Misplaced Pages

Subh-i-Azal: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 20:53, 24 January 2023 editQalandar303 (talk | contribs)109 edits Sources: RESTORING CITATION BIA KEEPS REMOVING WITHOUT REASON← Previous edit Latest revision as of 02:29, 11 January 2025 edit undoDay Creature (talk | contribs)737 edits Reverted 1 edit by 2600:1700:18D0:A500:2994:939D:3257:2AA2 (talk): UnsourcedTags: Twinkle Undo 
(190 intermediate revisions by 35 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Iranian religious leader (1831–1912)}}
{{Infobox person {{Infobox person
|title =Subh-i-Azal
|image =SoBhheAzaal.jpg |image =SoBhheAzaal.jpg
|alt = |alt =
|caption =Ṣubḥ-i Azal at the age of 80, Famagusta, circa 1911<ref>Published in ], ''The Fringe of the East'', London, MacMillan, 1913, p.264.</ref> |caption =Subh-i-Azal at the age of 80, Famagusta, circa 1911{{sfn|Lukach|1913|p=264}}
|birth_name =Mírzá Yahya Núrí |birth_name =Mirza Yahya Nuri
|birth_date ={{Birth-date|1831}} |birth_date ={{Birth date text|1831}}
|birth_place =Tehran, Iran |birth_place =Tehran, Iran
|death_date ={{Death-date and age|April 29, 1912|1831}} (In the ] he would have been about 82-3.) |death_date ={{Death-date and age|April 29, 1912|1831}}
|death_place =], present-day Cyprus |death_place =], present-day Cyprus
|other_names = |other_names =
|known_for =Leader of ] |known_for =Leader of ]
|occupation = |occupation =
|successor =Disputed |successor =Disputed
}} }}


'''Ṣubḥ-i-Azal''' (1831–1912, born '''Mírzá Yaḥyá''') was an Iranian religious leader of ],{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} known for his conflict with his half-brother ] over leadership of the Bábí community after 1853. '''Subh-i-Azal'''{{efn|{{langx|fa|صبح ازل|Ṣobḥ-e Azal}}}} (1831–1912, born '''Mīrzā Yahyā Nūrī'''{{efn|{{langx|fa|میرزا یحیی|Mirzā Yaḥyā}}}}) was an Iranian religious leader of ], appointed as head of the movement by the ] just before the latter's execution in 1850.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} He is known for his later conflict with his half-brother ] over leadership of the Bābī community, after which his followers became known as ]s.{{sfn|Warburg|2006|p=7-8}}


In 1850, when he was just 19 years old, he was appointed by the Báb to lead the Bábí community. When a pogrom began against the Bábís in 1852, Azal fled for Baghdad and spent 10 years there before joining the group of Bábí exiles that were called to Istanbul. During the time in Baghdad tensions grew with Baháʼu'lláh, as Bábí pilgrims began to turn to him for leadership. The Ottoman government further exiled the group to Edirne, where Baháʼu'lláh's announcement of divine revelation turned the tension into an open conflict, which culminated in a public debate that Azal failed to show up to, and an attempt by Azal to poison Baháʼu'lláh. At the time of appointment he was just 19 years old. Two years later a pogrom began to exterminate the Bābīs in Iran, and Subh-i-Azal fled for Baghdad for 10 years before joining the group of Bābī exiles that were called to Istanbul. During the time in Baghdad tensions grew with Baháʼu'lláh, as Bābī pilgrims began to turn to the latter for leadership. The Ottoman government further exiled the group to Edirne, where Subh-i-Azal openly rejected Baháʼu'lláh's claim of divine revelation and the community of Bābīs were divided by their allegiance to one or the other.


In 1868 the Ottoman government further exiled Azal and his followers to Cyprus, and Baháʼu'lláh and his followers to ]. When Cyprus was ] in 1878, he lived out the rest of his life in obscurity with a British pension.{{sfn|Mirza Yahya. In Britannica|2014}} In 1868 the Ottoman government further exiled Subh-i-Azal and his followers to Cyprus, and Baháʼu'lláh and his followers to ] in Palestine. When Cyprus was ] in 1878, he lived out the rest of his life in obscurity on a British pension.{{sfn|Mirza Yahya. In Britannica|2024}}


After Azal's death in 1912, the Azali form of Babism entered a stagnation and has not recovered as there is no acknowledged leader or central organization.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} Most Bábís either accepted the claim of Baháʼu'lláh or the community gradually diminished as children and grandchildren turned back to Islam,{{sfn|Manuchehri|2000}}{{sfn|Azali. In Britannica|2011}} By 1904, Azal's followers had dwindled to a small minority, and Baháʼu'lláh was almost universally recognized as the spiritual successor of the ].{{sfn|Carus|1904|p=361}} A source in 2001 estimated no more than a few thousand, almost entirely in Iran.{{sfn|Barrett|2001|p=246}} Another source in 2009 noted a very small number of followers remained in ].{{sfn|Campo|2009b}} By 1904, Azal's followers had dwindled to a small minority, and Baháʼu'lláh was almost universally recognized as the spiritual successor of the ].{{sfn|Carus|1904|p=361}} After Azal's death in 1912, the Azali form of Bābism entered a stagnation and has not recovered as there is no acknowledged leader or central organization.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}{{sfn|Warburg|2006|p=7-8}} Most Bābīs either accepted the claim of Baháʼu'lláh or the community gradually diminished as children and grandchildren turned back to Islam.{{sfn|Momen|1991}} A source in 2001 estimated no more than a few thousand, almost entirely in Iran.{{sfn|Barrett|2001|p=246}} Another source in 2009 noted a very small number of followers remained in ].{{sfn|Campo|2009b}}


==Name and title== ==Name and title==
His most widely known title, "Subh-i-Azal" ({{lang-fa|یحیی صبح ازل}})(Morning of Eternity) appears in an Islamic tradition called the ] (Kumayl was a student of the first Imam, ]) which the Báb quotes in his book ]. His given name was ], which is the Arabic form of the English name "John". As the son of a ] in the county of ], he was known as '''Mīrzā Yahyā Nūrī''' ({{langx|fa|میرزا یحیی نوری}}). His most widely known title, "Subh-i-Azal" (or "Sobh-i-Ezel"; {{langx|fa|یحیی صبح ازل}}, "Morning of Eternity") appears in an Islamic tradition called the Hadith-i-], which the Bāb quotes in his book ].


It was common practice among the Bábís to ]. The Báb's Will and Testament addresses Mirza Yahya in the first verse: It was common practice among the Bābīs to receive titles. He was also known by the titles al-Waḥīd, Ṭalʻat an-Nūr, and at-Tamara;{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} or Everlasting Mirror (Mir'atu'l-Azaliyya), Name of Eternity (Ismu'l-azal), and Fruit of the Bayan (Thamara-i-Bayan).{{sfn|Smith|2000}}
:"Name of Azal, testify that there is no God but I, the dearest beloved."{{sfn|Manuchehri|2004}}


==Background==
Manuchehri (2004) notes that Mirza Yahya was the only Bábí with such a title as "Azal".{{sfn|Manuchehri|2004}}
Subh-i-Azal was born in 1831 to ] and his fourth wife Kuchak Khanum-i-Karmanshahi, in the province of ].{{sfn|Smith|2000}}{{sfn|Adamson|2009}} His father was a minister in the court of ]. His mother died while giving birth to him, and his father died in 1839 when he was eight years old, after which he was cared for by his stepmother Khadíjih Khánum, the mother of Baháʼu'lláh.{{sfn|Smith|2000}}


In 1845, at about the age of 14, Subh-i-Azal became a follower of the Bāb.
He was titled by the Báb as Subh-i-Azal, that is "Morning of the Eternal" or Hazrat, that is "Highness of the Eternal" or Ismu-l-Azal, that is "Name of the Eternal".{{sfn|Carus|1904}} There are also references to the titles al-Waḥīd, Ṭalʻat an-Nūr, and at-Tamara.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}


===Early activities in the Bābī community===
==Life==
Subh-i-Azal met ], the 17th Letter of the Living who had, upon leaving the Conference of Badasht, traveled to Nur to propagate the faith. Shortly thereafter, she arrived at Barfurush and met Subh-i-Azal and became acquainted once again with Quddús who instructed her to take Subh-i-Azal with her to Nur. Subh-i-Azal remained in Nur for three days, during which he propagated the new faith.{{sfn|Kashani|1910|p=241}}
{{Babism}}


During the ], Subh-i-Azal, along with Baháʼu'lláh and Mirza Zayn al-Abedin endeavoured to travel there to assist the Bābīs. However, they were arrested several kilometers from Amul. Their imprisonment was ordered by the governor, but Subh-i-Azal escaped the officials for a short while, after which he was discovered by a villager and then brought to Amul on foot with his hands tied. On the path to Amul he was subject to harassment, and people are reported to have spat at him. Upon arriving he was reunited with the other prisoners. The prisoners were ordered to be beaten, but when it came time that Subh-i-Azal should suffer the punishment, Baha'u'llah objected and offered to take the beating in his place. After some time, the governor wrote to Abbas Quli Khan who was commander of the government forces stationed near Fort Tabarsi. Khan replied back to the governor's correspondence, saying that the prisoners were of distinguished families and should not be harassed. Thus, the prisoners were released and sent to Nur upon orders of the commander.
===Early life===
Subh-i-Azal was born in 1831 to Kuchak Khanum-i-Karmanshahi and ], in the province of ], and a younger-half-brother of ]. His father was a minister in the court of ]. His mother died while giving birth to him, and his father died in 1834 when he was three years old. His father is buried at Vadi-al-Islam in Najaf. He was orphaned at a very young age and taken into the care of his stepmother, Khadíjih Khánum, the mother of Baháʼu'lláh.{{sfn|Ruhi|2012}}


===Becoming a Bábí=== ===Marriages and children===
According to ], Mirza Yahya had several wives, and at least nine sons and five daughters. His sons included: Nurullah, Hadi, Ahmad, Abdul Ali, Rizwan Ali (AKA Constantine the Persian), and four others. Rizwan Ali reports that he had eleven or twelve wives.{{sfn|Browne|1897}} Later research reports that he had up to seventeen wives including four in Iran and at least five in Baghdad.{{sfn|Momen|1991|pp=87–96}} ] reports that he had "perhaps twenty-five children in all".{{sfn|Smith|2000}}
In 1845, at about the age of 14, Subh-i-Azal became a follower of the Báb.{{sfn|Ruhi|2012}}


