Download - Education of Suhrawardī
The event of Sihad ad-Din Al-Suhrawardi death (1191 C.E.) brought the end of a
by all accounts brilliant philosophical career, but certainly not its influence. As the
founder of the Ishraqi school of thought - known in English as the "Philosophy of
Illumination" - Al-Suhrawardi inspired generations of philosophers who crossed
religious, geographical, and dogmatic lines, reaching as far as the Zoroastrian revivalist
figure Azar Kayvan in 17th century Persia.1 Much of the present day ink spilled
concerning al-Suhrawardi centers around the principal construction of his philosophical
system: was it essentially based on Islamic mystic theosophy as Amin Razavi claims, or
primarily grounded in the author's Peripatetic background while exploring mystic
channels of knowledge as Ziai holds true? 2 Hopes for a resolution of this dispute - which
now spans decades and now more resembles a quandary along the lines of "the-chicken-
or-the-egg"- in favor of one side or the other are distant. New avenues of scholarly
pursuit regarding the life and works of al-Suhrawardi should now be opened.
Between Ziai and Amin Razavi, utmost importance has been given to attempts of
systematizing the manner in which al-Suhrawardi systematized his own treatises on
Ishraq. While indeed question of methodology for a systematizer of such import as al-
Suhrawardi is deserving of such efforts, little attention has been given to enumerating the
source materials which al-Suhrawardi used in delineating said system. At its core al-
Suhrawardi's Hikmat al-Ishraq is the unification of various contemporary methods of
1For influence on the 13th century Jewish logician Sa'd b Mansur Ibn Kammuna see: Moshe Perlman, Sa'd b Mansur Ibn Kammuna's Examination of the Inquiries into the Three Faiths: A Thirteenth Century Essay in Comparative Religion. (UC Press) Berkeley, 1977; for the Zoroastrian Azar Kayvan: Corbin, Henry, "Azar Kayvan" in Encyclopedia Iranica vol. III:183-187.2 See: Amin Razavi, Mehdi, Al-Suhrawardi and the School of Illumination. (Curzon) Richmond, 1997, henceforth cited as School of Illumination; and Ziai, Hossein, Knowledge and Illumination: Brown Judaic Studies vol. 97. (Scholar's University Press) Atlanta, 1990, henceforth cited as School of Illumination. Amin Razavi is keen to split the prevailing intellectual attitude between himself, Ziai and Islamic philosophers such as Mehdi Ha'iri and Sayyid Halal ad-Din Ashtiyani concerning the nature of Suhrwardi's philosophy. See in School of Illumination Intro. xvi-xix.
organizing knowledge - Islamic, Peripatetic and mystic - into a single method: affirming
its three constituent parts and placing mystic revelation in the form of Light, or ishraq, as
the highest and most reliable means of attaining knowledge. He held his mastery of
revelatory, as opposed to discursive, means to be a high achievement in his philosophical
milieu:
I have heard the master (Al-Suhrawardi) was asked, "Which of you is more excellent [in philosophy], you or Avicenna?" He replied, "We may be on par, or I may be a little better than he is, in the discursive, but I certainly exceed him in the revelatory and intuitive!3
The fact that Al-Suhrawardi left little in the way of bibliographical information
when writing the works that were to become central to Hikmat al-Ishraq and that divine
revelation is a system of knowledge that is decidedly unciteable has doubtlessly deterred
previous efforts at reconstructing the works at al-Suhrawardi's disposal. Special recent
focus on attempts to recreate the libraries of Neoplatonists4 from various traditions has
breathed life into efforts at succeeding at such a goal.
In efforts to continue this trend of modern scholarship into the systems of
influence that exerted themselves in al-Suhrawardi's time, this paper aims to give a
general reconstruction of prevailing attitudes and works available to al-Suhrawardi during
his scholastic career through a biographical analysis. Through the examination of those
systems of influence which al-Suhrawardi himself professed - Islamic, Peripatetic, and
Mystic in - their textual and societal forms we may be able to ascertain which
3 Taken from Nazhat al-arwah wa-rawdat al afrah by Shamsuddin Muhammed ibn Mahmud al-Shahruzuri (fl. 680/1282); extract ed. Spies, Otto, Three Treatises on Mysticism by Shihabuddin Suhrawerdi Maqtul (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 1935), pp. 90-121, henceforth cited as Shahrazurdi. English trans. Thackston, W.M. in The Visionary Treatises: Al-Suhrawardi. (Octagon) London, 1984, p. 4. Henceforth cited as Visionary Treatises.4 Cristina d'Ancona Costa has been at the forefront of this scholarly endeavor, particularly: D'Ancona Costa, Cristina. The libraries of the Neoplatonists: Proceedings of the Meeting of the European Science Foundation Network "Late antiquity and Arabic thought : Patterns in the Constitution of European Culture", Strasbourg, March 12-14, 2004. (Brill) Boston, Leiden, 2007.
foundational works al-Suhrawardi used to build his own system of philosophy
II: Life and Composition
Concrete details are few concerning Al-Suhrawardi's life from its beginning to its
end. As the nisba on his name indicates, his family hailed from the village of Suhraward,
near Zanjan in northeastern Iran. Though early accounts of his life put his age at the time
of his death as high as 505 and the exact date of his demise is unknown6, the most
common dates given for his life are 549-587/1155-1191. We are told by Ibn Abi
'Usaybi'a of his entrance to Aleppo in 579/11837, and Al-Suhrawardi himself testifies to
the date he completed his treatise The Philosophy of Illumination as 582/1186.8 In his
early years, he was a student in both Maraghah and Isfahan: two great centers of Islamic
learning at the time, especially the latter.9 We know a few of his teachers: from
Maraghah, Majd al-Din Jili, with whom he studied hikmat, philosophy and theology; and
from Isfahan, Zahir al-Din al-Qari, a noted commentator on Ibn Sina, with whom he
studied philosophy and the Basa'ir of 'Umar ibn Salan al-Sawi.10 He received formal
instruction in the Peripatetic style of philosophy. After completion of his studies in
Isfahan, he entered an extensive period of asceticism wandering through Anatolia and
5 Shahruzuri, op. cit. p. 97.6 A promising date of "a Friday in the month of Dhu 'l-Hijja 587/1191" has been given us by Ibn Taqhribirdi, al-Nujum al-Zahira fi muluk misr wa 'lqahirah, vol. 6 (Cairo: al-Mu'assah al-Misriyah Press, 1963), p. 114.7 Ibn Abi Usaybi'a Tabaqat al-'Atibba', ed. A. Mueller (Köningsberg; Pr. 1884) I, 168.8 Al-Suhrawardi, Opera Metaphysica et Mystica II, ed. Henry Corbin (Tehran: Institut Franco-Iranien, 1952). Hereafter cited as Opera II.9 The eminence of Isfahan as a learning center is well attested and a good general treatment can be found in Fisher, W.B.; Jackson, P.; Lockhart, L.; Boyle, J.A. The Cambridge History of Iran. (Cambridge University Press) Cambridge, 1968., see also: Endress, Gerhard, "Philosophische ein-Band-Bibliotheken aus Isfahan", Oriens, Vol. 36, (Brill) 2001, pp. 10-58, c.f. Ziai Knowledge and Illumination, p. 13.10 Nasr, S.H. Three Muslim Sages (Cambridge: Harvard University, 1964), p. 60.
