Jerusalem in Early Islam
Jerusalem in Early Islam
Jerusalem in Early Islam
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide
range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and
facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
http://about.jstor.org/terms
Brill is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Arabica
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
BY
OFER LIVNE-KAFRI
University of Haifa
a. Jerusalem itself is not mentioned or hinted in the Qur'an as the scene of the
last drama of humankind. The connection of Jerusalem (and of other cities and
places), to the matters of the end emerged in the Qur'anic interpretation and in
the had-t literature after Muhammad's death, also as a part of study and absortion
ofJewish and Christian materials.3 An important place in that literature was reserved
For basic bibliography see e.g., 0. Livne-Kafri, 'The Early Siza and Jerusalem',
Arabica 48 (2001), pp. 112-113, notes 1-2. Cf. also idem, 'The Muslim Traditions "in
Praise of Jerusalem" (Fadd'il al-Quds): Diversity and Complexity', Annali 58 (1998), pp.
165-192.
2 Cf. idem, 'Some Notes Concerning Muslim Apocalyptic Tradition', Quaderni di Studi
Arabi 17 (1999), pp. 71-94; idern, 'Some Notes on Muslim Apocalyptic Literature in Light
of the Jewish and Christian Apocalyptic Traditions' (accepted for publication in Studia
Islamica).
Not without controversy; see MJ. Kister, "'haddithiu 'an bant isrd'tla wa-la-haraja"',
Israel Oriental Studies 2 (1972), pp. 215-239, where he discusses in detail the debate among
Muslim scholars on whether or not it is lawful to rely on Jewish or Christian sources.
Cf. J.W. Hirschberg, 'The Sources of Muslim Traditions concerningJerusalem', Rocznik
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 383
for the fitan and maldhim, to which the 'Canonical Collections' of hadit also dedi-
cated special chapters. Prophecy and fortune tellig were likewise assigned a place
in Muslim apocalyptic literature, which also deals with the mahdr, a kind of Muslim
messiah, who sometimes appears identical with 'Isa (Jesus) and an anti-messiah, a
Muslim antichrist generally called al-daq&l, neither of which is mentioned in the
Qur'an. As in Jewish and Christian apocalyptic traditions, basically two major lev-
els are distinguished in the eschatological picture ofJerusalem: a. the remote events
of the day of judgement and the period leading up to it, generally replete with
disaster and horror (a&rdt al-sa'a, the signs of the hour [of the resurrection]) and b.
the very actual reality of the Muslim community presented in apocalyptic depic-
tions, which accordingly reflect religious, social, and political conditions.4
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
384 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 385
origin of Safiyya. 3 Some traditions introduced by Jewish converts show how much
they were still attached to their Jewish heritage, as they express typical Jewish
expectations of redemption, lament the destruction of the Temple, and yeam for
the rebuilding of the Temple. These traditions were also styled in an apocalyptic
manner, and they seem to echo a certain eschatological tension among Jews who
embraced Islam."4 An important tradition of this sort is also attributed to Ka'b al-
Ahbar. Of him it is said, 'He found in one of the books: Rejoice, Jerusalem
('Iru'salayim), that is to say bayt al-maqdis and the Rock (al-,awra) and it is called
the Temple [al-haykal: he4al in Hebrew]. I will send you my servant 'Abd al-Malik
and he will build you and embellish you, and I shall restore bayt al-maqdis to its
former sovereignty (mulk) and I shall crown it with gold and silver and pearls, and
I shall send to you my people, and I shall place my throne on the Rock, and I
am God, the Lord, and David is the king of the sons of Israel'.'5 This is an obvi-
ous expression of expectations of the Jews, who linked the reconstruction of the
Temple to a renewal of worldly rule. The Temple is identified with the Dome of
the Rock, 'a new Temple'; 'Abd al-Malik is executing a divine command. The
conclusion of the tradition introduces another important element in Jewish escha-
tology, the 'House of David'.'"
Other traditions connect the rebuilding of the Temple with the rise of Islam,
and this may be an echo of eschatological tension in circles of Jewish converts.
Ibn Sa'd (d. 230/845) quoted the following tradition on the authority of Muh. ammad
b. Ka'b al-Qurazi, a man of Jewish origin: 'God revealed Himself to Jacob and
said: I shall send from your descendants kings and prophets, till I send the Prophet
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
386 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
of the haram whose nation will build the Temple (haykal) of Jerusalem, and he is
the seal of the prophets and his name is Ahmad'.'7 In the name of Ka'b al-Ahbar,
the Jewish convert, a kind of 'new covenant' with the nation of Muhammad is
spoken of: 'This House (bayt al-maqdis) complained before God, may He be exalted,
about the destruction, and God revealed Himself: I manifest to you a new Torah,
which means, the Qur'an, and new inhabitants, which means the nation of
Muhammad, peace be upon him. They will hover towards you like the hovering
of the eagle, and they will long for you as the dove longs for its eggs and they
will enter you prostrating and bowing. . ..'8 As noted Jews could also iden-
tify ancient sacred sites (or sites perceived as such) and identify their apocaly
importance.
b2. Ascetics
The zuhhdd, Muslim ascetics, were greatly interested in the Jewish and Christian
heritage, and apparently were especially influenced by the model of Christian monks
and hermits. Many ascetics were occupied with eschatological matters, mainly the
individual aspect, because of their great piety and their intense fear of God's judge-
ment, which might send people to the fire of hell. The idea of the sancitiy of
Jerusalem was largely developed by ascetic circles.20 According to one tradition, the
famous ascetic, Ibrahim b. Adham (d. ca. 780), regarded his period as 'the time
of the punishments', most probably in an apocalyptic perception. He urged his
friends to leave 'this world' and go 'to the Holy Land and the mountains of
Jerusalem ... and he pointed to the mountain of Jerusalem. . .'.21 This tradition
also refers to the ascetic ideal of retirement from the company of men in order to
devote attention entirely to God, but sometimes to avoid participating in the civil
wars that were depicted as a part of the last events. Here the location was the
environs of Jerusalem, a dwelling place of Christian monks as well. The tradition
might also echo another important concept, basically derived from the Judaeo-
17 Ibn Sa'd, Ki-tab al-Tabaqdt al-Kabtr (Leiden, 1904-1940), vol. 1, part 1, p. 107.
18 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 153-154, no. 195; cf. Mugir al-Din, al-Uns al-
(ail (above, note 12), vol. 1, pp. 203-204; al-Luqaymi, Latd'jf al-Uns (above, note 12),
f. 5a; al-Miknasi, Fa.d'il Bayt al-Maqdis (above, note 16), f. 20b-21a; for words of con-
solation to Jerusalem and the ruined Temple see also Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5),
pp. 154-155, no. 197-198.
