islamic Doctrine Islamic Doctrine ISCA ISBN 978 1 930409 01 9 Mohammed Rustom Review of Michel Chodkiewicz s An Ocean without Shore Hamza Dudgeon The Counter Current Movements of Andalusia and Ibn ʿArabi Should Ibn ʿArabi be considered a Ẓahiri 2018 Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society Vol 64 https www academia edu 36173562 The Counter Current Movements of Andalusia and Ibn CA BFArab C4 AB Should Ibn CA BFArab C4 AB be considered a E1 BA 92 C4 81hir C4 AB Ignaz Goldziher The Ẓahiris Their Doctrine and Their History ed and trans by Wolfgang Behn Leiden Brill 1971 169 Dudgeon The Counter Current Movements of Andalusia and Ibn ʿArabi Should Ibn ʿArabi be considered a Ẓahiri 104 Goldziher The Ẓahiris 170 171 Chiragh Ali The Proposed Political Legal and Social Reforms Taken from Modernist Islam 1840 1940 A Sourcebook pg 281 Edited by Charles Kurzman New York City Oxford University Press 2002 Hamza Dudgeon The Revival of Sharia s Allegories 2019 Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society Vol 66 https www academia edu 40585698 The Revival of Sharia s Allegories Chittick William C Ebn al Arabi Mohyi al Din Abu Abd Allah Mohammad Ta I Hatemi Encyclopedia Iranica 1996 Web 3 Apr 2011 lt http iranica com articles ebn al arabi Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine gt Fitzpatrick Coeli Walker Adam Hani 2014 Muhammad in History Thought and Culture Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 440 ISBN 978 1610691772 a b c d Little John T January 1987 Al Insan Al Kamil The Perfect Man According to Ibn Al arabi The Muslim World 77 1 43 54 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 1987 tb02785 x Dobie Robert J date 17 November 2009 2010 Logos and Revelation Ibn Arabi Meister Eckhart and Mystical Hermeneutics Washington D C The Catholic University of America Press p 225 ISBN 978 0813216775 For Ibn Arabi the Logos or Universal Man was a mediating link between individual human beings and the divine essence Fitzpatrick and Walker 2014 p 445 a b Fitzpatrick and Walker 2014 p 446 a b c Gregory A Lipton 2018 04 02 Rethinking Ibn Arabi Oxford University Press p 15 ISBN 9780190684518 Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P Lecomte G 1997 Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol IX San Sze New ed Leiden Netherlands Brill p 812 ISBN 9004104224 Knysh A 1999 Ibn ʻArabi in the later Islamic tradition Albany State University of New York Press pp 79 Majmuʿat al rasaʾil wa al masaʾil vol 4 pp 73 and 75 Knysh 1999 p 66 Knysh 1999 p 67 Al Wafi vol 4 p 174 Al Dhahabi Mizan vol 3 p 656 Knysh 1999 p 72 Knysh 1999 p 74 Knysh 1999 p 75 Knysh 1999 p 76 Al Fasi lqd vol 2 pp 184 185 Ibn Khafif 1999 Correct Islamic Doctrine Islamic Doctrine Translated by Gibril Fouad Haddad As Sunna Foundation of America p 4 ISBN 9781930409019 Gibril Fouad Haddad 2015 The Biographies of the Elite Lives of the Scholars Imams and Hadith Masters Zulfiqar Ayub p 233 Ibn Arabi 560 638 1165 1240 Cis ca org Archived from the original on 2008 05 26 Retrieved 2018 11 05 William C Chittick Ibn Arabi Heir to the Prophets Oneworld Publications 2012 p 7 Michel Chodkiewicz introduction in The Spiritual Writings of Amir Abd al Kader SUNY Press 1995 p 7 Naqvi S Ali Raza THE BEZELS OF WISDOM Ibn al Arabi s Fuṣuṣ al Ḥikam by R W J Austin rev Islamic Studies Vol 23 No 2 Summer 