Mohammad Bagher Shafti
Mohammad Bagher Shafti (1761 in Charazeh – 22 March 1844 in Isfahan), also known as Rashti and Bidabadi, was an Iranian shia clergyman. The Seyyed mosque in Isfahan was built by him. According to Hossein Nasr and Hamid Dabashi, he is probably the first clergyman, who was titled as Hujjat al-Islam (proof of Islam). The reason for the titling was his double role as judge and Mufti and also his book about execution of Sharia.[1][2]
References[]
- ^ Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, Hamid Dabashi: Expectation of the Millennium. State University of New York Press, S. 205–206
- ^ Ahmad Kazemi Moussavi: "The Institutionalization of Marja'-i Taqlīd in the Nineteenth Century Shī'ite Community." Journal of The Muslim World. Band 84, Nr. 3–4, S. 279–299, 2007, S. 296
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Categories:
- Iranian Islamic religious leaders
- Iranian Muslims
- 1761 births
- 1844 deaths
- Descendants of Shia Imams
- Iranian Shia Muslims
- Iranian ayatollahs
- 18th-century Iranian people
- 19th-century Iranian people
- People of Qajar Iran