Abd Allah ibn Yazid al-Fazari

8th-century Islamic scholar
Abd Allah ibn Yazid al-Fazari
عبدالله بن يزيد الفزاري
Bornc. 748
Kufa
Diedc. 795
OccupationTheologist
Academic background
InfluencesAbu Ubayda Muslim ibn Abi Karima, Jabir ibn Zayd
Academic work
EraAbbāsid
School or traditionIbadi
Main intereststheology
Notable worksKitab al-Qadr (كتاب القدر); ‘Book of Predetermination’

Abū Muḥammad ʿAbdallāh ibn Yazīd al-Fazārī (Arabic: أبومحمد عبدالله بن يزيد الفزاري) (c. 748–795), was an Ibadi scholar of theology hailing from the Arab tribe of Banu Fazara.[1] His works comprise the earliest extant body of Islamic theology and considered by scholars as an important source for studying the first development of rational theology in Islam.[2]

Biography

Abd Allah was born to a family of the Banu Fazara tribe in the city of Kufa,[1] at the time a flourishing city under the rule of the Abbasid Caliphate. Abd Allah is known to have been a silk trader in Kufa. He most probably travelled to pursue his studies of theology in the Ibadi sect in the port city of Basra. Abd Allah most likely took his knowledge in theology under the Ibadite scholar Abu Ubayda Muslim ibn Abi Karima (d. 775).[1] Abu Ubayda played a leading role among the growing Ibadi community in Basra. Abd Allah consider Abu Ubayda as the second spiritual leader of the early Ibadi sect, only after the Imam Jabir ibn Zayd al-Azdi (d. 712) one of the founding figures of the Ibadis.[1] Abd Allah had many followers in the North African Ibadi community later known as the Nukkar, one of the main Ibadi branches.[2] A collection of six texts in theology dating to the 8th century attributed to Abd Allah was recently discovered in the majority Ibadi region of Mzab in Algeria. In these manuscripts, the sophisticated treatment of the divine related attributes show that this subject has been greatly in constant development even earlier in Islamic theology contrary to what had been formerly proposed by modern scholars.[2]

Works

There are six works attributed to Abd Allah al-Fazari:[2]