Greater Syria, seeking a "spiritual equal"11 in the Sufis he met along the way. It was,
perhaps, in this search for "spiritual equals" that he abandoned his commitment to the
itinerant lifestyle and moved to Damascus. He seems to have found suitable company as
he eventually settled there, gained employment in the court of Malik Zahir Shah, son of
the famed Ayyubid Salah ad-Din, and attracted a circle (halqa) of his own.12 Ziai has
attempted an outline of the time frame in which Al-Suhrawardi's major Ishraqi cycle of
doctrine (The Intimations, The Apposites, The Paths and Illuminations, and The
Philosophy of Illumination)13, written in Arabic, would have been completed in Syria, but
has argued that no definitive version of these existed even upon his death as they were
revised up until such point.14 In addition to these four great works, Al-Suhrawardi
authored numerous other titles, in Arabic and Persian. Many of these were mystical in
nature and drew on past "mystical philosophers"; the great majority dealt with his
personal theory of Ishraq - or the gaining of knowledge through revelatory means. He
was twice order to be executed by Salah al-Din (532-588/1138 - 1193), and this sentence
was carried out by Malik Zahir Shah. The conditions on the ground surrounding his
death may have prevented Al-Suhrawardi's circle from writing a biography, and the first
biographical source we have is someone who had likely never met the philosopher in
earthly form.15
11 Shahruzuri, op. cit. p. 120.12 It was apparently at this group's urging that Al-Suhrawardi released his cycle of Illuminationst works. See Al-Suhrawardi, Opera Metaphysica et Mystica I, ed. Henry Corbin (Tehran: Institut Franco-Iranien, 1952), p. 334. Henceforth cited as Opera I.13 Ziai argues convincingly that this series of four books served as Al-Suhrawardi's "elliptical" opus (Knowledge and Illumination, p. 10). He quotes Al-Suhrawardi himself from Paths and Heavens: "This book (Paths and Heavens) should be read before the Philosophy of Illumination and after the short examination called the Intimations." (Opera I, p. 194.). Elsewhere, Al-Suhrawardi describes his work Apposites as an addendum to Intimations. (Opera I, p. 214).14 Knowledge and Illumination, op. cit. pp . 16-19.15 Amin Razvi, School of Illumination. p. 14.
Even with this bare outline of Al-Suhrawardi's life, several important concerns
present themselves: (1) he was educated in Islamic institutions in 12th century Nishapur;
(2) he was educated in the Peripatetic style and had at least some access to contemporary
Peripatetic thought and texts; (3) he was familiar with mystical works, particularly those
from non-Islamic traditions. Analysis of these considerations will provide insight as to
the nature of the works dealt with by Al-Suhrawardi in his lifetime.
III: Life & Education in Early Medieval Khurasan
While tempting to imagine that we can pinpoint the exact nature of Al-
Suhrawardi's educational experience by conceiving his role within the vast and complex
social and educational bodies which comprised medieval Khurasan, reducing such a field
to manageable system is unfortunately not entirely feasible for the task at hand, given the
lack of certain key information regarding Suhrawardi. Michael Chamberlain, in his
works on high medieval Damascus16 and its elite classes, reminds us of the fallacy of
attributing undue social utility to the "institutions" of the Islamic world. In his own
words:
There was no "system" of education, patronage, appointment, or of government. Damascus did not have agencies, autonomous social bodies, or institutions with the power to organize such systems. Rather, Damascus and its revenue sources are better viewed as arenas for competitive practices of political and social struggle... distinctions between the realms of the "political" and the "social": or the "public" and the "private" reads modern relations between state and society into a medieval past that cannot sustain such a clear-cut division17
Especially constructive is the idea of abandoning anachronistic and modes of
16 Chamberlain, Michael. Knowledge and Social Practice in Medieval Damascus, 1190-1350. Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization Series. (Cambridge University Press) Cambridge, 1994, p. 34; henceforth cited as Knowledge and Social Practice. A shorter version of this work can be found in with the title "The Production of Knowledge and the Reproduction of the A'yan in Medieval Damascus", Madrasa: La transmission du savoir dans le monde muslaman sous la direction de Nicole Grandin et Marc Gaborieau (editions ARGUMENTS) Paris, 1997; henceforth cited as Production of Knowledge.17 Ibid, p. 12.
approach in Western scholarship when assessing the nature of a particular phenomenon -
in this case the rise of social and educational facilities in the Islamic world. He argues
instead for a more refined understanding of the contemporary social institutions; one
based more upon competing stakes in society. In the case of social facilities this would
mean abandoning ideas of the absolute agency of the state to introduce widespread
norms; for educational facilities these particular elements would mean re-imagining
education not as monolithic and static but competitive and dynamic. Those with the
money to establish waqfs for a madrasah, be they imperial or local agents, and those
vying for a mansab (paid position) within it were the principal actors. Chamberlain
contrasts this view with earlier scholarship emphasizing the model of an overarching,
centralized hierarchy with purposes of its own.18 Is Chamberlain's approach useful for an
area such as Khurasan? We must consider the social roles and criteria that shaped
imperial-local interaction in Khurasan as well as the effect of these conditions on the
local populations in Khurasan to make full use of such an approach.
Chamberlain's initial portrait of Damascus begins under the rule of the famed
Salah al-Din during the time of the Crusades. Social upheaval was common and tension
between local elites and the Ayubbid ruling party often ran at feverish temperatures.19
Similarly throughout Khurasan the Hanafi and Shafi'i madhhabs were frequently up in
arms against each other; when this was not the case, they were most often found up in
arms against Shi'i populations. Relations between the local Khurasani elite and the
various empires that ruled over them - notably the Ghaznavid and Seljuq states (364-
18 Symptomatic of this line of thinking is Waardenburg, Jacques. "Some Institutional Aspects of Muslim Higher Education and Their Relation to Islam," Numen, Vol. 12, Fasc. 2 (Apr., 1965), pp. 96-138. His note on p. 40 - a quotation from the writer al-Maqdisi describing riots and doctrinal disputes bordering on violence throughout the whole of Khurasan during his travels.19 Chamberlain, Knowledge and Social Practice, pp. 11-21.
581/975-1186) - in the run-up to al-Suhrawardi's time were oftentimes precarious.
