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The solitude of the Orphan: Ǧābir b. Ḥayyān and the Shiite heterodox milieu of the third/ninth–fourth/tenth centuries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2020

Leonardo Capezzone*
Affiliation:
Sapienza – University of Rome
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Abstract

The community of Shiite alchemists gathered under the pen name of Ǧābir b. Ḥayyān produced an important corpus first studied by Paul Kraus, who dated it between the third/ninth and fourth/tenth centuries. The religious, doctrinal and political issues of the corpus – especially in the last two collections – show that the Ǧābireans were a real sectarian trend unknown to heresiographers. Kraus, along with some scholars after him, understood the Ǧābirean community to be an expression of Ismaili thought. This paper aims to reconsider: a) the religious and political affiliation of Ǧābir's alchemical community in the light of textual comparisons that show a close connection between the Ǧābireans and the esoteric tenets characterizing the Shiite ġuluww as mirrored in the heresiographic sources of the late third/ninth and early fourth/tenth centuries, and in the Ġulāt literary sources; and b) the last collection of the Ǧābirean corpus as a polemical outcome specific to the Shiite milieu between the lesser and the greater Occultation of the twelfth Imam.

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Introduction

The community of Shiite alchemists gathered under the pen name of Ǧābir b. ḤayyānFootnote 1 produced an important corpus usually believed by scholarship to have been redacted between the third/ninth and fourth/tenth century.Footnote 2 The corpus deals not only with alchemy but also – especially in the last two collections – religious, doctrinal, and political issues which led scholars to understand the Ǧābirean community as a particular expression of the Shiite extremist milieu of that period.

The identity of the members, as well as the historicity of their activities, has always been protected by secrecy. Contemporary sources – with some important exceptions such as Ibn al-Nadīm – appear to have firmly shrouded the Ǧābireans in silence, and they managed to escape completely the heresiographic view, as if they had no impact at all on the Shiite sectarian context which surrounded them. Secrecy and anonymity as social and literary devices of voluntary absence – or concealment – are not exclusive prerogatives of the alchemists’ community. In general terms, they may be traced to a literary feature of the medieval Arabic culture whereby attributing a literary work to an author who has mastered the genre to which the work belongs represents a guarantee of authoritativeness and success.Footnote 3 In this case, the founding narrative according to which the alchemical corpus would have been authored by Ǧābir b. Ḥayyān, the pupil of the sixth Imam Ǧaʿfar al- Ṣādiq (d. 148/756), highlights both the powerful aspect of the Imam as a source of (salvific) knowledge, and Ǧābir's existence as well as his writings dating back to the second/eighth century.Footnote 4 However, as regards the intellectual motives underlying the Ǧābirean aim, the use of secrecy and anonymity is in many ways comparable to that of the tenth-century philosophical-scientific community known as Iḫwān al-Ṣafā’.Footnote 5

The founding contribution to the study of Ǧābir b. Ḥayyān's corpus is the work of Paul Kraus. Between 1935 and 1945 he published a collection of Ǧābirean texts, followed by a seminal essay on Ǧābir and Greek science.Footnote 6 Throughout his research Kraus highlighted the dependence of Arabic alchemical knowledge as reflected in Ǧābir's corpus on the cultural traditions of late antiquity, so following a research paradigm which obscured the relationship between Ǧābirean (and Arabic) alchemy and Chinese alchemy.Footnote 7

The amount of data Kraus collected has revealed the existence of an alchemical school, established in the third/ninth century and developed during the fourth/tenth century, named after the alleged disciple of Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq and placed under the authority of the sixth Shiite Imam. Hence, the Ǧābirean corpus was a work in progress and the outcome of investigations carried out over approximately a century. The apparent internal cohesion, as well as cross-references, suggests that it was constantly updated and rehashed to reflect continuity of thought, while remaining loyal to the rule – or method – of the voluntary dispersion of knowledge (tabdīd al-ʿilm).Footnote 8

The chronology and internal organization of the corpus established by Kraus are based on Ibn al-Nadīm's source. As is well known, the bibliographer of Baghdad recorded that the Ǧābirean treatises were gathered into four collections: the Hundred and Twelve Books; the Seventy Books; the Books of Balances; and the Five Hundred Books. The evolution of the corpus is more evident in the third and fourth collections: increasing importance is placed on the epistemological and theoretical aspect of the alchemical investigation, while treatises are devoted to religious, political and doctrinal issues close to the esoteric tenets characterizing the Shiite ġuluww as mirrored in the heresiographic sources of the late third/ninth and early fourth/tenth centuries and in the few surviving Ġulāt literary sources produced in that period.

One Ǧābirean treatise in particular – the Kitāb al-Raḥma – stands apart. Ibn al-Nadīm wrote that some sceptics of his time remained unconvinced that Ǧābir had authored the whole corpus. They admittedly acknowledged that Kitāb al-Raḥma was the only treatise really authored by Ǧābir b. Ḥayyān. Indeed, this text is not included in the list, and Ibn al-Nadīm only mentioned it in the biographical section.Footnote 9 Kraus considered the manuscripts of the Kitāb al-Raḥma as evidence of the continuous processing and rehashing of earlier materials, which was typical of the Ǧābirean community. However, textual evidence led him to establish that the Kitāb al-Raḥma preceded the corpus. His attitude towards this ancient work was curiously close to that of the sceptics mentioned by Ibn al-Nadīm; he actually deemed it separate from the whole Ǧābirean corpus, and somehow extraneous to the issue of Ǧābir b. Ḥayyān's historicity.

As for the community's belonging to the Shiite extremist wing, as reflected throughout the corpus in speculations about the figure of the Imam and the initiatory hierarchy of the epistemic access to his salvific knowledge, according to Kraus the Ǧābireans’ religious and political attitude may have been related to Ismailism or Qarmatism. The scholar's tragic death prevented him from developing such conjecture.Footnote 10 The Ǧābirean connection with Ismaili doctrines has been discussed and accepted by scholars like Henri Corbin (to whom we shall return) and Yves Marquet, although this idea has been criticized in more recent research carried out by Pierre Lory.Footnote 11

Although the corpus shares cultural paradigms common to the Arabic Hermetic culture (which also imbued Ismaili natural philosophy) on which Kevin van Bladel shed new light,Footnote 12 scholarship has usually perceived and consequently depicted the Ǧābirean community as if it were separate, or even entirely absent, from the religious and political debates and tensions that dramatically animated the Shiite scene between the end of the third/ninth and first decades of the fourth/tenth centuries – the critical period between the lesser and the greater Occultation of the twelfth Imam. Thus, the Ǧābireans and their corpus seem to be worlds apart in the historical space: although some of the later treatises of the corpus have a firmly politico-religious aim, which could suggest the Ǧābireans were a real sectarian trend, coeval heresiography does not seem to have recognized their actual existence. The dating of the corpus has always been evaluated in relation to external elements and factors, while no attempt has been made to contextualize the activities of the Ǧābirean community within the history of early Shiism.

On the contrary, this paper focuses on the presence of this alchemical community in the complex Shiite context of the fourth/tenth century, marked by the concealment of the twelfth Imam. In that period, a conflict between orthodox and heterodox doctrinal visions began to develop. The latter represented the expression of an élite, and hence advocated the superiority of the hermeneutic and esoteric interpretation of the charismatic knowledge of the Imam, to which scholars of early Shiism have turned their attention in recent years.Footnote 13 In this context the sectarian milieu of the ġuluww is described by the heresiography of the end of the third/ninth and beginning of the fourth/tenth century (ps. al-Nāšiʿ al-Akbar, al-Nawbaḫtī, al-Qummī),Footnote 14 with various doctrinal fronts claiming the intellectual (and political) legacy of the vanished Imam and its correct interpretation. A line of esoteric thought can be recognized among these various fronts. Shiite Imamite heresiography of the fourth/tenth–fifth/eleventh centuries traces this line back to some of the most intimate disciples of Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq (such as Abū’l-Ḫaṭṭāb and Mufaḍḍal ibn ʿUmar al-Ǧuʿfī).Footnote 15 This same line is more evident in texts such as Umm al-Kitāb (UK), Kitāb al-Haft wa'l-aẓilla (KHA) and Kitāb al-Ṣirāṭ (KṢ) (all written between the third/ninth–fourth/tenth and fifth/eleventh centuries). These texts emanate from an exegetical climate centred on the soteriological knowledge of the Imam which even permeates the doctrinal treatises of the Ǧābirean corpus: a common paraphrase reflecting an identical and shared religious and speculative disposition can be obtained by epitomizing the former and latter series of texts.

