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Muhammad ibn Ali al-Sanusi

Muhammad ibn Ali al-Sanusi

1787 CE1859 CE · Fez

Muhammad ibn Ali al-Sanusi (1202/1787-1276/1859), often called al-Sanusi al-Kabir ("the Elder"), was a scholar and Sufi reformer who founded the Sanusiyya, a religious order (tariqa, a Sufi brotherhood) that became one of the most influential movements of nineteenth-century North Africa. He was born in the village of al-Wasita near Mostaganem in what is now western Algeria, into a family claiming descent from the Prophet's house.

After early study at home, he spent roughly eight years at the Qarawiyyin mosque-college in Fez, then traveled east, briefly studying in Cairo. In the Hijaz (western Arabia) he became a disciple of the Moroccan reformer Ahmad ibn Idris, a teacher-link the sources treat as attested and central to his outlook: an emphasis on returning to the Qur'an and the Prophet's example (Sunna).

After Ibn Idris died in 1837, al-Sanusi established his own lodge near Mecca, then moved westward as political conditions tightened. From 1843 he built lodges (zawiyas) across Cyrenaica in eastern Libya, beginning with the "White Lodge" (al-Zawiya al-Bayda). He later returned to Mecca for several years before settling at the remote oasis of Jaghbub, where he died.

The Sanusiyya he founded spread among the tribes of the Sahara and later played a major role in Libyan resistance and statehood; his grandson Idris became Libya's first king. Whether his movement is best described as quietist revival or proto-political is debated among historians.

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Stop 1 of 51821Studying

FezפאסMorocco

What they did here

Studied for roughly eight years at the Qarawiyyin mosque-college in Fez, a leading center of Maliki learning. Sources differ on the exact arrival year (commonly given as the 1820s), so the start date here is approximate.

About Fez

Fez (Fas), in north-central Morocco, was founded in the early 9th century by the Idrisid dynasty and became the political and intellectual capital of medieval Morocco, home to the Qarawiyyin mosque-university. The historian Ibn Khaldun (d. 1406) taught there for a period, and the Maliki jurist Ahmad al-Wansharisi (d. 1508), author of al-Mi'yar, was active in the city.

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The world in their lifetime

Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Muhammad ibn Ali al-Sanusi’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.

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