Pre-Islamic Khurasan had been a highly fragmented locality, with various
regional power centers; after the spread of Islam throughout Khurasan and with a
population under more centralized rule, these roots exposed themselves. Bouillet relates
late 10th century numismatic evidence from Nishapur and Balkh from the reigns of
Mahmud of Ghazna and Arslan Arghun. 20 Their imperially minted coinage with Qur'anic
verses affirm the local Mu'atizili authority in order to gain the support of nobles in war
time. Further numismatic evidence shows a local elite Abu al Rida al-Athir Hussein al-
Baghdadi rising in Samarqand to assert himself as preeminent over the imperial
establishment, going so far as to print his own coins to strengthen his claims of
authority.21 Even the Shi'i possessed some power: Rumi (603-671/1207-1273) relates the
story of Fadhl al-Tabsari (d. 1155) who upon entering the city of Sabavan promised the
inhabitants that they would be spared if they could produce a single man by the name of
Abu Bakr.22 Not content to court only the power of elites, competition was further spread
out during the 11th century. Again Mahmud of Ghazna, ever the enterprising spirit,
appointed the leader of Nishapur's Karamiya sect to the position of ra'is, a very powerful
seat of authority within the city, ostensibly in an effort to circumvent the channels of elite
authority. This, however, backfired upon the imposition of a Shi'i "witch hunt"23 by the
new ra'is who was removed almost immediately. An anecdote from the time of Sanjar (d.
1186/7), a local governor besieging Nishapur, relates the tenor of imperial/local relations 20 Bulliet, Richard W. "Local Politics in Eastern Iran under the Ghaznavids and Seljuks," Iranian Studies, Vol. 11, No. 1/4, State and Society in Iran (1978), pp. 35-56, henceforth cited as Local Politics in Eastern Iran; pp. 43, 44. The coin issued in Nishapur contained verse III.17 and the coin issued in Balkh was inscribed with the "Throne Verse", both at that time recognized as having mu'atizilah import.21 'Abd al-Ghafir al-Farisi, "As-Siyaq li ta'rikh Naisa-buir," The Histories of Nishapur, ed. R. N. Frye (The Hague, 1965), second MS, fol. 14b-15a; c.f. Bulliet, Local Politics in Eastern Iran, p. 46. 22 23 Bulliet, Local Politics in Eastern Iran, p. 50.
well:
[In Nishapur] a riot broke out between the Hanafis and the Shafi'is. After seventy deaths had been counted on the Hanafi side, he [Sanjur] became incensed and decided that things had gone far enough. Accordingly, he [Sanjur] ordered his chamberlain to ride into town and say to the Shafi'i leader Abu Said Muhammad b. Yahya, the director of the Ni'miyya: "Is this city yours or mine? If it's mine, get out! If it's yours, get ready to fight me for it!
The atmosphere of wariness between imperial and local elites prevailed into the
Nizam al Mulk's prefecture and governed his concerns over the founding of the
Nizamiyah madrasahs.24 His predecessor, al-Kinduri, had tried his hand at quelling
dissent by essentially inciting pogroms against Ash'aris and jailing them. Bulliet's
characterization of the concessions to which Nizam al Mulk agreed in the hopes of
reconciliation in and creating a welcoming atmosphere Ashari'i and Shafi'i influence in
mosques and madrasahs is emblematic of the weakness of central power over the region.
Nizam al-Mulk despaired of repairing the breach between the Shafi'i and Hanafi
communities, stating:
In all the world there are only two schools that are good and on the right path. One is that of Abu Hanifah and the other is that of al-Shafi'i (may God have Mercy on them both). All the rest is vanity and heresy.25
This effort, though, seems to have shored up support for the state's educational
program. No other entity in post-Nizam al-Mulk Khurasan challenged orthodox sectarian
education, but this did not indicate the end of competition in the educational sphere.
Aspects of the sectarian, Peripatetic and mystic formed an integral part of education on
the whole in early medieval Khurasan. While the state successfully established
precedence in areas of sectarian education, other agents still funded schools with waqfs
and shiyukh still competed for spots within them, oftentimes holding a position which
allowed them to teach in more than a single tradition.26 The evidence attests to the 24 Ibid, p. 49.25 Siyar al Muluk. (Tehran) ca. 1340. Trans. Hubert Darke (London) 1960.26 See below, p. 24.
importance placed on having local support, often manifested in socio-religious
sectarianism, for important state functions.
While elites and imperial personages can be demonstrated to have played an
important role in education, what of those doing the teaching themselves? Practices
common to learning in the medieval Islamic world, especially the memorization of texts,
helped ensure the role of the shaykh in the competitive process. Without the temporal
power of a noble or a central administrator at their disposal, the shiyukh used their
privilege to knowledge as a means of assuring their own place in society. The written
transmission of texts would have seriously undermined their authority and place within
the educational sphere. By advocating a mode of learning which was centered on
themselves, they ensured their place within the educational facilities.
Given this climate in late 11th century Nishapur, attempts at characterizing a
centralized establishment as able to impose its will in socio-religious affairs - affairs
which were bound up in modes of governance in 11th and 12th century Khurasan - would
be highly suspect. Innovation and adaption happened not from solely from an imperial
"above", but came to pass through contention with and strong input from elites and, at
times, commoners" below"; indeed, many important aspects of socio-religious interaction
were marked by competition. This division of participation in the social and theological
spheres allowed medieval Khurasan to cultivate a variety of traditions, both state
sanctioned and uniquely rooted in a Khurasani identity. Al-Suhrawardi, growing up and
receiving his education in 12th century Khurasan, lived this plurality of traditions and
would become heavily influenced by them throughout his educational career.
The Sectarian Tradition
A brief history of Islamic educational bodies in Khurasan will be instructive in
forming a view of Al-Suhrawardi's place within them. The gold standard of scholarship
on Islamic establishments of higher education remains George Makdisi's oeuvre spanning
30 years27, though significant contributions have been made in the meantime. Elementary
education is well attested even in pre-Islamic times, in the form of the kuttab. By the
early Umayyad period, it had become the most widespread form of Islamic education and
was primarily concerned with the transmission of hadith and Qur'anic studies. The
presence of numerous kuttabs is attested in Nishapur in the 9th century28 There was, as a
rule, a single teacher charged with instruction and a basic curriculum of the Qur'an,
hadith and practical sciences such as grammar and arithmetic was shared throughout.