I shall seek to highlight some features of what can be defined as a Shiite style of thought, common to the surviving esoteric texts and the last production of the Ǧābirean community, which early heresiography has long been concerned with. The first common feature is a historical issue that marked the origins of Shiite ġuluww: the transfer of the Alid Imam's charisma to people who had no genealogical ties with the Prophet Muḥammad's family. Heresiographers understood that issue as a link between the early appearance of heterodoxy (e.g. the extremism professed by Abū’l-Ḫaṭṭāb) and the spread of doctrines such as those of the mufawwiḍa or muḫammisa sects in the third/ninth and fourth/tenth centuries.Footnote 16 The convergence of the manifold meanings of this theme into the symbolism of a particular figure, the Orphan (yatīm), can be observed over time.

1. The Shiite ġuluww and the transfer of the Imam's charisma outside the Alid genealogy

The spread of religious propaganda centred on a non-genealogical, spiritual transmission of the imamate occurred with the revolt of ʿAbd Allāh b. Muʿāwiya, which broke out in 126/744. While not a fully-fledged doctrine, it was based on the transfer of the Imam's religious charisma to an element outside of the Prophet's family, and was therefore extraneous to the genealogical link that gave rise to the conception of the passage of the Imamate and of political-religious charisma itself. The earliest heresiography provides a narrative of the spread of a set of beliefs relating to the heresy of ʿAbd Allāh b. Harb.Footnote 17 According to the heresiographers, those beliefs would have been divulged by close disciples of Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq.Footnote 18 The main themes of these descriptions are: Messianism, the belief in the pre-existence of the souls of the Imams in the form of shadow (aẓilla); the antinomian exegetical tendency according to which knowledge of the word of the Imam frees people from the burden of the Law; and a gnosis founded on the ascent or descent of the soul which approaches or moves away from the saving knowledge of the Imam and experiences a path of transmutation (tanāsuḫ) through mineral, vegetable, and animal forms. The esoteric texts that appear to stem from the dissemination of these doctrines are the UK, KHA, and KṢ. Footnote 19

Tanāsuḫ seems to be the keyword indicating a heterodox style of thought that unifies the sectarian phenomena of ġuluww described by the heresiographers.Footnote 20 A comparison of the surviving texts emanating from the esoteric context linked to the transmission of the most intimate disciples of Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq, the accounts of the heresiographers, and the Ǧābirean treatises that deviate from alchemical concerns and instead show a more markedly doctrinal approach, allow us to construct a common paraphrase, taken from the same religious and epistemological horizon. This case may represent a process of intertextuality.

The term tanāsuḫ hints at this intertextuality. This word does not occur in the Kitāb al-Raḥma, the earliest treatise attributed to the Ǧābireans, despite the fact that the text deals with the problem of the transmutation of bodies when they are subject to certain alchemical operations.Footnote 21 The aforementioned heresiographic texts seem to recognize it as the keyword of doctrines developed by the extreme sectarianism that stirred up the political and religious panorama between the second/eighth and fourth/tenth centuries – the period in which the Ǧābirean corpus was redacted. However, when the heresiography quotes heterodox statements, issues concerning state transitions and transmutations of the soul frequently revolve around the verb intaqala and the verbal nouns of the root N-Q-L: precisely in the sense in which they occur in Ǧābir. On the other hand, textual findings regarding the term tanāsuḫ are highly recurrent in the KHA and KṢ, which heresiographers may have used as sources.Footnote 22 Indeed, in those texts the term tanāsuḫ always occurs within a semantic field that places it not only in inferential but also synonymical relationship with the term tarkīb (structure, compound). Moreover, in a passage from the Ǧābirean Kitab al-Ḥaǧar the author speaks of “some of our books (kutubunā) on tanāsuḫ”.Footnote 23 None of these texts survive today. However, the Persian alchemist al-Ṭuġrā’ī (d. 514/1121) recorded a long fragment from a Kitāb al-Ištimāl repeatedly cited in the Ǧābirean corpus.Footnote 24 The main themes of this fragment are: time, the periodic cycles that mark the history of humanity, and the laws of the transmigration of souls. According to Ǧābir, souls have a celestial origin, but they have lapsed and fallen into a state of admixture (with matter) (al-mīzāǧ – a widespread concept in the KHA and KṢ) that involves the world of generation and corruption. The author does not explain the causes of the fall, but frames them within the law of necessity. Fallen souls have to take on a number of forms to purify themselves from corruption and ignorance.Footnote 25 The outcomes of this process of transmigration (masḫ and rasḫ – other very frequent terms in the KHA and KṢ) depend on the soul's insistence on error and sin, or on its choice to emancipate itself from ignorance. Ǧābir lingers on the second alternative, which allows the soul to reacquire its original form along an ascending path marked by transmutations (intiqāl, takrīr) capable of purifying the structure of the body.

In the incipit to his version of the Ǧābirean text, al-Ṭuġrā’ī thus writes:Footnote 26

This text is interwoven with difficult metaphors (rumūz), because in the literal sense it is written in the language of the supporters of the transmigration of souls (mubannā ʿalā kalām ahl al-tanāsuḫ fī-l-ẓāhir). In a figurative sense, however, [it alludes] to the teaching of the [alchemical]Art. Indeed, I have the doubt that many readers will be misled by this book, will not understand its enigmas (maġzāhu) and will dissolve them in the light of their outward sense.

Is tanāsuḫ a metaphor?Footnote 27 The KHA and KṢ seem to use this term in the exegesis of some Quranic verses, adopting it according to the descriptive model it provides: a similitude between the processes of physical transformation and the evolutionary cycles of the soul. Knowledge of the Imam is salvific: the KHA and KṢ repeatedly state that the sin of ignorance, punished with the gradations of the tanāsuḫ, can only be healed by recognizing the Imam. Through the assumption of his redemptive knowledge, human beings can rediscover their original integrity. In his Kitāb al-Mulk, Ǧābir declares the correspondence between the supreme elixir, which allows the transmutation of base metals into silver and gold, and the Imam. They share the power to purify, reconstitute, and heal the soul from its malaise:Footnote 28

Know, o brother, that the water, when it is thoroughly mixed with the Tincture and the Oil, coagulates, fixing itself in a look similar to a coral grain. When it has reached this step, and has become a docilely and fusible matter which cerifies, by now able to penetrate all metals, well, if it is really like that, it is the Imam. […] For God, for my teacher – God preserve him! I never revealed [this procedure] in any of my books, except in one, called Kitāb al-Mawāzīn. There I had spoken in such a way that no one could understand or sense the meaning. Those who had come to do this through their direct experience could not fully understand its meaning, except for one word. It may be that whoever came to the material achievement of the Work understood me. My word is: unless God grants you the joy of seeing the Imam. Who has never performed the operation will never understand what I am talking about. But I said this – for my teacher Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq, peace be upon him – in a clear and eloquent way, without symbols or enigmas, nor metaphorical expressions, as scholars usually do, and as I myself did in my books. I have done this so that my teacher – on him be peace – knows that I was neither ungenerous nor enigmatic in my words. Perhaps thanks to my effort, he will free me from the corruption of this world.

Therefore, in its metaphorical constructs Ǧābirean speech recognized that the risk of an interpretative drift was to be avoided. The gap between Ǧābir's utterance and al-Ṭuġrāʾī's reading is at the very least disconcerting. When Ǧābir adopts a metaphor he follows a stylistic code that produces clarity and rejects the enigma, which may be understood by those who share the same images of knowledge.Footnote 29 Thus, a process of intertextuality occurs in both the Ǧābirean texts and the esoteric texts, which allows at least a unified paraphrase – which even those who remain outside the stylistic and epistemic code (the medieval heresiographer and the modern reader) could achieve. When al-Qummī, in his Kitāb al-Maqālāt, reports the terms of a cognitive progression toward the Imam, marked by the passing of tests, he may have had before him the Kitāb al-Ištimāl as well as some passages of the KṢ or KHA:Footnote 30

Some of them do not believe that these verses [of the Quran] have a meaning of dispensation. Indeed, they believe that to every precept corresponds a sanction, and that the ultimate goal [of a discipline] is the passing of a test (imtiḥān). When a believer passes [the test], he can be considered free from the burden of impositions (saqaṭat ʿanhu al-miḥna). Therefore, it is not enough that the faithful be proficient and in a state of ritual purity, if he does not learn in depth the principles of the doctrine, because he will not pass his trial, and his knowledge will not experience progress in wisdom (lam yuḥsin fī’l-ḥikma iḫtibāruhu). Just as pure gold, though purified through an acidic substance (ḫall) and fire [may still contain] some slag, so the faithful examined by his lord may still reveal impurities and concretions. This is why the faithful experiences and investigates (yaḫtabiru wa-yaftišu), and when he really gets cleansed and perfected, he can consider himself free from the prohibitions that bind others.

In the KṢ we read:Footnote 31

When the believer has reached the seventh step and with it he will have achieved its path, then it will emancipate itself from the bond of the adoration. He will be free, and emancipated (ṣāra ḥurran wa-muḥarraran). He can do without discipline (fa-staġnā ʿalā al-taʾlīm) since he knows what is given to know, sees what is given to see, and hears what is given to hear. He will find what he aspired to, and finally he will be free from the burden of the quest.