His granddaughter, ], was later known for starting ], the first woman's rights magazine in Iran.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Zolghadr |first1=Zohreh |title=Iranian Women You Should Know: Roshanak Nodust |url=https://iranwire.com/en/special-features/67065/ |website=IranWire |access-date=17 September 2024}}</ref>
===Early activities in the Bábí community===
Subh-i-Azal met ], the 17th Letter of the Living who had, upon leaving the Conference of Badasht, traveled to Nur to propagate the faith. Shortly thereafter, she arrived at Barfurush and met Subh-i-Azal and became acquainted once again with Quddús who instructed her to take Subh-i-Azal with her to Nur. Subh-i-Azal remained in Nur for three days, during which he propagated the new faith.
{{sfn|Kashani|1910|p=241}}


==Appointment==
During the ], Subh-i-Azal, along with Baháʼu'lláh and Mirza Zayn al-Abedin endeavoured to travel there to assist the soldiers. However, they were arrested several kilometers from Amul. Their imprisonment was ordered by the governor, but Subh-i-Azal escaped the officials for a short while, after which he was discovered by a villager and then brought to Amul on foot with his hands tied. On the path to Amul he was subject to harassment, and people are reported to have spat at him. Upon arriving he was reunited with the other prisoners. The prisoners were ordered to be beaten, but when it came time that Subh-i-Azal should suffer the punishment, Baha'u'llah objected and offered to take the beating in his place. After some time, the governor wrote to Abbas Quli Khan who was commander of the government forces stationed near Fort Tabarsi. Khan replied back to the governor's correspondence, saying that the prisoners were of distinguished families and should not be harassed. Thus, the prisoners were released and sent to Nur upon orders of the commander.
Subh-i-Azal was appointed by the Bāb to "preserve what hath been revealed in the ''Bayān''", but the nature of his role has been the subject of debate due to conflicting sources.{{sfn|Smith|2000}} Shortly before the Bāb's execution, the Bāb wrote letters and gave them to Mullā {{okina}}Abdu'l-Karīm to deliver to Subh-i-Azal and Baháʼu'lláh.{{sfn|Amanat|1989|p=384}} These were later interpreted by both Azalīs and Bahāʼīs as proof of the Bāb's delegation of leadership to the two brothers.{{sfn|Amanat|1989|p=384}} Subh-i-Azal was 19 years old at the time.


In the period immediately following the Bāb's execution (1850), there were many claims to authority and Bābīs did not initially unite around Subh-i-Azal's leadership, but at some point Azal became the recognized leader, and remained so for about 13 years.{{sfn|Smith|2000}}{{sfn|Warburg|2006|p=446}}
===Appointment as the Báb's successor===
{{Main|Baháʼí–Azali split}}
According to Baháʼí sources, shortly before the Báb's execution, one of the Báb's scribes, Mullā {{okina}}Abdu'l-Karīm Qazvīnī, brought to the Báb's attention the necessity to appoint a successor; thus the Báb wrote a certain number of tablets which he gave to Mullā {{okina}}Abdu'l-Karīm to deliver to Subh-i-Azal and Baháʼu'lláh.{{sfn|Amanat|1989|p=384}} These tablets were later interpreted by both Azalis and Baháʼís as proof of the Báb's delegation of leadership.{{sfn|Amanat|1989|p=384}} ] states that the Báb did this at the suggestion of Baháʼu'lláh.{{sfn|ʻAbdu'l-Bahá|1886|p=37}}{{sfn|Taherzadeh|1976|p=37}}{{sfn|ʻAbdu'l-Bahá|Browne (tr.)|1891|pp=79–80}}


Warburg states that, "It seems likely that Subh-i-Azal was designated to be the Bab's successor",{{sfn|Warburg|2006|p=446}} and MacEoin states that, the Bāb regarded him as "his chief deputy" and the "future head of the movement."{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} The nature of that appointment differs according to which sources are believed. The disagreement is over whether he was appointed a spiritual successor who could write divinely-revealed verses, or a nominal figurehead who would maintain the community until the appearance of a greater prophet.{{sfn|Warburg|2006|p=446}} ] states that the Bāb did this to divert attention from Baháʼu'lláh, and that it was suggested by the latter.{{sfn|Smith|2000}}{{sfn|Taherzadeh|1976|p=37}}
In his history, ''Nuqtat'ul-Kāf'', Hājjī Mirzā Jāni Kāshānī (d. 1852) instead states the following:


The conflicting accusations, claims, and counter-claims of Azalī and Bahāʼī sources make it difficult to reconstruct an objective narrative of the splitting of the Bābī community into these two groups, one of which came to dominate and expand, while the other became almost defunct.{{sfn|Smith|2000}} Academic reviews are generally critical of the official Bahāʼī positions on the split; for example ],{{sfn|Browne|1918}} ],{{sfn|MacEoin|1989}} and ].{{sfn|Nicolas|1933|p=15}}
<blockquote>...After the martyrdom of ''Hazrat-i-Kuddús'' and his companions, the Master was filled with sadness, until such time as the writings of ''Jenáb-i-Ezel'' met his gaze, when, through the violence of his delight, he rose up and sat down several times, pouring forth his gratitude to the God whom he worshipped...About forty days after his departure the news of the martyrdom of ''Hazrat-i-Kuddús'' came to ''Jenáb-i-Ezel''. I have heard that after receiving this news he suffered for three days from a violent fever, induced by the burning heat of the fire of separation; and that after the three days the signs of holiness (''áthár-i-kudsí'') appeared in his blessed form and the mystery of the 'Return' was manifest. This event took place in the fifth year of the Manifestation of the Truth, so that ''Jenáb-i-Ezel'' became the blessed Earth of Devotion, and His Holiness 'the Reminder' appeared as the Heaven of Volition...Now when the letters of Jenáb-i-Ezel came to His Holiness 'the Reminder' he rejoiced exceedingly, and thenceforth began the decline of the Sun of 'the Reminder' and the rising of the Moon of Ezel. So he sent his personal effects, such as pen-cases, paper, writings, his own blessed raiment , and his holy rings, according to the Number of the Unity , that the outward form might correspond with the inward reality. He also wrote a testamentary deposition, explicitly nominating him as his successor , and added, 'Write the eight ''Váḥid''s of the Beyán, and, if " He whom God shall manifest" should appear in His power in thy time, abrogate the Beyán; and put into practice that which we shall inspire into thine heart.' Now the mystery of his bestowing his effects on Ezel according to the 'Number of the Unity' is perfectly evident, namely that he intended the inner meaning thereof, that it might be known to all his followers that after himself Ezel should bear the Divine influences. And his object in explicitly nominating him as his successor also was to re-assure the hearts of the weak, so that they might not be bewildered as to his real nature, but that enemies and friends alike might know that there is no intermission in God's grace, and that God's religion is a thing which must be made manifest. And the reason why himself refrained from writing the eight Váḥids of the Beyán, but left them to Ezel, was that all men might know that the Tongue of God is one, and that He in Himself is a sovereign Proof. And what he meant by 'Him whom God should manifest' after himself was Hazrat-i-Ezel and none other than him, for there may not be two ' Points ' at one time. And the secret of the Báb's saying, 'Do thus and thus', while Ezel was himself also a 'Proof', was that at this time His Holiness 'the Reminder was the Heaven of Volition, and Ezel was accounted the Earth of Devotion and the product of purified gifts, wherefore was he thus addressed. In short, as soon as the time had come when the 'Eternal Fruit' had reached maturity, the Red Blossom of Reminder-hood , casting itself from the branch of the Blessed Tree of the ''Ká'imate'' (which is 'neither of the East nor of the West') to the simoom-wind of the malice of foes, destroyed itself, and prepared to ascend from the outward and visible 'World of Dominion' to the inward realm of the Mystery of Godhead...{{sfn|Browne|1893|pp=374, 380–381}}</blockquote>


===Nuqtatu'l-Kaf===
The French diplomat and scholar A.-L.-M. Nicolas maintains that Subh-i-Azal's claim to successorship is obvious;.{{sfn|Nicolas|1933|p=15}} The Baháʼís hold that the Báb, for the purposes of secrecy, when corresponding with Baháʼu'lláh would address the letters to Subh-i-Azal.<ref name="cole_bio">{{cite web |title=A Brief Biography of Baha'u'llah |last=Cole|first=Juan|access-date=2006-06-22 |url=http://www-personal.umich.edu/~jrcole/bahabio.htm}}</ref> After the Báb's death Subh-i-Azal came to be regarded as the central authority in the movement to whom the majority of Bábís turned as a source of guidance and revelation.{{sfn|MacEoin|1989|p=99}}
] studied the Bābī movement in Iran and translated many primary sources from 1890 to 1920. One of these, ''Kitab-i-Nuqtatu'l-Kaf'' (or ''Noqtat al-Kāf''), was of particular interest to the appointment of Subh-i-Azal. Its publication was encouraged by Muhammad Khan Qazvīnī, a Shi'ite scholar, and its authorship was attributed to Hājī Mīrzā Jānī, a Bābī who died in 1852.{{sfn|Wickens|Cole|Ekbal|1989}} A similar manuscript attributed to Hājī Mīrzā Jānī and circulating among Bahāʼīs was ''Tarikh-i-Jadid'', but the Bahāʼī version lacked extra text supportive of Subh-i-Azal's authority. In his introduction to its publication, Browne attacked the Bahāʼīs for trying to rewrite history.{{sfn|Wickens|Cole|Ekbal|1989}} Further scholarship showed that the ''Nuqtatu'l-Kaf'' was circulating among Bahāʼīs, it wasn't being suppressed, and some material in it postdated the death of its assumed author.{{sfn|Wickens|Cole|Ekbal|1989}}


] made a detailed analysis of the question in his ''The Sources for Early Babi Doctrine and History'' (1992),{{sfn|MacEoin|1992}}{{sfn|Warburg|2006|pp=38–39}} summarized here by ]:
During the time that both Baháʼu'lláh and Subh-i-Azal were in Baghdad, Baháʼu'lláh publicly and in his letters pointed to Subh-i-Azal as the leader of the community.<ref name="cole_bio"/> However, since Subh-i-Azal remained in hiding, Baháʼu'lláh performed much of the daily administration of the Bábí affairs.<ref name="cole_bio"/> Then, in 1863 Baháʼu'lláh made a claim to be ], the messianic figure in the Báb's writings, to a small number of followers, and in 1866 he made the claim public.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} Baháʼu'lláh's claims threatened Subh-i-Azal's position as leader of the religion since it would mean little to be leader of the Bábís if "Him Whom God Shall Make Manifest" were to appear and start a new religion.<ref name="cole_bio"/> Subh-i-Azal responded to these claims with severe criticism, but his attempt to preserve the traditional Bábísm was largely unpopular, and his followers became the minority.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}
{{blockquote|text=In 1892, Browne acquired the Babi manuscript named ''Kitab-i-Nuqtatu'l-Kaf'' from a collection of Babi manuscripts originally owned by ] and sold to the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris in 1884. The first portion of the manuscript is laid out as a doctrinal treatise, while the later sections contain what Browne assumed to be an early copy of Mirza Jani Kashani's history. Browne considered his discovery to be of immense importance, since at that time no other copies of this history were known. However, Browne also discovered that the manuscript was at variance with the version of Mirza Jani Kashani's history that made up the core text in the ''Tarikh-i-Jadid''. Although the two texts for the most part are equivalent, several passages in the ''Nuqtatu'l-Kaf'' that refer to Subh-i-Azal and his role in the Babi movement are not included in the ''Tarikh-i-Jadid''. This led Browne to conclude that the discrepancies between the two histories were the result of a deliberate plot of the followers of Baha'u'llah to discredit Subh-i-Azal's claims to leadership. The Baha'is hotly rejected Browne's conclusion and accused the Azalis of distorting the sources. Thus, Abdu'l-Baha suggested that the Azalis had prepared a falsified version of Mirza Jani Kashani's history and had encouraged Browne to publish it. This hypothesis was restated many years later by the Baha'i historian Hasan M. Balyuzi...{{sfn|Warburg|2006|pp=38–39}}}}


