Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s Philosophical


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  102.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz



.

a¯  7il al-ana¯m , 34–35, mentions that Ibra¯hı¯m al-Sabba¯k (d. 513

/1119–20) “was for twenty years my companion in T.u¯s, Nishapur, Baghdad, and on the 

trip to Syria and Hijaz.” 

  103.  Ibn al-Jawzı¯,  al-Muntaz.am , 9:169.4–5; Glassen,  Der mittlere Weg ,  131. 

  104.  Like that of al- ¶Ibba¯dı¯ (d. 496/1103), an authority on homiletics ( wa ¶z. );  Sibt. ibn 

al-Jawzı¯,  Mir  7a¯t al-zama¯n , ed. Hayderabat, 1:5. 

  105.  Together with al-Qaffa¯l al-Sha¯shı¯ (d. 507/1114) and Ibn  ¶Aqı¯l (d. 513/1119), al-Ghaza¯lı¯ 

was present during the  bay  ¶a -ceremony for the new caliph al-Mustaz.hir in Muh.arram 487 / 

February 1094; Ibn al-Jawzı¯,  al-Muntaz.am , 9:82; Glassen,  Der mittlere Weg , 132, 158. 

  106.   akala ma¯la l-sult.a¯n . So in his  Fays.al al-tafriqa , 197.5/65.3, in which al-Ghaza¯lı¯ 

complains about people who claim to be Sufi s in order to live of the ruler’s purse. Part 

of his vow at Hebron was “no longer to take from the riches of the ruler” ( va-ma¯l-i sult.a¯n 



nagı¯rad ;  al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz

.

a¯   7il al-ana¯m ,  5.1.). 

  107.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz



.

a¯   7il al-ana¯m , 4.20; Krawulsky,  Briefe und Reden ,  66. 

  108.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Munqidh min al-d.ala¯l ,  18.13–15. 

  109.  Cf.  n.  86. 

  110.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-M



unqidh min al-d.ala¯l , 33.4–10. Part of the book mentioned, 

 Mufas.s.il al-khila¯f , may be preserved in al-Ghaza¯lı¯, “Jawa¯b al-masa¯  7il al-arba ¶ allatı¯ sa  7alaha¯ 

al-ba¯t.iniyya bi-Hamada¯n.” 

  

111. Daftary,  



The Isma¯ ¶ı¯lı¯s ,  335–38. 

  112. Bouyges,  Essai de chronologie , 23–24; al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Taha¯fut  (ed. Bouyges), ix. 

  

113. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Munqidh min al-d.ala¯l , 28.7–8;  Fad.a¯ 7ih. al-ba¯t.iniyya , 3. The book 



might be based on the earlier Persian  H

. ujjat al-h.aqq f ı¯ l-radd  ¶ ala¯ l-ba¯t.iniyya,  which is lost. 

   114.  Hourani, “Revised Chronology,” 293. 

  

115. Glassen,  



Der mittlere Weg ,  131–75. 

  116.  Abu

¯  Z.a¯hir of Arra¯n (a district in northern Azerbaijan); Juvaynı¯,  Ta  7

rı¯kh-i 

Jaha¯ngusha¯y ,  3:204.6. 

  

117. Safi ,  The Politics of Knoweldge in Premodern Islam ,  65–74. 



  118.  Ibn al-Jawzı¯,  al-Muntaz.am ,  9:62.4. 

  119.  Klausner,  The Seljuk Vezirate ,  30. 

  120.  Ibn  al-Athı¯r,  al-Ka¯mil , 10:154. There was, however, speculation about the cause 

of his death. Laoust,  La politique de G



.

aza¯lı¯ , 61, notes that the historians do not agree on 

the day of al-Muqtadı¯’s death (some say it was four days later), which is an indication 

that it may not have been made public immedately 

 

not e s   to   page s   3 2 – 3 7  



2 9 7

  121.  Juvaynı¯,  Ta  7

rı¯kh-i Jaha¯ngusha¯y , 3:206.3–4, 207.9–10. For a detailed narrative 

of the events shortly before Niz.a¯m al-Mulk’s assassination and the long power-struggle 

afterward, see Laoust,  La politique de G

.

aza¯lı¯ , 56–64, 107–14, and 133–37. On the various 

confl icts among Seljuq family members during the war of succession after Maliksha¯h’s 

death, see Claude Cahen’s article “Barkya¯ru

¯k” in  EI2 ,  1:1051b–2b.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ refers to 

some of these events in a letter he wrote later to Mujı¯r al-Dı¯n, the vizier of Sanjar; al-

Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz



.

a¯   7il al-ana¯m ,  57–59. 

