The Nativist Prophets of Early Islamic Iran: Rural Revolt and Local Zoroastrianism

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Cambridge University Press, Jun 28, 2012 - History - 566 pages
Patricia Crone's latest book is about the Iranian response to the Muslim penetration of the Iranian countryside, the revolts subsequently triggered there, and the religious communities that these revolts revealed. The book also describes a complex of religious ideas that, however varied in space and unstable over time, has demonstrated a remarkable persistence in Iran across a period of two millennia. The central thesis is that this complex of ideas has been endemic to the mountain population of Iran and occasionally become epidemic with major consequences for the country, most strikingly in the revolts examined here, and in the rise of the Safavids who imposed Shi'ism on Iran. This learned and engaging book by one of the most influential scholars of early Islamic history casts entirely new light on the nature of religion in pre-Islamic Iran, and on the persistence of Iranian religious beliefs both outside and inside Islam after the Arab conquest.
 

Contents

THE REVOLTS
11
Sunbadh the Muslimiyya 3 1
46
Muhammira Khidashiyya RaWandiyya
79
Ishaq
96
alMuqanna and the Mubayyida
106
Bihafaridh Ustadhsis and Yusuf alBarm
163
The Aftermath
178
God Cosmology Eschatology
191
Doctrines
317
Regional and Official Zoroastrianism on the Ground
371
I7 Wifesharing
391
The Mazdakite Utopia and After
439
I9 Iranian Religion versus Islam and Inside It
453
Sharon and the Khidashiyya
495
Works Cited and Abbreviations
501
Index
543

I2 Reincarnation 23 3
237
I4 Khurrarni Beliefs in PreIslarnic Sources
279

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About the author (2012)

Patricia Crone was born on March 28, 1945 in Kyndelose, Denmark. She received undergraduate and doctoral degrees from the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London. She taught at Oxford University and Cambridge University before joining the Institute for Advanced Study, an independent research center, where she was a professor from 1997 until retiring in 2014. She explored archaeological records and contemporary Greek and Aramaic sources to challenge views on the roots and evolution of Islam. She wrote numerous books during her lifetime including Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World written with Michael Cook, God's Rule: Government and Islam: Six Centuries of Medieval Islamic Political Thought, and The Nativist Prophets of Early Islamic Iran. She died from cancer on July 11, 2015 at the age of 70.

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