9 According to a tradition, Ka'b al-Ahbar (originally a Jew himself), had to pay to
a certain Jewish scholar in Jerusalem (probably an inhabitant of the city) so that he
would show him the site of 'the rock upon which Solomon son of David stood on the
day when he completed the building of the Mosque [the Temple]' (Ibn al-Muragga
[above, note 5], p. 129, no. 158). Ka'b's stepson is the informant who enumerated the
apocalyptic traits of Jerusalem before the caliph 'Abd al-Malik (cf. note 27).
20 This was essentially the theory presented by S.D. Goitein in his article 'The Sanctity
of Palestine in Muslim Piety', Yediot, 12 (1946), pp. 120-126 (in Hebrew). The English
version was published in his Studies in Islamic Histogy and Institutions (Leiden, 1966), pp.
135-148. See also 0. Livne-Kafri, 'Early Muslim Ascetics and the World of Christian
Monasticism', Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 20 (1996), pp. 124-125.
21 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 190, no. 272a. On Ibrahim b. Adham see
R. Jones, 'Ibrahim b. Adham', EI2, vol. 3 (1971), pp. 985-986.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 387
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
388 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
(al-sa4ra) would not have a special role on the day of resurrection, contrary to Ka'b
al-Ah.bar who claimed that 'in the day of resurrection the Rock shall be the place
for the foot of Allah (al-Rahman)'. 'Abd al-Malik's silence seems to signify support
of Ka'b's view.28
These are only some examples of the circles involved in the creation of an apoc-
alyptic tradition conceming Jerusalem. As stated, it is not easy to distinguish these
circles sharply.
'Have you perceived what the people believe regarding this rock? Is it true that we
have to follow, or is it something originating from the book [ofJews or Christians],
so that we shoud leave it? Both of them said: Glory be to God! Who doubts about
it? When God, may He be exalted, ascended from it (istawa) to Heaven, He said
to the Rock of Jerusalem: This is my place (maqam), and the place of my Throne
in the day of ressurection (yawm al-qfyama), and of the assembly of my servants,
and this is the place of my paradise at its right side, and my hell at its left side,
and I shall set my scales in front of it; I am God, the Judge of judgement-day
(dayyanyawm al-dn). After that He ascended to Heaven'.29
28 Muhammad b. Oarir al-Tabari, 6dmi' al-Bayan (Cairo, 1954), vol. 16, p. 212. On
the scholarship of 'Abd al-Malik himself see Ibn al-Atjr, al-Kmimil ft al-Ta'rtb (Beirut,
1385-1386), vol. 4, p. 520.
29 This tradition is quoted by I. Hasson in his introduction to al-Wasiti, Fa.d'il al-
Bayt al-Muqaddas (above, note 15), p. 16; See also al-Hanaff, al-Mustaqsd (above, note
15), f. 35a; cf. al-Miknasi, Fada'il Bayt al-Maqdis (above, note 16), f. 43b; al-Luqaymi,
Latd'if al-Uns (above, note 12), f. 16b. For a theological discussion see 0. Livne-Kafri,
'Fada'il Bayt al-Maqdis (The merits ofJerusalem): Two Additional Notes', Quaderni di Studi
Arabi 19 (2001), pp. 63-66.
30 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 261, no. 399 quoting from Muqatil b. Sulayman.
Muqatil's chapter is in fact the first arranged tract on the Praises of Jerusalem annexed
to Su. al-isrd', 1 (identified first by Mj. Kister, 'A Comment on the Antiquity of
Traditions Praising Jerusalem', The Jerusalem Cathedra 1 [1981]), pp. 185-186). Cf.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 389
on him, standing on the rock of Jerusalem which is the nearest place on earth to
heaven, at a distance of eighteen miles, and all the creatures will hear and they
will assemble in Jerusalem and it is the middle of the earth, and this is the "nearer
place" . . .'.31 The identification of the Rock as the sounding place appears in other
traditions in Ibn al-Muragga's book and in different commentaries to the Qur'an.32
'This is a day in which God will order Israfll who will stand on the Rock of
Jerusalem and say to him: Blow the trumpet ... and he will lengthen it and spread
it [the trumpet] ... he will call and the call will be heard to a distance of one thou-
sand years and that is his saying: 'from a near place'; and concerning what you
asked which is the thing Israfil will call with ... he will call while the trumpet is
in his mouth and the width of the circle of his mouth is like the width of heaven
and earth and it is made of light, and then he will call: 0 you, the rotten bones
and the skins torn to pieces, and the cut hair! Arise to your Lord...'.3
Another Qur'anic verse which speaks of the infidels, who 'shall come forth from
the tombs hastily, as if they were hurrying unto a waymark' (Su. al-Ma'drt , 43),
is also connected to the Rock. According to a certain interpretation they will hurry
to the Rock of Jerusalem.34 According to another tradition, 'hell will be opened
from this valley, namely the valley of gahannam [hell] and paradise will be opened
from the mosque, namely the mosque ofJerusalem'.35
al-Wasiti (above, note 15), p. 89, no. 145; Oalal-Din al-Suy-tg, Kit&b al-Durr al-Mantiir
ft al-Tafsir bi-l-Ma'tur (Cairo, 1314), vol. 6, p. 110 (quoting al-Wasiti and Ibn 'Asakir);
Fada'il Bayt al-Maqdis (anon. above, note 16), ff 55a-55b. On Israfil see Aj. Wensinck,
'Israfil', El2, vol. 4 (1978), p. 211. According to him the origin of the name is the
Hebrew word srafim. On the entire issue see in detail Livne-Kafri, Jerusalem in Muslim
Traditions (above, note 11), pp. 31-34.
