Who is the accused? The interrogation of Aḥmad Ibn Ḥanbal
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3989/alqantara.2001.v22.i2.217Abstract
ABSTRACT The miḥna (218-234 H.) was a defining event of Islamic spiritual authority. Its importance was evident to contemporaries, the inquisitors and their victims, and each side recorded the events. This study compares these accounts. It concentrates on three components that appear in both narratives: how each side told the story to the wide public; how they perceived the torture of Ibn Ḥanbal; how they described and understood the dialogue between Ibn Ḥanbal and his inquisitors. Interestingly, the depictions of these events bear a strong resemblance. The aim of this study is to trace how shared factual descriptions end up promoting opposing ideologies.
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