Similarly, the same epistemic framework can be grasped by drawing a parallel between the initiatory hierarchy established in the KṢ and that resulting from the Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn, at the top of which Ǧābir places the Prophet, the Imam, and then the yatīm, the Orphan, followed by the rank of the Threshold (bāb).Footnote 32

2. The principle of the Orphan

The transfer of charisma outside of the Prophet's family places particular emphasis on the Orphan. The role and rank of the Orphan (yatīm) are magnified in the UK, the KHA, and the KṢ, making it one of the key figures of the initiatory hierarchy of proximity to the Imam's redemptive knowledge. One of the later treatises of the Ǧābirean community – the Kitāb al-Māǧid contained in the last collection of the corpus, the Five Hundred Books – is devoted to the precedence of the three ʿAyn-Mīm-Sīn principles (ʿAlī-Muḥammad-Salmān) and the subordination of the principle of Sīn to that of ʿAyn.

Henry Corbin based his approach to the Kitāb al-Māǧid on Kraus’ hypothesis about the Ǧābirean community's affiliation to Ismailism. The three doctrinal principles of ʿAyn, Mīm, and Sīn were thus interpreted by Corbin's hermeneutic sensitivity in light of an Ismaili-oriented reading.Footnote 33 However, Heinz Halm has shown that this nucleus of doctrines revolving around the supremacy of Muḥammad, ʿAlī and Salmān (of which, as we shall see, the Kitāb al-Māǧid gives an exposition that implicitly re-emerges in the heresiography) was unknown in the context in which Fatimid Ismailite propaganda spread between the third/ninth and the fourth/tenth centuries.Footnote 34

Let us return to some sources that describe the Shiite heterodox landscape in Baghdad during the fourth/tenth century. One of them is Masʿūdī. In one passage of his Murūǧ al-ḏahab the doctrines of the tanāsuḫ and the tafwīḍ (i.e. “entrustment”, an echo of the emanationist doctrines, with which God entrusted the creation to the five members of the Prophet's family) are attributed to sectarian groups who believe that members of the Prophet's family pre-existed in shadow form (aẓilla). Two of these sects are of interest to us: muḥammadiyya and ʿilbāniyya (ʿilbā’īyya):Footnote 35

This error was supported by many of their authors, and also by the most subtle of their theologians, who belonged to the muḥammadiyya, ʿilbāniyya or even to other sects. Among these, we should remember Ishaq b. Muhammad al-Naḫaʿī, called al-Aḥmar, well-known for his book entitled Kitāb al-Ṣirāṭ. This book has been refuted by al-Fayyāḍ b. ʿAlī b. Muḥammad in his book entitled al-Qusṭās, and by al-Nahkīnī. Those authors belong to the muḥammadiyya, and have refuted the tenets of [the sect of the] ʿilbāniyya, which are professed in the Kitāb al-Ṣirāṭ.Footnote 36 We have already had [elsewhere] the opportunity to talk about muhammadiyya, ʿilbāniyya, muġīriyya and all the other heterodox doctrines, such as those of the entrustment (tafwīḍ), or the mediation (waṣāʾiṭ); we have already refuted them all and also the ones who preach the transmigration of souls (tanāsuḫ al-arwāḥ) in animal species, whether they are Muslims or wise men from ancient Greece, or India, or they are dualist, Zoroastrians, or Christians. We already gave our arguments against the heretics who have preceded us or who live in our time, in the year 322 [933–4].

To better understand this doctrinal framework it is useful to take a step forward to al-Šahrastānī:Footnote 37

The ʿAlbāʾiyya are the followers of al-ʿAlbāʾ b. Ḏiraʾ al-Dawsī, who set ʿAlī above the Prophet, saying that Muḥammad had been sent by ʿAlī, whom he called a divine being […]. Some believe in the divinity of both ʿAlī and Muḥammad, but for them ʿAlī is superior; these are called the ʿAyniyya. Others who consider them both divine put Muḥammad first; these are called the Mīmiyya. Some others believe in the divinity of all five Companions of the Cloak: Muḥammad, ʿAlī, Fāṭima, Ḥasan and Ḥusayn, all of them equally imbued with the spirit of God.

Al-Masʿūdī describes, during a period of crisis brought about by the concealment of the twelfth Imam, some Shiite orientations speculating on a gnosis focused on the pre-existence of members of the Prophet's family, and their demiurgic function. The scenario seems to be split between muḥammadiyya – or mīmiyya, as specified by al-Šahrastānī – which favours the absolute superiority of Muḥammad's prophecy, and ʿilbāniyya/ʿalbāniyya,Footnote 38 or ʿayniyya, which instead exalts the role of ʿAlī and believes in the pre-eminence of the wilāya over the nubuwwa, the interpreter of the Law over the legislator and the heir of the prophecy over the prophet himself. The surviving esoteric texts – especially the KṢ – are unequivocally aligned on the principle of ʿAyn, and formulate with unusual clarity (which perhaps testifies their early dating) the terms of the theological framework on which this priority is based: the dependence of ism = Name / Signifier = Mīm = Muḥammad upon maʿnā = Sign / Signified = ʿAlī.Footnote 39

The heresiographic texts make no mention of a third paradigm, that of the Threshold (bāb) which permits access to the Word and its Meaning. In the UK, the earliest of the texts containing the (alleged)Footnote 40 teaching of the fifth and sixth Imams Muḥammad al-Bāqir and Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq, the emergence of this paradigm is clearly evident and centres around Salmān. Indeed, al-Qummī proves he is aware of the existence of doctrines revolving around the theme of spiritual adoption. In the long paragraph dedicated to the sect named muḫammisa, he writes:Footnote 41

They believe that […] God Almighty manifested himself to his creatures throughout all cycles and periods; he made himself visible to them in the form of light and urged them to accept the message of his unicity, but they refused. He became visible through the threshold of the prophecy (min bāb al-nubuwwa wa-l-risāla) but the creatures still refused. He then became visible through the threshold of the Imamate (min bāb al-imāma), and they accepted. Then God Almighty granted the Imamate and destined those who shared the pure substance of Muḥammad to be made of light. […] But the sign (maʿnā) was always one: it was Salmān, threshold of the Prophet, who manifested himself together with Muḥammad in each of his epiphanies among the Arabs and the Persians. Other thresholds had manifested themselves together with Muḥammad in various shapes, forming [the hierarchy] of the Thresholds, the Orphans (aytām), the Nobles (nuǧabāʾ), the Leaders (nuqabāʾ), the Elects (muṣṭafiyyīn), the Competents (muḫtaṣṣīn), the Examiners (mumtaḥinīn), and the Believers (muʾminīn).Footnote 42 The sign of the Threshold is Salmān, and he is the messenger of Muḥammad, and is connected to him, while Muḥammad is the Lord (al-rabb). The sign of the Orphan is Miqdād. He is so-called because he is close to the Threshold, but stands in solitude because he is not joined to the first two (li-qurbihi min al-bāb wa-tafarrudihi bi-l-ittiṣāl minhumā). The Orphans are two, the minor and the major: the greater is Miqdād, the lesser is Abū Ḏarr.

As described in the heresiography, the initiatory approach to the Imam's esoteric knowledge proceeds according to a paradigm of epistemic access based on the symbolism of the adoption and assumption of the Imam's legacy of knowledge by a figure totally extraneous to the Prophet's offspring. Emphasis is placed on figures that exalt this extraneousness through the paradigmatic condition of the stranger or the Orphan, symbolized by archetypal figures of the conversion to Islam such as Abū Ḏarr, al-Miqdād, and Salmān, who were among the first companions of ʿAlī: all three are characterized by a condition of extraneousness and liminality. An intense elaboration at both a hagiographic and at a symbolic and mythological level had developed around them.Footnote 43 Shiite heterodoxy makes them symbolic steps of the initiatory hierarchy towards the Imam's knowledge. Al-Nawbaḫtī and al-Qummī, relying on the same source, denounce these doctrines, based on a deviant exegesis of Q. 89: 15–6, and replied with what they considered to be the correct interpretation of Q. 89: 17–9:Footnote 44

So they interpret God's word: “When his Lord tries him through honour and blessings, he says, ‘My Lord has honoured me’, but when He tries him through the restriction of his provision, he says, ‘My Lord has humiliated me’. Yet, it is the very word of God that denies them, and replies to them, showing the evidence of the error in which they incur: “No indeed! You [people] do not honour orphans”, – that is the Prophet – “you do not urge one another to feed the poor”– that is the legitimate Imam (al-imām al-waṣī) – “you consume inheritance greedily”.

