Hebtiahs Bohra

Branch of Mustaali Ismaili Shi'a Islam

Part of a series on Islam
Isma'ilism
Ismail lion calligram
Concepts
  • Quran
  • Taʾwīl
  • Imamate
  • Ẓāhir
  • Bātin
  • Nūr
  • 'Aql
  • ʿIlm
  • Daʿwa
    • Dāʿī
    • Bāb
    • Hujja
  • Satr
  • Taqiya
  • Pīr
  • Numerology
  • Panentheism
  • Reincarnation
  • Titles
  • Walayah
  • Purity
  • Prayer
  • Charity
  • Fasting
  • Pilgrimage
Branches/sects

States

People

Centers

Other

 Islam portal
  • v
  • t
  • e

The Hebtiahs Bohra were a branch of Mustaali Ismaili Shi'a Islam that broke off from the mainstream Dawoodi Bohra after the death of the 39th Da'i al-Mutlaq in 1754.[1] They were mostly concentrated in Ujjain in India with a few families who were Hebtiah Bohra.

History of the Imāmī-Hebtiahs Bohra

The historical emergence of the Hebatiah Bohras
The historical emergence of the Shī‘ah Imāmī Tāyyībī-Mustā‘lī Hebtiahs-Ismā'īlīs
The schematic history of the development of the Imāmī-Mustā‘līan Hebtiahs Bohra from other Shī‘ah Muslim sects
WahbBarrahFatimahAbdul-MuttalibNatīla
Aminah bint WahabʿAbd AllāhAsad ibn HashimFatimah bint Qays'Abbas
Khadija bint KhuwaylidMuhammad
(Family tree)
Abi TalibFatimah bint AsadʿAbd Allāh
Fatima ZahraAli al Murtaza
(Family tree)
Khawlah b. Ja'far al-HanafiyyahʿAli bin ʿAbd Allāh b. 'Abbas
Hasan al MujtabaHusayn ibn Ali (Family)Shahr BanuIbn al-Hanifiyyah
Fatimah bint HasanZayn al-'AbidinJayda al-SindhiKaysanites
(Al-Mukhtar)
Farwah bint
Al-Qasim ibn Muhammad
Muhammad al-BaqirZayd ash-Shahīd (Zaydiyyah)First Sufi
Abu Hashim (Hashimiyya)
Ja'far al-SadiqYemen-FiversZaydi-AlavidsMuhammad "al-Imām"
Isma'il ibn JafarAl-Aftah
(Aftahiyya)
Al-Dibaj
(Sumaytiyya)
Musa al-KadhimIbrāhim ibn Ali ibn 'Abd Allah
Imāmī Ismā'īlīsmMuhammad al-AftahIbrāhim ibn MūsāImāmī Athnā‘ashariyyahMuslim’īyyah (Sīnbād)
Al-Maktūm
(Mubārakʾiyya)
SevenersFātimā al-Ma‘sūmahAli al-RidaIshaq al-Turk
ʿAbadullāh (Wafī Aḥmad)Ḥamdān Qarmaṭ'l-ʾAšʿaṯAl-Tustari
(Taṣawwuf)
Muhammad al-Taqī (Jawad)Muhammerah (Muqanna)
Aḥmad (Taqī Muhammad) Abū Sa'idMūsā al-MūbārraqāAli al HadiKhurrāmīyah (Pāpak, Maziar)
Ḥusayn (Raḍī ʿAbdillāh)Abū-TāhirMuhammad ibn Ali al-HadiHasan al-AskariKızılbaş
Ubayd Allāh (Fatimids)QarmatisNāimī-ḤurūfīsIbn Nusayr ('Ulyāʾiyya)
al-QāʾimʿAlī Al-Aʿlā (Baktāsh’īyyah)Muhammad
(Imām Zāmān)
Al-Khaṣībī (Nusairis)
al-ManṣūrPasīkhānī (Nuktawiyya)Imamiyyah (Twelvers)Sarı Saltuk (Baktāshīs)
al-MuʿizzNasīmīJa'farisAlevisOtman Baba
al-ʿAzīzAkhbarisShaykhisUsulisBalım Sultan
al-ḤākimSafavids (Safavī Iran)Nuqta-yi Ula (Bábis)Velayat-e-faqih (Iran, Islamic Rep.)Gül Baba (Hurufi-Bektaşi)
al-ẒāhirDurzis
(Al-Muqtana)
Mírzá Yaḥyá (Azalis)Mírzá Ḥusayn (Baháʼís)Other Alevis (Bektashism)
Al-Mustanṣir bi-LlāhDā'ī Nasir KhusrawBadakhshan & Afgan PamirisYarsanis
(Sultan Sahak)
Al-Musta'li (Musta'lis)Muḥammad ibn Abū Tamīm Al-Nizār
(Nizārīs)
Ostad Elahi
('Ali-Ilahis)
Al-ĀmirHashshashins (Ḥ. bin Sabbah) Işık Alevis
At-Tayyib (Tayyibis)Al-Ḥāfīz (Hafizis)Ḥasan ʿAlā (Alamūt Nizārīs) Alians
(Demir Baba)
Harabatis
(Baba Rexheb)
Arwa
al-Sulayhi
Zoeb Musa (Dawoodis)Agha Khans (Nizārī Ismā'īlīs)Pamir IsmāʿīlīsmChepnis
Sulayman (Sulaymanis)Ali bin Ibrāhim
(Alavi Bohra)
Hebtiahs BohraA . Hussain Jivaji
(Atba-i-Malak)
Jafari Bohras (Syed Jafar Ahmad Shirazi)Progressive Dawoodis (Asghar Ali)Atba-i-Malak Vakil (A. Qadir Ebrahimji)Atba-i-Malak Badar (Ghulam Hussain Miya Khan)

See also

References

  1. ^ Clinton Bennett (14 February 2013). The Bloomsbury Companion to Islamic Studies. A&C Black. pp. 355–. ISBN 978-1-4411-2788-4.