نوع المستند : المقالة الأصلية
المؤلف
دكتوراة في التاریخ والحضارة، جامعة الشهید بهشتي، طهران، ایران.
المستخلص
الكلمات الرئيسية
عنوان المقالة [English]
المؤلف [English]
The Fathiyya was one of the internal Shiʿi sects that initially recognized the imamate of ʿAbd Allah, the son of Imam Jaʿfar al-Sadiq (peace be upon him), and after his death came to believe in the imamate of Imam Musa al-Kazim (peace be upon him). Prominent Fathite scholars were among the major transmitters from the Imams (peace be upon them) and possessed a significant scholarly and hadith legacy. The main question of this study is: what kind of scholarly interaction did the Imamiyya community have with the Fathiyya? The hypothesis is that the Fathiyya constituted the closest intra-Shiʿi group to the Imamiyya, did not separate themselves from the Imamiyya community, and that the Imamiyya, in turn, engaged constructively with their scholarly heritage. This research adopts a descriptive–analytical method and, drawing on data from sectarian studies, biographical evaluation (rijal), and hadith scholarship, examines the nature of the Imamiyya’s scholarly interactions with this intra-group sect. The findings indicate that the scholarly works and hadiths of the Fathiyya were preserved within the Imamiyya tradition, and that both groups benefited from each other’s intellectual heritage through scholarly relations, including teacher–student networks. The Imamiyya maintained generally positive interactions with the Fathiyya and experienced fewer tensions with them compared to other intra-Shiʿi sects such as the Zaydiyya and the Waqifiyya. The Fathiyya’s acceptance of the imamate of later Imams and their relatively non-hostile stance toward the Imamiyya played a significant role in fostering these positive interactions.
الكلمات الرئيسية [English]