All of this is relevant to the Ǧābirean problem, because exalting the role of the Orphan is the focus of the initiatory (and political) ideology that emerges from the treatises included in the last collection of the corpus, the Five Hundred Books. If the corpus was complete, as Kraus proposed, by the fourth/tenth century, the Ǧābirean treatise entitled Kitāb al-Māğid could be one of the first attestations (if not the earliest) of a principle of the Sīn (actually unknown to heresiographers) alongside the principles of the ʿAyn and Mīm, polemically addressed to the only other contemporary claim founded on the triad ʿAyn-Mīm-Sīn and on the charismatic role of the bāb, originating from al-Ḥusayn b. Ḥamdān al-Ḫasībī (d. 346/957) and his circle between the lesser and the greater Occultation.Footnote 45

Some treatises of the last two collections of the Ǧābirean corpus thus provide important clues to establishing the religious (and political) position of the Ǧābirean community within the context of the conflicts and tensions that arose in the aftermath of the proclamation of the twelfth Imam's concealment. In this context, several fronts within the Shiite community contended with each other for the intellectual, religious and political legacy of the Imamate. These treatises give rise to a self-referential vision of the messianic role of the alchemist/scientist. On a theoretical basis, the Ǧābirean community – identifying itself in the figure of the Orphan, the supreme epistemic access to the Imam's knowledge – declared itself to be the legitimate heir of the contested legacy. In cultural terms, the community participated in the main philosophical debates that overcame the boundary between the Sunnis and the Shiites: the problem of the law (šarīʿa vs. nomos) and the problem of how to acquire knowledge – which the Ǧābireans imagined could be reproduced. In operative terms, the Ǧābirean Utopia came to conceive of the creation of a creature capable of reproducing the supreme quality of the Imam: a legislative disposition (nāmūsī al-ṭibāʿ).

3. The political–philosophical issue of knowledge

The brain and its faculties was one of the main issues debated in the Arab–Islamic intellectual scene of the fourth/tenth century.Footnote 46 In that same period, philosophical thought was concerned with another significant problem: understanding the divine Law according to the Platonic sense of the nomos. Knowledge and its acquisition lie at the very heart of Shiite epistemology: knowledge of the Imam was in itself a theory of cognition. The late antique cultural legacy led in ambivalent terms to a physical and religious approach to the debates on the modalities of the intellect. The long passage in the UK in which the Imam Muḥammad al-Bāqir describes the hierarchy of the senses in correspondence to an initiatory hierarchy formed by certain characters depending upon their different approach to the Imam is an aspect of these investigations.Footnote 47

In the KṢ – an excellent allegory of knowledge – the Imam Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq describes a theory of perception according to which the senses form an apparatus that acts as a filter of the intellect (ʿaql), which is the substance giving the senses the right order (al-ǧawhar al-mudabbir). The ṣirāṭ, namely the path to knowledge, is accessed through the senses and the intellect. Cognitive experience is expressed through language, which translates the processes of the intellect into action. The senses, driven by the will, are the interpreters and translators of the ordering substance. Language is brought back to the level of ẓāhir (the realm of appearance) while the intellect belongs to the level of bāṭin (the realm of esoteric knowledge). Those aware of the logical processes underpinning the modalities of knowledge acquire an increase in perception that consolidates self-consciousness (zāda fī mawǧūdihi): alongside the theory of perception, a theory of happiness and health is thus outlined.Footnote 48

Ǧābir is aligned with this configuration of knowledge, which in religious terms originates from the Imam and returns to the Imam. Nonetheless, the Ǧābireans widen the boundaries of the investigation, conceiving of a “scientific” answer to a religious–philosophical dilemma – indeed, one that is consequential, albeit disruptive, to the progression of the desires that alchemy allows its pupils (a consequence of increased self-consciousness?): the artificial generation of human beings.Footnote 49 This problem is systematically addressed in the Kitāb al-Taǧmīʿ and in the Kitāb al-Taṣrīf.Footnote 50 However, artificial generation seems to be just one outcome that leads to further different perspectives: in the Kitāb al-Taǧmīʿ, the assembling of a human body is linked to the problem of knowledge, its acquisition, and the physiological devices that determine it. Ǧābireans share the classical Galenic tripartite brain theory, and pay special attention to which of the three parts is the most suited to generate knowledge acquisition processes: the part in which imagination (ḫayāl) lies; the part where thought (fikr) resides; or the part devoted to memory (ḏikr).Footnote 51 They are especially interested in learning how knowledge manifests through cognitive competence and language (wuqūʿ al-ʿilm lahu wa-l-nuṭq).Footnote 52 However, behind the aim of creating brain faculties lies a political project. The Ǧābireans sought to give life to an intelligent creature “endowed with life (ḥayy), penetration (ḥādd), imagination (ḫayūl), and with a legislative attitude (nāmūsī al-ṭibāʿ)”. They clearly state that they were able to generate law-bearing beings (tawlīd aṣḥāb al-nawāmīs).Footnote 53

What sources do the Ǧābireans refer to explicitly? Pseudepigraphic texts, such as a Kitāb al-Tawlīd attributed to Porphyry, or a pseudo-Platonic Kitāb al-Nawāmīs.Footnote 54 Despite the apparent modernity of the project, the Ǧābirean library contains texts belonging to a Hermetic – or better pseudo-HermeticFootnote 55 – tradition closely linked to the physika dynameis literature and theurgical procedures of late antiquity, with which the body of knowledge informing the Kitāb al-Taǧmīʿ is still imbued. But a shift in the operative axis regarding the legislative nature of the creature also reveals a commitment, and the Ǧābireans’ participation in issues that engaged the fourth/tenth-century political philosophy, in search of a conciliation (as in the case of al-Fārābī) between the nomos of the Greek philosophical tradition and the šarīʿa contained in the Islamic revelation. In this period, Islamic political philosophy inspired by PlatoFootnote 56 had in fact led falsafa to investigate, on the one hand, the correlation between the concept of law and the philosophical status of those who promulgate laws and, on the other, the recognition in Islamic terms of the political significance of the divine revelation.Footnote 57

We know from Ibn al-Nadīm that the last collection, the Five Hundred Books, had been planned in view of a refutation against the philosophers (naqḍan ʿalāʾl-falāsifa).Footnote 58 Of course, we do not know against which philosophers the controversy was targeted – the ancients or the moderns.Footnote 59 However, the current use, also contemplated by Ǧābir, which distinguishes between the term ḥukamāʾ (referring to an ancient wisdom, with which alchemists were in contact), and the term falāsifa (usually applied to pure Greek philosophy, but also to the great masters of the alchemical Art) seems to denote a specific direction of the polemical intent. Moreover, the Ǧābireans share the philosophical–political framework of the debates on the relationship between politics and intellect: the laws (nawāmīs) those texts refer to are explicitly related to political government (siyāsa).Footnote 60

Faced with the bewilderment experienced within the Shiite community after the disappearance of the Imam, the challenging response provided by the Ǧābirean community seems to be aimed at overcoming the historical person of the Imam – not denying him, but instead reacting to his absence – which made the correct application of the šarīʿa impossible to accomplish. This leans towards what we might even call science-fiction ante litteram. Nonetheless, it enhances the redemptive role of science (alchemy) and the political function (in the Platonic sense) of the elite of scientists: they can generate a creature that is not the Imam, but that reproduces the brain mechanisms, giving rise to a complex body capable of offering salvation through the law. At least so they declare, adhering to the semiotic system of the alchemical communication according to which the experiment is always described, without having been achieved.

4. The political perspective of the Ǧābirean community

Paul Kraus deemed the Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn to be one of the Ǧābirean texts that best illustrates the alchemical community's affiliation to Ismailism.Footnote 61 Here the Ǧābirean writers offer their vision of the history of the Imamate. There are no particularly discordant positions with respect to the current views: the controversial cases of Muḥammad b al-Ḥanafiyya and the succession of Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq are examined. According to the Ǧābireans, who speak here in the first person (fa-naqūlu), with regard to the appointment of Ismāʿīl followed by a rethinking in favour of Mūsā al-Kāẓim, the sixth Imam would have acted according to his cognitive faculties.Footnote 62 Ǧābir does not seem to deny the legitimacy of the Imams after al-Kāẓim, although he admits that some Imams were more important than others. The implicit position of the Ǧābirean community stands firm in acknowledging the absolute charisma of Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq, and seems to accept the legitimacy of al-Kāẓim's Imamate as a consequence of that charisma. A passage from the treatise reports the opinion of a group (ṭāʾifa) according to whom, if the order of the Imamate kept stable (mustaqīm) by the first six Imams had been followed by a period of disorder and confusion, it would have been marked by the emergence of an Imam vicar with the status of nāṭiq. Instead, again according to this group, Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq revealed his knowledge of a final order (šaddada al-ʿilm wa-naẓarahu) in such a way as to render useless the advent of a vicar to fulfil the role of nāṭiq.Footnote 63 Ǧābir emphasizes the unlikeliness of such an assertion without adding anything else. Given that, for him, the Imamate is primarily a question of ʿilm, his objection can be interpreted as an act of exclusive dependence on the sixth Imam.Footnote 64 In the following passage, Ǧābir suggests that the person (šaḫṣ) who acquires total knowledge and is able to unify both the eloquent and silent dimension (ğāmiʿ al-nuṭq wa-l-ṣamt) is represented by the same Ǧābirean corpus. The internal consistency of the corpus leads us to read this statement within the framework of the Ǧābirian mimesis, which sees the Imam saying to his pupil “Kneel in front of me, o Ǧābir, because in truth you shall kneel to yourself”. Or when Ǧābir, now a teacher, tells one of his disciples: “If you know the reasons of the order I have given to my books, you will be Ǧābir”.Footnote 65 The Ǧābirean political view leads to an apocalyptic dimension in Kitāb al-Bayān:Footnote 66

This person, o brother, will appear only in a moment that will make inevitable profound mutations (intiqalāt), when the sciences will be neglected, the religions will be corrupted, the disorder will be unchallenged. It will be then that a total refoundation will manifest itself: then, the first renewal that [that person] will bring will be the composition of books on the sciences, and the demonstration of the irrefutable proofs they contain. Then, that person will raise his sword, and with the sword will reform the souls of those who cannot get enhanced, and need to be induced in a cycle of purification (takrīr),Footnote 67 since they are incapable of purifying themselves with the sciences.

