Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da> ?p ?o }
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- 1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da first "David".
- 1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da isCitedBy Iran–Saudi_Arabia_relations.
- 1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da last "Commins".
- 1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da page "115".
- 1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da publisher "I.B.Tauris".
- 1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da quote ""Saudi Arabia lacks a constitution that defines legislative authority and processes. Wahhabi doctrine, however, possesses a political theory, based on the views of the Philosopher Ibn Taymiyya, which requires Muslims to obey the ruler, even if he is a sinner. Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab in the Book of God's Unity had declared that to obey the rulers in permitting something forbidden by Islamic law is tantamount to idolatry. In Ibn Taymiyya's view, the only ground for disobedience to a ruler is if he commands a believer to violate something prohibited by the shari'a.".
- 1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da title "The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia".
- 1f88b057a7d9dc8c430a82d219de7a8612181d986abf08fe1777e5c1c001f5da year "2009".