La question de l’influence de la Qādiriyya sur les débuts du califat de Ḥamdallāhi, à l’épreuve de nouvelles sources

In their analysis of the movement launched by Aḥmad Lobbo in 1818, authors writing during the colonial period (such as Marty or Hampâté Bâ) projected to the past, in an anachronistic manner, the prominent role of Sufi brotherhoods as it had developed during their time. Hence, they attributed Aḥmad L...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bernard Salvaing
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Institut des Mondes Africains 2021-12-01
Series:Afriques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/afriques/3308
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841552435810664448
author Bernard Salvaing
author_facet Bernard Salvaing
author_sort Bernard Salvaing
collection DOAJ
description In their analysis of the movement launched by Aḥmad Lobbo in 1818, authors writing during the colonial period (such as Marty or Hampâté Bâ) projected to the past, in an anachronistic manner, the prominent role of Sufi brotherhoods as it had developed during their time. Hence, they attributed Aḥmad Lobbo’s movement to the influence of the Qādiriyya brotherhood and to the Kunta family. The study of local sources leads to dismiss this vision. In fact, the rise of the Islamic State in Māsina seems to take its roots in a revivalism that took as a reference the Islamic Policy of the Songhay Emperor Askiyā Muḥammad (d. 1538) who was advised by the preacher al-Maġīlī and tried to deeply integrate Islam into the religious and cultural life of the Empire. One must also take into account the long-standing presence, in the whole of Muslim West Africa, of an Islamic culture that focused on the study of fiqh and taṣawwuf, but without being rooted in institutionalized brotherhoods. Further, the Islamic renewal that took place in the rest of the Islamic World in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries had little impact on West Africa, except perhaps in Sokoto. The real change in the matter occurred only with the coming of the Tiǧāniyya through al-Ḥāǧǧ ‘Umar.
format Article
id doaj-art-b28637ae2e99427c8f7f8fff93fc7f9e
institution Kabale University
issn 2108-6796
language deu
publishDate 2021-12-01
publisher Institut des Mondes Africains
record_format Article
series Afriques
spelling doaj-art-b28637ae2e99427c8f7f8fff93fc7f9e2025-01-09T13:02:40ZdeuInstitut des Mondes AfricainsAfriques2108-67962021-12-011210.4000/afriques.3308La question de l’influence de la Qādiriyya sur les débuts du califat de Ḥamdallāhi, à l’épreuve de nouvelles sourcesBernard SalvaingIn their analysis of the movement launched by Aḥmad Lobbo in 1818, authors writing during the colonial period (such as Marty or Hampâté Bâ) projected to the past, in an anachronistic manner, the prominent role of Sufi brotherhoods as it had developed during their time. Hence, they attributed Aḥmad Lobbo’s movement to the influence of the Qādiriyya brotherhood and to the Kunta family. The study of local sources leads to dismiss this vision. In fact, the rise of the Islamic State in Māsina seems to take its roots in a revivalism that took as a reference the Islamic Policy of the Songhay Emperor Askiyā Muḥammad (d. 1538) who was advised by the preacher al-Maġīlī and tried to deeply integrate Islam into the religious and cultural life of the Empire. One must also take into account the long-standing presence, in the whole of Muslim West Africa, of an Islamic culture that focused on the study of fiqh and taṣawwuf, but without being rooted in institutionalized brotherhoods. Further, the Islamic renewal that took place in the rest of the Islamic World in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries had little impact on West Africa, except perhaps in Sokoto. The real change in the matter occurred only with the coming of the Tiǧāniyya through al-Ḥāǧǧ ‘Umar.https://journals.openedition.org/afriques/3308Aḥmad LobboPaul MartyHampâté BâQādiriyyaMāsina
spellingShingle Bernard Salvaing
La question de l’influence de la Qādiriyya sur les débuts du califat de Ḥamdallāhi, à l’épreuve de nouvelles sources
Afriques
Aḥmad Lobbo
Paul Marty
Hampâté Bâ
Qādiriyya
Māsina
title La question de l’influence de la Qādiriyya sur les débuts du califat de Ḥamdallāhi, à l’épreuve de nouvelles sources
title_full La question de l’influence de la Qādiriyya sur les débuts du califat de Ḥamdallāhi, à l’épreuve de nouvelles sources
title_fullStr La question de l’influence de la Qādiriyya sur les débuts du califat de Ḥamdallāhi, à l’épreuve de nouvelles sources
title_full_unstemmed La question de l’influence de la Qādiriyya sur les débuts du califat de Ḥamdallāhi, à l’épreuve de nouvelles sources
title_short La question de l’influence de la Qādiriyya sur les débuts du califat de Ḥamdallāhi, à l’épreuve de nouvelles sources
title_sort la question de l influence de la qadiriyya sur les debuts du califat de hamdallahi a l epreuve de nouvelles sources
topic Aḥmad Lobbo
Paul Marty
Hampâté Bâ
Qādiriyya
Māsina
url https://journals.openedition.org/afriques/3308
work_keys_str_mv AT bernardsalvaing laquestiondelinfluencedelaqadiriyyasurlesdebutsducalifatdehamdallahialepreuvedenouvellessources