Abu Bakr al-Shibli
c. 861 CE–c. 946 CE · Samarra
Abu Bakr al-Shibli (full name traditionally given as Abu Bakr Dulaf ibn Jahdar al-Shibli) was a Sufi (Islamic mystic) of Baghdad, counted among the leading figures of the early "sober" school associated with his teacher al-Junayd. Reference works place his life at roughly 247/861 to 334/946; these dates are traditional estimates rather than firmly documented. His family was of Khurasani origin — sources connect the name "al-Shibli" to a village (given as Shibliyya or Shibla) in the Usrushana region of Transoxania — while he himself is generally said to have been born in Samarra; one tradition instead has the family from Samarqand and his birth in Baghdad. Before turning to the mystical path he is reported to have served the Abbasid state as a court official (hajib, "chamberlain"), and some accounts make him a deputy-governor of the district of Demavand; he is said to have renounced this career around the age of forty to follow al-Junayd. Later tradition remembers him as a Maliki in law (one of the Sunni schools of jurisprudence), though this is not uniformly reported. He became famous for shathiyat — ecstatic, paradoxical utterances spoken in states of mystical intoxication — and biographers report episodes of confinement linked to this conduct. He is frequently associated in later narrative with the controversial mystic al-Hallaj, executed in Baghdad in 922, though such anecdotes are reported rather than securely attested. He died and was buried in Baghdad, where his tomb was long venerated.
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Samarra
What they did here
Most accounts give Samarra as al-Shibli's birthplace (c. 247/861), his family being of Khurasani (Iranian) origin (linked to a village Shibliyya/Shibla in Usrushana, Transoxania). A competing tradition makes the family Samarqandi and places his birth in Baghdad, so the birthplace is not settled.
About Samarra
Samarra, on the Tigris north of Baghdad in Iraq, was founded in 836 by the Abbasid caliph al-Mu'tasim as a new imperial capital to house the Turkish army, and served as the caliphal seat until 892. It is significant in Twelver Shi'ism as the residence and burial place of the imams Ali al-Hadi (d. 868) and Hasan al-Askari (d. 874).
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