Further investigation by McCants and Milani (2004) found another early copy of the manuscript and concluded that it was written in the early 1850s, though not by Hājī Mīrzā Jānī, and that it was "not markedly different from Browne’s edition".{{sfn|McCants|Milani|2004}}
Subh-i-Azal's leadership was controversial. He generally absented himself from the Bábí community spending his time in ] in hiding and disguise.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}<ref name="cole_bio"/>{{sfn|Barrett|2001|p=246}} Subh-i-Azal gradually alienated himself from a large proportion of the Bábís who started to give their alliance to other claimants.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} Manuchehri states that Subh-i-Azal remained in hiding because he was primarily concerned with personal safety, due to a statement from the Báb in his will and testament that Subh-i-Azal should protect himself.{{sfn|Manuchehri|2004}}


===Takur uprising===
MacEoin further states:
The Bābī community was engaged in several pitched ] with the government from 1848 to 1851. Subh-i-Azal allied himself with a faction led by Azīm, and in 1852 coordinated a new militant uprising in ], Iran. This new upheaval was apparently timed to coincide with an attempt to assassinate ], which was organized by Azīm.{{sfn|Smith|2000}}{{sfn|Campo|2009a}}
<blockquote>Baháʼí polemic has made much capital out of Azal's behaviour at this period, attributing it to a mixture of incompetence and cowardice. But it is clear that he actually continued to identify himself as the head of the Bábís, to write books, reply to letters, and on occasion meet with other leaders of the community His behaviour seems, therefore, to have been dictated less by cowardice than by the adoption of a policy of ''taqiyya'' . Not only was this an approved practice in Shiʻism, but there was particular sanction for it in the seclusionist policies of the last Imams and, in particular, the original ''ghayba'' of the Twelfth Imam, who went into hiding out of fear of his enemies.{{sfn|MacEoin|1989|p=108}}</blockquote>

The uprising failed, and the botched assassination attempt resulted in the entire Bābī community being blamed and severely punished by the government. Many thousand Bābīs were killed. Subh-i-Azal took up a disguise to escape Iran and joined a cohort of exiles in Baghdad.{{sfn|Smith|2000}}{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}

After Azīm's death in 1852, Subh-i-Azal became the clear head of the remaining militant faction of the Bābīs, which remained wedded to a vision of radical political activism;{{sfn|Amanat|1989|p=414}} representing what ] describes as a preoccupation with, "the Shi'ite vision of a utopian political order under the aegis of the Imam of the age".{{sfn|Amanat|1989|p=365}}


===Baghdad=== ===Baghdad===
In Baghdad, Subh-i-Azal kept his whereabouts secret and lived secluded from the Bābī community, keeping in contact through 18 agents termed "witnesses of the Bayan".{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}{{sfn|Adamson|2009}}
In 1852, Subh-i-Azal was involved in an uprising in ], Iran, which was planned to coincide with the assassination attempt on the life of the ].{{sfn|Campo|2009a}} Following the attempt, he and other Babis chose to go into exile in Baghdad.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} In Baghdad he lived as the generally acknowledged head of the community, but he kept his whereabouts secret from most of the community, instead keeping in contact with the Babis through agents, termed "witnesses", in Iran and Iraq to routinize the charismatic authority of the movement,{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} and echoing "the supposed appointment of agents by the twelfth Imam during the lesser occultation." One of the most important "witnesses of the Bayán" who represented Subh-i-Azal in Baghdad was Sayyid Muhammad Isfahani. Apart from Isfahani, Subh-i-Azal had written to six other individuals naming them all "witnesses of the Bayán." These witnesses are as follows: Mulla Muhammad Ja'far Naraqi, Mulla Muhammad Taqi, Haji Sayyid Muhammad (Isfahani), Haji Sayyid Jawad (al-Karbala'i), Mirza Muhammad Husayn Mutawalli-bashi Qummi, and Mulla Rajab 'Ali Qahir.{{sfn|MacEoin|1989|p=110}}


The Bābī community in Iran remained fragmented and broken after the pogrom of 1852–3, and new leadership claims developed. The most significant challenger to Subh-i-Azal was Mirza Asad Allah Khu'i, known by the title '''Dayyān''',{{sfn|Smith|2000}} who made a claim to be ].{{sfn|MacEoin|1989|p=113}} Azal wrote a lengthy refutation of Dayyān titled ''Mustayqiz''. Dayyān was killed in Baghdad by Mirza Muhammad Mazandarani in 1856 at the order of Subh-i-Azal.{{sfn|Smith|2000}}{{sfn|MacEoin|1989|p=113}}
===Challenges to Baháʼu'lláh's authority===
In 1863 Bahá’u’lláh made a claim to be Him Whom God Shall Make Manifest, the messianic figure in the Báb's writings, to a small number of followers, and in 1866 he made the claim public. Bahá’u’lláh's claims threatened Subh-i-Azal's position as leader of the religion since it would mean little to be leader of the Bábís if "Him Whom God Shall Make Manifest" were to appear and start a new religion. Subhh-i-Azal responded by making his own claims, but his attempt to preserve the traditional Bábísm was largely unpopular, and his followers became the minority.


Subh-i-Azal's leadership was controversial. He generally absented himself from the Bābī community, spending his time in Baghdad in hiding and disguise.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}{{sfn|Barrett|2001|p=246}} Subh-i-Azal gradually alienated himself from a large proportion of the Bābīs who started to give their alliance to other claimants.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} Bahāʼī sources have attributed this to his incompetence and cowardice, but MacEoin also attributes the isolation to the Shi'a practice of '']''.{{sfn|MacEoin|1989|p=108}}
====Dayyán====
The most serious challenge to the authority of Subh-i-Azal came from Mirza Asad Allah Khu'i "Dayyán," whose activities incited him to write a lengthy refutation titled "Mustayqiz." The Hasht Bihisht refers to Dayyán as "the Judas Iscariot of his people." Following the Báb's death, Dayyán, who had a deep interest in the study of the ] in regards to such areas as ] and ], began to advance his own claims to be Him Whom God shall make manifest. MacEoin reports that Mirza Muhammad Mazandarani, a follower of Subh-i-Azal, murdered Dayyan for his claims in response to an order by Subh-i-Azal for him to be killed.{{sfn|MacEoin|1989|p=113}}


During the Baghdad period of 1853–1863, tensions rose between Subh-i-Azal and Baháʼu'lláh. Bahāʼī sources describe Azal as increasing in jealousy during this time, and Baháʼu'lláh's 2-year sojourn in Kurdistan as an attempt to avoid the growing disunity.{{sfn|Smith|2000}}
===Exile===
]
In 1863 most of the Babis were exiled by the Ottoman authorities to ].{{sfn|Campo|2009b}}
In Adrianople, ] made his claim to be the messianic figure of the ] public, and created a permanent schism between the two brothers.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}{{sfn|Campo|2009b}} Subh-i-Azal responded to these claims by making his own claims and resisting the changes of doctrine which were introduced by Baháʼu'lláh.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} His attempts to keep the traditional Babism were, however, mostly unpopular.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} During this time there was feuding between the two groups.


===Edirne===
According to Balyuzi and some other sources, Subh-i-Azal was behind several murders and attempted murders of his enemies, including the poisoning of ].{{sfn|Balyuzi|2000|pp=225–226}}{{sfn|Browne|1918|p=16}}{{sfn|Cole|2002}} Some Azali sources re-apply these allegations to ], even claiming that he poisoned himself while trying to poison Subh-i-Azal.{{efn|Mirza Aqa Khan Kirmani made this claim later in his ''Hasht-Bihisht''. This book is abstracted in part by ] in "Note W" of his translation of ''A Traveller's Narrative''.{{sfn|ʻAbdu'l-Bahá|Browne (tr.)|1891|loc="Note W"}}}} The second attempt in 1864 was more severe and had adverse effects on Bahaʼu'lláh throughout the remainder of his life until 1892. Mírzá Yahyá invited Baháʼu'lláh to a feast and shared a dish, half of which was laced with poison. Baháʼu'lláh was ill for 21 days following this attempt and was left with a shaking hand for the rest of his life.
In 1863 most of the Bābīs were called by the Ottoman authorities to Istanbul for four months, followed by an exile to ] that lasted from 12 December 1863 to 12 August 1868.{{sfn|Smith|2000|pp=129–130}}{{sfn|Campo|2009b}} The travel to Istanbul began with ] privately making his claim to be the messianic figure of the Bayan, which became a public proclamation in Edirne. This created a permanent schism between the two brothers.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}{{sfn|Campo|2009b}} Subh-i-Azal responded to these claims by making his own claims and resisting the changes of doctrine which were introduced by Baháʼu'lláh.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} His attempts to keep the traditional Bābism were, however, mostly unpopular.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}


Subh-i-Azal was behind the poisoning of ] while in Edirne in 1865.{{sfn|Browne|1918|p=16}}{{sfn|Smith|2008|p=24}}{{sfn|Cole|2002}} An Azali source later re-applied these allegations to ], even claiming that he poisoned himself while trying to poison Subh-i-Azal.{{efn|Mirza Aqa Khan Kirmani made this claim later in his ''Hasht-Bihisht''. This book is abstracted in part by ] in "Note W" of his translation of ''A Traveller's Narrative''.{{sfn|ʻAbdu'l-Bahá|1886}}}} The poisoning had adverse effects on Bahaʼu'lláh throughout the remainder of his life.{{sfn|Smith|2008|p=24}} A Bahāʼī, Salmānī, reported that Azal again attempted to have Baháʼu'lláh killed in the late winter of 1866.{{sfn|Cole|2004|p=3}} In March 1866, Baháʼu'lláh responded with a formal written declaration to Subh-i-Azal in the ''Sūri-yi Amr'' and referred to his own followers as Bahāʼīs.{{sfn|Smith|2008|p=24}}
Finally the feuding between the two groups lead the Ottoman government to further exile the two groups in 1868; Baháʼu'lláh and the Baha'is were sent to ] and Subh-i Azal and his family, along with some followers, were sent to ] in ].{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}