We might question whether that person, transposed here in an apocalyptic dimension, is the same person who in the Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn embodied the attributes of explicitation and silence, evidently destined to establish the nomos/nāmūs.

The Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn is a text fundamental to understanding the political–religious views of the Ǧābirean community. The progression of the names designating the degrees of the initiatory hierarchy (55), as indicated in the list that opens the treatise, does not correspond to the exact position they occupy in the hierarchy. This is specified only later, when the author comments on the attributes of each degree. In the first list the Orphan (yatīm) is ranked twentieth, but in the comment he appears according to the real succession thus illustrated:Footnote 68

Some claim that each of these people holds the knowledge of the Imam; this would allow them to become Imams. The most acute discernment is proper to those who possess reason: that is their definition of Imam, for which [the Imam] is the one who in addition to possessing a complete knowledge also knows how to put it into practice. However, other people [of the hierarchy] do not act [by virtue of that knowledge] nor can they impose it. The Veil is composed of two persons: one is good, adorns himself with that knowledge and with the company of men, and if questioned he transmits [his knowledge] showing himself gently; the other is evil, hides [knowledge] and is arrogant. The Orphan is educated by the Imam (tarbiyat al-imām),Footnote 69 and is always bound to him. It is veiled, and only the Imam can see him. The Threshold (bāb) is the operator of the great Work, which can only be explained by the words [of the Prophet]: “I am the city of knowledge and ʿAlī is the key”. It is good to clarify how every Prophet, Imam, Orphan and Threshold can be defined as such, and then to proceed with other people. […] Not all Imams have to deal with an Orphan, even if there have been Imams in connection with an Orphan: that is not the image (ṣūra) of Ḥasan, Ḥusayn and Muḥammad b. al-Ḥanafiyya in relation to ʿAlī, who was instead in that particular relationship with the Prophet, while instead ʿAlī was an Orphan. Likewise, there was no Threshold between them, whereas ʿAlī was a Threshold. These two figures [the Orphan and the Threshold] represent two distinct virtues (faḍlān), even if their personifications (ašḫāṣ) coincide. The subsequent Imams [after ʿAlī] learned from their Thresholds. This is why Ḥusayn was preferred by some to Ḥasan, because the latter learned from his father, while the first learned as much from his father as from Ḥasan. And although it was said that Ḥasan had learned from the Prophet, from ʿAlī, and from Salmān, yet Ḥusayn had learned from all three, and furthermore from his brother. […] As to the difference between the Prophet and the Imam, the first speaks, the second is silent. The Prophet commands, and the Veil is commanded, the Imam is commanded but knows what has been commanded, while the Veil does not know the command received as a whole. The Prophet acts, governs and commands, while the Orphan does not act, does not govern and does not command, the Imam is silent and speaks, while the Orphan does not keep silent and does not speak, and does not know the command received as a whole. The Veil is commanded, while the Orphan is not. The Prophet is multiple (ǧāmiʿ), the Threshold is unique. The Imam rules, while the Threshold is a guide. The Threshold knows, the Veil does not know. The Threshold is joined (muttaṣil), but the Orphan is alone (munfaṣil). The Threshold is fixed, the Orphan is in movement.

Deciphering the very meaning of the attributes with which the mutual relationship between the first four figures of the hierarchy are defined is not an easy task. One can, however, grasp the historicity of such a vision by comparing it with the heresiographical record: “the Threshold is joined, but the Orphan is alone”, writes Ǧābir; “He is called Orphan because he is close to the Threshold, but stands in solitude, since he is not joined [to the Threshold and the Prophet]”, writes al-Qummī, recognizing in this image one of the muḫammisa tenets.Footnote 70 However, there are precise indications on the paradigmatic functions of ʿAlī, who here seems to indicate that both the figures of the Orphan and the Threshold converge into the same person. The Ǧābirean formulation of the priority of the principle of the ʿAyn focuses on this point.

In my opinion, this text should be read coherently with the refutative aims underpinning the entire collection of the Five Hundred Books (according to Ibn al-Nadīm). This can also be understood by looking at the opinions reported at the beginning on the nature of the Imam's knowledge. In particular, the Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn should be placed in parallel to the Kitāb al-Māǧid, entirely dedicated, as we have seen, to formalizing the three principles ʿAyn - Mīm - Sīn, and to prioritizing the ʿAyn over the other two on the basis of the numerical value of the letters that make up the names of the three paradigm characters.

The interpretations of this treatise converge on a fundamental point, which I too endorse: māǧid is the symbolic representation of the yatīm, of the Orphan reaching its highest degree in the hierarchy of knowledge not by virtue of a genealogical link with the Imam and the Prophet's family, but due to the absolute intellectual dependence that binds him to the Imam. This would explain the view of māǧid as the archetype of those who aspire to become ǦābirFootnote 71 – or to cover the political role reserved for the Imam.Footnote 72 The demonstration of the priority of the ʿAyn over the Sīn through the relationship between the alphabet and numerology seems to be an even more sophisticated, cryptic version of the theory described in the Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn: ʿAlī, the prototype of each Imam, also includes in himself the Threshold and Orphan paradigms. The absolute dependence of the Orphan on the Imam creates a relationship of exclusive privilege according to which the Orphan is implicitly superior to the Threshold. Such superiority of the yatīm over the Bāb is demonstrated by describing the close analogy between these two figures and those of the ʿAyn and the Sīn: being a direct emanation of the principle of the ʿAyn, the Orphan is the immediate holder of the Imam's knowledge. This privilege is recalled in a minor treatise of the same collection, the Kitāb al-Ḫalīl, where the authors implicitly refer to the passages on the Orphan in the Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn, and thus write: “We have already spoken about the attributes of the Orphan, saying that he was instructed by the Imam. He is his delegate (nāʾib), and later (baʿd: after his concealment?) he takes his place (qāma maqāmahu) as if he were his son.”Footnote 73

As we have seen, an affirmation stands out with all its disturbing weight among the functions the Ǧābireans assign to the top of the hierarchy: “The Threshold is the operator of the great Work”. If everything converges towards a parallel between the two ranks of the Threshold and the Orphan – as the final statement of the passage quoted here shows – which are distinct in function but unified in a single person, is it perhaps possible to perceive between the lines a declaration directed against someone who claims, in turn and at that time, the role of bāb for himself? If the Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn implicitly refers to the refutation of the Sīn priority contained in the Kitāb al-Māǧid, is it perhaps possible to identify the target of the Ǧābirean discussion as someone who, at that time, in the Shiite esoteric hierarchy of the after-ġayba, claimed the role of bāb by exalting the paradigm of the Sīn? The confutative aim of the last Ǧābirean collection was likely directed against someone perfectly able to understand the alchemical perspective from which the Ǧābireans launched its claim to primacy.

