TY - BOOK AU - Trimingham,J.Spencer TI - The Sufi orders in Islam SN - 0195120582 AV - BP189.68 .T75 1998 PY - 1998/// CY - New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Sufism N1 - Includes bibliographical references (p. [282]-299) and index; Foreword; John O. Voll --; I; The Formation of Schools of Mysticism --; II; The Chief Tariqa Lines --; III; The Formation of Ta'ifas --; IV; Nineteenth-Century Revival Movements --; V; The Mysticism and Theosophy of the Orders --; VI; The Organization of the Orders --; VII; Ritual and Ceremonial --; VIII; Role of the Orders in the Life of Islamic Society --; IX; The Orders in the Contemporary Islamic World --; App. A; Relating to Early Silsilas --; App. B; Sufis, Malamatis, and Qalandaris --; App. C; Suhrawardi Silsilas --; App. D; Qadiri Groups --; App. E; Independent Orders of the Badawiyya and Burhaniyya --; App. F; Shadhili Groups in the Maghrib deriving from al-Jazuli --; App. G; Madyani and Shadhili Groups in Egypt and Syria --; App. H; Rifa'i Ta'ifas in the Arab World N2 - Sufism, the name given to Islamic mysticism, has been the subject of many studies, but the orders through which the organizational aspect of the Sufi spirit was expressed have been neglected. Here, author J. Spencer Trimingham offers a clear and detailed account of the formation and development of the Sufi schools and orders (tariqas) from the second century of Islam until modern times; Trimingham focuses on the practical disciplines behind the mystical aspects of Sufism which initially attracted a Western audience. He shows how Sufism developed and changed, traces its relationship to the unfolding and spread of mystical ideas, and describes in sharp detail its rituals and ceremonial practices. Finally, he assesses the influence of these Sufi orders upon Islamic society in general ER -