This began an approximately year-long separation that ended with a definite schism. The two brothers separated households, and the Bābīs in Iraq and Iran split into three factions: Azalīs, Bahāʼīs, or undecided. In February–March 1867, all three factions gathered in Baghdad for debates, and soon the undecided mostly joined the Bahāʼīs, who were already in the majority.{{sfn|Cole|2004|p=4}} In Edirne, the group of about 100 Bābīs was still socially intermixed until the summer of 1867, when they lived separately based on their loyalties.{{sfn|Cole|2004|p=7}}
==Family==
According to ], Mirza Yahya had several wives, and at least nine sons and five daughters. His sons included: Nurullah, Hadi, Ahmad, Abdul Ali, Rizwan Ali, and four others. Rizvan Ali reports that he had eleven or twelve wives.{{sfn|Browne|1897}} Later research reports that he had up to seventeen wives including four in Iran and at least five in Baghdad, although it is not clear how many, if any, were simultaneous.{{sfn|Momen|1991|pp=87–96}} According to Azali sources, Subh-i-Azal had five wives in total.{{citation needed|date=July 2017}}


A crisis erupted in August/September 1867. Sayyid Muhammad Isfahānī, an Azalī, instigated a public debate between the two brothers to settle the disputed claims.{{sfn|Cole|2004|p=7}} On a Friday morning, Azal challenged Baháʼu'lláh to a debate in the ] that afternoon. ] describes the communication,
He was the grandfather of ].<ref>{{cite book |title=کارنمای زنان کارای ایران (از دیروز تا امروز)|author=فرخزاد، پوران|publisher=نشر قطره|location=]|year=1381|isbn=964-341-116-8}}</ref>
{{blockquote|text=The challenge document envisaged that Azal and Bahā’u’llāh would face each other there and call down ritual curses on one other, in hopes that God would send down a sign that would demonstrate the truth of one or the other. This custom, called mubāhalih in Persian, is a very old one in the Middle East, and appears to have evoked the contest between Moses and Pharaoh’s magicians.{{sfn|Cole|2004|p=7}}}}


Baháʼu'lláh arrived at the mosque, with a crowd waiting, and sent a messenger to the home of Subh-i-Azal to remind him of the challenge, but Azal told the messenger that the confrontation would have to be postponed. That night, Baháʼu'lláh wrote to Azal, proposing that either Sunday or Monday they would complete the challenge, but Azal never responded to the request and never showed up on those days.{{sfn|Cole|2004|p=11}} The Bahā’īs interpreted Azal's failure to appear at his own challenge as cowardice, and it caused the further deterioration of Subh-i-Azal's credibility.{{sfn|Smith|2008|p=24}} The news quickly spread to Iran, where the majority of Bābīs still lived.{{sfn|Cole|2004|p=13}}
==Succession==
There are conflicting reports as to whom Subh-i-Azal appointed as his successor. ] reports that there was confusion over who was to be Subh-i-Azal's successor at his death. Subh-i-Azal's son, Rizwán ʻAli, reported that he had appointed the son of Aqa Mirza Muhammad Hadi Daulatabadi as his successor; while another, ], states that Mirza Yahya had said that whichever of his sons "resembled him the most" would be the successor. None appear to have stepped forward.{{sfn|Browne|1918|pp=312–314}} ] reports that Subh-i-Azal appointed his son, Yahya Dawlatabadi, as his successor, but notes that there is little evidence that Yahya Dawlatabadi was involved in the affairs of the religion,{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} and that instead he spent his time as that of secular reformer.{{sfn|Campo|2009a}} Shoghi Effendi reports that Mirza Yahya appointed a distinguished Bábí, Aqa Mirza Muhammad Hadi of Daulatabad (Mirza Hadiy-i-Dawlat-Abadi) successor, but he later publicly recanted his faith in the Báb and in Mirza Yahya. Mirza Yahya's eldest son apparently became a Baháʼí himself.{{sfn|Effendi|1944|p=}}{{sfn|Momen|1991|p=99}} ] quoting a later source states that Yahya did not name a successor.{{sfn|Miller|1974|p=107}} Miller relied heavily on Jalal Azal who disputed the appointment of Muhammad Hadi Daulatabadi.{{sfn|Momen|1991}}


===Cyprus===
MacEoin notes that after the deaths of those Azali Babis who were active in the ] in Iran, the Azali form of Babism entered a stagnation which it has not recovered as there is no acknowledged leader or central organization.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} Current estimates are that there are no more than a few thousand.{{sfn|Barrett|2001|p=246}}{{sfn|Azali. In Britannica|2011}}
]
Subh-i-Azal, along with Sayyid Muhammad Isfanani made accusations against Baháʼu'lláh to the Ottoman authorities, which resulted in both factions being further exiled in 1868; Baháʼu'lláh to ] and Azal to ] in ].{{sfn|Smith|2000}}{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}


The formal exile of Subh-i-Azal ended in 1881,{{sfn|Smith|2000}} when Cyprus was acquired by Britan in the aftermath of the ], but he remained on the island for the rest of his life until his death on 29 April 1912. He remained elusive and secretive, living off a British pension and being perceived as a Muslim holy man by the people of Cyprus, even receiving a Muslim burial.{{sfn|Smith|2000}} From Cyprus he seemed to have little contact with the Bābīs in Iran.
==Works==


], an official of the British Colonial Office, commented in 1913 that after Subh-i-Azal's arrival in Cyprus,
Large collections of Subh-i-Azal's works are found in the British Museum Library Oriental Collection, London; in the Browne Collection at Cambridge University; at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris; and at Princeton University.{{sfn|Momen|2009}} Some of his works are provided at . In the English introduction to "Personal Reminiscences of the Babi Insurrection at Zanjan in 1850,"{{sfn|Browne|1897}} E.G. Browne lists thirty-eight titles as being among the works of Subh-i-Azal. Browne lists them as follows:
{{blockquote|text=Now occurred a curious phenomenon. Athough doctrinally there was little to distinguish the two parties, the basis of the schism being a personal question, the one waxed exceedingly while the other waned. Rapidly the Ezelis dwindled to a handful, and soon were confined, almost entirely, to the members of Subh-i-Ezel's devoted family.{{sfn|Lukach|1913|p=265}}}}


==Succession==
*1) ''Kitab-i Divan al-Azal bar Nahj-i Ruh-i Ayat''
There are conflicting reports as to whom Subh-i-Azal appointed as his successor, and there was confusion after his death. Azal originally planned to appoint his eldest son Ahmad, but a dispute between them caused the appointment to be withdrawn and he instead appointed Hādī Dawlatābādī (d. 1908).{{sfn|Adamson|2009}} After the latter's death, Subh-i-Azal further appointed the man's son, Yahyā Dawlatābādī (d. 1939), but he had little involvement in the religion and any chain of leadership appears to have gone defunct with his appointment.{{sfn|Smith|2000|p=171}}{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}{{sfn|Campo|2009a}}
*2) ''Kitab-i Nur''
*3) ''Kitab-i ʻAliyyin''
*4) ''Kitab-i Lamʻat al-Azal''
*5) ''Kitab-i Hayat''
*6) ''Kitab-i Jamʻ''
*7) ''Kitab-i Quds-i Azal''
*8) ''Kitab-i Avval va Thani''
*9) ''Kitab-i Mirʼat al-Bayan''
*10) ''Kitab-i Ihtizaz al-Quds''
*11) ''Kitab-i Tadliʻ al-Uns''
*12) ''Kitab-i Naghmat ar-Ruh''
*13) ''Kitab-i Bahhaj''
*14) ''Kitab-i Hayakil''
*15) ''Kitab fi Tadrib ʻadd huwa bi'smi ʻAli''
*16) ''Kitab-i Mustayqiz''
*17) ''Kitab-i Laʼali va Mujali''
*18) ''Kitab-i Athar-i Azaliyyih''
*19) ''Sahifih-ʼi Qadariyyah''
*20) ''Sahifih-ʼi Abhajiyyih''
*21) ''Sahifih-ʼi Ha'iyyih''
*22) ''Sahifih-ʼi Vaviyyih''
*23) ''Sahifih-ʼi Azaliyyih''
*24) ''Sahifih-ʼi Huʼiyyih''
*25) ''Sahifih-ʼi Anzaʻiyyih''
*26) ''Sahifih-ʼi Huviyyih''
*27) ''Sahifih-ʼi Marathi''
*28) ''Alvah-i Nazilih la tuʻadd va la tuhsa''
*29) ''Suʼalat va Javabat-i bi Hisab''
*30) ''Tafsir-i-Surih-i-Rum''
*31) ''Kitab-i Ziyarat''
*32) ''Sharh-i Qasidih''
*33) ''Kitab al-Akbar fi Tafsir adh-Dhikr''
*34) ''Baqiyyih-ʼi Ahkam-i Bayan''
*35) ''Divan-i Ashʻar-i ʻArabi va Farsi''
*36) ''Divan-i Ashʻar-i ʻArabi''
*37) ''Kitab-i Tuba (Farsi)''
*38) ''Kitab-i Bismi'llah''


Subh-i-Azal's son, Rizwan ʻAli, wrote to C.D. Cobham on 11 July 1912,
==Notes==
{{blockquote|text= before his death had nominated the son of Aqā Mīrzā Muhammad Hādī of Dawlatābād.{{sfn|Browne|1918|p=312}}}}
{{notelist}}
{{reflist|24em}}


] wrote to Browne on 5 September 1912,
==Sources==
{{blockquote|text=It appears that Subhi-i-Azal left a letter saying that he of his sons who resembled him most closely in his mode of life and principles was to be his successor. The point as to which of the sons fulfils this condition has not yet been decided; consequently all the children would appear at present to be co-heirs... No steps have, as far as I am aware, yet been taken to elect a ''walī'' .{{sfn|Browne|1918|pp=313–314}}}}
{{refbegin|30em}}


] wrote in 1944 that Subh-i-Azal appointed Hādī Dawlatābādī as his successor, and that he later publicly recanted his faith in the Bāb and in Subh-i-Azal.{{sfn|Effendi|1944|p=233}} Hādī was targeted for death by a local cleric, and despite the public recantation, he continued being a leader of the Azalis in secret.{{sfn|Smith|2000|p=171}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |title=Azali |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica |date=28 September 2011 |publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica, inc. |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Azali |access-date=2017-07-10 |ref={{sfnRef|Azali. In Britannica|2011}} }}


Jalal Azal, a grandson of Subh-i-Azal who disputed the appointment of Hādī Dawlatābādī, later told ] between 1967 and 1971 that Azal did not appoint a successor.{{sfn|Momen|1991}}{{sfn|Miller|1974|p=107}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |title=Mirza Yahya Sobh-e Azal |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica |date=28 November 2014 |publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica, inc. |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Mirza-Yahya-Sobh-e-Azal |access-date=2017-07-10 |ref={{sfnRef|Mirza Yahya. In Britannica|2014}} }}