  • Kitab al-Qadr (Arabic: كتاب القدر, Book of Predetermination)
  • Kitab fi al-Rad 'ala Ibn 'Umayr (كتاب في الرد على ابن عمير, Book on Refutation of Ibn ʿUmayr)
  • Kitab fi al-Rad 'ala al-Mujassima (كتاب الرد على المجسمة, Book of Refutation of the Corporalists)
  • Kitab al-Fatya (كتاب الفتيا, Book of Legal Opinion)
  • Kitab al-Tawhid fi Ma'rifat Allah (كتاب التوحيد في معرفة الله, Book of Monotheism in the Recognition of God)
  • Kitab fi man Raja' 'an 'Elmeh wa Faraq al-Nabi wa Huwa 'ala Deneh (كتاب في من رجع عن علمه وفارق النبيّ وهو على دينه, Book about Whoever Reneges on his Knowledge and Departs from the Prophet while Remaining in his Religion)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Madelung, Wilferd (2016-09-01). "al-Fazārī, ʿAbdallāh b. Yazīd". Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE.
  2. ^ a b c d Early Ibāḍī Theology: Six kalām texts by 'Abd Allāh b. Yazīd al-Fazārī. Brill. 2014-07-03. ISBN 978-90-04-27459-4.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Fields
Aqidah
Philosophy
Science
Sufism
Theologians
Ash'arism
(al-Ash'ari)
Early Sunni
Maturidism
(Al-Maturidi)
Mu'attila
Mu'jassimā
Murji'ah
Mu'tazila
(Wasil ibn 'Ata')
Najjārīyya
  • Abū ʿAbdillāh al-Husayn ibn Muḥāmmad ibn ʿAbdillāh an-Najjār ar-Rāzī
    • Abū Amr (Abū Yahyā) Hāfs al-Fard
    • Muḥāmmad ibn ʿĪsā (Burgūsīyya)
    • Abū ʿAbdallāh Ibnū’z-Zā‘farānī (Zā‘farānīyya)
    • Mustadrakīyya
Salafi Theologians
Shia-Imamiyyah
(Wilayat al-faqih)
Shia-Ismailiyyah
(Ibn Maymūn)
Key books
Sunni books
Shia books
Independent
Ahl us-
Sunnah
wa’l-
Jama’ah
Ahl al-Hadith
(Atharism)
Ahl ar-Ra'y
(Ilm al-Kalam)
Shia Islam
Zaydism
Imami
Mahdiist
Shi'ite
Sects in
Islam
Imami
Twelver
Imami
Isma'ilism
Kaysanites
Shia
Other Mahdiists
Muhakkima
(Arbitration)
Kharijites
Ibadism
Murji'ah
(Hasan ibn
Muḥāmmad
ibn al-
Hanafiyyah)
Karrāmīyya
  • Abū ʿAbdillāh Muḥāmmad ibn Karrām ibn Arrāk ibn Huzāba ibn al-Barā’ as-Sijjī
    • ʿĀbidīyya (ʿUthmān al-ʿĀbid)
    • Dhīmmīyya
    • Hakāiqīyya
    • Haisamīyya (Abū ʿAbdallāh Muhammad ibn al-Haisam)
    • Hīdīyya (Hīd ibn Saif)
    • Ishāqīyya (Abū Yaʿqūb Ishāq ibn Mahmashādh)
    • Maʿīyya
    • Muhājirīyya (Ibrāhīm ibn Muhājir)
    • Nūnīyya
    • Razīnīyya
    • Sauwāqīyya
    • Sūramīyya
    • Tarā'ifīyya (Ahmad ibn ʿAbdūs at-Tarā'ifī)
    • Tūnīyya (Abū Bakr ibn ʿAbdallāh)
    • Wāhidīyya
    • Zarībīyya
Other sects
  • Gaylānīyya
    • Gaylān ibn Marwān
  • Yūnusīyya
    • Yūnus ibn Awn an-Namīrī
  • Gassānīyya
    • Gassān al-Kūfī
  • Tūmanīyya
    • Abū Muāz at-Tūmanī
  • Sawbānīyya
    • Abū Sawbān al-Murjī
  • Sālehīyya
    • Sāleh ibn Umar
  • Shamrīyya
    • Abū Shamr
  • Ubaydīyya
    • Ubayd al-Mūktaib
  • Ziyādīyya
    • Muhammad ibn Ziyād al-Kūfī
Other Murjīs
  • Al-Harith ibn Surayj
  • Sa'id ibn Jubayr
  • Hammād ibn Abū Sūlaimān
  • Muhārīb ibn Dithār
  • Sābit Kutna
  • Awn ibn Abdullāh
  • Mūsā ibn Abū Kasīr
  • Umar ibn Zar
  • Salm ibn Sālem
  • Hālaf ibn Ayyūb
  • Ibrāhim ibn Yousūf
  • Nusayr ibn Yahyā
  • Ahmad ibn Hārb
  • Amr ibn Murrah
Mu'shabbiha
Tamsīl
Tajsīm
Qadariyah
(Ma'bad
al-Juhani)
Alevism
Muʿtazila
(Rationalism)
  • Mā’marīyya
  • Bahshamiyya
    • Abū Hāshīm Abdu’s-Salām ibn Muḥāmmad ibn Abdi’l-Wahhāb al-Jubbā'ī
  • Huzaylīyya
    • Abū’l-Huzayl Muḥāmmad ibn al-Huzayl ibn Abdillāh al-Allāf al-Abdī al-Bāsrī
      • Abū Ma‘n Sūmāma ibn Ashras an-Nūmayrī al-Bāsrī al-Baghdādī
  • Ikhshīdiyya
  • Nazzāmīyya
    • Ali al-Aswarī
    • Abū Bakr Muḥāmmad ibn Abdillāh ibn Shabīb al-Basrī
    • Hābītīyya
      • Ahmad ibn Hābīt
  • Sumamīyya
    • Sumāma ibn Ashras
  • Kā‘bīyya
    • Abū’l-Kāsīm Abdullāh ibn Ahmad ibn Māhmūd al-Balhī al-Kā‘bī
Quranism
Independent
Muslim
beliefs
Messianism
Modernism
Taṣawwuf
Other beliefs
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
    • 2
National
  • France
  • BnF data
  • Germany
  • Israel
  • United States
  • Netherlands
  • Poland