31 Muqatil b. Sulayman, Tafsir, MS. Sarai Ahmad III, no. 74, f 169a, line 15. Cf.
Hirschberg (above, note 3), p. 328.
32 See Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 111, no. 124. Cf. al-Wasiti (above, note
15), p. 88, no. 143; al-Tabarsi, Magma' al-Baydn ft Tafsir al-Qur'dn (Beirut, 1954-1957),
vol. 26, p. 117 below. Cf. Ibn al-Muragga, p. 111, no. 126; al-Zasmaibiarl, al-KaIdIf
(Calcuta, 1856-1867), vol. 2, p. 1407; Ibn Katir, TafsTr al-Qur'&n al-'A,zm (Cairo, 1952),
vol. 4, p. 230; al-Maqdisi, Mutir al-Gardm (above, note 16), f. 7a; Ibn al-Gawzi, Ktdb
Fadd'il al-Quds al-Sarzf; MS Princeton 586, f. 29b-30a; Yaquat, Mu'gam al-Buldan (Beirut,
1975), vol. 5, 166.
3 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 240, no. 359.
34 Ibid., p. 112, no. 127; p. 239, no. 355.
3 Ibid., p. 254, no. 387. In a commentary to Su. Hiud, 40 ('Until, when Our com-
mand came, and the oven boiled...') Muqatil states, 'Allah, may He be exalted, said
to Moses: Go to Jerusalem, because my fire of hell is there and my light and my oven'
(Muqatil, Tafsir [above, note 31], f. 120a; cf. Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 259,
no. 399.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
390 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
(al-sahra) as the place of paradise, the source of the four rivers of paradise; it is
told of a divine light descending from Eden to the mosque of Jerusalem and of
an open gate from paradise, from which mercy and pity come down on Jerusalem;
Jerusalem is one of paradise's cities in this world; the source of drinking water in
this world is located under the Rock; there is a symmetry and parallel lines between
paradise in the seventh heaven (or a temple in the seventh heaven) and bayt al-
maqdis and the Rock, etc.36
Following the Jewish legend, the place of hell is identified with the Valley of
Joshaphat, but is confused with the Valley of Hinnom, because the Arabic name
of the Valley of Joshaphat is w&ad gahannam (the valley of hell).37 It was related that
'the wall' which Allah mentioned in the Qur'an (Su. al-haad, 13) 'and a wall shall
be set up between them, having a door in the inward whereof is mercy, and the
outward thereof is chastisement' is the eastern wall of the the mosque of
Jerusalem, 'in the inward whereof is mercy, and the outward thereof is chastise-
ment', namely wdad gahannam.38 It was told of 'Ubada b. al-Samit that he was seen
standing on the eastern wall of Jerusalem and weeping. The reason was explained
by a saying of his: 'The messenger of God brought to our knowledge that he saw
hell from here';39 or according to another tradition that 'he saw from here an angel
uptuming burning-coals'.' Some traditions are connected with a judicial question
of whether praying in the churches of the Christians in the Valley of Joshaphat is
lawful (probably against similar practices amongs Muslims). Legitimacy is requested
in the actions of the caliph 'Umar b. al-Hattab. One tradition tells that 'Umar,
'after he conquered Jerusalem, he passed by the Church of Mary may Peace be
on her, which is located in the valley, and he prayed there; later on he repented
and said: that is because of a saying of the Prophet, may peace be on him: this
valley is from the valleys of hell'. Another tradition says that he prayed twice in
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 391
the church which is in wdda gahannam and he said later on: 'It was written of us
that I should kneel praying ... on a gate from the gates of hell'.4' A clear reser-
vation against prayer in the Christians sites of the Valley of Joshaphat and on the
Mount of Olives is also expressed in a saying attributed to Ka'b al-Ah.bar.42 Dreams
are also a source of information concerning hell and paradise in Jerusalem, for
example a dream of the Prophet Muhammad on a night journey to the Holy
Land43 and a night dream of a man who was considered to be one of the abdal-
saints on 'Alfura' night of 335 AH.44 In the Guide to the Pilgrims included in 'The
Praises of Jerusalem' of Ibn al-Muragga, the Gate of Mercy (bab al-rahma) over-
looking the valley of Joshaphat was chosen to be the place in which the pilgrims
'should ask of Allah paradise, and ask of him a shelter from the fire of hell',
'because the wdda which is behind it is the wddt of hell and it is the place about
which Allah, may He be exalted, said 'And a wall shall be set up between them,
having a door in the inward whereof is mercy, and the outward thereof is chas-
tisement'.45
Commentators tried also to identify the place of the sdhira in Su. al-Ndzi'dt 14,
which speaks of the creatures on the day of judgement. Wahb b. Munabbih spoke
about that verse when he stayed in Jerusalem: 'Here is al-sdhira, that means, al-
Quds'.46 There is also an identification of al-sahira with 'the piece of land which
is under the monastery, where the road to Jerusalem is [most probably the road
up to Jerusalem from the east] '.4 It was also said that al-sahira was 'a mountain
near Jerusalem', and some identifications connect it with al-9am in general.48 One
tradition on the authority of the Prophet Muhammad states, "The people will be
gathered by groups; the believer will not mix with the infidel and the infidel will
not be mixed with the believer, and the angel of the trumpet will descend and
stand on the Rock of Jerusalem, and the people will be gathered barefoot, naked
and uncircumcised, and the sun will approach their heads while between it and
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
392 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
them there is a distance of sixty years ... and they will come to the piece of land
which is called al-sdhira and it is in the vicinity of Jerusalem...'.49
c3. Ibn al-Muragga in his Guide to the Pilgrim recommends that the pilgrim go
up the sahira which is 'the Mountain of Olives'. He links this to an old tradition
on Safiyya, the widow of the Prophet Muhammad, who went to Jerusalem, climb
the Mount of Olives, and prayed there. This is connected with traditions men-
tioned above that Safiyya visited the Mount of Olives and prayed there, and said
that this was the place where the people would be separated on the day of res-
urrection for heaven and hell.50 Indeed, The Mount of Olives became a site for
pilgrimage, and it is mentioned among the sacred mountains in commentaries to
the Qur'an and in the hadi.51
49 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 234, no. 347. Cf. al-Wasiti- (above, note 15),
p. 87, no. 142; see Calal al-Din al-SuyutiT, al-La'dli' al-Mam'ia (Cairo, 1352), vol. 1,
pp. 52-53. On the 'spreading element' ofJerusalem in the end according to theJewish
sages, see Vilnai (above, note 37), pp. 113, 115.