  122.  Hillenbrand,   1092: A Murderous Year , 293–94; Glassen,  Der mittlere Weg , 

134–45. Recently, Omid Safi ,  The Politics of Knowledge in Premodern Islam , 74–79, ar-

gued that Maliksha¯h instigated Niz.a¯m al-Mulk’s assassination. The evidence he quotes, 

however, is late (al-Subkı¯) and does not trump the many voices much closer to the event 

(Ra¯wandı¯, Nı¯sha¯bu

¯rı¯, and Rashı¯d al-Dı¯n T.abı¯b) who assume that Ta¯j al-Mulk was be-

hind the murder and that he acted as an agent for Terken Kha¯tu

¯n. 

  123.  Abu



¯ Bakr ibn al- ¶Arabı¯,  al- ¶Awa¯s.im min al-qawa¯s.im ,  56–57. 

  124.  Ibn  al-Athı¯r,  al-Ka¯mil , 10:145–46. The text in Ibn al-Jawzı¯,  al-Muntaz.am ,  9:62–

63, is not altogether clear which of the two parties asked for the provision. Once in 

Isfahan, Terken Kha¯tu

¯n sent a delegation to the caliph in order to renegotiate the terms 

of Mah.mu¯d’s appointment. That seems to have led to a mistaken presentation of this 

episode in Laoust,  La politique de G

.

aza¯lı¯ ,  59. 

  125.  Ibn al-Jawzı¯, al-Muntaz.am  ,  9:62.16–17. 

  126.  Ibn  Kathı¯r,  al-Bida¯ya ,  12:139.18–19. 

  127.   la¯ yaju¯zu illa¯ ma¯ qa¯lahu l-khalı¯fa ; Ibn al-Jawzı¯, al-Muntaz.am, 9:63.2–3. 

  128.  On  al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s views about the caliphate, see Laoust,  La politique de G

.

aza¯lı¯ , 

234–65; F. R. C. Bagley’s introduction to  Ghaza¯lı¯ ’ s Book of Council for Kings ,  li–lvi;  and 

Binder, “Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s Theory of Islamic Government.” 

  129.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Shifa¯  7 al-ghalı¯l ,  225.3–4. 

  130.  Hillenbrand, “Islamic Orthodoxy of Realpolitik? Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s Views on Gov-

ernment,” 91. 

   131.  Ibid., 90. See also al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Fad.a¯  7ih. al-ba¯t.iniyya , 173–74. Recently Safi ,  The 

Politics of Knowledge , 110–24, proposed that there was a shift in al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s political 

thinking away from the authority of the caliph in his early writings to the authority of 

the sultan in his later ones. Yet, this is not convincing, since what counted for al-Ghaza¯lı¯ 

was the  shawka  and not the character of the offi ce that held it. It could, in principle, be 

held by caliph, sultan, or vizier. See Laoust,  La politique de G

.

aza¯lı¯ , 237–39, 247–52. 

  132.  Majd al-Mulk Abu

¯ l-Fad.l al-Qummı¯ al-Bala¯sa¯nı¯ was a high offi cial (a  mustawf ı¯ ) 

at Berk-Yaruq’s court. In 492/1098, he was killed by Berk-Yaruq’s generals. Mu  7ayyad 

al-Mulk, a son of Niz.a¯m al-Mulk, was fi rst vizier to Berk-Yaruq and later to his rival 

half-brother Muh.ammad Tapar. In 494/1100, Berk-Yaruq executed him with his own 

hands. 

  133.  Abu



¯ l-Fath.  ¶Alı¯ ibn al-H.usayn al-T.ughra¯  7ı¯ (d. after 497/1103). He was Sanjar’s 

fi rst vizier and was soon to be replaced by Fakhr al-Mulk. Cf. Krawulsky,  Briefe und 



Reden , 32–33; Iqba¯l A

¯ shtiya¯nı¯,  Viza¯ra¯t dar  ¶ahd-i sala¯t.ı¯n-i buzurg-i salju¯qı¯ ,  195;  Klausner, 

 The Seljuk Vezirat , 107; Ibn al-Athı¯r,  al-Ka¯mil ,  10:180.17. 

  134.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz



.

a¯   7il al-ana¯m ,  58.2. 