===Aftermath===
*{{cite book |last=ʻAbdu'l-Bahá |author-link=ʻAbdu'l-Bahá |editor=Browne, E.G. (Tr.) |date=1886 |title=A Traveller's Narrative: Written to illustrate the episode of the Bab |publisher=Kalimát Press |location=Los Angeles, USA |publication-date=2004 |isbn=1-890688-37-1 |url=http://www.bahai.org/library/authoritative-texts/abdul-baha/travelers-narrative/ }}
Several Azalī Bābīs were influential in the ].{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}} For example, the writings of two sons-in-law of Subh-i-Azal, ] (d. 1896) and Shaykh Ahmad Rūhī Kirmānī (d. 1896), both influenced the movement.{{sfn|Amanat|1989|p=415}} Yahyā Dawlatābādī (d. 1939), the appointed successor of Subh-i-Azal, his younger brother `Alī-Muhammad, as well as Jamāl al-Dīn Esfahānī and Malik al-Motakallemīn were all associated with Azalī Bābism and influencing constitutional and secular reforms.{{sfn|Amanat|1994}} However, Yahyā Dawlatābādī was stigmatized as a Bābī and, like his father, publicly distanced himself from association with the Azalīs while presenting himself as Muslim; he was nearly killed in 1908 and soon exiled from Iran as an anti-monarchist activist.{{sfn|Amanat|1994}}


The 7 "witnesses of the Bayan" that remained loyal to him were Sayyid Muhammad Isfahani, Mulla Muhammad Ja'far Naraqi, Mulla Muhammad Taqi, Haji Sayyid Muhammad (Isfahani), Haji Sayyid Jawad (al-Karbala'i), Mirza Muhammad Husayn Mutawalli-bashi Qummi, and Mulla Rajab 'Ali Qahir.{{sfn|MacEoin|1989|p=110}} The remaining 11 witnesses later became Bahāʼīs and abandoned Subh-i-Azal.{{sfn|Adamson|2009}}
*{{cite book |author=ʻAbdu'l-Bahá |author-link=ʻAbdu'l-Bahá |translator=Browne, E.G. |date=1891 |title=A Traveller's Narrative: Written to illustrate the episode of the Bab |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |pages=(See Browne's "Introduction" and "Notes", esp. "Note W".) |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/diglib/books/A-E/B/browne/tn/hometn.htm|ref={{sfnref|ʻAbdu'l-Bahá|Browne (tr.)|1891}} }}


Ahmad Bahhaj (1853–1933), son of Subh-i-Azal and Fatima (sister of Baqir), later moved to Haifa and became a Bāha'ī.{{sfn|Momen|1991|pp=99–100}} Jalal Azal (d. 1971), the son of `Abdu'l-`Ali and grandson of Subh-i-Azal, also became a Bāha'ī around 1920 and married a granddaughter of Bāha'u'llāh. However, Jalal Azal joined ]'s opposition and turned against ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.{{sfn|Momen|1991|pp=100–102}}
*{{cite book |last=Amanat |first=Abbas |date=1989 |title=Resurrection and Renewal: The Making of the Babi Movement in Iran |url=https://archive.org/details/resurrectionrene00aman |url-access=registration |publisher=Cornell University Press |location=Ithaca, NY }}


By the time of Subh-i-Azal's death 1912, the Azali form of Bābism entered a stagnation from which it never recovered, as it has not had an acknowledged leader or central organization.{{sfn|MacEoin|1987}}{{sfn|Warburg|2006|pp=7–8}}
*{{cite journal |last=Azal |first=Wahid |title=Invoking the Seven Worlds: An acrostic prayer by Mīrzā Yaḥyā Nūrī Ṣubḥ-i-Azal |url=https://www.academia.edu/3588368/Invoking_the_Seven_Worlds_An_acrostic_prayer_by_M%C4%ABrz%C4%81_Ya%E1%B8%A5y%C4%81_N%C5%ABr%C4%AB_%E1%B9%A2ub%E1%B8%A5_i_Azal (LUVAH: Journal of the Creative Imagination) |location=Pennsylvania, United States |year=2013 |volume=3 |pages=1–37}}


There may have been between 500 and 5,000 Azalis in Iran in the 1970s.{{sfn|Smith|2000}} A source in 2001 estimated no more than a few thousand, almost entirely in Iran.{{sfn|Barrett|2001|p=246}}
*{{cite book |last=Balyuzi |first=H.M. |author-link=Hasan M. Balyuzi |date=2000 |title=Baháʼu'lláh, King of Glory |publisher=George Ronald |location=Oxford, UK |isbn=0-85398-328-3 }}


==Works==
*{{cite book |last=Barrett |first=David |title=The New Believers |publisher=Cassell & Co |date=2001 |location=London, UK |isbn=0-304-35592-5 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/newbelieverssurv00barr }}
Large collections of Subh-i-Azal's works are found in the British Museum Library Oriental Collection, London; in the Browne Collection at Cambridge University; at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris; and at Princeton University.{{sfn|Momen|2009}} In the English introduction to "Personal Reminiscences of the Babi Insurrection at Zanjan in 1850," Browne lists thirty-eight titles as being among the works of Subh-i-Azal.{{sfn|Browne|1897}}


==Notes==
*{{cite book |contributor-last=Browne |contributor-first=E.G. |contribution=Appendix II |author=Mirza Huseyn of Hamadan |date=1893 |title=The Tarikh-i-Jadid, or New History of Mirza 'Ali Muhammad The Bab |translator=Browne, E.G. |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |pages=327–396 |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/diglib/books/K-O/M/MirzaHuseyn/TarikhiJadid.htm }}
{{notelist}}


==Citations==
*{{cite journal |last=Browne |first=E.G. |title=Personal Reminiscences of the Babi Insurrection at Zanjan in 1850, written by Aqa ʻAbdu'l-Ahad-i-Zanjan |journal=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society |date=1897 |volume=29 |pages=761–827 |url=http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~bahai/diglib/articles/A-E/browne/brznjan1.htm }}
{{reflist|24em}}


==References==
*{{cite book |last=Browne |first=E.G. |author-link=Edward Granville Browne |date=1918 |title=Materials for the Study of the Bábí Religion |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/diglib/books/A-E/B/browne/material/msbrtoc.htm }}
{{refbegin|30em}}


*{{cite encyclopedia |title=Mirza Yahya Sobh-e Azal |date=25 April 2024 |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica |publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica, inc. |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Mirza-Yahya-Sobh-e-Azal |access-date=2024-10-01 |ref={{sfnRef|Mirza Yahya. In Britannica|2024}} }}
*{{cite book |author=ʻAbdu'l-Bahá |author-link=ʻAbdu'l-Bahá |date=1886 |orig-date=Reprinted 1975 |title=A Traveller's Narrative: Written to illustrate the episode of the Bab |publisher=Philo Press |location=Amsterdam |isbn=90-6022-316-0 |url=https://bahai-library.com/browne_abdul-baha_travellers_narrative }}
*{{cite encyclopedia |last=Adamson |first=Hugh C. |date=2009 |title=MIRZA YAHYA AZAL |p=326–327 |series=The A to Z Guide Series, No. 70 |encyclopedia=The A to Z of the Baháʼí Faith |publisher=Scarecrow Press |place=Plymouth, UK |isbn=978-0-8108-6853-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/atozofbahaifaith0000adam |url-access=registration }}
*{{cite book |last=Amanat |first=Abbas |date=1989 |title=Resurrection and Renewal: The Making of the Babi Movement in Iran |url=https://archive.org/details/resurrectionrene00aman |url-access=registration |publisher=Cornell University Press |location=Ithaca, NY |isbn=978-0-8014-2098-6 }}
*{{cite encyclopedia |last=Amanat |first=Abbas |author-link=Abbas Amanat |date=1994 |orig-date=Updated 18 November 2011 |title=DAWLATĀBĀDĪ, SAYYED YAḤYĀ |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |volume=VII/2 |pages=143–146 |url=https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/dawlatabadi-sayyed-yahya |access-date=2024-10-11}}
*{{cite book |last=Barrett |first=David |date=2001 |title=The New Believers |publisher=Cassell & Co |location=London, UK |isbn=0-304-35592-5 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/newbelieverssurv00barr }}
*{{cite journal |last=Browne |first=E.G. |date=1897 |title=Personal Reminiscences of the Babi Insurrection at Zanjan in 1850, written by Aqa ʻAbdu'l-Ahad-i-Zanjan |journal=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society |volume=29 |pages=761–827 |url=http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~bahai/diglib/articles/A-E/browne/brznjan1.htm }}
*{{cite book |last=Browne |first=E.G. |author-link=Edward Granville Browne |date=1918 |title=Materials for the Study of the Babi Religion |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/diglib/books/A-E/B/browne/material/msbrtoc.htm }}
*{{cite encyclopedia |last=Campo|first=Juan |date=2009a |title=Ṣubḥ-i Azal |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Islam |publisher=Facts on File, Inc. |location=New York, NY }} *{{cite encyclopedia |last=Campo|first=Juan |date=2009a |title=Ṣubḥ-i Azal |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Islam |publisher=Facts on File, Inc. |location=New York, NY }}
*{{cite encyclopedia |last=Campo|first=Juan |date=2009b |title=Babism |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Islam |publisher=Facts on File, Inc. |location=New York, NY}}

*{{cite encyclopedia |last=Campo|first=Juan |date=2009b |title=Babism |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Islam |publisher=Facts on File, Inc. |location=New York, NY |quote=Most of the movement's survivors turned to the religion of Baha Ullah (the Bahai Faith) in 1863, but others stayed loyal to Ali Muhammad's designated heir, Mirza Yahya (or Subbh-i Azal, d. 1912), and this group of Babis became known as Azalis. Azali Babism survived a period of exile in Iraq and Turkey, and its adherents participated in the Iranian Constitutional Revoluion of 1906. A very small number of Babis survive today in the Central Asian republic of Uzbekistan.}}

*{{cite journal |last=Carus |first=Paul |date=1904 |title=A New Religion. Babism |journal=The Open Court |issue=6 |url=https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1765&context=ocj}} *{{cite journal |last=Carus |first=Paul |date=1904 |title=A New Religion. Babism |journal=The Open Court |issue=6 |url=https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1765&context=ocj}}