There was no set time for metriculation or graduation from the kuttab though Bulliet has
established a probably estimate at 7.5 years of age in Nishapur29; some boys as old as
their teens were only starting and some students such as Ibn Sina are related to have
graduated at a highly accelerated pace.30 The range of time spent in elementary education
would have been short, and continued studies would have lasted, on average, perhaps 20
years.31 One may assume, then, that the completion of the cycle of studies in a kuttab
could have been completed early in a boy's teen years, from where he would have gone
27 Most notable amongst these, and inevitably found in every work on the subject since, are: [Muslim Institutions of Learning in 11th century Bagghdad. Bulletein of the School of Oriental and African Studies v. 24; London, 1961. Pp. 1-56]; [Rise of Colleges: Institutions of Learning in Islam and the West. (Edinburgh University Press) Edinburgh, 1981 pp. xiv.& 379]; [Religion, Law and Learning in Classical Islam. (Varorium Reprints) London, 1991.]28 Nashabe, Hisham. Muslim Educational Institutions: A General Survey Followed by a Monographic Study of Al-Madrasah al-Mustansiriyah in Baghdad. (Libraire du Liban) Beirut, 1989, pp. 18-19; henceforth cited as Muslim Educational Institutions.29 Bulliet, Richard W. "The Age Structure of Medieval Islamic Education," Studia Islamica, No. 57 (Maisonneuve & Larose) 1983, pp. 105-117, p. 110; henceforth cited as Age of Islamic Education.30 Ibn Sina is related to have said that he had he learned nothing new after reaching 18 years of age. 31 Bulliet, Age of Islamic Education, p. 112.
on to higher studies. Competition between shiyukh was high for students; they typically
had very new students per year32and their was a great deal of mobility between them. In
the early late 11th century, Omar al-Suhrawardi, whose tradition would be linked to the
Sufi brotherhood of this appellation, was known to have had at least 15 hadith teachers in
his boyhood.33
The tradition of ritualized higher learning in Islam goes back to the Prophet
Mohammed and his teaching at the mosque. This type of formalized education
dominated the early phase of Islamic educational bodies, wherein certain mosques
developed a reputation for excellence in educational tradition and became to resemble a
university in terms of organized curriculum and awarding of degrees of completion
(i'jaza'). These "university-mosques" produced all four of the most prominent jurists:
Malik b. Annas, Imam Ahmad b. Hanbal, Imam Abu Hanifa, and Imam al Shafi'i.
Concurrent with the rise of the "university-mosque", teaching activity moved
outside this space into various other domains:
…the madrasah was the gradual outcome of Muslim educational activity outside the mosque. This type of activity was undertaken first by individual 'ulama' who, for some reason or other, chose to teach in their own houses, shops, etc.34
In Khurasan the development of this independent network of learned men with
their own facilities eventually gave way to a system of patronage, complete with
regularly scheduled scholarly debates in the palaces of viziers beginning in the 10th and
11th centuries.35 Indeed, the term madrasa, as used to describe an educational facility,
32 Ibid, p. 11433 Arberry, A.J. "The Teachers of Shihāb al-Dīn 'Umar al-Suhrawardī," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Cambridge University Press on behalf of the School of Oriental and African Studies), 1950, pp. 339-356.34 Ibid, p. 7.35 Arjomand, Said Amir. The Law, Agency and Policy in Medieval Islamic Society: Development of the Institutions of Learning from the Tenth to the Fifteenth Century, Comparative Studies in Society and History, v. 41, No. 2 (Apr., 1999) pp. 260-92, p. 266; henceforth cited as Law, Agency and Policy.
appears far more frequently in Khurasan than any other area under Islamic influence at
that time.36 The use of waqf grants by patrician families of northeastern Iran to attract
and retain various shiyukh al-islam to their houses - a development that can be seen in the
early 10th century37 - would eventually become a sponsored on the state level. Both Nasir
al-Dawlah Abu al-Hasan Muhammad and A.H. Nasr b. Sabuktagin, who served in the
Simjurid state, founded madrasahs within their territories in the late 10th century. By the
time of Badr b. Hasanwayh (d. 405/1014), a Baghdadi vizier of west-central Iran who
constructed over 3000 mosque-khan complexes, the interest of the state in providing
religious facilities - if not teaching institutions38 - and being a competitor in the field of
Islamic education was clear.
Upon his accession to power, the second Seljuq ruler Arp Alan (454-464/1063–
1072) created the waqf for a state-sponsored madrasah in Nishapur, the first supreme
Seljuq ruler to establish a waqf for a madrasah directly. This precedent grew sizably
under his vizier Nizam al-Mulk (408-485/1018-1092, in function 1063-1092), who
arranged a program to build a madrasah in major urban centers under Seljuq control, the
most famous being the Nizamiyah in Baghdad; the rest, however, within Khurasan at
Balkh, Herat, Isfahan in addition to Nishaspur. .
The pro-Shafi'i and Hanafi stance supported by Nizam al-Mulk not only produced
strongly backed expressions of Seljuq orthodoxy such as the hadith collection of the
Shafi'i Imam Bukhari's, which was used throughout Shafi'i madrasahs, but patronage to
36 Bulliet, Richard. The Patricians of Nishapur: A Study in Medieval Islamic Social History. (Cambridge University Press) Cambridge, 1972, pp. 249-52.37 Arjomand, Law, Agency and Policy, p. 268.38 Mottahedeh argues that Makdisi was wrong in attributing the role of teaching colleges to the 3000 institutions built by Badr b. Hasanways, arguing instead that the text reads "He created/built in his territories three thousand mosques and caravansarays for strangers." Mottahedeh, p. 65. In Law, Agency and Policy Arjomand , writing later that Mottahedeh, affirms Makdisi's stance (p. 268).
Shafi'i and Hanbali scholars from Khurasan. The faculty of Baghdad's Nizamiyah
madrasah was staffed by Khurasanians and 35% of the Baghdadi 'ulama' undertook some
learning in Khurasan during their careers.39 The propagation of Ash'ari theology, which
was predicated upon the rejection of Mu'atizili reason and stressed the incapacity of such
logic to uncover the attributes of God, found purchase under Nizam al-Mulk. Such a
conceptual system produced the great al-Ghazali (449-504/1058-1111), who taught at the
Nizamiyah in Baghdad and was influential throughout Khurasan. In summation,
Khurasani educational facilities were provided both by elites and governmental agents,
overwhelmingly reflecting the prevailing sectarian preferences of the population: Ash'ari
principles espoused by either the Hanafi or Shafi'i madhab.
With some proper background on Khurasani educational establishments, we may
now ask the question: What happened in these institutions? While so far the development
of the exterior form and function of the madrasah has been discussed, the interior
processes have been neglected. The ideal form of Muslim education was the one-to-one
relationship with a shaykh.40 This relationship was not to remain exclusive throughout
one's life - the period of study might be termed sahaba or "companionship" - and many
students sought out multiple shiyukh to expand their learning. The student sought out a
shaykh with a particular 'ijaza' - a license to teach a certain work - and would hope to
gain an 'ijaza in turn through his affiliation. They terminology used to define the
relationship between a student and his master was murid and murshid, respectively. The
39 Mottahedeh, p. 71. See especially n. 41.40 Important works on the subject include Meier, F. “Khurasan and the End of Classical Sufism”, Essays on Islamic Mysticism and Piety (Brill) Leiden, 1999)., henceforth cited as End of the Classical Sufi Period.; Wach, J. "Master and Disciple: Two Religio-Sociological Studies" in Journal of Religion vol 42. 1962, pp. 1-21 and Silvers-Alario, A.J. “The Teaching Relationship in Early Sufism: A Reassessment of Fritz Meier’s Definition of the Shaykh al-Tarbiya and the Shaykh al-Ta‘līm”, Muslim World vol. 93, 2003.
obedience41 in with which the shaykh was held can be seen in the staggering number of
tabaqat (biographical dictionaries) which were commonplace across the Islamic world -
one such example of featuring Khurasani teachers is that of Ibn al-Salah al-Shahrazuri (d.
