Muhammad al-Taqi


Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim
Muhammad at-Taqī
Imams of Twelver Shi'a Islam
A depiction by a Muslim artist.
A modern depiction by a Shi'a artist
Rank Ninth Twelver Imām
Name Muhammad ibn ‘Alī ibn Mūsā
Kunya Abū Ja‘far[1][2]
Birth 10th Rajab 195 AH
≈ 8 April 811 C.E.
Death 29th Dhul Qi‘dah 220 AH
≈ 24 November 835 C.E.
Birthplace Madīnah[1]
Buried al-Kādhimiya Mosque, Kadhimayn
Life Duration Before Imamate: 8 years
(195 - 203 AH)
- 4 years[1] with his father Imām ar-Ridhā
Imāmate: 17 years
(203 - 220 AH)
Titles *al-Taqī[1][2]
(Arabic for God-fearing)
*al-Jawād[1][2]
(Arabic for Generous)
*Dokuzuncu Ali
(Turkish for Ninth Ali)
Spouse(s) Sumānah[3]
Father ‘Alī ar-Ridhā
Mother Sabīkah a.k.a. Khayzurān[1]
Children ‘Alī al-Hādī (successor)
Hakimah Khātūn
Almahdi.png
Ali · Hasan · Husayn

al-Sajjad · al-Baqir · al-Sadiq
al-Kadhim · al-Rida · al-Taqi
al-Hadi · al-Askari · al-Mahdi

Muhammad al-Taqī or Muhammad al-Jawād (Arabic: الإمام محمد التقي الجواد) (Rajab 10, 195 AH - Dhu al-Qi'dah 29, 220 AH[1]; approximately April 8, 811 AD - November 24, 835 AD) was the ninth of the Twelve Imams. His given name was Muhammad ibn ‘Alī ibn Mūsā, and among his titles, al-Taqī and al-Jawād are the most renowned. Muhammad al-Taqī was the shortest-lived of the Twelve Imāms, dying at the age of 25.[4]

Contents

Birth and family life

He was born on the tenth of Rajab, 195 AH. His mother was Khaizaran, a woman from the family of Maria al-Qibtiyya.

Hakima, the sister of Ali ar Rida, is reported saying that on the night of al-Taqi’s birth her brother advised her to be present beside his wife. According to legend, al-Taqi at his birth looked at the sky and uttered confirmation of the oneness of Allah and the prophethood of Muhammad.

Early maturity

He undertook the responsibility of Imamate at the age of eight years.

He was a child when his father was killed. By reports, he did not act upon childish or whimsical impulses and he accepted adult responsibility and behaviours at an early age. Shi'a writers have propagated claims about his possession of extraordinary knowledge at a young age by likening his circumstances to that of the Islamic tradition of Jesus - a figure called to leadership and prophetic mission while still a child. [5]

According to Twelver Shi’ah Islam, the Imams are perfectly able to give judgment on all matters of religious law and their judgment is always legally correct. To that end al-Taqi supposedly receive a miraculous transfer of knowledge at the moment of the death of the previous Imam[6] To that end it is reported, for example, that during his time in Baghdad he performed creditably in a public debate with one of the leading scholars of the city.

Al Kadhimiya Mosque in Khadimayn, Baghdad

Marriage and lifestyle during Abbasid rule

After Al-Ma'mun had poisoned Ali al-Raza to death he endeavored to show that the death had come by a natural cause. Al-Ma'mun also brought al-Taqi from Medina to Baghdad with the plan of marrying him to his daughter, Umul Fazal. Although the Abbasids made strenuous attempts to forestall it, the marriage was duly solemnised.

After living in Baghdad for eight years, al-Taqi and Umul returned to Medina. There he found his relationship with his wife strained and upon the death of al-Ma'mun in 833 his fortunes deteriorated. The successor to his father-in-law was Al-Mu'tasim. With the new Abbasid ruler in power al-Taqi was no longer protected and his interests and position were imperilled by the dislike that al-Mu'tasim had for him.

In 835, al-Mu'tasim called al-Taqi back to Baghdad. The latter left his son Ali al-Hadi (the tenth Shi’ah Imam) with Somaneh (the mother of Ali al-Hadi) in Medina and set out for Baghdad. He resided there for one more year, becoming a well known scholar and popular in debates.

Death

There are various accounts of the circumstances of his death.

Ibn Sheher Ashoob records [7] that Al-Mu'tasim encouraged Umul Fazal to murder him. She duly poisoned him to death on the twenty-ninth of Dhu al-Qi'dah, 220 Hijra (the 26th year after his birth).

Muhammad at-Taqi is buried beside the grave of his grandfather Musa al-Kadhim (the seventh Shi’ah Imam) within Al Kadhimiya Mosque, in Kadhimayn, Iraq - a popular site for visitation and pilgrimage by Shi’a muslims.

See also

  • Zaynab
  • Umm Kulthūm
  • ‘Abbās
  • ‘Alī al-Akbar
  • ‘Alī al-Asghar
  • Qāsim
  • Sukayna
  • Ma'sūmah Qum
  • Muhammad ibn al-Hanafiyyah
  • Fadhl ibn ‘Abbās
  • Shī‘ah Islām
  • Battle of Karbalā
  • Battle of Siffīn
  • Battle of Nahrawān

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 A Brief History of The Fourteen Infallibles. Qum: Ansariyan Publications. 2004. pp. 145. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 al-Qurashi, Baqir Shareef (2005). The Life of Imam Muhammad Al-Jawad. Qum: Ansariyan Publications. pp. 31. 
  3. A Brief History of The Fourteen Infallibles. Qum: Ansariyan Publications. 2004. pp. 151. 
  4. A Brief History of The Fourteen Infallibles. Ansariyan Publications. pp. 146. 
  5. Quran, Surah Al-Ma'idah Verse 110 (5:110)
  6. Muhammad ibn Yaqub Kulayni, al-Kafi, Vol. I (usul), p.225, No. I Maktabat as-Saduq, Tehran 1961
  7. Sheikh Muhammad ibn Nu'man al-Mufid, Kitab al-Irshad, p. 308, al-Haydari Press, Najaf 1963

External links


Muhammad al-Taqi
Banu Hashim
Cadet branch of the Banu Quraish
Born: 10th Rajab 195 AH ≈ 8th April 811 CE Died: 29th Dhul Qi‘dah 220 AH ≈ 24th November 835 CE
Shī‘a Islam titles
Preceded by
Ali al-Ridha
Imam - IX
of Twelver

818 – 835
Succeeded by
Ali al-Hadi