*{{cite magazine |last=Cole |first=Juan |author-link=Juan Cole |date=January 2002 |title=Baha'u'llah's Surah of God: Text, Translation, Commentary |magazine=Translations of Shaykhi, Babi and Baha'i Texts |volume=6 |number=1 |publisher=H-Bahai |location=East Lansing, MI |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/trans/vol6/surall.htm }} *{{cite magazine |last=Cole |first=Juan |author-link=Juan Cole |date=January 2002 |title=Baha'u'llah's Surah of God: Text, Translation, Commentary |magazine=Translations of Shaykhi, Babi and Baha'i Texts |volume=6 |number=1 |publisher=H-Bahai |location=East Lansing, MI |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/trans/vol6/surall.htm }}
*{{cite book |last=Cole |first=Juan |author-link=Juan Cole |date=2004 |chapter=The Azálí-Bahá'í Crisis of September, 1867 |pages=227–251 |editor-last=Sharon |editor-first=Moshe |editor-link=Moshe Sharon |title=Studies in Modern Religions, Religious Movements, and the Babi-Bahá'í Faiths |publisher=] |location=Leiden |url=https://bahai-library.com/cole_azali_bahai_crisis }}

*{{cite book |first=Shoghi |last=Effendi |author-link=Shoghi Effendi |year=1944 |title=God Passes By |publisher=Baháʼí Publishing Trust |location=Wilmette, Illinois, USA |isbn=0-87743-020-9 |url=http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/se/GPB/ }} *{{cite book |last=Effendi |first=Shoghi |author-link=Shoghi Effendi |year=1944 |title=God Passes By |publisher=Baháʼí Publishing Trust |location=Wilmette, Illinois, USA |isbn=0-87743-020-9 |url=http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/se/GPB/ }}
*{{cite book |last=Kashani |first=Jani (Attrib.) |editor-last=Browne |editor-first=E.G. |editor-link=Edward Granville Browne |date=1910 |title=Kitab-i Nuqtat al-Kaf: Being the Earliest History of the Babis |publisher=E.J. Brill |location=Leiden, The Netherlands |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/areprint/nk/nuqta.htm }}

*{{cite book |last=Lukach |first=Harry Charles |author-link=Harry Luke |date=1913 |title=The Fringe of the East |location=London |publisher=MacMillan |pages=263–267}}
*{{cite journal |last=Frigerio |first=Fabrizio |title=Un prisonnier d'État à Chypre sous la domination ottomane : Soubh-i-Ezèl à Famagouste |url=https://www.academia.edu/8926137 |journal=Πρακτικά του Γ Διεθνούς Κυπρολογικού Συνέδριου (Proceedings of the III International Cyprological Congress) |location=Nicosia, Cyprus |year=2001 |volume=3 |pages=629–646}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |last=MacEoin |first=Denis |author-link=Denis MacEoin |date=15 December 1987 |title=Azali Babism |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |volume=III |pages=179–181 |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/azali-babism }}

*{{cite book |last=Kashani |first=Jani (Attrib.) |editor=Browne, E.G. |year=1910 |title=Kitab-i Nuqtat al-Kaf: Being the Earliest History of the Babis |publisher=E.J. Brill |location=Leiden, The Netherlands |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/areprint/nk/nuqta.htm }} *{{cite book |last=MacEoin |first=Denis |author-link=Denis MacEoin |year=1989 |title=Studia Iranica: Divisions and Authority Claims in Babism |url=https://bahai-library.com/maceoin_authority_claims_babism}}
*{{cite book |last=MacEoin |first=Denis |author-link=Denis MacEoin |year=1992 |title=The Sources for Early Bābī Doctrine and History: A Survey |publisher=Brill |location=Leiden, The Netherlands |isbn=978-90-04-09462-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xqV9-zmMxsUC }}

*{{cite journal |last1=McCants |first1=William F |last2=Milani |first2=Kavian S |date=2004 |title=The History and Provenance of an Early Manuscript of the Nuqtat al-kaf dated 1268 (1851-52) |url=https://bahai-library.com/mccants_milani_nuqtat_al-kaf |journal=Iranian Studies |volume=37 |issue=3 |pages=431–449 |doi= |access-date=2024-12-04}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |last=MacEoin |first=Denis |author-link=Denis MacEoin |title=Azali Babism |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |volume=III |date=15 December 1987 |pages=179–181 |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/azali-babism }}

*{{cite book |last=MacEoin |first=Denis |year=1989 |title=Studia Iranica: Divisions and Authority Claims in Babism |url=https://bahai-library.com/maceoin_authority_claims_babism}}

*{{cite journal |last=Manuchehri |first=Sepehr |title=Taqiyyah (Dissimulation) in the Babi and Bahá'í Religions |journal=Australian Bahá'í Studies |year=2000 |volume=2 |url=https://bahai-library.com/manuchehri_taqiyyih_babi_bahai |access-date=2022-12-02 }}

*{{cite journal |last=Manuchehri |first=Sepehr |title=The Primal Point's Will and Testament |journal=Research Notes in Shaykhi, Babi and Baha'i Studies |date=2004 |volume=7 |issue=2 |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/notes/vol7/BABWILL.htm }}

*{{cite book |last=Miller |first=William M. |author-link=William McElwee Miller |year=1974 |title=The Baháʼí Faith: Its History and Teachings |publisher=] |isbn=0-87808-137-2 }} *{{cite book |last=Miller |first=William M. |author-link=William McElwee Miller |year=1974 |title=The Baháʼí Faith: Its History and Teachings |publisher=] |isbn=0-87808-137-2 }}
*{{cite journal |last=Momen |first=Moojan |author-link=Moojan Momen |year=1991 |title=The Cyprus Exiles |journal=Baháʼí Studies Bulletin |pages=81–113 |url=http://bahai-library.com/momen_cyprus_exiles }}

*{{cite journal |last=Momen |first=Moojan |author-link=Moojan Momen |title=The Cyprus Exiles |journal=Baháʼí Studies Bulletin |year=1991 |pages=81–113 |url=http://bahai-library.com/momen_cyprus_exiles }} *{{cite encyclopedia |last=Momen |first=Moojan |author-link=Moojan Momen |year=2009 |encyclopedia=Baháʼí Encyclopedia Project |title=Yahyá, Mírzá (c. 1831-1912) |publisher=National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States |location=Evanston, IL |url=http://www.bahai-encyclopedia-project.org/index.php?view=article&catid=37%3Abiography&id=71%3Ayahya-mirza&option=com_content&Itemid=74 }}
*{{cite book |last=Nicolas |first=A.-L.-M. |author-link=A. L. M. Nicolas |year=1933 |title=Qui est le successeur du Bâb? |publisher=Librairie d'Amerique et d'Orient |location=Paris |isbn=978-2-7200-0395-0 |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/diglib/books/K-O/N/Succeseur/Succeseur.htm}}

*{{cite encyclopedia |last=Momen |first=Moojan |author-link=Moojan Momen |encyclopedia=Baháʼí Encyclopedia Project |title=Yahyá, Mírzá (c. 1831-1912) |year=2009 |publisher=National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States |location=Evanston, IL |url=http://www.bahai-encyclopedia-project.org/index.php?view=article&catid=37%3Abiography&id=71%3Ayahya-mirza&option=com_content&Itemid=74 }} *{{cite encyclopedia |last=Smith |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Smith (historian) |date=2000 |title=A concise encyclopedia of the Baháʼí Faith |publisher=] |location=Oxford, UK |isbn=1-85168-184-1 |pages=53–54}}
*{{cite book |last=Smith |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Smith (historian) |date=2008 |title=An Introduction to the Baha'i Faith |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-68107-0 |location=New York|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z7zdDFTzNr0C }}

*{{cite book |last=Nicolas |first=A.-L.-M. |title=Qui est le successeur du Bâb? |publisher=Librairie d'Amerique et d'Orient |year=1933 |location=Paris |isbn=978-2-7200-0395-0 |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/diglib/books/K-O/N/Succeseur/Succeseur.htm}}

*{{cite book |last=Ruhi |first=Atiyya |title=Fragment of Subh-i Azal's Biography |publisher=Harvard University, Qamartaj Dolatabadi Papers, Women's Worlds in Qajar Iran |date=7 August 2012 |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |url=http://www.qajarwomen.org/en/items/1141C1.html}}

*{{cite book |first=Peter |last=Smith |author-link=Peter Smith (historian) |year=1988 |title=The Baháʼí Religion, A Short Introduction to its History and Teachings |publisher=George Ronald |location=Oxford, UK |isbn=0-85398-277-5 }}

*{{cite book |last=Taherzadeh |first=Adib |author-link=Adib Taherzadeh |date=1976 |title=The Revelation of Baháʼu'lláh, Volume 1: Baghdad 1853-63 |publisher=George Ronald |location=Oxford, UK |isbn=0-85398-270-8 |url=http://www.peyman.info/cl/Baha%27i/Others/ROB/V1/Cover.html }} *{{cite book |last=Taherzadeh |first=Adib |author-link=Adib Taherzadeh |date=1976 |title=The Revelation of Baháʼu'lláh, Volume 1: Baghdad 1853-63 |publisher=George Ronald |location=Oxford, UK |isbn=0-85398-270-8 |url=http://www.peyman.info/cl/Baha%27i/Others/ROB/V1/Cover.html }}
*{{Cite book |last=Warburg |first=Margit |author-link=Margit Warburg |date=2006 |title=Citizens of the world: a history and sociology of the Bahaʹis from a globalisation perspective |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-474-0746-1 |location=Leiden |oclc=234309958}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |last1=Wickens |last2=Cole |last3=Ekbal |date=15 December 1989 |title=Browne, Edward Granville |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica |volume=IV/5 |pages=483–488 |url=https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/browne-edward-granville |access-date=2024-10-09}}


{{refend}} {{refend}}

==Further reading==
*{{cite book |author=Mirza Huseyn of Hamadan |translator-last=Browne |translator-first=E.G. |translator-link=Edward Granville Browne |date=1893 |title=The Tarikh-i-Jadid, or New History of Mirza 'Ali Muhammad The Bab |contribution=Appendix II |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |pages=327–396 |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/diglib/books/K-O/M/MirzaHuseyn/TarikhiJadid.htm |ref=none}}
*{{cite journal |last=Manuchehri |first=Sepehr |date=2004 |title=The Primal Point's Will and Testament |journal=Research Notes in Shaykhi, Babi and Baha'i Studies |volume=7 |issue=2 |url=http://www.h-net.org/~bahai/notes/vol7/BABWILL.htm |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |last=Ruhi |first=Atiyya |date=7 August 2012 |title=Fragment of Subh-i Azal's Biography |publisher=Harvard University, Qamartaj Dolatabadi Papers, Women's Worlds in Qajar Iran |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |url=http://www.qajarwomen.org/en/items/1141C1.html |ref=none}}


{{wikiquote}} {{wikiquote}}

Latest revision as of 02:29, 11 January 2025

Iranian religious leader (1831–1912)
Subh-i-Azal
Subh-i-Azal at the age of 80, Famagusta, circa 1911
BornMirza Yahya Nuri
1831 (1831)
Tehran, Iran
DiedApril 29, 1912 (1912-04-30) (aged 81)
Famagusta, present-day Cyprus
Known forLeader of Azali Bābism
SuccessorDisputed

Subh-i-Azal (1831–1912, born Mīrzā Yahyā Nūrī) was an Iranian religious leader of Bābism, appointed as head of the movement by the Bāb just before the latter's execution in 1850. He is known for his later conflict with his half-brother Baháʼu'lláh over leadership of the Bābī community, after which his followers became known as Azalis.