5 See Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 80, no. 68, and cf. above, notes 12-13
51 See, e.g., Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), pp. 232-234, no. 343-346. Cf.
A. Aptowizer, 'Heavenly Temple according to the Aggadah', Tarbiz 2 (1941), p. 272,
n. 3 (in Hebrew). See above, note 12 (the example of the ascetic 'Abd Allah b. Abr
Zakariyya').
52 Livne-Kafri, Navel (above, note 36), pp. 97-98.
53 Cf. A. Aptowizer (above, note 51), pp. 270 if.; E.U. Urbach, 'HeavenlyJerusalem
and EarthlyJerusalem', Yernalaim Ledoroteha (Jerusalem, 1969), pp. 169-171 (in Hebrew).
54 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 208, no. 299; cf. al-Maqdisi, MutHr al-Gardm
(above, note 16), f. 72a; Mugir al-Din, al-Uns al-6alil (above, note 12), p. 213; see also
Ibn al-Faqih, IWtb al-Buldan (above, note 25), p. 97, line 11.
55 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 210, no. 304; cf. Hirschberg (above, note 3), p. 327.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 393
Or:
'Allah said to Jerusalem: Days and nights will not pass until I send down on you
a dome from heaven, that I shall build with my own hands, and the angels will
carry it. It will shine on you as the light of the sun and no human being will enter
to it... and I will place around you a wall and a fence of clouds and five walls
of topaz and sapphire and pearls and gold and silver. To you is the gathering (for
the resurrection) and from you is the resurrection. '56
It was also transmitted that it was written in the Torah that Allah said to Bayt al-
Maqdis: '. . . I shall send to you water from beneath the Throne of Glory, and I
shall wash you until I leave you like crystal [this is only one meaning of the word
maha] and I shall put around you a wall of clouds, its width twelve miles, and a
fence of fire. I shall put on you a dome that I created with my hands . . .'.5 The
last two traditions appear with certain changes also regarding the Rock ofJerusalem.5"
Unlike Revelation 21, the Muslim traditions do not mention the city descending
from heaven, but like what is said there they mention precious stones and the
number twelve. There is also a connection between the Muslim traditions and what
is said in Revelation as regards the width of the wall, the lack of need of sunlight,
and water issuing from the Throne of Glory.59 According to another tradition, the
Rock, which on the day of judgement will be the place of the Throne of Glory
and the place of the judgement, will turn into a white pearl, and its width will be
like the width of heaven and earth.60 According to an apocalypse of Ka'b al-Ahbar
mentioned earlier, the caliph 'Abd al-Malik will build Jerusalem (Irftfaliyim), which
56 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 208, no. 300; Regarding the dome cf. Aj.
Wensinck, The Ideas of the Western Semites Concerning the Navel of the Earth (Verhandelingen
Koninklijke Akademie van Wetenschappen: Letterkunde XII, 1), Amsterdam 1916,
p. 39, pp. 42 ff.
5 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 209, no. 301; cf. Hirschberg (above, note 3),
p. 327, n. 1.
58 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 109, no. 122; cf. al-Wasiti (above, note 15),
p. 71, no. 116; Abui Nu'aym al-Isbahani, .Hilyat al-Awl4$' (Cairo), vol. 6, p. 43 (item
'Ka'b al-Ahbar'); FaOddil Bayt al-Maqdis, (anon. above, note 16), if. 49a-50a; al-Miknas
Fada'il Bayt al-Maqdis (above, note 16), ff 42a-43b; cf. al-Maqdisi, Mutir al-Gardm (above,
note 16), f. 69b-70a; see also Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 110, no. 123; cf. al-
Wasiti (above, note 15), p. 72, no. 118; al-Hanafli, al-Mustaqsd (above, note 15), f. 31b.
59 On the width of the wall see Revelation 21:12 ff. On not being in need to the
light of the sun see ibid., verse 23; water coming from the Throne of Glory cf. ibid.,
22:1.
60 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 104, no. 108; cf. al-Nuwayri, Nihdyat al-Arab fl
Funuin al-Adab (Cairo, 1923), vol. 1, p. 336; Ibn al-Firkah, Ba'it al-Nufjus (above, note
12), p. 64; Ibn al-Gawzi, Fa.d'il (above, note 32), f. 29a; Fa.d'il Bayt al-Maqdis (anon.,
above, note 16), ff 48a-48b; al-Kangi (above, note 16), f. 78a; al-Miknasi, Fa,da'il Bayt
al-maqdis (above, note 16), ff. 41a-41b; cf. al-Kangi, f. 72a; al-Maqdisi, Muttr al-Gardm
(above, note 16), f. 70a; Abiu Fadl Allah al-'Umari, Masalik al-Absarfi Mamdlik al-Am.sdr
(Cairo, 1342), p. 138; Mugir al-Din, al-Uns al-Galil (above, note 12), p. 209; Ibn
al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 104, no. 109. On the Black Stone, which is a precious
stone from paradise see H. Lazarus-Yafeh, 'The Religious Problematics of Islamic
Pilgrimage', Proceedings of the Israeli Academy of Sciences, vol. 5, no. 11 (1976), p. 233 (in
Hebrew); on the spread ofJerusalem see Urbach (above, note 53), p. 159.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
394 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
is Bayt al-Maqdis and the Rock, which is called al-haykal (he4al in Hebrew: the
Temple) with gold, silver and pearls..'.61
The 'bride motif', which appears in Revelation ('I saw the Holy City, new
Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, made ready like a bride adorned
for her husband'),62 appears differently in the Muslim traditions. According to one
of them, which carries an obvious Jewish character (such as in the phrase 'I shall
not forget you until I forget my right hand'; cf. Psalms 137:5), Allah says to the
Rock: '. . . Days and nights will not pass unless each mosque in which the name
of Allah was mentioned, will gather to you. They will surround you the same way
the riders surround the bride when she is carried to the house of her family ....63
This image is reserved to the Ka'ba, which on the day of resuerrection will be
conducted to Jerusalem like a bride conducted to her husband, and it will inter-
cede for the people who went on a pilgrimage to it.64 One tradition relates that
the Ka'ba will visit Jerusalem on the day of judgement, and then both of them
will be conducted to heaven with their inhabitants.65 This is not the descent of a
heavenly Jerusalem to earth, but the ascension of the Ka'ba and Jerusalem to
heaven.