5. Contextualizing the last Ǧābirean treatises

The Sīn paradigm, to which the supremacy of the figure of the bāb corresponds, could have been another answer to overcoming the crisis following the disappearance of the twelfth Imam. During the period of minor concealment (260/874–329/941), when relations between the Imam and the Shiite community were managed by the four sufarāʾ, a harsh confrontation divided the orientations of Shiism.Footnote 74 At the top of the wikāla governing the Shiite community, the elitist tendencies related to muḫammisa stood against a front whose goal was to stress the theological-juridical nature of the Imam's knowledge, and was possibly more willing to provide answers to the doubts raised by the masses.Footnote 75 In this period, marked by Ibn al-Furāt's powerful pro-Shiite visirate, a tendency emerged, which Abū Ǧaʿfar al-Ṭūsī defined as bābawiyya. The challenge against the government of the sufarāʾ came from the bureaucratic apparatus at the highest level of the Shiite community.Footnote 76 Among the most important supporters of this elitist current was a prominent Shiite theologian, Muḥammad b. ʿAlī al-Šalmaġānī (d. 322/934), who claimed the right to be the privileged representative (bāb) of the concealed Imam. After having been protected by some powerful Shiite families of Baghdad,Footnote 77 he was forced into exile in Maʿlaṯāyā (northern Iraq), and was then arrested and put to death with some of his followers.Footnote 78

Ibn al-Nadīm includes al-Šalmaġānī among the names of the philosophers who dealt with the speculative aspects of alchemy (al-falāsifa allaḏīna takallamū fī l-ṣanʿa),Footnote 79 emphasizing its prominent place in alchemical practice. This source is the only one to mention the four titles of his alchemical works, which include a comment (šarḥ) on Ǧābir b. Hayyan's Kitāb al-Raḥma.Footnote 80 We know that a conceptual topos denoting the strong doctrinal dualism of al-Šalmaġānī – who conceived of reality as a succession of pairs of opposites – is represented by the idea of ḍidd, the demonic and adversative principle which informs his emanationist metaphysics. The term also occurs in the lexicon of the KṢ, which currently uses it in a perspective that likely recalls the doctrine of the opposites as the sources attribute it to al-Šalmaġānī.Footnote 81 In the Seventy Books collection, Ǧābir uses it to indicate negative physical qualities inherent in the elementary structure of substances.Footnote 82

Dedicating a comment to the earliest text of the Ǧābirean corpus could represent a very precise choice connected to the history and evolution of that school. The same inclination (shared by many, as Ibn al-Nadīm wrote) to deem the Kitāb al-Raḥma the only treatise actually authored by Ǧābir b. Ḥayyān, pupil of Ǧaʿfar al-Ṣādiq, may underlie such a choice. If this were the case, this choice could have been dictated by less philological than ideological reasons. Writing a commentary on the first text of a corpus that had undergone an evident evolution over time, with such important epistemological developments and so profoundly marked by autonomy of thought within the entire Shiite episteme, could mean questioning such an evolution and development: in other words, it could mean a return to the origins of the school.

Throughout the last treaties – the Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn and the Kitāb al-Māğid in particular – the Ǧābirean community developed a system of relations among the Shiite hierarchical figures which strongly regulated the function of the Bāb and of the Yatīm – a figure tasked with implementing the reform announced by the Kitāb al-Bayān, and with which the Ǧābirean elite identifies.Footnote 83 The hierarchy as imagined by al-Šalmaġānī may have had to adhere to an immobile structure whose apex was the Bāb. The refutation of the Sīn priority formulated in the enigmatic Kitāb al-Māğid – highly obscure for all those outside such a semiotic code – may have been perfectly understandable to the alchemist al-Šalmaġānī.

Conclusion

The absolute secrecy under which the Ǧābireans chose to operate makes it difficult, but not impossible, to locate them in their historical space. In the last treatises of the corpus – where the alchemical concern leaves more room for the political–religious attitude – this community explicitly claimed control of the political and intellectual legacy of the hidden Imam, and presented itself as the yatīm, a figure also known to other ġulāt doctrinal views that marked the struggling Shiite panorama between the lesser and the greater Occultation. In this controversial climate, they disputed and came into conflict with other ġuluww groups, resorting to a common language focused on the transfer of the Imam's charisma to a figure extraneous to the Alid family, in order to affirm the pre-eminence of their intellectual role. The Ǧābirean project, which aimed to generate an artificial imam in a laboratory, was their own response, disconcerting yet consistent with their salvific view of science, to the absence of the Imam. However, the legislative function of the artificial imam would no longer have been linked to the šarīʿa (only possible with the living Imams), but to the nāmūs. Again, the Ǧābireans left a trace that allows us to place them in a precise historical and cultural space: from their perspective, they actually participated in a philosophical–political debate on šarīʿa vs. nomos, specific to the fourth/tenth century, inaugurated by al-Fārābī.

Footnotes

*

I wish to thank the anonymous readers for their relevant suggestions and remarks.

References

1 Henceforth references to Ǧābir b. Ḥayyān will mean the plurality of the members of the Ǧābirean community. My definition of the Ǧābirean as a community strictly depends on the theoretical outline provided in Kuhn, T., The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1970)Google Scholar.

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12 Van Bladel, K., The Arabic Hermes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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14 In general, on Imami Shiite heresiography see Van Ess, J., Der Eine und das Andere. Beobachtungen an islamischen häresiographischen Texten (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2011), I, 206–79Google Scholar.

15 al-Naǧāšī, Kitāb al-Riǧāl, ed. al-Nā’inī, M.J. (Beirut: Dār al-aḍwā’, 1408/1988), II, 359–61Google Scholar.

16 Modarresi, Crisis and Consolidation, 21–8; W. Madelung, “Mukhammisa”, Encyclopaedia of Islam (EI) 2, VII, 517–8; M. Asatryan, “Moḵammesa”, EIr online: http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/mokammesa-sect.

17 (Ps.) al-Nāši’ al-Akbar, Uṣūl al-niḥal, in Van Ess, J., Frühe muʿtazilitische Häresiographie: zwei Werke des Nāši’ al-Akbar (gest. 293 H.) (Beirut and Wiesbaden: Steiner, 1971), 3640Google Scholar; al-Qummī, Kitāb al-Maqālāt wa-l-firaq, ed. Maškūr, M.J. (Tehran: Mu'assasat-i Maṭbūʿātī ʿAṭā’ī, 1963), 3943Google Scholar; al-Nawbaḫtī, Firaq al-šī‘a, ed. Ritter, H. (Istanbul: Staatsdruckerei, 1931), 2935Google Scholar. On the myth of saba'iyya as a heresiographic pattern: al-Qadi, W., “The development of the term Ghulāt in Muslim literature with special reference to the Kaysāniyya”, in Dietrich, A. (ed.), Akten des VII. Kongresses für Arabistik und Islamwissenschaft (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht, 1976), 295319Google Scholar; Anthony, S., The Caliph and the Heretic: Ibn Saba’ and the Origins of Shīʿism (Leiden: Brill, 2012), 243–4, 309–10CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On ḥarbiyya, see Crone, P., The Nativist Prophets of Early Islamic Iran (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012), 92–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

18 They are Ǧābir b. ʿAbd Allāh al-Anṣārī and Ǧābir b. Yazīd al-Ǧuʿfī: al-Qummī, Maqālāt, p. 43; al-Nawbaḫtī, Firaq al-šīʿa, p. 31. Cf. Capezzone, L., “Pre-existence and shadows: a gnostic motif, or a literary one?” in Hassan, I. (ed.), La littérature aux marges du ʿadab. Regards croisés sur la prose arabe classique (Lyon and Beirut: Diacritique Éditions – Presses de l'Institut Français du Proche Orient, 2017), 336–56Google Scholar.

19 Umm al-Kitāb = UK, ed. W. Ivanow, Der Islam 23, 1936, 1–132; Kitab al-Haft wa-l-aẓilla = KHA, ed. Tāmir, ʿĀ., Ḫālifa, I. ʿA. (Beirut: Imprimerie Catholique, 1970)Google Scholar. Kitāb al-Ṣirāṭ = KṢ, in Capezzone, L., “Il Kitāb al-Ṣirāṭ attribuito a Mufaḍḍal b. ʿUmar al-Juʿfī. Edizione del ms. unico (Paris: Bibliothèque nationale ar. 1449/3) e studio introduttivo”, Rivista degli Studi Orientali, 69, 1995, 295416Google Scholar; Anthony, S., “The legend of ʿAbdallāh ibn Sabā’ and the date of Umm al-Kitāb”, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 21/1, 2011, 130Google Scholar; Tidjens, E.F., “Der mythologisch-gnostiche Hintergrund des Umm al-Kitāb”, Acta Iranica 7, 1977, 241526Google Scholar. Halm, H., “Das ‘Buch der Schatten’: Die Mufaḍḍal-Tradition der Ghulat und die Ursprünge des Nusairiertum. I”, Der Islam, 55, 1978, 219–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar (henceforth: “Das ‘Buch der Schatten’ I”); Halm, “Das ‘Buch der Schatten’: Die Mufaḍḍal-Tradition der Ghulat und die Ursprünge des Nusairiertum. II” (henceforth: “Das ‘Buch der Schatten’ II”), Der Islam, 58, 1981, 15–86; Halm, Die islamische Gnosis, 113–99, 240–74; 128–61; Asatryan, M., Controversies in Formative Shiʿi Islam: The Ghulat Muslims and Their Beliefs (London and New York: I.B.Tauris / The Institute of Ismaili Studies, 2017)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20 Cf. Amir-Moezzi, Le guide divin, 313–5.

21 Technical data on the early date of the Kitāb al-Raḥma are found in Kraus, “Contribution I”, 5–9; Needham, Science and Civilisation in China, vol. V, 4, 435.

22 If al-Qummī, Maqālāt, p. 42, can reproduce a fragment of the heterodox speech on the progression of knowledge intended as refinement and purification, placing it in alchemical similitude with a purification process, it is very likely that this also depends on a process of intertextuality in progress.

