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caliphate
(redirected from Khilafah)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.02 sec.
caliphate (kăl`ĭfāt', -fĭt), the rulership of Islam;

caliph (kăl`ĭf'), the spiritual head and temporal ruler of the Islamic state. In principle, Islam Islam (ĭsläm`, ĭs`läm), [Arab.,=submission to God], world religion founded by the Prophet Muhammad.
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 is theocratic: when Muhammad Muhammad (məhăm`əd) [Arab.,=praised], 570?–632, the name of the Prophet of Islam , one of the great figures of history, b.
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 died, a caliph [Arab.,=successor] was chosen to rule in his place. The caliph had temporal and spiritual authority but was not permitted prophetic power; this was reserved for Muhammad. The caliph could not, therefore, exercise authority in matters of religious doctrine. The first caliph was Abu Bakr Abu Bakr (ä`b
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. He was succeeded by Umar Umar (
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, Uthman Uthman (
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, and Ali Ali (älē`) (Ali ibn Abu Talib), 598?–661, 4th caliph (656–61).
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. Sunni Sunni (s`nī) [Arab.
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 Muslims recognize these first four, or Rashidun (the rightly guided), caliphs. Shiites Shiites (shē`ītz) [Arab.
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, however, recognize Ali as the first caliph. After Ali's death, Muawiya Muawiya (mä`wēä), d.
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 became caliph and founded the Umayyad Umayyad (mä`yäd), the first Islamic dynasty (661–750).
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 dynasty (661–750), chiefly by force of arms. Its capital was Damascus. In 750 the Abbasid Abbasid (əbă`sĭd, ă`bəsĭd) or Abbaside
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 family, descended from the Prophet's uncle, led a coalition that defeated (749–50) the Umayyad family. The Abbasid dynasty (749–1258) is sometimes called the caliphate of Baghdad. One Umayyad, Abd ar-Rahman I Abd ar-Rahman I, d. 788, first Umayyad emir of Córdoba (756–88). The only survivor of the Abbasid massacre (750) of his family in Damascus, he fled from Syria and eventually went to Spain.
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, escaped the general massacre of his family and fled to Spain; there the emirate of Córdoba was set up in 780. This later became the caliphate of Córdoba, or the Western caliphate, and persisted until 1031. A third competing contemporaneous caliphate was established by the Fatimids Fatimid (făt`ĭmĭd) or Fatimite
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 in Africa, Syria, and Egypt (909–1171). After the fall of Baghdad to the Mongols under Hulagu Khan in 1258, the Abbasids fled to Egypt. The Ottomans captured Egypt in 1517 and Selim I Selim I (Selim the Grim) (sĕlĭm`), 1467–1520, Ottoman sultan (1512–20).
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 assumed the title of caliph by questionable right. The Ottoman sultans, however, kept the title until the last sultan, Muhammad VI, was deposed. He was succeeded briefly by a cousin, but in 1924 the caliphate was abolished by Kemal Atatürk Atatürk, Kemal (kĕmäl` ätätürk`), 1881–1938, Turkish leader, founder of modern Turkey.
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. A year later Husayn ibn Ali Husayn ibn Ali (ĭ`bən ä`lē), 1856–1931, Arab political and religious leader.
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, king of Arabia, proclaimed himself caliph, but he was forced to abdicate by Ibn Saud Ibn Saud (Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud) (ĭ`bən säd`), c.
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. Subsequently, several pan-Islamic congresses attempted to establish a rightful caliph. A number of Islamist political parties and Islamist guerrilla groups have called for the restoration of the caliphate by uniting, either through peaceful political action or through force, Islamic nations in a transnational state.

Bibliography

See W. Muir, The Caliphate (1898, repr. 1964); T. W. Arnold, The Caliphate (1924, repr. 1966); A. S. Tritton, The Caliphs and Their Non-Muslim Subjects (1930, repr. 1970); M. Ali, Early Caliphate (tr. 1947); S. K. Bakhsh, The Caliphate (1954); P. K. Hitti, History of the Arabs (10th ed. 1970); H. Kennedy, The Early Abbasid Caliphate (1981).


caliphate, califate, kalifate
the office, jurisdiction, or reign of a caliph


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Sa'diyya Shaikh, "Family Planning, Contraception and Abortion in Islam: Undertaking Khilafah," in Daniel C.
The isolationists argue that American Muslims must participate only in an effort to revive the institution of Khilafah, which magically will take care of all Muslim problems.
 
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