  135.  Laoust,   La politique de G



.

aza¯lı¯ 

, 58, already observed that despite having 

ample opportunity, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ never implied that Niz.a¯m al-Mulk was murdered by an

Isma¯ ¶ı¯lite. 

  136.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz

.

a¯   7il al-ana¯m .,  58.17–18. 

  137.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Nas.ı¯h.at al-mulu¯k ,  45. ult. –46.6. 

  138.  Ibn Jawzı¯,  al-Muntaz.am ,  9:170.14–18. 

2 9 8  


not e s   to   page s   3 7 – 4 0

  139.  Claude Cahen, Art. “Barkya¯ru

¯k,” in  EI2 , 1:1051b–2b, and C. E. Bosworth in  The 



Cambridge History of Iran. Volume 5 , 109. The  Niz.a¯miyya  party changed its allegience 

and supported Berk-Yaruq’s rival, Muh.ammad Tapar. 

  140.  Daftary,   The Isma¯ ¶ı¯lı¯s , 335–40; Hillenbrand, “The Power Struggle Between the 

Seljuq and the Isma¯ ¶ı¯lis of Alamut,” 206; Bosworth, “The Isma ¶ilis of Quhista¯n.” 

  141.  Daftary,  The Isma¯ ¶ı¯lı¯s , 343, 354–55. 

  142.  “Esoterics” ( al-ba¯t.iniyya ) is a pejorative term for Isma¯ ¶ı¯lite-Siites. Ibn al-Jawzı¯, 

 al-Muntaz.a¯m ,  9:77. 

  143.  Cf. the trial of a  da¯ ¶ı¯  accused of apostasy conducted by Ibn  ¶Aqı¯l in 490/1097 

(Griffel,  Apostasie und Toleranz , 282–83). In 495/1101, even al-Kiya¯  7 al-Harra¯sı¯, one of al-

Ghaza¯lı¯’s successors in his chair at the Niz.a¯miyya, was suspected to be a secret Isma¯  ¶ ı¯lite

agent. See Makdisi,  

Ibn  ¶Aqı¯l et la résurgence 

, 288–89; Ibn al-Jawzı¯,  



al-Muntaz.am , 

9:129–30; Ibn Khallika¯n,  Wafaya¯t , 3:288–89; al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t ,  7:232. 

  144.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Munqidh ,  36.2–6. 

  145.  Ibid., 36.7–8. 

  146.  Ibid., 36.11–16. Cf. McCarthyAl-Ghazali: Deliverance from Error, 78–79. 

  147.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯, al-Munqidh, 37.10–12. 

  148.  Ibid.,  37.15–16. 

  149.  Ibid.,  37.19. 

  150.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz

.

a¯   7il al-ana¯m , 45.5–6. The letter was written after the death of 

al-Kiya¯  7 al-Harra¯sı¯ in Muh.arram 504 / July 1110. 

  

151. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Munqidh ,  38.20. 



  152.  Ibid. 37.20–21. 

  153.  Ibid., 37–38. 

  154.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ probably could only authorize his brother as a temporary replace-

ment for himself. His appointment of his brother as temporary replacement begs the 

question to what extent al-Ghaza¯lı¯ really wished to break with the Niz.a¯miyya. See Mak-

disi, “Non-Ash ¶arite Shafi  ¶ism,” 241. In 489/1096, the chair was given to Abu

¯  ¶Abdalla¯h 

al-T.abarı¯, who had held it before al-Ghaza¯lı¯. In 493/1100, al-Kiya¯ 7 al-Harra¯sı¯ took the 

chair. See Halm,  Ausbreitung ,  165. 

  155.  Later, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ would write a letter of recommendation for him ( Faz



.

a¯   7il al-

ana¯m , 33–35), in which he mentions that Ibra¯hı¯m accompanied him for twenty years 

(35.2–3). On Abu

¯ Z.a¯hir Ibra¯hı¯m ibn Mut.ahhar al-Shabba¯k, see al-S.arı¯fı¯nı¯,  al-Muntakhab 

min al-Siya¯q , 163 = Frye,  The Histories of Nishapur , text 3, fol. 36b; al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t ,  7:36; 

Krawulsky,  Briefe und Reden ,  26–27. 

  156.  “Wise master,” a Persian title Ibn al- ¶Arabı¯ applies to al-Ghaza¯lı¯ in his  Qa¯nu¯n 

al-ta  7wı¯l , 111, 120 

  157. Ibn al- ¶Arabı¯,  al- ¶Awa¯s.im min al-qawa¯s.im , 23.4–7. Cf. Jabre, “La biographie et 

l’œuvre,” 87–88. The full text of this passage is available on p. 67. 