1984 pp 146 150 Chittick William C The Disclosure of the Intervening Image Ibn Arabi on Death Discourse 24 1 2002 pp 51 62 Almond Ian The Honesty of the Perplexed Derrida and Ibn Arabi on Bewilderment Journal of the American Academy of Religion Vol 70 No 3 Sep 2002 pp 515 537 Al Futuhat Al Makkiyya Dar Sader Beirut Lebanon Book 1 pg 7 Chittick William C The Disclosure of the Intervening Image Ibn Arabi on Death Discourse 24 1 2002 51 62 Notes on Fusus ul Hikam Reynold A Nicholson Studies in Islamic Mysticism a b Addas Claude 2000 Ibn ʻArabi the voyage of no return Cambridge CB UK Islamic Texts Society ISBN 0946621748 OCLC 41925362 Michel Chodkiewicz An Ocean Without Shore Ibn Arabi the Book and the Law SUNY Press 1993 p 59 Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society Ibnarabisociety org Retrieved 2018 11 05 Sultan al Mansub Abd al Aziz Shahi Abrar Ahmed eds 2015 Fusus al Hikam translator Abrar Ahmed Shahi Ibn al Arabi Foundation Angela Culme Seymour The Daily Telegraph February 3 2012 Archived from the original on 2022 01 12 Culme Seymour A tr 1975 The Wisdom of the Prophets Gloucestershire U K Beshara Publications Austin R W J tr 1980 Ibn Al Arabi The Bezels of Wisdom Mahwah NJ The Paulist Press ISBN 0 8091 2331 2 Fusus Al Hikam Archived 2015 07 04 at the Wayback Machine Translated by Muhammad Abdul Qadeer Siddiqui Annotated by Mohammed Abdul Ahad Siddiqui 2014 Kitab Mahal Darbar Market Lahore Online Version at guldustah com Osman Soykut Kimdir Guncel Osman Soykut Haberleri www sabah com tr Retrieved 12 June 2020 Saudi wins award for novel on Ibn Arabi Dawn 26 April 2017 Retrieved 5 August 2021 Bibliography Edit Books by Ibn Arabi Edit This is a small selection of his many books In Arabic Edit Ibn Arabi Al Futuḥat al Makkiyya Vols 1 4 Beirut n p photographic reprint of the old edition of Bulaq 1329 1911 which comprises four volumes each about 700 pages of 35 lines the page size is 20 by 27cm Print Ibn Arabi Ibrahim Madkur and ʻUthman Yaḥya Al Futuḥat al Makkiyya Vols 1 14 al Qahirah al Hayʼah al Miṣriyah al ʻAmmah lil Kitab 1972 Print this is the critical edition by Osman Yahya This version was not completed and the 14 volumes correspond to only volume I of the standard Bulaq Beirut edition Ibn Arabi Fuṣuṣ al Ḥikam Beirut Dar al Kitab al Arabi Print Ibn Arabi Sharḥ Risalat Ruḥ Al quds fi Muḥasabat Al nafs Comp Mahmud Ghurab 2nd ed Damascus Naḍar 1994 Print Ibn Arabi Insha al Dawa ir Beirut Dar al kutub al Ilmiyya 2004 Print Ibn Arabi Rasa il Ibn Arabi Ijaza li Malik al Muẓaffar Beirut Dar al kutub al Ilmiyya 2001 Print Ibn Arabi Rasa il Ibn al Arabi Kitab al Jalala Hyberadad Deccan Da irat al Ma arif al Uthmaniyya 1948 Print Ibn Arabi Kitab al Ba Cairo Maktabat al Qahira 1954 Print Ibn Arabi Risalat ila Imam al Razi Hyberadad Deccan Da irat al Ma arif al Uthmaniyya 1948 Print In English Edit Ibn Arabi 1997 Divine Governance of the Human Kingdom Translated by Tosun Bayrak Fons Vitae ISBN 9781887752053 Ibn Arabi 1992 What the Seeker Needs Essays on Spiritual Practice Oneness Majesty and Beauty with Ibn ʻArabi s Glossary of 199 Sufi Technical Terms Translated by Tosun Bayrak University of Virginia Threshold Books ISBN 9780939660414 Ibn Arabi Nasab al Khirqa Trans Gerald Elmore Vol XXVI Oxford Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society 1999 Print Ibn Arabi Divine Sayings The