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- Shath abstract "In the Islamic mystical tradition of Sufism, a shath (plural: shathiyat) is an ecstatic utterance. Famous shathiyat include “Glory be to me” by Bayazid Bastami and “I am the Truth” by Mansur Al-Hallaj.It is a Sufi term which refers to ecstatic expression or utterance which can be associated to blasphemy, madness but to some Sufi authors, it is actually a divine experience where the seeker of truth feels the intoxication of divinity.The heyday of shath occurred during the classical period of Sufism from the ninth to twelfth century AD (the third to sixth century by Islamic count). They later figured as topoi of Persian Sufi poetry (especially that of Farid al-Din Attar) before being reduced by later Sufis to mere allegories for Ibn Arabi's philosophy.Shathiyat have traditionally been associated with great outrage among the Islamic cultures of their day, and many of their authors have been subject to religious persecution by Islamic courts. However, C.W. Ernst argues in his work on shath that such prosecutions were mostly political affairs, resulting from “personal vendetta, subversion of the state and party factionalism” instead of religious intolerance. Because of their opposition to religious norms, these ecstatic utterances play an important role in the conception of Islamic Antinomianism.".
- Shath wikiPageID "37810579".
- Shath wikiPageLength "2229".
- Shath wikiPageOutDegree "24".
- Shath wikiPageRevisionID "671029770".
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Antinomianism.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Attar_of_Nishapur.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Ayn_al-Quzat_Hamadani.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Bayazid_Bastami.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Blasphemy.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Category:Islamic_terminology.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sufism.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Crazy_wisdom.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Divine_ecstasy.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Divinity.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Ecstasy_(emotion).
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Ecstatic.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Farid_al-Din_Attar.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Sufism.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Ibn_Arabi.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Islamic_calendar.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Literary_topos.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Mansur_Al-Hallaj.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Religious_ecstasy.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Ruzbihan_Baqli.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Sarmad_Kashani.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Sharia.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Sufi.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Sufi_poetry.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Sufism.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLink Utterance.
- Shath wikiPageWikiLinkText "''shathiyat''".
- Shath wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shath".
- Shath wikiPageWikiLinkText "shath".
- Shath hasPhotoCollection Shath.
- Shath wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Shath wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Shath wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Shath wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Shath wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Sufism-stub.
- Shath subject Category:Islamic_terminology.
- Shath subject Category:Sufism.
- Shath hypernym Utterance.
- Shath type School.
- Shath type School.
- Shath comment "In the Islamic mystical tradition of Sufism, a shath (plural: shathiyat) is an ecstatic utterance.".
- Shath label "Shath".
- Shath sameAs شطح.
- Shath sameAs شطحیات.
- Shath sameAs m.0n_90zw.
- Shath sameAs Q7490635.
- Shath sameAs Q7490635.
- Shath wasDerivedFrom Shath?oldid=671029770.
- Shath isPrimaryTopicOf Shath.