23 Kitāb al-Ḥaǧar, in The Arabic Works of Jābir ibn Ḥayyān (henceforth AW), ed. Holmyard, E.J. (Paris: Geuthner, 1928), 1542: 17Google Scholar.

24 Kitāb al-Ištimāl, in MR, 548–55. For its mentions throughout the Ǧābirean corpus, see Kraus, “Contribution I”, 165.

25 Cf. also Kitāb al-Ḫawāṣṣ (MR, 378) and Kitāb Usṭuqus al-uss al-ṯānī (AW, 100). Both treatises belong to the collection of the Hundred and Twelve Books, which is earlier than that of the Book of the Balances and includes (according to the Ǧābireans) the Kitāb al-Ištimāl.

26 Kitāb al-Ištimāl, in MR, 548.

27 Cf. T. Kuhn, “Metaphor in science”, and Boyd, R., “Metaphor and theory change: what is ‘metaphor’ a metaphor for?”, both in Ortony, A. (ed.), Metaphor and Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979), respectively pp. 409–19 and 481–532Google Scholar.

28 Kitāb al-Mulk, in Berthelot-Houdas, La Chimie au Moyen Âge, III, 94–5. On the relationship between Imam and elixir cf. Lory, Alchimie et mystique, 59 ff.

29 I take the notion of images of knowledge (connected with that of body of knowledge) from Elkana, Y., Anthropologie der Erkenntnis (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1986)Google Scholar.

30 al-Qummī, Maqālāt, 42.

31 KṢ, 327; but see the entire passage at 324–30. Cf. Halm, H., “Courants et mouvements antinomistes dans l'islam medieval”, in Makdisi, G., Sourdel, D. and Sourdel-Thomine, J. (eds), La notion de liberté au Moyen Âge. Islam, Byzance, Occident (Pennsylvania and Paris: Dumbarton Oaks Colloquia IV (12–15 October 1982), 1985), 135–41: 138Google Scholar.

32 Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn, in MR, 489–500; cf. Kraus, P., “Les dignitaires de la hiérarchie religieuse selon Ǧābir ibn Ḥayyān”, in Bulletin de l'Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale 41, 1942, 8397Google Scholar.

33 Corbin, H., “Le ‘Livre du Glorieux’ de Jâbir b. Hayyân”, in Eranos Jahrbuch 18, 1950, 47114Google Scholar.

34 Halm, H., Kosmologie und Heilslehre des frühen Ismāʿīliyya (Wiesbaden: Steiner, 1978), 142–68Google Scholar; cf. Brett, “The ʿAyn, the Mīm”.

35 al-Masʿūdī, Murūǧ al-ḏahab, ed. de Meynard, Ch. Barbier and de Courteille, A. Pavet (Paris: Imprimerie Imperiale, 1861–77), III, 262–8Google Scholar.

36 The text mentioned by al-Masʿūdī is not the same KṢ we are concerned with here: see M. Asatryan, Controversies, 97, 105.

37 al-Šahrastānī, Kitāb al-Milal wa-l-niḥal, ed. Cureton, W. (London: Society for the Publication of Oriental Texts, 1864), I, 134Google Scholar.

38 Cf. al-Qummī, Maqālāt, 59; ʿAlyā'iyya according to Halm, Kosmologie und Heilslehre, 157–61.

39 KṢ, 378–83.

40 On the historicity of the second–third/eighth–ninth century ġulāt texts: Daou, T. Bayhom, “The second-century Šīʿite Ġulāt: were they really gnostic?”, Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies 5, 2003–04, 13–60: 19 ffGoogle Scholar.

41 al-Qummī, Maqālāt, 56–7.

42 Cf. UK, 92, ff. 73–4; KHA, 45–8; KṢ, 325–7.

43 On Salmān, see the classic Massignon, L., “Salmān Pāk et les prémices spirituelles de l'Islam iranien”, in Opera Minora (Beirut: Dar al-Maaref, 1963), I, 443–83Google Scholar, and Horovitz, J., “Salmān al-Fārisi”, Der Islam 12, 1922, 178–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Cameron, A.J., Abū Dharr al-Ghifārī: an Examination of His Image in the Hagiography of Islam (London: Royal Asiatic Society Books, 1973)Google Scholar; G.H.A. Juynboll, “al-Miḳdād b. ʿAmr”, EI2. According to Imamite Shiism, the three characters have the status of apostles (ḥawāriyyūn): al-Kaššī, Iḫtiyār maʿrifat al-riğāl, ed. ʿA.M. al-Ḥaʾirī (Bombay: al-Maṭbaʿa al-Muṣṭafawiyya, 1317 ah), 4–18.

44 al-Nawbaḫtī, Firaq al-šīʿa, pp. 33–4; al-Qummī, Maqālāt, 46. On the common source: Madelung, W., “Bemerkungen zur imamitischen Firaq-Literatur”, Der Islam 43, 1967, 3752CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

45 A similar “trinitary” doctrine concerning Muḥammad, ʿAlī, and Salmān, where a presence of the principle of the Sīn stands out beside those of the Mīm and the ʿAyn, is attested only in another ġulāt expression such as that of al-Ḫasībī: see. Moosa, M., Extremist Shiites. The Ghulat Sects (New York: Syracuse University Press, 1988), 342–51Google Scholar; Asher, M.M. Bar and Kofsky, A., “An early Nuṣayrī theological dialogue on the relation between the Maʿnā and the Ism”, in Le Muséon, 108, 1995, 169–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bar Asher and Kofsky, The Nuṣayrī-ʿAlawī Religion. An Enquiry into its Theology and Liturgy, 7–42; Friedman, The Nuṣayrī-‘Alawīs, 73–80.

46 See below, n. 51.

47 UK, 44, ff. 300–1.

48 KṢ, 337–41.

49 On the artificial generation of living beings in medieval Islamic occult sciences cf. Saif, L., “The cows and the bees: Arabic sources and parallels for pseudo-Plato's Liber Vaccae (Kitāb al-Nawāmīs)”, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 79, 2016, 147Google Scholar.

50 The two treatises belong to the third collection, the Kutub al-mawāzīn, but the issue is already somewhat anticipated with the creation of minerals in Kitāb al-Sab'īn (in MR, 461–2), included in the earlier collection of the Seventy Books. On artificial generation and the relationship between Greek and Ğābirean alchemy cf. Kraus, “Contribution II”, 102–34.

51 Tenth-century Islamic medical and philosophical thought is concerned with the theory of the tripartite brain: cf. the Ğābirean view in Kitāb al-Taṣrīf, in MR, 371–4, Kitāb al-Taǧmīʿ, in MR, 369–80, and al-ṣafāʾ, Iḫwān, Rasāʾil Iḫwān al-Ṣafāʾ (Beirut: Dār Ṣādir, 1957), III, 376Google Scholar, al-Fārābī, Mabādiʾ ārāʾ ahl al-madīna al-fāḍila (al-Fārābī on the Perfect State), a revised text with introduction, translation and commentary by Richard Walzer (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1985), 178–85, 244–7Google Scholar. As regards the Greek medical tradition in which that issue was rooted see Kraus, “Contribution II”, 116–9; Capezzone, L., “Knowing, remembering, imagining: approaches to the topic of memory in medieval Islamic culture”, in Langermann, Y. Tzvi and Morrison, R.G. (eds), Texts in Transit in the Medieval Mediterranean (Philadelphia: Penn State University Press, 2016), 85100CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Cf. al-Fārābī, Risāla fīʾl-ʿaql, ed. Bouyges, M. (Beirut: Imprimerie Catholique, 1938), 100Google Scholar.

52 Kitāb al-Taǧmīʿ, in MR, 370–1.

53 Kitāb al-Taǧmīʿ, in MR, 343. As is usual, the Ğābireans describe the experiment as if it had already been carried out and had succeeded.

54 Cf. Pingree, D., “Plato's hermetic Book of the Cow”, in Prini, R. (ed.), Il Neoplatonismo nel Rinascimento (Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana, 1993), 133–45 (133–4)Google Scholar; Prini, R., “From Hermes to Jābir and the Book of the Cow”, in Magic and the Classical Tradition, ed. Burnett, C. and Ryan, W.F. (London: Warburg Institute, 2016), 1928Google Scholar.

55 Cf. van Bladel, The Arabic Hermes, 238; Kraus, “Contribution I”, 212.

56 On the complex question of al-Fārābī's reading of Plato, see. Tamer, G., Islamische Philosophie und die Krise der Moderne. Das Verhältnis von Leo Strauss zu Alfarabi, Avicenna und Averroes (Leiden: Brill, 2001), 67–77, 207–62, 290–96Google Scholar (on the Arabic tradition of a pseudo-Platonic Book of Laws).

