- The
Ibadi movement or
Ibadism (Arabic: الإباضية, romanized: al-ʾIbāḍiyya,
Arabic pronunciation: [alʔibaːˈdˤijja]) is a
branch of Islam. It has been called...
- century. In 1895, the
Hindu presence in
Muscat came
under attack by the
Ibadhis and by 1900, the
number of
Hindus decreased to 300.
During the independence...
-
Islam and the
Maliki madhhab became virtually universal,
apart from the
Ibadhis of the M'zab and
small Jewish communities.
Islam took
longer to spread...
- faith. Later, Al-hajjaj, the
governor of Iraq, came into
conflict with the
Ibadhis,
which forced them back to Oman.
Among those who
returned was the scholar...
-
plummeted to 300. In 1895, the
Hindu colony in
Muscat came
under attack by the
Ibadhis. By the time of independence, only a few
dozen Hindus remained in Oman...
-
candidates who
possess the
appropriate spiritual and
personal qualities.
Ibadhi leadership is
vested in an imam, who is
regarded as the sole legitimate...
- Sa’id bin
Ahmad bin
Muhammad bin
Abdelmajid Al-Busaidi Al-Azdi Al-Ammani Al-
Ibadhi was born in the city of Adam, Oman in 1694, the son of Sa’id bin
Ahmad Al-Busaidi...
- into
central Arabia and Oman. The
Jabrids had a
major role in
reviving the
Ibadhi Imamate in
opposition to the Nabhanids, as they
supported the installation...
-
Buddhist 0.3%,
unaffiliated 0.2% note: non-****
Muslims include native Ibadhi Muslims (<1% of the po****tion) and
foreign Muslims (2010 est.) Buddhist...
-
brought up
through mixed marriages either following mixed Shia/**** or Shia/
Ibadhi traditions. However,
Laurence Louër, in his book
Transnational Shia Politics:...