The bride motif was applied to other towns also,66 especially those in constant
conflict with external enemies (ribatdt; tugur). This is particularly evident in the tra-
ditions regarding the last day:
'Alexandria and Ascalon are two brides, and Alexandria is of a higher rank. When
the day of judgement comes, it will be conducted as a bride to Jerusalem, along
with its inhabitants'.67
61 Cf. note 15. This tradition has a very clearly Jewish hue. Goitein connects the
issue of the precious stones to Jewish sources, speaking of the external cover of the walls
of the Dome of the Rock in mosaics and precious stones. See S.D. Goitein, 'Jerusalem
during the Arab Period', Jerusalem Researches of Eretz Israel 4 (1953), p. 89 (in Hebrew).
62 Revelation 21:2. According to Werblowski, clear evidence on heavenly Jerusalem
as a bride (or a mother) is not found in ancient Jewish sources, but he believes that
this idea already existed in the period of the Second Temple. See RJ.Z. Werblowski,
'Metropolis for All the Countries', remWalaim Ledoroteha (above, note 8), p. 75.
63 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 110, no. 123.
64 Ibid., p. 211, no. 307; cf. al-Wasiti (above, note 15), p. 93, no. 153; see also Fa4dail
Bayt al-Maqdis (anon., above, note 16), if. 50a-50b; al-Kasani, al-Mahaga al-Baygda
(Teheran, 1339 AH), vol. 2, p. 154; cf. Lazarus-Yafeh, The Relious Problematics (above,
note 60), p. 236.
65 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 211, no. 306; cf. al-Wasiti (above, note 15),
p. 40, no. 55; p. 92, no. 152; cf. Ibn gaddad, al-A'laq al-Iatpra (above, note 27),
p. 189. On heavenly paradise descending to Jerusalem see Ibn al-Faqih, Kltdb al-Buld?n
(above, note 25), p. 94. On the entire issue see also Livne-Kafri, Navel (above, note 36),
pp. 99-101; idem, Jerusalem in Muslim Traditions (above, note 1 1), pp. 34-38.
66 Cf., e.g., Ibn al-Faqrh, Aitab al-Bulddn (above, note 25), p. 104: 'the two brides of
this world are Ray and Damascus'; al-Dahabt, Mizdn al-Jftidl ft Naqd al-Rigal (Cairo,
1325 AH), vol. 1, p. 285: 'Ascalon is the bride of paradise'.
67 'Utan b. al-Salah, Fa.da'il al-Iskandafiyya wa-'Asqaldn, MS Berlin 198, f, 2b. See
also Ibn 'Arraq, Tanzth al-Saria al-Mar'jua 'an al-AhdAt al-Mawdiia (Cairo, 1378 AH),
vol. 2, p. 62 regarding the glorification of Qazvin that 'will become on the day of
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 395
The precious stones of Jerusalem, which descend from heaven, also appear in
respect of the frontier towns: 'On the Day of Resurrection, Allah will tum three
towns into topaz, and they will be conducted as brides to their husbands. These
are Ascalon, Alexandria, and Qazvin'.68
fl. Before the last judgement a period of terrible events is supposed to happen.
The name asr&t al-sd'a, the 'signs of the hour' (of the resurrection), was given to
the specific circumstances (like social and political crises, wars, cosmic changes) that
must precede the last judegment. In Judaism the parallel to akr@t al-sd'a might be
the terms hevlei masiah or ymot masiah.70 Some events, like the appearance of Gog
and Magog, are mentioned already in the Qur'an, although important conceptions
such as that of a mahdi (messiah), or of an antichrist, generally called al-dagdl, are
not mentioned there. The figure of this false Messiah, sometimes with the title of
al-Suyjdni, has attracted the attention of many scholars, notably regarding the polit-
ical aspects of the traditions.7' A special Muslim terminology emerged to denote
apocalyptic ideas, such as fitan ('trials', sing. fitna), generally relating to inner tribu-
lations arising from major disturbances, civil wars, and schism within the Muslim
community, and of maldhim ('wars', sing. malhama) concerning warfare, generally
with eschatological connotations, also against the infidels, principally the Byzantines.72
resurrection, having two wings with which it will hover between earth and heaven; it
will be a white pearl. Carrying its inhabitants ... it will declare: I am Qazvin, a part
of paradise. I will intercede for those who came to me'. On the role of the Ka'ba inter-
ceding for the pilgrims, see Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), pp. 212-213, no. 309. Cf.
A.E. Gruber, Ferdienst und Rang die Fadd'il als literarisches und gesellchafiliches Problem im
IsIam (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1975), p. 61. On the entire issue see also Livne-Kafri,
Diversity and Complexiy (above, note 1), pp. 173-181; idem, 'Jerusalem and the Sanctity
of the Frontier Cities in Islam', Cathedra 94 (1999), pp. 75-88 (in Hebrew).
68 Ibid., p. 82; idem, Diversity and Complexit_ (above, note 1), p. 180. Cf. (alal al-Din
al-Suyuti, 'al-'Urf al-Wardtfl Ahbdr al-Mah', in al-Haunt Ii-l-Fatdwd (Cairo, 1351), vol. 2,
p. 223: The people will gather around the mahdt (the Messiah) 'and they will conduct
him like the bride conducted to her husband the day she gets married'.
69 See in detail Livne-Kafri, 'Burial in the Holy Land and Jerusalem according to
Muslim Tradition', Liber Annuus 53 (2003), pp. 417-425.