57 Walzer, R., “al-Farabi's theory of prophecy and divination”, Journal of Hellenic Studies 77, 1957, 142–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Macy, J., “Prophecy in Alfarabi and Maimonides: the imaginative and rational faculties”, in Pines, S. and Yovel, Y. (eds), Maimonides and Philosophy (Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1986), 185201CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

58 Ibn al-Nadīm, Fihrist, 423.

59 In the Kitāb al-Taǧmīʿ, in MR, 369, Ǧābireans explicitly intend “philosophers” to mean those who are concerned with artificial generation (aʿnī biʾl-falāsifa aṣḥāb al-takwīn al-ḫāṣṣa). According to Kraus, “Contribution II”, 103–34, the Ǧābireans address their confutation to some representatives of Hellenistic theurgical thought. In fact, they base their theories on the authority of (pseudoepigraphic) works by authors such as Porphiry, Plato, Homer, and so on, possibly using those authorities of the past with a political aim directed, as we shall see, at some contemporary debates.

60 Kitāb al-Taǧmīʿ, in MR, 370. When defining the specific quality of the head of their ideal city, Iḫwān al-Ṣafāʾ also distinguish between the figures of Imam, the bearer of šarīʿa (wāḍiʿ al-šarīʿa), and the bearer of nomos (wāḍiʿ al-nāmūs): Rasā’il, IV, 130–48. Cf. Netton, I.R., “Brotherhood versus Imāmate: Ikhwān al-Ṣafāʾ and the Ismāʿīlis”, Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam, 2, 1980, 253–62Google Scholar.

61 Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn, in MR, 489–500. Here I refer to chapters 36–38 of the treatise. Kraus, “Les dignitaires de la hiérarchie religieuse”, compared the Ǧābirean terminology to that of the UK, then considered to be an Ismailite text. Now we know, also thanks to texts such as KHA and KṢ, that such terminology was common to all the movements of Shiite ġuluww.

62 Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn, in MR, 499. On the views on the Imamate presented in this treatise, cf. Lory, Alchimie et mystique, 84–102.

63 Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn, in MR, 493–4.

64 Lory, Alchimie et mystique, 102–4, comes to similar conclusions, but exclusively framed from an eschatological perspective. My opinion is that this treatise, like the others studied here, is religiously and politically connected to the controversial Shiite climate during the lesser and the greater ġayba.

65 Respectively: Kitāb Iḫrāǧ mā fī l-quwwa ilā l-fiʿl, in MR, 79; Kitāb al-Māǧid, in MR, 116. Cf. Lory, P., “Ésotérisme shiʿite et alchimie. Quelques remarques sur la doctrine de l'initiation dans le Corpus Jābirien”, in Amir-Moezzi, M.M. (ed.), L’ésoterisme shiʿite. Ses racines, ses prolongements (Turnhout: Brepols, 2016), 411–22CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

66 Kitāb al-Bayān, in AW, 12. See the translation by P. Kraus, “Dschābir ibn Ḥajjān und die Ismāʿīlijja”, 3. Jahresbericht, Forschungs-Institut für Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, 1930, 23–42; the one by Marquet, L'alchimie des philosophes, 97–8, and the one by Lory, Alchimie et mystique, 99–100.

67 The three scholars mentioned above translate takrīr as “reincarnation”.

68 Kitāb al-Ḫamsīn, in MR, 490. See the French translation by Kraus, “Les dignitaires de la hiérarchie religieuse”, 88–90, which differs from mine in some passages.

69 Kraus, “Les dignitaires de la hiérarchie religieuse”, 88: “l'Adopté de l'imām”.

70 al-Qummī, Maqālāt, 59.

71 Marquet, L'alchimie des philosophes, 104–10; Lory, Alchimie et mystique, 83–94.

72 However, the suggestion made by Lory, Alchimie et mystique, pp. 82–3, is of great value: that the Ǧābirean community, although identified in the rank of the Orphan, does not assign it any function or public engagement in the Shiite reformed establishment.

73 Kitāb al-Ḫalīl, in Riḍā, M.ʿA. Abū, “Risālatān falsafīyatān li-Ǧābir ibn Ḥaiyān”, Zeitschrift für Geschichte der arabisch-islamischen Wissenschaften, 2, 1985, 7584: 81Google Scholar.

74 Kohlberg, E., “From Imāmiyya to Ithnā ʿAshariyya”, BSOAS 39, 1976, 521–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Klemm, V., “The four sufarāʾ of the Twelfth Imām. On the formative period of the Twelver Shīʿa”, in Kohlberg, E. (ed.), Shiʿism (The Formation of the Classical Islamic World 33, Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003), 135–52Google Scholar; Hussain, J.M., “The role of the Imamite Wikāla with special reference to the First Safīr”, Hamdard Islamicus 5, 1982, 2552Google Scholar. Hussain, J.M., The Occultation of the Twelfth Imam: A Historical Background (London: Muhammadi Trust of Great Britain, 1982)Google Scholar; Amir-Moezzi, Le guide divin, 245–64; Arjomand, S.A., “The crisis of the Imāmate and the institution of occultation in Twelver Shi'ism: a sociohistorical perspective”, International Journal of Middle East Studies 28, 1996, 491515CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Arjomand, S.A., “Imam Absconditus and the beginnings of a theology of occultation: Imami Shiʿism circa 280–90 A.H./900 A.D.”, Journal of the American Oriental Society, 117, 1997, 112CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Abdulsater, H.A., “Dynamics of absence. Twelver Shi‘ism during the Minor Occultation”, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 161/2, 2011, 305–34Google Scholar.

75 According to Amir-Moezzi, M.A., The Spirituality of Shiʿi Islam. Beliefs and Practices (London and New York: I.B. Tauris, 2016), 225Google Scholar: “the ‘theological-legal-rational’ movement, which continues to this day, began to dominate, thus marginalizing the original ‘esoteric non rational’ current”. For a discussion on labelling and categorizing the two fronts see Abdulsater, “Dynamics”, 321 and n. 106.

76 Al-Kaššī, Iḫtiyār, 321–2 (fīʾl-ġulāt fī waqt ‘Alī b. Muḥammad), seems to recognize the existence of this current during the Imamate of ʿAlī al-Hādī, and reports the case of ʿAlī b. Ḥasaka and his disciple al-Qāsim b. Yaqṭīn, both supporters of the divinity of the Imam, and their claim to the role of bāb. This claim emerged from within the wikāla apparatus (on which see Hussain, The Occultation, 79–98, Modarressi, Crisis and Consolidation, 12–16). According to this source, the Imam ʿAlī al-Hādī condemned this form of extremism supported by al-Ḥasan b. Muḥammad b. Bābā al-Qummī (mentioned in the isnād of KṢ, 381, see Capezzone, L., “Una nuova fonte per lo studio dell'eterodossia islamica: il Kitāb al-ṣirāṭ attribuito a Mufaḍḍal b. ʿUmar al-Ǧuʿfī”, Rivista degli Studi Orientali, 67, 1993, 265–71: 270Google Scholar), companion of the tenth and the eleventh Imams, and disciple of Muḥammad b. Nuṣayr al-Numayrī (d. 270/883–4). The latter self-proclaimed himself safīr and bāb of the concealed Imam (al-Kaššī, Iḫtiyār, 323, Hussain, The Occultation, 103–5; Halm, “Das ‘Buch der Schatten’ II”, 72–9; Friedman, The Nuṣayrī-ʿAlawīs, 6–16; Abdulsater, “Dynamics”, 312–3).

77 L. Massignon, “Recherches sur les Shiʿites extrémistes à Bagdad à la fin du troisième siècle de l'hègire”, Opera Minora, I, 523–36; Newman, Formative Period, 23–6.

78 al-Ṭūsī, Kitāb al-Ġayba (ed.), Mūsawī, Qumm, 1408 AH, 214–28. Hussain, The Occultation, 126–30; Newman, The Formative Period, 23–5; Abdulsater, “Dynamics”, 317–30.

79 Ibn al-Nadīm, Fihrist, 419, mentioning him as al-ʿAzāqirī. Cf. the same source, at 423, where the Five Hundred Books collection is depicted as a refutation of the philosophers (naqḍ ʿalā l-falāsifa).

80 Ibn al-Nadīm, Fihrist, 425, under the entry Ibn Abī l-ʿAzāqir.

81 Fragmentary elements for a tentative reconstruction of al-Šalmaġānī's doctrines, as reported by sources such as Yāqūt's Iršād al-arīb or al-Ṭūsī's Kitāb al-Ġayba, have been gathered by Charles Pellat, “Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī al-Shalmaghānī”, EI 2. Cf. the hostile portrait given by Louis Massignon, La passion d'al-Hallaj martyr mystique de l'islam, Paris, Gallimard, 1975, sub index.

82 E.g. in Kitāb al-Hudā, in L’élaboration de l’élixir suprème. Quatorze traités de Jābir ibn Ḥayyān sur le Grand Œuvre alchimique, ed. Pierre Lory, 5.

83 See above, n. 66.