  158.  Macdonald, “The Life of al-Ghazza¯lı¯,” 80, 98, suggested that al-Ghaza¯lı¯ had 

reason to fear the enmity of Berk-Yaruq. Jabre, “La biographie et l’œuvre,” 93–94, 

thought that al-Ghaza¯lı¯ feared assassination by the Isma¯ ¶ı¯lites. The most reliable analysis 

is offered by Laoust,  La politique de G

.

aza¯lı¯ , 90–105. For other theories, see Abd-el-Jalil, 

“Autour de la sincerité d’al-Ghaza¯lı¯”; Sawwaf,  Al-Ghazzali. Etude de la réforme ghazza-



lienne , 57–58; Abu-Sway, “Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s ‘Spiritual Crisis’ Reconsidered.” These theories 

are discussed in Kojiro Nakamura’s article on al-Ghaza¯lı¯ in the  Routledge Encyclopedia 



of Philosophy , 4:64. For a thorough discussion of the textual evidence in the  Munqidh  

and of earlier interpretations of al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s “conversion,” see Poggi,  Un classico della 



spiritualità musulmana ,  187–210. 

  159.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Munqidh ,  38.3ff. 

 

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2 9 9

  160.  Not  al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s experience of this crisis but rather his very public admis-

sion makes it important. Martin Heidegger, for instance, experienced a severe crisis in 

the spring of 1946 when, because of his earlier Nazi sympathies, he was temporarily 

stripped of his teaching position at Freiburg University. This crisis, however, never be-

came a prominent part of his biography since he never publicly admitted to it. 

  161.  Van Ess, “Quelques remarques sur le Munqid

¯

 min ad.-d.ala¯l,” 60ff. 



  162.  “The sheikh of the Sha¯fi  ¶ites in Syria (. . .) The historians say that he was an 

imam, a resourceful authority (  ¶alla¯ma muf ı¯d ), an expert on the  h.adı¯th  and the Qur   7a ¯n, 

an ascetic, noble-minded, pious, and powerful in a way that he had no equal” (al-Ya¯fi  ¶ı¯, 

 Mir  7a¯t al-jina¯n,  3:152.17–20). On him, see Ibn  ¶Asa¯kir,  Tabyı¯n , 286–87; al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t , 

5:351–53; and al- ¶Ulaymı¯,  al-Uns al-jalı¯l ,  1:297–98. 

  163.  Tibawi, “Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s Sojourn in Damascus and Jerusalem,” 70. 

  164.  Ibn    ¶Asa¯kir,  Tabyı¯n , 286.10–11; al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t ,  5:352.7–8. 

  165.  Menn, “The  Discourse on the Method  and the Tradition of Intellectual Autobi-

ography,” 167–68. 

  166.   ma¯l al-sult.a¯n wa- ¶umma¯lihi ,  al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Bida¯ya f ı¯ l-hida¯ya ,  200.13.  English 

transl. in Watt,  Faith and Practice , 139. The rulers’ income and whether one can benefi t 

from it is the subject of a detailed discussion in the fi fth chapter of the fourteenth book 

Kita¯b al-H

. ala¯l wa-l-h.ara¯m ) of the  Ih.ya¯ 7  2:172–80 / 5:890–901. 

  167.  Glassen,  Der mittlere Weg , 50; Safi ,  The Politics of Knowledge , 101–2; Makdisi, 

 Rise of Colleges , 41; Kasa¯  7ı¯,  Mada¯ris-i Niz.a¯miyyah ,  116–17. 

  168.  For the four different categories of  wara ¶,  see al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Ih.ya¯ 7 , 1:31 / 32–33. 

  169.  Ibid., 1.70:7–22 / 94.3–21. 

  170.  Ibn    ¶Asa¯kir,  Tabyı¯n , 286.11–12; al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t , 5:352–53. The ruler was Tu-

tush ibn Alp-Arslan (d. 488/1095), and the money was from  jizya . 

  171.  min ujrat al-naskh , Ibn al-Jawzı¯,  al-Muntaz.am , 9:169.6. The term is unclear as 

it usually refers to the payment a professional scribe receives for his work. None of the 

sources mention that al-Ghaza¯lı¯ turned to copying manuscripts, so here the term seems 

to refer to collecting money for paying scribes to copy and publish books. 

