subscribe or login to access all content.
One night in the year 411/1021, the powerful ruler of Fatimid Cairo, al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, rode out of the southern gates of his city and was never seen again. Was the caliph murdered, or could he have decided to abandon his royal life, wandering off to live alone and anonymous? Whatever the truth, the fact was that al-Hakim had literally vanished into the desert. Yet al-Hakim, though shrouded in mystery, has never been forgotten. To the Druze, he was (and is) God, and his disappearance merely indicated his reversion to non-human form. For Ismailis, al-Hakim was the sixteenth imam, descended ... More
Keywords: Fatimid Cairo, al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, royalty, Druze, God, Ismailis, Jews, Christians, Prophet
Print publication date: 2010 | Print ISBN-13: 9789774163289 |
Published to Cairo Scholarship Online: September 2011 | DOI:10.5743/cairo/9789774163289.001.0001 |
subscribe or login to access all content.