642/1244). Recording not only the historical background of each shaykh, biographical
dictionaries typically recounted the physical traits and customs of each one - even down
to minute details such as mannerisms while reciting the texts or extemporaneous speech
(al-khatib).42 Devotion to the shaykh took many forms, including an oath to only practice
recitation of texts in his presence.43
Teaching methods varied little from shaykh to shaykh. The most prized form of
learning was that of hafiz or memorization. Memorization of a certain text showed great
ability and was highly prized, while failing to learn a text by heart was seen as a
deficiency. Numerous pneumonic devices were taught to aid in memorization.44 Texts
would have shown a high degree of replication from place to place within Khurasan:
Shahab Ahmed's bibliographical study of the 12th century Balkhi scholar al-Faryabi's
work45 shows that more than 80% of the sources he used came from other Khurasani
scholars. He further states that this interiorizing focus of scholarship is evident from at
least the 3rd century hijri (early 9th century).
The curriculum of higher education varied throughout the Muslim world based on
41 Ibn Jama'a relates this piece of wisdom: "The shaykh is like a date palm, and one should wait until something falls from it"; c.f. Chamberlain Production of Knowledge, p. 45. See also Ohlander E. "Sufism in the Age of Transition: 'Umar al Suhrawardi and the Rise of the Islamic Mystical Brotherhoods," Islamic History of Civilization Vol. 70 (Brill) Leiden, 2008, pp. 187-219; especially the section on pp. 214-15 on 'Umar al-Suhrawardi's admonitions for behavior vis-á-vis the shaykh.42 Chamberlain, Production of Knowledge, pp. 42-45.43 Ibid. p. 41.44 See: Yates, F.A. The Art of Memory. Chicago, 1966.; Chamberlain's n. 61 in Production of Knowledge p. 38 gives a glimpse as to the feats of memory performed by some Damascene shiyukh.45 Ahmed, Shahab. "Mapping the World of a Scholar in Sixth/twelfth Century Bukhāra: Regional Tradition in Medieval Islamic Scholarship as Reflected in a Bibliography," Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 120, No. 1 (Jan. - Mar., 2000), pp. 24- 43, henceforth cited as Mapping the World; p. 40
which side of the Shi'i/Sunni divide the learner fell on. Majid Fakhri provides sample
mid 4th-early 5th/late 10th-early 11th century curricula from the Shi'i al-Azhar and the
Shafi'i Nizamiyah of Baghdad in "The Liberal Arts in Mediaeval Arabic Tradition".46
Noticeably absent from the Nizamiyah list is any philosophical concentration, while
forAl-Azahar, study of philosophy was regarded as second only to that of grammar. One
can reasonably assume that if the Nazimiyah, the crown jewel of Nizam al-Mulk's series
of madrasahs, did not include philosophy on the curriculum then other Shafi'i madrasahs
followed the same path. Without this option available in the Nizamite family of
madrasahs - of which the Nizamiya madrasa at Isfahan, a city in which Suhrawardi went
to study, was a member - a student interested in philosophy would have to seek out
separate educational opportunities in pursuit of philosophical studies.
Based on an early Islamic education in Khurasan, Al-Suhrawardi would have been
familiar with concepts overwhelmingly particular to Khurasan. As a result of the
peculiarities of the Nizamiyah madrasah system, he would have been well-versed in
Ash'ari, Hanafi and Shafi'i modes of thought and read widely in Khurasani works in those
fields. This would include hadith transmission and works of kalam, particularly the
specialties of his teacher in Maragha, Majid al-Din Jili. A great number of these works
would have been memorized.
The Peripatetic Tradition
Peripatetic philosophy as it existed in al-Suhrawardi's time was essentially an
46 Fakhri, M. "The Liberal Arts in the Mediaeval Tradition" XVIII Philosophy, Dogma and the Impact of Greek Thought in Islam, Variorum Collected Studies Series. (Variorum) Hampshire, 1994, p. 93. For further reading on the curriculum of al-Azhar, see Dodge, B. Al-Azhar, a Millenium of Muslim Education. Washington D.C., 1961.
affirmation of the Aristotelian system of philosophy and those systems which were based
off of it, namely the Neoplatonic movement. Aristotle's comprehensive systemization of
knowledge, logic and rhetoric exerted primary influence on world philosophical systems
for well over a millennium, and Arabic thought was impacted profoundly by its
introduction. What then, was the nature of Peripatetic thought in Khurasan by the middle
of the 6th/12th century?
The answer to this question takes us back to the initial transmission of Greek
works into Arabic. Monumental works by O'Leary47 and more recently Gutas48 have ably
captured the movement and serve as thorough introductions to the subject. Gutas relates
that the transmission of Greek concepts of philosophical, medicinal, and astronomical
sciences were cast into Arabic by a diverse cast of "international scholars"49 hailing from
Iraqi Nestorian communities, the Syriac monastic tradition and Persian scholars familiar
with Indian sources. The translation of many of the principal documents used in the
Abbasid era happened in two steps: first from the Greek to the "host" vernacular, and
from there to the Arabic. We have the names of several of these translators and their
biographies do indeed reflect this international character of this group of scholars:
Severus of Nisbis (d. 45/666) spoke Persian, Greek and Syriac; Theophilus of Edessa (d.
168/785) and Stephanus the Philosopher (d. ca. 800), both of whom worked in the
fledgling Abbasid court and were well versed in Greek, Syriac and Pahlavi and Indian
sources.50 One of the greatest Arabic luminaries of the translation movement was 47 O'Leary, L. How Greek Science Passed to the Arabs (2nd edition). (Routledge & Paul) London, 1957.48 Gutas, Dmitri. Greek Thought, Arabic Culture: The Graceo-Arabic Translation Movement in Baghdad and Early 'Abbasid Society (2nd-4th/8th-10th centuries). London/New York 1998. Henceforth cited as Greek Thought.49 Ibid., p. 15.50 Bergsträsser, G. Neu Materialien zu Hunain ibn Ishaq's Galen-Bibliographie [abhandlungen fuur die Kunde des Morgenlandes XIX, 2]. Leiden, 1932, pp. 17-19, c.f Gutas, Greek Thought, Arabic Culture. p.38.