  172.   pı¯sh hı¯ch sult.a¯n narawad va-ma¯l-i sult.a¯n nagı¯rad va-muna¯z.at-i u¯ ta ¶as.s.ub na-



konad ,  al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz

.

a¯   7il al-ana¯m , 5.1, cf. also 45.9–10. 

  173.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Ih.ya¯ 7 , 1:61–70 / 70–81; quote on 1:64.3 / 73. ult.  

  174.  Ibn al-Athı¯r,  al-Ka¯mil ,  10:172.13–14;  al-Dhahabı¯,  Siyar , 19:330.7–8. Al-Dhahabı¯ 

(19:327–28) also reports that al-Ghaza¯lı¯ composed his works  



al-Arba  ¶ı¯n ,   Qist.a¯s al-

mustaqı¯m , and  Mih.akk al-naz.ar  in Damascus. He mistakenly assumed that he stayed 

there for years. 

  175.  Sibt. ibn al-Jawzı¯,  Mir  7a¯t al-zaman , ed. Hayderabat, 1:171.2–3; al-Ya¯fi  ¶ı¯,  Mir  7a¯t 

al-jina¯n ,  3:146.5. 

  176.  Al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t , 6:197.17–18. Tibawi, “Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s Sojourn in Damascus 

and Jerusalem,” 73–74. 

  177.  Ibn Jubayr,  Tadhkira bi-l-akhba¯r ,  213–14.  Al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t ,  6:197.15–16,  re-

ports the tale on the authority of al-Dhahabı¯, who says he has it from Ibn  ¶Asa¯kir. Cf. le 

Strange,  Palestine under the Moslems , 246, 264. The base of that minaret is part of the 

remnants from the Roman  temenos  and has largely been unchanged since pre-Islamic 

times. 


  178.   fa-qa¯ma Dimashqa sana 489 wa-aqa¯ma bi-ha¯ mudda ;  Ibn  ¶Asa¯kir,  

Ta   7rı¯kh

 madı¯nat Dimashq ,  55:200.9 

  179.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Munqidh ,  38.11. 

  180.  Al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t ,  6:199.10–13. 

   181.  Or in the cave under the rock? Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Munqidh ,  38.15–16. 

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  182.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Ih.ya¯ 7 , 1:142.21–23 / 1:180.14–16. 

  183.  Al-  ¶Ulaymı¯,  al-Uns al-jalı¯l , 1:299.14, says that al-Ghaza¯lı¯ “composed several 

works in Jerusalem.” The title of this work contains two indications to Jerusalem: fi rst, 

the word  quds , which may stand for  Madı¯nat al-Quds , “Jerusalem,” and second, the plu-

ral of  mi  ¶ra¯j ,  Muh.ammad’s ascent to heaven on the twenty-seventh of Rajab. Muh.ammad 

is believed to have left from the plateau at the Dome of the Rock, where his footprint is 

still shown. Incidentally, on 27 Rajab 489 / 22 June 1096, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ was in Jerusalem. 

Whether or not he wrote this book is unclear. 

  184.   mah.w al-ja¯h wa-muja¯hadat al-nafs , Ibn al-Jawzı¯,  al-Muntaz.am ,  9:169.9. 

  185.  Al- ¶Ulaymı¯ , al-Uns al-jalı¯l ,  1:299.15–16. 

  186.  Bieberstein/Bloedhorn,   Jerusalem: Grundzüge der Baugeschichte ,  3:200.  Prop-

erly speaking, the Golden Gate is a double gate with two doors. The north door is known 

as the  ba¯b al-rah.ma , the south door as the  ba¯b al-tawba.  The name “Gate of Mercy,” how-

ever, also applies to the whole building. 

  187.  In the case of Damascus, the reference to the  za¯wiya   to  Abu

¯-l Fath. Nas.r is 

unmistakable, as al-Subkı¯ calls it “za¯wiyat al-shaykh Nas.r al-Maqdisı¯.” 

  188.  Al-  ¶Ulaymı¯ , al-Uns al-jalı¯l,  1:298.2–3; 2:34.3–4. 

  189.  Kaplony,   The H

. aram of Jerusalem 324 – 1099 , 638–41. Macdonald’s claim (in 

“The Life of al-Ghazza¯lı¯,” 93) that at the beginning of the twentieth century there was 

still a  za¯wiya  known as  al-Ghaza¯liyya  in Jerusalem cannot be taken seriously. 