At the time of appointment he was just 19 years old. Two years later a pogrom began to exterminate the Bābīs in Iran, and Subh-i-Azal fled for Baghdad for 10 years before joining the group of Bābī exiles that were called to Istanbul. During the time in Baghdad tensions grew with Baháʼu'lláh, as Bābī pilgrims began to turn to the latter for leadership. The Ottoman government further exiled the group to Edirne, where Subh-i-Azal openly rejected Baháʼu'lláh's claim of divine revelation and the community of Bābīs were divided by their allegiance to one or the other.

In 1868 the Ottoman government further exiled Subh-i-Azal and his followers to Cyprus, and Baháʼu'lláh and his followers to Acre in Palestine. When Cyprus was leased to Britain in 1878, he lived out the rest of his life in obscurity on a British pension.

By 1904, Azal's followers had dwindled to a small minority, and Baháʼu'lláh was almost universally recognized as the spiritual successor of the Bāb. After Azal's death in 1912, the Azali form of Bābism entered a stagnation and has not recovered as there is no acknowledged leader or central organization. Most Bābīs either accepted the claim of Baháʼu'lláh or the community gradually diminished as children and grandchildren turned back to Islam. A source in 2001 estimated no more than a few thousand, almost entirely in Iran. Another source in 2009 noted a very small number of followers remained in Uzbekistan.

Name and title

His given name was Yahyá, which is the Arabic form of the English name "John". As the son of a nobleman in the county of Núr, he was known as Mīrzā Yahyā Nūrī (Persian: میرزا یحیی نوری). His most widely known title, "Subh-i-Azal" (or "Sobh-i-Ezel"; Persian: یحیی صبح ازل, "Morning of Eternity") appears in an Islamic tradition called the Hadith-i-Kumayl, which the Bāb quotes in his book Dalā'il-i-Sab'ih.

It was common practice among the Bābīs to receive titles. He was also known by the titles al-Waḥīd, Ṭalʻat an-Nūr, and at-Tamara; or Everlasting Mirror (Mir'atu'l-Azaliyya), Name of Eternity (Ismu'l-azal), and Fruit of the Bayan (Thamara-i-Bayan).

Background

Subh-i-Azal was born in 1831 to Mīrzā Buzurg-i-Nūrī and his fourth wife Kuchak Khanum-i-Karmanshahi, in the province of Mazandaran. His father was a minister in the court of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar. His mother died while giving birth to him, and his father died in 1839 when he was eight years old, after which he was cared for by his stepmother Khadíjih Khánum, the mother of Baháʼu'lláh.

In 1845, at about the age of 14, Subh-i-Azal became a follower of the Bāb.

Early activities in the Bābī community

Subh-i-Azal met Tahirih, the 17th Letter of the Living who had, upon leaving the Conference of Badasht, traveled to Nur to propagate the faith. Shortly thereafter, she arrived at Barfurush and met Subh-i-Azal and became acquainted once again with Quddús who instructed her to take Subh-i-Azal with her to Nur. Subh-i-Azal remained in Nur for three days, during which he propagated the new faith.

During the Battle of Fort Tabarsi, Subh-i-Azal, along with Baháʼu'lláh and Mirza Zayn al-Abedin endeavoured to travel there to assist the Bābīs. However, they were arrested several kilometers from Amul. Their imprisonment was ordered by the governor, but Subh-i-Azal escaped the officials for a short while, after which he was discovered by a villager and then brought to Amul on foot with his hands tied. On the path to Amul he was subject to harassment, and people are reported to have spat at him. Upon arriving he was reunited with the other prisoners. The prisoners were ordered to be beaten, but when it came time that Subh-i-Azal should suffer the punishment, Baha'u'llah objected and offered to take the beating in his place. After some time, the governor wrote to Abbas Quli Khan who was commander of the government forces stationed near Fort Tabarsi. Khan replied back to the governor's correspondence, saying that the prisoners were of distinguished families and should not be harassed. Thus, the prisoners were released and sent to Nur upon orders of the commander.

Marriages and children

According to Browne, Mirza Yahya had several wives, and at least nine sons and five daughters. His sons included: Nurullah, Hadi, Ahmad, Abdul Ali, Rizwan Ali (AKA Constantine the Persian), and four others. Rizwan Ali reports that he had eleven or twelve wives. Later research reports that he had up to seventeen wives including four in Iran and at least five in Baghdad. Smith reports that he had "perhaps twenty-five children in all".

His granddaughter, Roshanak Nodust, was later known for starting Peyk-e Saadat Nesvan, the first woman's rights magazine in Iran.

Appointment

Subh-i-Azal was appointed by the Bāb to "preserve what hath been revealed in the Bayān", but the nature of his role has been the subject of debate due to conflicting sources. Shortly before the Bāb's execution, the Bāb wrote letters and gave them to Mullā ʻAbdu'l-Karīm to deliver to Subh-i-Azal and Baháʼu'lláh. These were later interpreted by both Azalīs and Bahāʼīs as proof of the Bāb's delegation of leadership to the two brothers. Subh-i-Azal was 19 years old at the time.

In the period immediately following the Bāb's execution (1850), there were many claims to authority and Bābīs did not initially unite around Subh-i-Azal's leadership, but at some point Azal became the recognized leader, and remained so for about 13 years.

Warburg states that, "It seems likely that Subh-i-Azal was designated to be the Bab's successor", and MacEoin states that, the Bāb regarded him as "his chief deputy" and the "future head of the movement." The nature of that appointment differs according to which sources are believed. The disagreement is over whether he was appointed a spiritual successor who could write divinely-revealed verses, or a nominal figurehead who would maintain the community until the appearance of a greater prophet. ʻAbdu'l-Bahá states that the Bāb did this to divert attention from Baháʼu'lláh, and that it was suggested by the latter.

The conflicting accusations, claims, and counter-claims of Azalī and Bahāʼī sources make it difficult to reconstruct an objective narrative of the splitting of the Bābī community into these two groups, one of which came to dominate and expand, while the other became almost defunct. Academic reviews are generally critical of the official Bahāʼī positions on the split; for example Edward Granville Browne, Denis MacEoin, and A. L. M. Nicolas.

Nuqtatu'l-Kaf

Edward Granville Browne studied the Bābī movement in Iran and translated many primary sources from 1890 to 1920. One of these, Kitab-i-Nuqtatu'l-Kaf (or Noqtat al-Kāf), was of particular interest to the appointment of Subh-i-Azal. Its publication was encouraged by Muhammad Khan Qazvīnī, a Shi'ite scholar, and its authorship was attributed to Hājī Mīrzā Jānī, a Bābī who died in 1852. A similar manuscript attributed to Hājī Mīrzā Jānī and circulating among Bahāʼīs was Tarikh-i-Jadid, but the Bahāʼī version lacked extra text supportive of Subh-i-Azal's authority. In his introduction to its publication, Browne attacked the Bahāʼīs for trying to rewrite history. Further scholarship showed that the Nuqtatu'l-Kaf was circulating among Bahāʼīs, it wasn't being suppressed, and some material in it postdated the death of its assumed author.

Denis MacEoin made a detailed analysis of the question in his The Sources for Early Babi Doctrine and History (1992), summarized here by Margit Warburg:

In 1892, Browne acquired the Babi manuscript named Kitab-i-Nuqtatu'l-Kaf from a collection of Babi manuscripts originally owned by de Gobineau and sold to the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris in 1884. The first portion of the manuscript is laid out as a doctrinal treatise, while the later sections contain what Browne assumed to be an early copy of Mirza Jani Kashani's history. Browne considered his discovery to be of immense importance, since at that time no other copies of this history were known. However, Browne also discovered that the manuscript was at variance with the version of Mirza Jani Kashani's history that made up the core text in the Tarikh-i-Jadid. Although the two texts for the most part are equivalent, several passages in the Nuqtatu'l-Kaf that refer to Subh-i-Azal and his role in the Babi movement are not included in the Tarikh-i-Jadid. This led Browne to conclude that the discrepancies between the two histories were the result of a deliberate plot of the followers of Baha'u'llah to discredit Subh-i-Azal's claims to leadership. The Baha'is hotly rejected Browne's conclusion and accused the Azalis of distorting the sources. Thus, Abdu'l-Baha suggested that the Azalis had prepared a falsified version of Mirza Jani Kashani's history and had encouraged Browne to publish it. This hypothesis was restated many years later by the Baha'i historian Hasan M. Balyuzi...

Further investigation by McCants and Milani (2004) found another early copy of the manuscript and concluded that it was written in the early 1850s, though not by Hājī Mīrzā Jānī, and that it was "not markedly different from Browne’s edition".

Takur uprising

The Bābī community was engaged in several pitched military confrontations with the government from 1848 to 1851. Subh-i-Azal allied himself with a faction led by Azīm, and in 1852 coordinated a new militant uprising in Takur, Iran. This new upheaval was apparently timed to coincide with an attempt to assassinate Naser al-Din Shah, which was organized by Azīm.

The uprising failed, and the botched assassination attempt resulted in the entire Bābī community being blamed and severely punished by the government. Many thousand Bābīs were killed. Subh-i-Azal took up a disguise to escape Iran and joined a cohort of exiles in Baghdad.

After Azīm's death in 1852, Subh-i-Azal became the clear head of the remaining militant faction of the Bābīs, which remained wedded to a vision of radical political activism; representing what Amanat describes as a preoccupation with, "the Shi'ite vision of a utopian political order under the aegis of the Imam of the age".

Baghdad

In Baghdad, Subh-i-Azal kept his whereabouts secret and lived secluded from the Bābī community, keeping in contact through 18 agents termed "witnesses of the Bayan".

The Bābī community in Iran remained fragmented and broken after the pogrom of 1852–3, and new leadership claims developed. The most significant challenger to Subh-i-Azal was Mirza Asad Allah Khu'i, known by the title Dayyān, who made a claim to be He whom God shall make manifest. Azal wrote a lengthy refutation of Dayyān titled Mustayqiz. Dayyān was killed in Baghdad by Mirza Muhammad Mazandarani in 1856 at the order of Subh-i-Azal.

Subh-i-Azal's leadership was controversial. He generally absented himself from the Bābī community, spending his time in Baghdad in hiding and disguise. Subh-i-Azal gradually alienated himself from a large proportion of the Bābīs who started to give their alliance to other claimants. Bahāʼī sources have attributed this to his incompetence and cowardice, but MacEoin also attributes the isolation to the Shi'a practice of Taqiyya.