Hunayn ibn Ishaq (193-259/809?-873), who began his own school for promoting
translation and was a key biographer of other translation figures.51
The "Plato" or "Aristotle" encountered by Arabic teachers and philosophers may
not have been so authentic as they had imagined - there is even a source that is known to
modern scholars as "The So-Called Theology of Aristotle" - actually a commentary
written by Plotinus dealing with various Aristotelian texts. With the introduction of
Neoplatonism by Plotinus five centuries previous to the height of the Arab translation
movement, many Aristotelian and Platonic concepts had taken on very new forms,
borrowing heavily from traditions further to the east in Iran and India.52 Few original
works in their totality made their way into Arabic, with the possible exceptions of Palto's
Republic and Aristotle's Organon.53
Compendiums with later commentators such as Porphyry, Galen, and Alexander
of Aphrodisius were instead the widely available sources. Given this, several confusing
factors beset Arab commentators as they worked with the translated material. Most
common among the mistakes committed was confusing true works and pseudo-sources,
such as the "So Called Theology of Aristotle" as well as with al-Farabi's use of a redacted
Republic to write his al-Medina al-Fadhila .54 Additionally, philosophical principals often 51 Few worthy English accounts are available on Hunayn Ibn Ishaq. Two good accounts are found in: [Mijallī, Nasīm. Ḥunayn ibn Isḥāq wa-ʻaṣr al-tarjamah al-ʻArabīyah. (al-Majlis al'Alaa lil-Thiqafa) Cairo, 2006.] and [Salama-Carr, Mariam. Traduction a l'époque abasside: la ecole de Hunayn Ibn Ishaq et son importance pour la traduction. (Didier, Sinclair, JM) Paris,1994.52 Walbridge, John. The Wisdom of the Mystic East: Al-Suhrawardi and Platonic Orientalism. (SUNY Press) New York, 2001, ix-x. His bizarre insistence on the use of terms such as "Oriental" is often off-putting and unfortunate in such a carefully measured work. Alon, Ilai. Socrates in Medieval Arabic Literature, Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science Series vol. X, eds. H Daiber and D. Pingree (Magnes Press) Jerusalem, 1991 (henceforth cited as Socrates in Medieval Arabic Literature) provides a good discussion of the difficulties modern scholars encounter with the accuracy of the translated texts, pp. 36-40.53 A fuller discussion of these texts may be found in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy under the articles "Ancient logic", "Aristotle", "Plato", "Republic". The Organon consisted of Aristotle's Categoriae, De Interpretatione, Analytica Priora, Analytica Posteriora, Topica and De Sophisticis Elenchis, encompassing a program of logic, rhetoric, ontology and epistemology.54 Fakhry, Majid. Al-Fārābi : founder of Islamic Neoplatonism : his life, works and influence. (Oxford
"migrated" between works by the same author.55 Whole philosophic legacies at times
became confused with for one another: the appearance of pithy sayings (hikmat)
attributed to Aristotle that had no relationship - either direct or indirect - with his works is
one such example.56 Fehmi Jadaane was influential in sorting out the hiccups in the
transmission of the Stoic legacy, which had become confused with the Peripatetic.57
These lacunae in the transmission process have proven more vexing for the
modern scholar than their medieval Islamic counterparts, and during this latter period
Greek knowledge moved forward in civil society in numerous fields. Scribes,
astronomers (working in texts from the Egyptian Ptolemy58), mathematicians (working
with texts from Euclid59) and especially doctors (working with texts from Dioscurides60)
benefited from access to Greek teachings. Nor was the learning done strictly in an
Islamic milieu: as with the translators at the beginning of the Abassid period, numerous
Christian, pagan and Zoroastrian communities were centered around their Greek schools
well into the 11th century: at Dayr Qunna south of Baghdad, Harran (ancient Carrhae),
University Press) Oxford, 2002. 55 This was especially the case in works by Aristotle. For a most helpful chart on Abbasid period translation listing the original Greek author, work, date of earliest testified Arabic translation and extant manuscript, see Greek Thought, Arabic Culture; pp. 182-83. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has an excellent entry regarding Greek translation into Arabic under "Greek Sources in Arabic and Islamic Philosophy". For a fuller discussion of the texts themselves, see [Burnett, Charles. Glosses and Commentaries on Aristotelian Logical Texts: The Syriac, Arabic and Medieval Latin Traditions. (Warburg Institute) London, 1993].56 See: Zakeri, Mohsen. "Before Aristotle Became Aristotle: Pseudo-Aristotelian Aphorisms in adab al-falsafa", Islamic Thought in the Middle Ages: Studies in Text, Transmission and Translation in Honour of Hans Daiber, Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science Series Vol. LXXV. eds. Anna Akasoy and Wim Raven. (Brill) Leiden, 2008, pp. 649-696.57 Jadaane, Fehmi. L'Influence Du Stoïcisme Sur la Pensée Muslamane. (Dar el-Machreq Éditeurs, Imprimerie Catholique) Beyrouth, 1968; henceforth cited as L'Influence du Stoïcisme.58 Almagest from: Vat. Urbinas 82; Vaticanus gr. 1291, 1594; Parisinus gr. 2389; Leidensus B.P.G. 78. Also through Theon from: Comm. On Canons: Vatincanus gr. 190 and Laurentianus 28, 18; and Pappus from Comm. On Almagest Laurentanius 28, 18.59 Data from Vaticanus gr. 190 and 204. Elements from Vaticanus 190; also Marinus Comm. On Data from Vatincanus gr. 204.60 Materia Medica from Parsinius gr. 2179.
and Marw (northeast Persia), respectively.
Peripatetic thought came to be regarded as supreme during this period due to the
influence of Aristotle. The depth to which Aristotle permeated the consciousness of
Arabo-Islamic philosophers is impressive, as is itsbreadth: no fewer than ten of his
"original" works, along with several commentaries, are found covered in some major
Islamic philosophers, making Aristotle by far the most influential figure featured in
Arabic works concerning Greek knowledge in all parts of the Dar al-Islam. However, it
would be a fallacy to characterize it as fully dominant in the Arabic philosophical milieu.
