Hidden Caliphate: Sufi Saints beyond the Oxus and Indus

Hidden Caliphate: Sufi Saints beyond the Oxus and Indus

by Waleed Ziad
Hidden Caliphate: Sufi Saints beyond the Oxus and Indus

Hidden Caliphate: Sufi Saints beyond the Oxus and Indus

by Waleed Ziad

Hardcover

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Overview

Winner of the Albert Hourani Book Award

Sufis created the most extensive Muslim revivalist network in Asia before the twentieth century, generating a vibrant Persianate literary, intellectual, and spiritual culture while tying together a politically fractured world.

In a pathbreaking work combining social history, religious studies, and anthropology, Waleed Ziad examines the development across Asia of Muslim revivalist networks from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. At the center of the story are the Naqshbandi-Mujaddidi Sufis, who inspired major reformist movements and articulated effective social responses to the fracturing of Muslim political power amid European colonialism. In a time of political upheaval, the Mujaddidis fused Persian, Arabic, Turkic, and Indic literary traditions, mystical virtuosity, popular religious practices, and urban scholasticism in a unified yet flexible expression of Islam. The Mujaddidi “Hidden Caliphate,” as it was known, brought cohesion to diverse Muslim communities from Delhi through Peshawar to the steppes of Central Asia. And the legacy of Mujaddidi Sufis continues to shape the Muslim world, as their institutional structures, pedagogies, and critiques have worked their way into leading social movements from Turkey to Indonesia, and among the Muslims of China.

By shifting attention away from court politics, colonial actors, and the standard narrative of the “Great Game,” Ziad offers a new vision of Islamic sovereignty. At the same time, he demonstrates the pivotal place of the Afghan Empire in sustaining this vast inter-Asian web of scholastic and economic exchange. Based on extensive fieldwork across Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, and Pakistan at madrasas, Sufi monasteries, private libraries, and archives, Hidden Caliphate reveals the long-term influence of Mujaddidi reform and revival in the eastern Muslim world, bringing together seemingly disparate social, political, and intellectual currents from the Indian Ocean to Siberia.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674248816
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 12/14/2021
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.25(d)

About the Author

Waleed Ziad is Assistant Professor and Ali Jarrahi Fellow in Persian Studies in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Formerly a Research Fellow at the Abdallah S. Kamel Center for the Study of Islamic Law and Civilization at Yale Law School, Ziad has conducted fieldwork in over 120 towns across Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, and Pakistan.

Table of Contents

Note on Transliteration ix

Introduction: Beyond the Great Game 1

1 A Persianate Cosmopolis 29

2 The Reviver of the Second Millennium 61

3 Transporting Sacred Knowledge 91

4 How Peshawar Revived Bukhara's Sanctity 111

5 The Saint and the Khan 137

6 Peshawar in Turmoil 160

7 Guardians of the Caravans 190

8 The Diplomat-Saints of Ferghana 207

9 From Swat to Kabul 222

Conclusion: The Sage of North Waziristan 246

Appendix A Key Reigns and Events by Region, 1700-1900 265

Appendix B Patterns of Reproduction of Practical Sufi Handbooks 273

Notes 287

Acknowledgments 337

Index 341

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