  190.  Burgoyne,   Mamluk Jerusalem , 49. Al-Malik al-Mu ¶az.z.am  ¶I¯sa¯ was appointed 

governor of Damascus, including the province of Jerusalem, by his brother al-Malik al-

Ka¯mil in 597/1201. After al-Malik al-Ka¯mil’s death in 615/1218, he became an indepen-

dent ruler of Syria until his own death in 624/1227. 

  191.  Al- ¶Ulaymı¯,  al-Uns al-jalı¯l , 2:34.4–5; Ibn Khallika¯n,  Wafaya¯t al-a ¶ya¯n ,  3:244.2–3. 

  192.  Ibn  Khallika¯n,  Wafaya¯t al-a  ¶ya¯n , 3:244.2–3. Al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t ,  8:327.6,  re-

ports that Ibn al-S.ala¯h. had taught in the  madrasa al-S.ala¯h.iyya  in Jerusalem, that is, the 

former Crusader Church St. Anne that S.ala¯h. al-Dı¯n had converted into a madrasa right 

after the conquest of 583/1187 (on that institution, cf. Bieberstein/Bloedhorn,  Jerusalem , 

1:217, 3:170–73). These two schools devoted to the memory of S.ala¯h. al-Dı¯n should not be 

confused with the still-existing  kha¯nqa¯h al-S.ala¯h.iyya , that is, the former Latin Patriar-

chat at the  ¶Aqabat al-Kha¯nqa¯h close to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher (Bieberstein/

Bloedhorn,  Jerusalem ,  2:216–18). 

  193.  I am grateful to Muhammad Ghosheh at the Mu  7assasat Ih.ya  7 al-Tura¯th wa-l-

Buh.u¯th al-Isla¯miyya (Center for Heritage and Islamic Research) in Jerusalem for point-

ing this out to me. 

  194.  Mujı¯r al-Dı¯n’s report is most probably a refl ex on earlier writings about the 

conversion of the  za¯wiya  of Abu

¯ l-Fath. Nas.r in Damascus into a school that referred in 

its name to al-Ghaza¯lı¯. This information was somehow applied to Jerusalem, where 

Abu


¯ l-Fath. Nas.r had fi rst taught before he moved to Tyros and Damascus. This then got 

mixed up with information about a derelict school “al-Na¯s.iriyya” above the Golden Gate. 

The fact that Mujı¯r al-Dı¯n refers to this school as the one where al-Ghaza¯lı¯ taught, yet 

mentions that it was (re)founded by the Ayyu¯bid al-Ma¯lik al-Mu ¶az.z.am (al- ¶Ulaymı¯,  al-



Uns al-jalı¯l , 2:34.4–5) in 610/1214, is evidence for his confusion. 

  195.  In a letter written in 504/1110, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ mentions that he took his vow at 

Hebron in the year 489 (al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  Faz

.

a¯   7il al-ana¯m ,  45.8.) 

  196.  See below, pp. 63–64. Cf. al-Ghaza¯lı¯,  al-Munqidh ,  38.17–18. 

  197.  Al-Subkı¯,  T.abaqa¯t , 6:198.1–9. Tibawi, “Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s Sojourn,” 71. 

  198.  Ibn  al-Qala¯nisı¯ (d. 555/1160),  Dhayl Ta  7



rı¯kh Dimashq , 134; Ibn al-Athı¯r,  

al-

Ka¯mil ,  10:185. 

 

not e s   to   page s   4 5 – 4 8  



3 0 1

  199.  Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ (?),  Tuhfat al-mulu¯k , 407.11–13. If genuine, this text would be to-

gether with  ¶Alı¯ ibn Z.a¯hir al-Sulamı¯’s (d. 500/1106)  Kita¯b al-Jiha¯d,  one of the earliest by 

a Muslim scholar who calls for  jiha¯d  against the crusaders. 

  200.  Cf.  Abu

¯ Bakr ibn al- ¶Arabı¯’s report below p. 65. The  riba¯t.  or  kha¯nqa¯h   of 

Abu


¯ Sa ¶d al-Nı¯sha¯bu¯rı¯ (d. 479/1086) was built about twenty years earlier. He left other 

 religious buildings in Baghdad; see le Strange,  Baghdad during the Abbasid Caliphate , 

99–100, and Kasa¯  7ı¯,  Mada¯ris-i Niz.a¯miyyah , 112–14. Cf. also the valuable map of the quar-

ter surrounding the Niz.a¯miyya madrasa in Baghdad shortly before the Mongol invasion 

of 656/1258, printed at the beginning of Kasa¯  7ı¯’s book. 


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