Abdulhakim Arvasi
Abdulhakim Arvasi | |
---|---|
Born | 1865 |
Died | 1943 |
Era | Modern Era |
Region | Islamic philosophy |
School | Sunni Islam |
Influences
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Influenced
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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Abdulhakim Arvasi or Sayyeed Abd al Haqeem-i Arvasi (1865–1943) was a Sunni Islamic scholar.
Contents
Life
Arvasi lived in the times of the late Ottoman Empire and the early Republic of Turkey. He was one of the most profound Islamic scholars of his time and a mujtahid. Arvasi was a descendant of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad, and hence he had the title sayyed (seyyid in Turkish) before his name. He is the 33rd sheikh of the Naqshbandi order.[1] He was born in Van,[2] Turkey. He received religious education from the famous scholar and walî Seyyid Fehim-i Arvasi. He was deeply learned in many worldly and religious sciences such as: natural sciences, hadith, tafsir and tasawwuf. Arvasi taught in Van for 30 years after which he moved to Istanbul as the Russian Army had invaded the eastern part of the country.[3] Arvasi taught in various madrasas and mosques of Istanbul for many years. One of his most famous students was Necip Fazıl Kısakürek.[4] Arvasi died in Ankara in 1943[5] after decades of teaching of Islam. He is buried in Baglum Cemetery, Ankara.
Silsila[6]
- Muhammed el-Mustafa
- Ali ibni Ebî Tâlib
- Hasen el-Basrî
- Habîb el-Acemî
- Davûd et-Tâî
- Ma’rûf el-Kerhî
- Sırrî bin Müflis es-Sekatî
- Cüneyd el-Bağdâdî
- Ebû Amr ez-Zeccâc
- Ebû Osmân el-Mağribî
- Ebû Tâlib el-Mekkî
- İmâmü’l-harameyn Ebü’l-Meâlî Abdülmelik bin Abdillah bin Şeyh Yûsüf el-Cüveynî
- Hüccet-ül-İslâm Muhammed bin Muhammed el-Gâzâlî
- İmâm Fahrüddîn er-Râzî
- Kâtib el-Kazvînî
- Allâme eş-Şîrâzî
- Kutbüddîn er-Râzî
- Mübârekşâh el-Buhârî
- Şerîf el-Cürcânî
- Mevlânâ İmam Muhyîü’s-sünneti ve’d-dîn el-Kûşnâdî
- Ma’rûf el-Celî
- Şeyh Muhyiddîn İmâm an-Navavî
- Muhyiddîn el-Haddâd
- Mecdüddîn el-Fîrûzâbâdî
- Muzhirüddîn Muhammed el-Kazerûnî
- Necmüddîn Abdülgaffâr el-Kazvînî
- Muhammed bin Muhammed el-Cezerî
- İmam Ebü’l-Kâsım er-Râfiî
- Necmüddîn Abdülgaffâr el-Kazvînî
- Mevlânâ Celâlüddîn Muhammed el-Kazvînî
- Mahmûd bin Ebü’l-Feth er-Rüstâî
- Mevlânâ Allâme Tâcüddîn Mahmûd el-Fârûkî
- Şerîf Ali el-Cürcânî
- Muhammed ibni Es’ad es-Sıddîkî ed-Devânî
- Hâce Cemâlüddîn Mahmud eş-Şîrâzî
- Mevlânâ Mirzâ Can
- Nasrullah el-Halhâlî
- Zeynüddîn el-Bülânî
- Molla Ali
- Abdullah el-Esnevî
- Tâhâ el-Kürdî el-Kâdirî
- Haydarü’l-Evvel
- Haydarü’l-Evvel
- Haydar ibni Ahmed
- İbrâhim bin Haydar
- İsmâîl efendi es-Safevî
- Muhammed Sâlih efendi es-Safevî
- Molla Mahmûd el-Behdînî
- Molla Halil Ömer el-Es’ırdî
- Ebû Abdullah Molla el-Hasan el-Ahvedî el-Ensârî
- es-Seyyid Fehîm el-Arvâsî
- es-Seyyid Abdülhakîm el-Arvâsî
Works
- Er-Riyâd-üt-Tasavufiyye
- Râbita-i Şerîfe
- Keşkül
- Sefer-i Âhiret
- Eshâb-i Kirâm
- Ecdâd-i Peygamberî
References
- ↑ Riva Kastoryano, Turkey Between Nationalism and Globalization, p 55. ISBN 0415529239
- ↑ Gareth Jenkins, Political Islam In Turkey, p 260
- ↑ Itzchak Weismann, The Naqshbandiyya: Orthodoxy and Activism in a Worldwide Sufi Tradition, p 152
- ↑ Touraj Atabaki, The State and the Subaltern: Modernization, Society and the State in Turkey, p 131
- ↑ Riva Kastoryano, Turkey Between Nationalism and Globalization, p 55. ISBN 0415529239
- ↑ İcâzet-Nâme-e Hüseyin Hilmi Işık
Bibliography
- O ve Ben p. (Turkish)
- Hal Tercümesi (Turkish)
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- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Articles with Turkish-language external links
- 1865 births
- 1943 deaths
- Islamic studies scholars
- People from Van, Turkey
- Muslim scholars
- Muslim theologians
- Islamic biography stubs
- European academic biography stubs
- Turkish people stubs
- Turkey education stubs