RT Article T1 Could Sufism Have Been a Means of Spreading Ibn Taymiyya's Thought in the Ottoman Empire? JF The Muslim world VO 112 IS 4 SP 422 OP 435 A1 Ḍumairīya, Nāṣir Muḥammad Yaḥyā 19XX- LA English PB Hartford Seminary Foundation YR 2022 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1837652988 AB Current studies on Ibn Taymiyya's influence on the intellectual life of the Ottoman Empire focus on the mid-sixteenth and the early seventeenth centuries. In this paper, I argue that Ibn Taymiyya's influence on some aspects of Ottoman intellectual life can be traced, indirectly, to the beginning of the fifteenth century. Through studying the attitudes of some scholars toward Ibn ʿArabī and his ideas, I argue that these attitudes were affected by the outflow of Ibn Taymiyya's ideas. How did these ideas leak into the Ottoman intellectual milieu? Unexpectedly, it seems that Sufism played an important role in spreading some of Ibn Taymiyya's ideas in an indirect way. This paper discusses three possible ways through which Ibn Taymiyya's thought may have circulated in the Ottoman Empire as early as the fifteenth century: a scholar, a book, and a Sufi order. K1 takfīr K1 Ibrāhīm al-Ḥalabī K1 Zayniyya order K1 Fāḍiḥat al-mulḥidīn K1 Ibn ʿArabī K1 Sufism K1 Ibn Taymiyya DO 10.1111/muwo.12447