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Mahammadali Huseinzadeh

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Muhammad Ali Huseinzadeh
Personal
Born1791
DiedApril 22, 1852(1852-04-22) (aged 60–61)
ReligionIslam
SchoolShia
Muslim leader
Based inTbilisi, Russian Empire
Period in office1823-1846
SuccessorFazil Iravani
PostSheikh ul-Islam of the Caucasus

Akhund Mahammadali Huseinzadeh (Azerbaijani: Məhəmməd Əli Hüseynzadə) — first shia Sheikh ul-Islam of the Caucasus from 1823 to 1852. Maternal great-grandfather of Ali bey Huseynzade.

Mahammad Ali's daughter Nisa Huseinzadeh and granddaughter Boyukkhanim, by Ali bey Huseynzade, 1910

Early life

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Mahammadali Huseinzadeh was born in Salyan, Shirvan Khanate in 1791. He got his primary religious education in Salyan, Ganja, and later in Baghdad and came to Tbilisi in 1802 where he was appointed as akhund of Shah Abbas Mosque. He was appointed as Sheikh ul-Islam of the Tbilisi in 1822 (or in 1823[1]) and served in this post until 1846.[2] His influence was not wider and only accepted around Tbilisi and Ganja. This influence was mainly decreased after the appointment of Mir-Fatah-Agha as head of the Caucasian Spiritual Assembly in 1828.[3] His main accomplishment was imperial legalization of sharia courts and feudal rights of beys on 6 December 1846 by Nicholas I just days before his resignation. He was succeeded by Fazil Iravani in 1846.

Despite his resignation, he was active in the religious scene and helped to fund a Shiite theological school in Tbilisi on 12 December 1847 with help from Fathali Akhundov and Abbasgulu Bakikhanov.[4] He died on 22 April 1852. His nephew, Ahmad Huseinzadeh also became a sheikh-ul-islam.

Family

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He had at least 2 daughters:

  1. Nisa Huseinzadeh (b. 1835)
  2. Husniyya Huseinzadeh — married to her own cousin Ahmad Huseinzadeh[5]

References

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  1. ^ Abbasov, Ali. "Ислам в современном Азербайджане: образы и реалии" [Islam in modern Azerbaijan: images and realities]. old.sakharov-center.ru. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
  2. ^ Духовные правления мусульман Закавказья в Российской империи (XIX – начало ХХ в.) (in Russian). Litres. 2017-09-05. p. 445. ISBN 978-5-04-001380-7.
  3. ^ Sherry, Dana (Summer 2003). "Mosque and State in the Caucasus, 1828-1841" (PDF). Caucasus and Central Asia Newsletter (4).
  4. ^ Ahmadov, Husein (1985). XIX əsr Azərbaycan məktəbi [19th century Azerbaijani school] (in Azerbaijani). Maarif. pp. 44–45.
  5. ^ "Формулярный список о службе председателя Шиитского духовного правления, Закавказского шейх-уль-ислама Ахунда Ахмеда Гусейн-заде · Russian Perspectives on Islam". islamperspectives.org. Retrieved 2021-06-14.