Omar Amine61 in his work dealing with Stoic thought within Arabic philosophy says:
L'influence des stoïciens (sur les penseurs muslamans), notamment en ce qui concerne les questions morales et théologiques, est égale sinon supérieure a celle exercée par le Péripatétisme et le Platonisme.62
Particularly in regards to ideas of the "virtuous man" (insan kamil), a popular
literary device of medieval Islamic works on morals (akhlaq), Stoic philosophy was
considered superior.63 Within other areas of inquiry, however, the Peripatetics were
dominant. Peripatetic formulations of logic, epistemology, ontology and metaphysics are
more prevalent than any Stoic counterpart, and as mentioned before, many writers in the
Arabic tradition confused the two and introduced mistakenly reduced Stoic principles as
Peripatetic.64
The true measure of Peripateticism's influence can be seen in its association with
the giants of Arabo-Islamic philosophy. Meditations on Aristotelian or pseudo-
Aristotelian works became a prerequisite for aspiring philosophical adepts. The
following attempts only to show, in the briefest possible terms, the impact Aristotelian 61 Amine, O. al-Falsafa ar-riwaqiyya, 2eme éd., Le Caire, 1959.62 Ibid, p. 295.63 Jadaane, L'Influence du Stoïcisme, p. 63, 69.64 Ibid, pp. 51-76.
themes had on major writings of eminent early Islamic philosophers.65 Al-Kindi (183-
256/800-870) based one of his most important works, al-Rasa'il, around what he thought
to be Aristotelian system and represents the first genuine attempt to synthesize Greek
thinking with Islamic principles.66 Al-Farabi (258-338/872-950) devoted two entire
works to the Aristotelian system: the Risa'il fil 'aql and Risala al-Mutafarriqa. His use of
the Organon, specifically Categorie, and Alexander of Aphrodisius' commentaries in
Risala al-Mutafarriqa undertook questions of essence and existence. Ibn Sina (369-
428/980-1037) was an unabashed Peripatetic, though his later works show disapproval of
some shortcomings in relation to questions of being and essence. His Kitab al Shifa' has
inspired a massive work by Amos Bertolacci67, which traces the use of Aristotle's
Metaphysics throughout. Bertolacci's analysis weighs in at 613 pages of text, making the
extent to which Aristotle had been absorbed into Arabo-Islamic thought after roughly two
centuries of exposure readily appreciable. The final great philosopher before al-
Suhrawardi, al-Ghazali (449-504/1058-1111), was specifically concerned with questions
of epistemology, finding its strongest voice in Tahafut al-Falsafa.68 In that his lifelong
crusade against man's rational ability to comprehend the Necessary Being was a primarily
epistemological question, we see him use Aristotle's De Interpretatione frequently in his
attacks against the Mu'atizilite community. These were undeniable "superstars" of the
learned Arab world, and their works would have found quick and widespread acceptance
65 Full fine introductory treatment of this theme can be found in Kassim, Hussain. Aristotle and Aristotelianism in Medieval Muslim, Jewish and Christian Philosophy. (Austin & Winfield) New York, 2000. Henceforth cited as Aristotle and Aristotelianism.66 The main treatment of Aristotelian ideas in the text deals with principles and universals. It is generally agreed upon that he was using Porphyry's Isagoge when writing. See Aristotle and Aristotelianism., p. 98.67 Bertolacci, Amos. The Reception of Aristotle's Metaphysics in Avicenna's Kitab al Sifa Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science Series Vol. LXIII. (Brill) Leiden, 2006.68 Aristotle and Aristotelianism, p. 101.
in Peripatetic circles.69
Regrettably, little information has passed down to us concerning the methods
utilized by institutions where Greek philosophy was taught. Hunayn Ibn Ishaq had a
multi-religious community of scholars working on translations with him in the early 9th
century, certainly with Nestorian Christians involved. Hunayn compares the
methodology of teaching Greek philosophy - in this case medicine - in his own time with
that of a late-Antique Alexandria:
The members of the medical school in Alexandria would gather every day to read and study one leading text among those [books by Galen], just as our contemporary Christian colleagues gather every day in places of teaching known as skhola for [the study of] a leading text by the ancients. As for the rest of the books, they used to read them individually - each one on his own, after having first practiced with those books which I mentioned - just as our colleagues today read the commentaries of the books by the ancients.70
We can see that this practice deviates from the previously described
murid/murshid relationship that existed in more Islamicized spheres. As this was a
particularly early example, perhaps this style of learning was phased out. Unfortunately,
we have no later attestations to guide our suppositions. The institution at Marw, similar to
the one described by Hunayn in that it was also not centered on an Islamic student base,
may also have deviated from the murid/murshid style, but most probably did not utilize
the Alexandrian model used in Hunayn's account. Suitable demography for the school at
Isfahan is lacking, though as it existed in a more fully Islamicized area with numerous
teachers attested71, it may be generally assumed that Islamic teaching forms as seen
throughout Khurasan were followed.
69 Alon. Socrates in Medieval Arabic Literature, p. 12.70 Bersträsser, G. Hunain ibn Ishaq über die syrischen und arabischen Galen-Übersetzungen [Abhandlungen für die Kunde des Morgenlandes XVII, 2], Leipzig, 1925, pp. 18.19-19.1. c.f. Gutas, Greek Thought, Arabic Culture, p. 15, (trans. Gutas.)71 Schimmel, Annemarie. "The Ornament of the Saints: The Religious Situation in Iran in Pre-Safavid Times," Iranian Studies, Vol. 7, No. 1/2, Studies on Isfahan: Proceedings of the Isfahan Colloquium, Part I (Winter - Spring, 1974), Taylor & Francis Ltd., pp. 88-111.
One other possible resource for analyzing the way in which Greek works were
taught in the Arab world exists in Chryssipus' treatise on logic. It was translated into
Arabic72 but as Chryssipus was a commentator on Xenon - making him a Stoic - it is
difficult to tell whether or not his work would have been utilized by the Peripatetics. An
educated opinion would reason that the difficulties which arose from the frequent
reductions of Stoic logic into a Peripatetic form, already seen to have caused confusion
amongst Arabic commentators, may also apply to this Chryssipus' text. Such a situation
would have made it widely accepted and relatively standardized amongst self-described
Arab Stoics and Peripatetics. The method outlined in Chryssipus' treatise is covered by
I.M. Bochenski.73
Presumably then, there was at least one Peripatetic school in either Maraghah or
Isfahan which was not allied with the Nizamiya madrasah system in which al-Suhrawardi
studied and in which either Majd al-Din Jili or Zahir al-Din al-Qari taught. As Majd al-
Din Jili is reported to have taught him philosophy and Zahir al-Din al-Qari is reported to
have taught him the works of Ibn Sina, we can say that al-Suhrawardi would have
become familiar with Peripatetic thought over a period of roughly ten years or more. It is
probable that a relationship similar to the Islamic system's murshid/murid model existed.
If indeed there existed a central text in structured learning, it surely included the
Organon, or at least the first four books. While impossible to determine based solely on
biographical evidence, it is likely further Greek resources would have been the pseudo-
Aristotelian "Theology" by Plotinus and Chryssipus' treatise on logic. These would have
72 Found in Ibn Fatik, al-Mukhtar and Shahrastani, al-Milal wa n-nihal.73 Bochinski, I.M. Ancient Formal Logic, Studies in Logic and the Foundations of Mathematics Series, eds. L.E.J. Brouwer, E.W. Beth and A. Heything (North Holland Publishing Company) Amsterdam, 1951. Ziai seems to consider this work indicative of the way logic would have been taught in Suhrawardi's day: see Ziai, Knowledge and Illumination, p. 41 notes.
coupled with the writings of the earlier sages al-Kindi, al-Farabi, Ibn Sina and al-Ghazali.