70 Cf. Livne-Kafri, Muslim Apocalyptic Tradition (above, note 2), p. 74, note 15. Cf. The
Hebrew Engclopaedia, s.v. 'ah.arit hayamim'.
7' On the Mahdi see D.B. Macdonald, 'al-Mahdi', El', vol. 3 (1936), pp. 111-115.
Cf. e.g., W. Madelung, 'The Sufjbann between Tradition and History', Studia Islamica
(1986), pp. 5-48.
72 Livne-Kafri, Muslim Apocalyptic Tradition (above, note 2), pp. 72-75.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
396 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
In the Qur'an, the descriptions of the last day are not connected to Jerusalem
and in the hadt literature this vision is not nessarily associated with Jerusalem. The
signs of the hour mentioned in the Qur'an, such as the appearance of Gog and
Magog, are widely described in the hadft. Besides the Qur'anic portrayal, the hadt
literature absorped Jewish and Christian materials, like the antichrist legend or the
Jewish equivalent Armilus, and other materials.73
'I came to the prophet of God, may God bless him and grant him salvation, while
he was in a certain building of his, and I saluted him, and he said:
Is that you, 'Awf? and I said, Yes, 0 prophet of God. And he said, come
in ... And he said, Count, 'Awf, six [signs] before the hour of the resurrection,
of which the first is the death of your prophet (and I started to cry because of
that, until the prophet of God started to hush me), say: One. And the second is:
The conquest of Jerusalem, say: Two. And a death which will be amongst my
nation which is like the murrain of the sheep,74 say: Three. And the fourth will
be a fitna in the midst of my nation (and he emphasized its severity), say: Four.
And the fifth: Money will be in abundance, until a man will be given one hun-
dred dinars and he will be unsatisfied, say: Five. And the sixth a ceasfire that will
be between you and baniu al-asfar [the Byzantines],7 and they will march against
you under eight flags, under each flag twelve thousand men; the shelter place for
the Muslims [fust@! al-muslimfn]76 will be then a place called al-Guta, in a town
called Damascus...'
To describe events which happen to the Muslims, this tradition uses also motifs
known from Jewish and Christian traditions; however, one should not necessarily
seek a historical parallel for every detail in this kind of literature. The death of
Muhammad (the first sign) opens a new era in the history of mankind, up to its
73 See e.g., ibid., pp. 77-79; idem, Jerusalem in Muslim Traditions (above, note 11), pp.
42-50. Cf. W. Bousset, 'Antichrist', Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics, vol. I, p. 578;
D. Flusser, 'Antichrist', The Hebrew Encyclopaedia, vol. 4, col. 466-469. Cf. notes 101, 104.
74 Or: a mortal disease or a murrain that befalls camels or sheep and the like: see:
mutdn (or mawtdn) in E.W. Lane, An Arabic-English Lexicon (London 1865-1893), vol. 7,
p. 2742; also: a sudden death (al-Wasiti [above, note 15], p. 53, no. 86, note 5).
75 See Lane (previous note), s.v. 'asfar, the expression 'banu al-asfar, also: from the
descendants of aofar, the son of Rum the son of Esau' (al-ruim: the Greeks [the Byzantines])
76 See Ibn al-Atir, al-Nihdya ft Garnb al-IHadit (Cairo, 1311), p. 200 (s.v. fst).
77 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 42, no. 34. Cf. Ibn Hanbal, Musnad (Cairo,
1313 AH), vol. 6, p. 25; Fada'il Bayt al-Maqdis (anon., above, note 16), f. 69b-70b. Cf.
also Ibn Hanbal, ibid., vol. 2, p. 174 with some changes. The sixth sign, for instance,
is the conquest of Constantinople; vol. 6, p. 27. See also H. Lammens, 'Guta', EP, vol.
2 (1927), p. 67. 'Awf b. Malik al-Aiga'!, lived in H.ims [d. 73 AH; cf. e.g., Ibn al-
clmad, Sadarat al-Dahab (Cairo, 1350-1351), vol. 1, p. 79]. It was said said about him
that 'he told the prophet [Muh.ammad] may peace be on him: I fear lest I will not see
you after this day, so tell me your will. He said: You have to go to the Mountain of
the resurrection' (Ibn al-Muragga [above, note 5], p. 267, no. 406).
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 397
78 See: '. . . I am the last prophet, and you are the last among the nations, and h
[the dadggl, the antichrist of the Muslim tradition], will certainly appear among you'
(Ibn Maga, Sunan [Cairo, 1952-1953], vol. 2, p. 1359); cf. Abui Nu'aym al-Isbahani,
A4bdr Isbahdn (Leiden, 1931-1934), p. 281.
79 See: D. Flusser, Judaism and the Sources of Christianit (Tel Aviv, 1979), p. 253 f (A
Prophecy on Jerusalem in the New Testament; the article was published at first under
the tide 'A Prophecy on the freeing of Jerusalem in the New Testament', in Eretz Israel
10 [1971], pp. 226 ff [in Hebrew]).
80 See, e.g., Matthew 24:7; Even Shmuel (above, note 10), The Book of Elijah,
p. 44.
81 For traditions on the td'an (plague) see, e.g., Galal al-Din al-Suyiti, al-Jjasd'is al-
Kubrd (Cairo, 1967), vol. 2, p. 477; vol. 3, p. 212; Aslam b. Sahl al-Wasiti, Ta'ril Wdsit
(Baghdad, 1967), p. 48; al-Hakim al-Naysabtori, al-Mustadrak (Hyderabad, 1334-1342),
vol. 1, p. 50; vol. 3, pp. 88-89.
82 Cf., e.g., The Hebrew Encyclopaedia, s.v. 'aharit hayamim'; Matthew 24:10; Mark
13:12.
83 Compare: 'If someone tells you: take land that is worth one thousand dinars for
[only] one dinar-do not take' (according to H.Z. Hirschberg, 'The Footprints of the
Messiah in Arabia the Fifth and the Sixth Centuries' in The Memorial Volume to the
Rabbinical Bet Hamidrak in Vienna [Jerusalem, 1946], p. 112, note 2 [in Hebrew]).