Mishkat Al Anwar of Ibn Arabi Oxford Anqa 2005 Print Ibn Arabi The Meccan Revelations Pir Press 2010Books about Ibn Arabi Edit Addas Claude Quest for the Red Sulphur Islamic Texts Society Cambridge 1993 ISBN 0 946621 45 4 Addas Claude Ibn Arabi The Voyage of No Return Cambridge 2019 second edition Islamic Texts Society ISBN 9781911141402 Akkach Samer Ibn Arabi s Cosmogony and the Sufi Concept of Time in Constructions of Time in the Late Middle Ages ed Carol Poster and Richard Utz Evanston IL Northwestern University Press 1997 Pp 115 42 Titus Burckhardt amp Bulent Rauf translator Mystical Astrology According to Ibn Arabi The Fons Vitae Titus Burckhardt Series ISBN 1 887752 43 9 Chittick William C 2007 Ibn Arabi Heir to the Prophets Oxford Oneworld Publications p 1 ISBN 978 1851685110 Henry Corbin Alone with the Alone Creative Imagination in the Sufism of IbnʿArabi Bollingen Princeton 1969 reissued in 1997 with a new preface by Harold Bloom Elmore Gerald T Ibn Al Arabi s Testament on the Mantle of Initiation al Khirqah Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society XXVI 1999 1 33 Print Elmore Gerald T Islamic Sainthood in the Fullness of Time Ibn Al Arabi s Book of the Fabulous Gryphon Leiden Brill 1999 Print Hirtenstein Stephen 1999 The Unlimited Mercifier The Spiritual life and thought of Ibn Arabi Anqa Publishing amp White Cloud Press ISBN 978 0953451326 Hirtenstein Stephen and Jane Clark Ibn Arabi Digital Archive Project Report for 2009 Archived 2015 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi 1165AD 1240AD and the Ibn Arabi Society Dec 2009 Web 20 Aug 2010 Knysh Alexander Ibn Arabi in the Later Islamic Tradition The making of a polemical image in medieval Islam Albany NY SUNY Press 1999 Torbjorn Safve Var inte radd Do not be afraid ISBN 91 7221 112 1 Yahia Osman Mu allafat Ibn ʻarabi Tarikhuha Wa Taṣnifuha Cairo Dar al Ṣabuni 1992 Print Yousef Mohamed Haj Ibn Arabi Time and Cosmology London Routledge 2007 Culture and Civilization in the Middle East Yusuf Muhammad Haj Shams Al Maghrib Allepo Dar al Fuṣṣilat 2006 Print Kilic M Erol Caradas Cagfer Kaya Mahmut 1999 IBNU l ARABI Muhyiddin An article published in Turkish Encyclopedia of Islam in Turkish Vol 20 Ibn Haldun Ibnu l Cezeri Istanbul TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi pp 493 522 ISBN 978 975 389 447 0 External links EditChittick William Ibn Arabi In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Rustom Mohammed 2014 Ibn ʿArabi s Letter to Fakhr al Din al Razi A Study and Translation Journal of Islamic Studies 25 2 113 137 doi 10 1093 jis ett071 Ibn Arabi Society page about Ibn Al Arabi Ibn Arabi amp Mystical Journey The Journey to the Lord of Power Archived 2006 09 09 at the Wayback Machine John G Sullivan Department of Philosophy at Elon College Le concept d amour chez Ibn Arabi in French Ibnarabi net Download Books حكم من يدعي إجماع أهل السنة على تكفير الإمام محيي الدين بن العربي Dar al Ifta al Misriyyah in Arabic Ibn Arabi and Wahdat al Wujud Ibn Arabi s poem Tarjuman Al Ashwaq The Interpreter of Desires translated by Yasmine Seale and Robin Moger Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ibn Arabi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ibn Arabi amp oldid 1148713623, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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