During the Baghdad period of 1853–1863, tensions rose between Subh-i-Azal and Baháʼu'lláh. Bahāʼī sources describe Azal as increasing in jealousy during this time, and Baháʼu'lláh's 2-year sojourn in Kurdistan as an attempt to avoid the growing disunity.

Edirne

In 1863 most of the Bābīs were called by the Ottoman authorities to Istanbul for four months, followed by an exile to Edirne that lasted from 12 December 1863 to 12 August 1868. The travel to Istanbul began with Baháʼu'lláh privately making his claim to be the messianic figure of the Bayan, which became a public proclamation in Edirne. This created a permanent schism between the two brothers. Subh-i-Azal responded to these claims by making his own claims and resisting the changes of doctrine which were introduced by Baháʼu'lláh. His attempts to keep the traditional Bābism were, however, mostly unpopular.

Subh-i-Azal was behind the poisoning of Baháʼu'lláh while in Edirne in 1865. An Azali source later re-applied these allegations to Baháʼu'lláh, even claiming that he poisoned himself while trying to poison Subh-i-Azal. The poisoning had adverse effects on Bahaʼu'lláh throughout the remainder of his life. A Bahāʼī, Salmānī, reported that Azal again attempted to have Baháʼu'lláh killed in the late winter of 1866. In March 1866, Baháʼu'lláh responded with a formal written declaration to Subh-i-Azal in the Sūri-yi Amr and referred to his own followers as Bahāʼīs.

This began an approximately year-long separation that ended with a definite schism. The two brothers separated households, and the Bābīs in Iraq and Iran split into three factions: Azalīs, Bahāʼīs, or undecided. In February–March 1867, all three factions gathered in Baghdad for debates, and soon the undecided mostly joined the Bahāʼīs, who were already in the majority. In Edirne, the group of about 100 Bābīs was still socially intermixed until the summer of 1867, when they lived separately based on their loyalties.

A crisis erupted in August/September 1867. Sayyid Muhammad Isfahānī, an Azalī, instigated a public debate between the two brothers to settle the disputed claims. On a Friday morning, Azal challenged Baháʼu'lláh to a debate in the Sultan Selim Mosque that afternoon. Cole describes the communication,

The challenge document envisaged that Azal and Bahā’u’llāh would face each other there and call down ritual curses on one other, in hopes that God would send down a sign that would demonstrate the truth of one or the other. This custom, called mubāhalih in Persian, is a very old one in the Middle East, and appears to have evoked the contest between Moses and Pharaoh’s magicians.

Baháʼu'lláh arrived at the mosque, with a crowd waiting, and sent a messenger to the home of Subh-i-Azal to remind him of the challenge, but Azal told the messenger that the confrontation would have to be postponed. That night, Baháʼu'lláh wrote to Azal, proposing that either Sunday or Monday they would complete the challenge, but Azal never responded to the request and never showed up on those days. The Bahā’īs interpreted Azal's failure to appear at his own challenge as cowardice, and it caused the further deterioration of Subh-i-Azal's credibility. The news quickly spread to Iran, where the majority of Bābīs still lived.

Cyprus

Ṣubḥ-i-Azal at the age of 80, unknown photographer, Famagusta, 1911 circa.

Subh-i-Azal, along with Sayyid Muhammad Isfanani made accusations against Baháʼu'lláh to the Ottoman authorities, which resulted in both factions being further exiled in 1868; Baháʼu'lláh to Acre and Azal to Famagusta in Cyprus.

The formal exile of Subh-i-Azal ended in 1881, when Cyprus was acquired by Britan in the aftermath of the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), but he remained on the island for the rest of his life until his death on 29 April 1912. He remained elusive and secretive, living off a British pension and being perceived as a Muslim holy man by the people of Cyprus, even receiving a Muslim burial. From Cyprus he seemed to have little contact with the Bābīs in Iran.

Harry Luke, an official of the British Colonial Office, commented in 1913 that after Subh-i-Azal's arrival in Cyprus,

Now occurred a curious phenomenon. Athough doctrinally there was little to distinguish the two parties, the basis of the schism being a personal question, the one waxed exceedingly while the other waned. Rapidly the Ezelis dwindled to a handful, and soon were confined, almost entirely, to the members of Subh-i-Ezel's devoted family.

Succession

There are conflicting reports as to whom Subh-i-Azal appointed as his successor, and there was confusion after his death. Azal originally planned to appoint his eldest son Ahmad, but a dispute between them caused the appointment to be withdrawn and he instead appointed Hādī Dawlatābādī (d. 1908). After the latter's death, Subh-i-Azal further appointed the man's son, Yahyā Dawlatābādī (d. 1939), but he had little involvement in the religion and any chain of leadership appears to have gone defunct with his appointment.

Subh-i-Azal's son, Rizwan ʻAli, wrote to C.D. Cobham on 11 July 1912,

before his death had nominated the son of Aqā Mīrzā Muhammad Hādī of Dawlatābād.

H.C. Lukach wrote to Browne on 5 September 1912,

It appears that Subhi-i-Azal left a letter saying that he of his sons who resembled him most closely in his mode of life and principles was to be his successor. The point as to which of the sons fulfils this condition has not yet been decided; consequently all the children would appear at present to be co-heirs... No steps have, as far as I am aware, yet been taken to elect a walī .

Shoghi Effendi wrote in 1944 that Subh-i-Azal appointed Hādī Dawlatābādī as his successor, and that he later publicly recanted his faith in the Bāb and in Subh-i-Azal. Hādī was targeted for death by a local cleric, and despite the public recantation, he continued being a leader of the Azalis in secret.

Jalal Azal, a grandson of Subh-i-Azal who disputed the appointment of Hādī Dawlatābādī, later told William Miller between 1967 and 1971 that Azal did not appoint a successor.

Aftermath

Several Azalī Bābīs were influential in the Iranian Constitutional Revolution. For example, the writings of two sons-in-law of Subh-i-Azal, Mīrzā Āqā Khān Kirmānī (d. 1896) and Shaykh Ahmad Rūhī Kirmānī (d. 1896), both influenced the movement. Yahyā Dawlatābādī (d. 1939), the appointed successor of Subh-i-Azal, his younger brother `Alī-Muhammad, as well as Jamāl al-Dīn Esfahānī and Malik al-Motakallemīn were all associated with Azalī Bābism and influencing constitutional and secular reforms. However, Yahyā Dawlatābādī was stigmatized as a Bābī and, like his father, publicly distanced himself from association with the Azalīs while presenting himself as Muslim; he was nearly killed in 1908 and soon exiled from Iran as an anti-monarchist activist.

The 7 "witnesses of the Bayan" that remained loyal to him were Sayyid Muhammad Isfahani, Mulla Muhammad Ja'far Naraqi, Mulla Muhammad Taqi, Haji Sayyid Muhammad (Isfahani), Haji Sayyid Jawad (al-Karbala'i), Mirza Muhammad Husayn Mutawalli-bashi Qummi, and Mulla Rajab 'Ali Qahir. The remaining 11 witnesses later became Bahāʼīs and abandoned Subh-i-Azal.

Ahmad Bahhaj (1853–1933), son of Subh-i-Azal and Fatima (sister of Baqir), later moved to Haifa and became a Bāha'ī. Jalal Azal (d. 1971), the son of `Abdu'l-`Ali and grandson of Subh-i-Azal, also became a Bāha'ī around 1920 and married a granddaughter of Bāha'u'llāh. However, Jalal Azal joined Mīrzā Muhammad ʻAlī's opposition and turned against ʻAbdu'l-Bahá.

By the time of Subh-i-Azal's death 1912, the Azali form of Bābism entered a stagnation from which it never recovered, as it has not had an acknowledged leader or central organization.

There may have been between 500 and 5,000 Azalis in Iran in the 1970s. A source in 2001 estimated no more than a few thousand, almost entirely in Iran.

Works

Large collections of Subh-i-Azal's works are found in the British Museum Library Oriental Collection, London; in the Browne Collection at Cambridge University; at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris; and at Princeton University. In the English introduction to "Personal Reminiscences of the Babi Insurrection at Zanjan in 1850," Browne lists thirty-eight titles as being among the works of Subh-i-Azal.

Notes

  1. Persian: صبح ازل, romanizedṢobḥ-e Azal
  2. Persian: میرزا یحیی, romanizedMirzā Yaḥyā
  3. Mirza Aqa Khan Kirmani made this claim later in his Hasht-Bihisht. This book is abstracted in part by Edward G. Browne in "Note W" of his translation of A Traveller's Narrative.

Citations

  1. Lukach 1913, p. 264.
  2. ^ MacEoin 1987.
  3. ^ Warburg 2006, p. 7-8.
  4. Mirza Yahya. In Britannica 2024.
  5. Carus 1904, p. 361.
  6. ^ Momen 1991.
  7. ^ Barrett 2001, p. 246.
  8. ^ Campo 2009b.
  9. ^ Smith 2000.
  10. ^ Adamson 2009.
  11. Kashani 1910, p. 241.
  12. ^ Browne 1897.
  13. Momen 1991, pp. 87–96.
  14. Zolghadr, Zohreh. "Iranian Women You Should Know: Roshanak Nodust". IranWire. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  15. ^ Amanat 1989, p. 384.
  16. ^ Warburg 2006, p. 446.
  17. Taherzadeh 1976, p. 37.
  18. Browne 1918.
  19. MacEoin 1989.
  20. Nicolas 1933, p. 15.
  21. ^ Wickens, Cole & Ekbal 1989.
  22. MacEoin 1992.
  23. ^ Warburg 2006, pp. 38–39.
  24. McCants & Milani 2004.
  25. ^ Campo 2009a.
  26. Amanat 1989, p. 414.
  27. Amanat 1989, p. 365.
  28. ^ MacEoin 1989, p. 113.
  29. MacEoin 1989, p. 108.
  30. Smith 2000, pp. 129–130.
  31. Browne 1918, p. 16.
  32. ^ Smith 2008, p. 24.
  33. Cole 2002.
  34. ʻAbdu'l-Bahá 1886.
  35. Cole 2004, p. 3.
  36. Cole 2004, p. 4.
  37. ^ Cole 2004, p. 7.
  38. Cole 2004, p. 11.
  39. Cole 2004, p. 13.
  40. Lukach 1913, p. 265.
  41. ^ Smith 2000, p. 171.
  42. Browne 1918, p. 312.
  43. Browne 1918, pp. 313–314.
  44. Effendi 1944, p. 233.
  45. Miller 1974, p. 107.
  46. Amanat 1989, p. 415.
  47. ^ Amanat 1994.
  48. MacEoin 1989, p. 110.
  49. Momen 1991, pp. 99–100.
  50. Momen 1991, pp. 100–102.
  51. Warburg 2006, pp. 7–8.
  52. Momen 2009.

References

Further reading

Categories: