000 01153nam a2200121Ia 4500
008 180225s1921 CNT 000 0 und d
245 1 0 _aThe New World of Islam
500 _a-
500 _a-
520 3 _a"Even the Babbist movement in Persia, far removed though it was doctrinally from Wahabi teaching, was indubitably a secondary reflex of the Wahabi urge." p. 24 Notes: "For the Babbist movement, see Clément Huart, La Réligion de Bab (Paris, 1889); Comte Arthur de Gobineau, Trois Ans en Perse (Paris, 1867). A good summary of all these early movements of the Mohammedan revival is found in Le Chatelier, op. cit.." p. 36. "With the Mohammedan Revival at the beginning of the nineteenth century, however, symptoms of social unrest appeared once more. Wahabism aimed not merely at a reform of religious abuses but was also a general protest against the contemporary decadence of Moslem society. In any cases it took the form of a popular revolt against established governments. The same was true of the correlative Babbist movement in Persia, which took place about the same time." p. 274.
690 _aISLAM
700 1 _aStoddard, Lothrop
999 _c1924
_d1924