Of these, we may assume that Ibn Sina was the most thoroughly studied, as Zahir al-Din
al-Qari was a specialist in his works. As they all died at least 40 years in advance of the
birth of Suhrawardi, commentaries on their works would also likely have been available
and used in al-Suhrawardi's time.
The Sufi Tradition
A third division of al-Suhrawardi's educational experience was his encounter with
Sufi and extra-Islamic mystical sources. Nishapur had a strong tradition in each of these
areas from early transmission of Indian and Zoroastrian materials, to early mystical
movements such as the Malamatiya and Karamiya and finally to more highly organized
Sufi movements by the outset of the 11th century. Jacqueline Chabbi's74 review of ascetic
movements and their political affiliations along with Margaret Malamud's75 treatment of
Sufism in 10th and 11th century Nishapur serve as excellent overviews of the early Sufi
period, as is Fritz Meier's still seminal work "Khurasan and the End of the Classical Sufi
Period".76 In many ways, the rise of Sufi institutions of learning in Khurasan as a means
to "define and defend Sufi principles and practice"77 can be seen as concurrent with more
traditional modes of Islamic and Peripatetic learning.
In terms of relations with political authorities, Chebbi notes the use of waqfs from
74 Chabbi, Jacqueline. "Remarqes sur le développement historique des mouvements ascétiques et mystiques a Khourosan, IIIe/IX siecle-IV/X siecle," Studia Islamica, no. 46 (1977), pp. 5-72. Henceforth cited as Remarques.75 Malamud, Margaret. "Sufi Organizations and Structures of Authority in Medieval Nishapur", International Jounral of Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Aug., 1994), pp. 427-442. Henceforth cited as Sufis…Medieval Nishapur.76 Meier, Fritz. "Khurasan and the End of the Classical Sufi Period" Essays on Islamic Piety and Mysticism. Trans. John O'kane, ed. Bernd Radtke (Brill) Leiden, 1999. A modern partial-refutation of this work has been given by A.J. Silvers-Alario. See n. 29 for reference. 77 Sufis…Medieval Nishapur. P. 428.
the establishment of both the Ghaznavid (383-387/994-998) and Seljuq royal elites in
order to court the influence of Sufis78, a development mirrored by similar contemporary
waqfs given out to fund madrasah construction. Sufi participation in the 'Ash'ari
madhhab assured their paid presence in madrasahs and centers for the study of fiqh.79,
much as adherence to the 'Ashari doctrine ensured royal support for the hadith collector
al-Bukhari and Khurasani scholars who sought positions in Baghdad.
Shaykh relations and the bond of the murid/murshid are also seen to have
undergone a transformation during the 10th and 11th centuries in Khurasan. Initial
Karamiya emphasis on zuhd (asceticism) and khalwa (spiritual retreat) gave way to one-
on-one relationships with shiyukh that affirmed:
…the bond between them as being more hierarchical and formal, but also more intensely personal. Sufi writers describe a more intimate and all-enompassing relationship between master and disciple than had previously existed.80
While Meier and Silvers-Alario may disagree over the exact nature of the
murid/murshid relationship, specifically the reality of tighter formal bonds between the
murid and murshid during the sahaba (companionship) phase, the ability of the murid to
move between from shaykh to shaykh is readily agreed upon. This precise development
was seen to have occurred in the more central Islamic modes of education such as hadith
and Qur'an stuides, as demonstrated above. The shaykh centered experience of a Sufi
education should not come as a surprise, given that these same shaykhs used the same
method when teaching fiqh or kalam.
The murid/murshid relationship manifested itself in more than just a physical
presence. As noted before with the development of tabaqat in more traditional Islamic
78 Remarques, pp. 12-15.79 Sufis…Medieval Nishapur, p. 428.80 Sufism…Medieval Nishpaur, p. 428.
models of education, Khurasani Sufis81 took on the task of writing the biographies of
previous Sufi masters, concentrating on their exact mannerisms during spiritual exercises
such as dhikr. Frequent references to the earlier esoteric mystic traditions of Bistami82 (d.
260/874), Hallaj (d. 309/922) and Junayd (d. 297/910) support recognition of varied
roots of the early tradition, though the evidence reveals a result similar to that found in
Ahmed's analysis of al-Faryabi: the vast majority of Sufis listed in these tabaqat were
based and educated in Khurasan.
Transmission of information in the Sufi tradition, then, can be seen in many ways
to parallel that of sectarian tradition. While broadly familiar with ideas of early subjects
of Khurasani tabaqat, al-Suhrawardi still came away with an understanding more colored
by Khurasani understanding of Sufism. Works of particularly pertaining to zuhd can be
seen as instrumental given his Sufi practice, begun upon the end of his studies in Isfahan,
was predicated upon asceticism.
The education of Shahab al-Din al-Suhrawardi cannot be neatly broken down into
"Mystic", "Peripatetic" or"Sectarian" because his education comprised all of these. This
is the result of an educational system that stood as a whole while comprising three
distinct elements, defined by the competing educational factions which administered
them. Works by of a sectarian nature including Ash'ari theology as well as Hanafi and
Shafi'i taught in the Nizamiyah madrashas were dominant; Peripatetic formulations of
81 The Khurasani tabaqat of their Sufi masters are indeed expansive and cannot possibly receive a thorough treatment here. Selected tabaqat include: the 10 volume set of Ifsahani, the Hilyat al-'awliya; Hujwiri's Kashf al-mahjub, the first Sufi tabaqat written in Farsi; Qayrashi produced a number of tabaqat during his lifetime including Tartib al-suluk and the technical summit of Khurasani tabaqat literature, Risala fi 'ilm al-tasawwuf. Along with being a biographical dictionary, it serves as a practicum for basic Sufi phrases and practices.82 Perhaps even though the Tadhakirat al 'awliya' of Attar al Nishapuri, (b. 539/1145)a rough contemporary of al-Suhrawardi.
ancient Greek philosophy, a subject not taught in the Nizamiyah madrasah system, such
as Ibn Sina's works and the commentaries of Neoplatonists such as Porphyry and
Alexander of Aphrodisius were handled by a competing madrasah system. Sufi shaykhs
worked inside of these two facilities during the 10th and 11th centuries developed their
own priorities, concerned primarily with tabaqat literature and the production of mystical
knowledge not necessarily attached to sectarian or philosophical matters. Increased
understanding of the methods of teaching used within each branch of education will no
doubt be illuminating and help us understand the interaction these forms of education had
amongst one another. For the time being, however, efforts to extend our understanding of
al-Suhrawradi's approach to his Ishraqi writings should focus not on argumentative
framings of their method but on the concrete establishment of works and conditions of his
educational experience which shamed his approach to philosophy.