- This
article contains Persian text.
Without proper rendering support, you may see
question marks, boxes, or
other symbols. Bábism (Persian: بابیه, romanized: Bâbiyye)...
-
classical Arabic. The word is also frequently,
albeit not exclusively, used by
Bábists, Baháʼís, Mandaeans,
Indonesian Christians,
Maltese Christians, and Sephardic...
- Bábism. The
Bábist movement began following the 1850
execution of
Sayyid Ali
Muhammad Shirazi,
known as the Báb.
Several thinkers among the
Bábists were very...
-
rumours that the Báb recanted. The
Shaykh al-Islām, a
champion of the anti-
Bábist campaign, not at the Báb's trial,
issued a
conditional death sentence if...
- ISBN 978-1-4798-5152-2. * "
Babists of Persia". The
Daily Chronicle. De Kalb, IL. 6 Jul 1901. p. 3.
Retrieved Dec 18, 2017. "Miss
Arline Peck and the
Babists". The Inter...
- was born in
Kerman in 1847, he was the
second son of one of the
prominent Bábist figures of Kerman. In Kerman, he
married one of Subh-i-Azal's daughters...
- poems.
Aliqoli Mirza witnessed the rise of Bábism and
befriended many
Bábists in his youth. One of them was Abdol-Rahim Heravi, who
helped him gather...
- by the Qajars, with the Báb and many of his
followers being executed.
Babists subsequently took up an
underground struggle against the
Qajar monarchy...
- 11, 2019. * "New York
Babists split". The Sun. New York, New York. 19 May 1901. p. 23a.
Retrieved Nov 11, 2019. "New York
Babists split". The Charlotte...
-
Publishing Trust. p. 75. ISBN 0-87743-020-9. "Miss
Arlene Peck and the
Babists". The
Inter Ocean. Chicago, Illinois. 7 Jul 1901. p. 36.
Retrieved Nov...