84 It is hard to determine a definite date for this matter. For an example of a non-
belligerency agreement with the Byzantines on hard conditions of taxation and humil-
iation at the time of 'Abd al-Malik, see Muhammad b. Garir al-Tabari, Ta'r7i al-Rusul
wa-l-Mulik (Leiden, 1879-1901), ed. De Goeje, second series, vol. 2, p. 796.
85 Cf., e.g., G.E. von Grunebaum, 'The Sacred Character of Islamic Cities', A. Badawi
(ed.), in Melanges Tdhd Husain (Cairo 1962), p. 26.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
398 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
86 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 215, no. 314; cf. Ibn 'Asakir, Ta'r7i Madinat
Dimasq, ed. Salah al-Din al-Muna-ggd (Damascus, 1951-1963), vol, 1, p. 228, line 5;
see also Ibn Hanbal (above, note 77), vol. 4, p. 160; vol. 5, p. 197 bottom; p. 270,
line 9; al-Mustadrak (above, note 81), vol. 4, p. 486; Ibn al-Faqih, Kit&b al-Bulddn (above,
note 25), p. 104, line 8; al-Raba'!, Fa.d'il al-Sdm wa-Dinmsq (Damascus, 1950), p. 20,
no. 53; p. 27; Abui al-Tayyib, 'Awn al-Ma'bid (Medina, 1389), vol. 2, p. 406; Fa.d'il
Bayt al-Maqdis (anon., above, note 16), ff 115a-1 15b; al-Maqdisi, Mutir al-Garam (above,
note 16), ff 18a-18b; 62b; 'Abd Allah b. Muhammad al-Badri, Nuzhat al-AndmJt Ma4dsi
al-Sam (Baghdad-Cairo 1341), p. 357; 'Abd al-Wahhab al-4a'rani, Lawdqih al-Anwar al-
Qudsyya (Cairo, 1961), p. 514; Ibn 'Asakir, al-Ta'nih al-Kabir (Damascus, 1329-1349), vol.
1, p. 49; Ibn 'Asakir, Madinat Dnmasiq, ibid., vol. 1, pp. 219-233; Abui Dawud, Sunan Abi
Ddwzid (Cairo, 1950-1951), vol. 4, pp. 158-159; al-6arrahi, Kaff al-Jjafa' wa-Muzil al-
Ilbds (Cairo 1351-1352), vol. 1, p. 449; al-Manini, al-lidm bi-Fadd'il al-Sdm (Jerusalem,
1944),p. 56; al-Sulami, TargJb Ahl al-Isldm ft Suknd al-Sam (Jerusalem, 1940), p. 13; al-
Mundiri, al-Tarigb wa-l-Tarhib min al-IHadit al-Sarif (Beirut, 1968), vol. 4, p. 63, no. 18;
al-Suyiti., Ith4f (above, note 42), f. 108b; 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abd al-Razzaq, IHadd'iq
al-In'dm ft Mahasin al-Sam, MS Princeton 3047 (4429), ff 18b, 19b; Ibn al-Firkah al-
Fazari, Mu4ta,sar al-I'ldm, MS Princeton 4416 (241), f 9a; Muhammad b. Habib, Durr
al-Niazdmfi Mahasin al-Sam. Ms. Princeton, the Yahuda collection 1862 (4427), f. 8a. As
regards Damascus serving as a stronghold against a ruler who will take power over the
whole world see also al-tarrahi (this note), vol. 1, p. 460, line 24.
87 Cf. Even Shmuel (above, note 10), p. 103, and there regarding Biblical verses
according to which there will be a 'remnant' (pleta) in Mount Zion and Jerusalem (Joel
3:5; Obadiah 17) to prove that Upper Galilee will be a refuge for the Jews. Concerning
Jerusalem, compare what was said about 'Heftsiba, the mother of messiah Menahem
ben 'Amiel standing in the Eastern Gate, where that wicked one [Armilus] shall not
enter' (ibid., pp. 80-81). Cf. our note 89 below.
88 Mount Sinai (cf. MJ. Kister, 'You Shall Only Set Out for Three Mosques, A
Study of an Early Tradition', Le Musion 82 [1969], pp. 177, note 16), or: The Mount
of Olives (perhaps preferable here). Cf. Lane (above, note 74), s.v. 'hir'. Cf. note 95
below.
89 See also 'the shelter of the believers from the dagdl is bayt al-maqdis' (Ibn al-
Muragga [above, note 5], p. 216, no. 316); cf. Mugir al-Din, al-Uns al-6a1i1 (above,
note 12), p. 207; Ibn al-Muragga, p. 223, no. 328. See Wensinck, The Navel of the Earth
(above, note 56), p. 140 (concerning Mecca), 137 (concening Medina) and: Muhammad
b. 'Abd Allah al-Zarkail, [ldm al-Sdgid bi-Ahkdm al-Masdgid (Cairo, 1385), p. 253; 'All
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 399
b. Abi Bakr al-Haytami, Magma' al-Zawd'id (Cairo, 1352-1353), vol. 3, p. 298; Sa'd
al-Din al-Isfara'ini, Zubdat al-A'mdl wa-julksat al-Afal, MS Paris 1632, f 29a. On the
Si'Yte holy city of Qum, see al-Maglisi, Bihdr al-Anwdr (Iran, 1301-1315), vol. 14,
p. 308. Note a saying that Galilee was a refuge for the prophets of Israel in times of
fitan (Ibn Saddad, al-A'ldq al-Eatira [above, note 27], p. 38); this might be compare
with the story about the gathering of the Jews in Galilee around the messiah, son of
Joseph; see Even Shmuel (above, note 10), pp. 103, 121, 135; cf. above, note 87.
90 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 209, no. 303; cf. al-Wasiti (above, note 15),
p. 54, no. 81; Ibn Hanbal (above, note 77), vol. 5 p. 232, 245; Abui Dawuiid, Sunan Abi
Dawud (above, note 86), vol. 4, p. 157, no. 1589; Fada'il Bayt al-Maqdis (anon., above,
note 16), f. 138b; Abui al-Tayyib (above, note 86), vol. 2, p. 400; al-Ljatib al-Bagdadi,
Ta'iih Bagddd (Cairo, 1931/1349), vol. 10, p. 223. See also al-Tirmidil Sah4h al-Tirmidt
(Cairo, 1931-1934), pp. 90-91; Ibn Maga, Sunan (above, note 78), vol. 2, p. 36; Ibn
Hanbal, ibid., vol. 5, p. 234, line 24; al-Hanafi, Kitdb al-Mustaqsd (above, note 15), f. 40a,
line 2; Kister, Antiquit_ of Traditions PraisingJerusalem (above, note 30), pp. 185-186.
9' In this connection we may mention the great raid of Sulayman b. 'Abd al-Malik
on Constantinople. According to one source, he started it from Jerusalem. See Ibn al-
Muragga (above, note 5), p. 226, no. 333. Cf. Ahmad b. Muhammd al-Maqdisi, Kitdb
Mutpr al-Gardm bi-Fada'il al-Sdm, ed. Ahmad Samih. al-Halidi (Jaffa, 1365), p. 45; al-
Suyutil, Ithdf (above, note 42), f. 64a.
92 See Livne-Kafri, 'A Note on Some Traditions of Fada'il al-Quds' (above, note 9),
p. 81.
93 calM al-Din al-Suyut.l, 'al-'Urf al-Wardi (above, note 68), pp. 234-235. According
to a tradition, in Antioch are hidden the Torah, the staff of Moses, the broken Tablets
of the Covenant, and the table of Solomon (Sams al-Din al-Dahabi, Tadkirat al-Ijua'iz
[Hyderabad, 1375-1377], vol. 2, p. 765). Cf. similarly: Muhammad b. Hibban al-Busti,
Ii-tdb al-Maghrihn (Hyderabad, 1970), vol. 2, p. 37. According to this tradition Antioch
will be the abode of a scion of the house of Muhammad who will bring justice on
earth. Antioch also has a role in theJewish eschatological image (see Midrash Zerubavel,
in Even Shmuel [above, note 10], pp. 77, 81), and 'the staff with which the signs were
made' (Aharon's staff), will be delivered to the Messiah Menahem ben Amiel by his
mother Heftsiba (ibid.). Cf. Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 35, no. 24; al-Wasiti
(above, note 15), p. 37, no. 49; Fa.d'il Bayt al-Maqdis (anon., above, note 16), f. 83b.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
400 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
Cf. Hirschberg, Footprints (above, note 83), p. 120; Even Shmuel (above, note 10),
pp. 79, 96. There might be a loan from the Muslim legend here as well. See ibid.,
p. 177, editor's introduction to Nistarot Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai.
9 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 218, no. 319; cf. Mugir al-Din, al-Uns al-6alil
(above, note 12), vol. 1, p. 207. Cf. Mu4tasar Tulifat al-Anam, MS Princeton 4560, ff.
31b-32a. The notion is connected to Qur'anic ideas (cf. Su. 20, 195); cf. also a simi-
lar idea in Isaiah 40:4. Compare Hirschberg (above, note 3), pp. 343-344, and see our
note 89, and Kister, The 7Three Mosques (above, note 88), pp. 173-196.
96 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 216, no. 317; cf. al-Wasiti (above, note 15),
p. 62, no. 100; Fa.da'il Bayt al-Maqdis (anon. above, note 16), ff. 86b-87a. Cf. Ibn Maga
(above, note 78), vol. 2, p. 1359, no. 4077; see also ibid., pp. 1361-1362. See also Ibn
al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 216, no. 315; p. 240, no. 358 (al-masih al-daggl).
97 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 217, no. 318. cf. Fad'il Bayt al-Maqdis (anon.,
above, note 16), f 126a; Tulzfat al-Anam (above, note 95), ff. 30b-31a; Mubtas.ar al-I'ldm
(above, note 86), f. 36a; Ibn 'Asakir, Madi-nat Dimasq (above, note 86), vol. 1, p. 217.
Cf. 'Abd al-Razzaq al-San'ani, al-Musannaf (Simlak-Dabhil, 1970-1972), vol. 11, pp.
400-410; Ibn Hanbal (above, note 77), p. 75.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 401
tradition tells that Elisha and Elijah (Alhsa' and Ilyas) will warn the people against
the dagdl. He will pretend to be God, but they will deny it. The angel Michael
will prevent him from entering Mecca and Gabriel will protect Medina. The dagdl
will flee along with the mun&fiqiun (hypocrites). At that time there will be inJerusalem
'the group through whom God conquered Constantinople', and other Muslims that
will join them. A warner (nadfr) will come to warn them against the dagadl, who
will seize him and kill him; then he will resurrect him in order to prove his divin-
ity, but he will fail to do it a second time and the people will start doubting him.
The daggal will hurry to Jerusalem, where Jesus will kill him at the Lod Gate.98
According to this tradition God will make the earth short so that the distance
to Lod Gate will be half an hour; the intention seems to be Lod, the town. But
according to one tradition, 'Bab Ludd (Lod Gate) in which as related by the
prophet, may peace be on him, Jesus son of Mary will kill the dadgl, is not t
gate of the church in Ramla, but it is the western Gate of David which is at
the mirhab of David, may peace be on him; it is called the Gate of Lod'.99 It is
possible that there was a certain belief connected to Lod or Ramla, which was
transfered to Jerusalem.'0?
These traditions seem to reflect the legend of the antichrist, including its anti-
Jewish tone.'0' It is interesting to note that the conversion of theJews to Christianity,
according to apocalyptic Christian conceptions, turns into their conversion to Islam
98 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 219, no. 321. According to one tradition the
dead resurrected by the daggl wil be al-Hadir ('Abd al-Razzaq [previous note], p. 393,
no. 20824). Cf. Aj. Wensinck, 'al-Uadir', El2, vol. 4 (1978), pp. 902-905; idem and
G. Vajda, 'Ilyas', El2, vol. 3 (1971), p. 1156. See also al-Sahawl, al-I'ldn bi-al-Tawbth
(Damascus, 1349), p. 137; al-Husayn b. Muhammad al-Diyarbakri, Ta'rik4 al-HamTs f
Ahwdl Anfas Nafts (Cairo, 1283), vol. 1, p. 87; cf. the traditions in 'Abd al-Razzaq, i
p. 389 and Ibn Hanbal (above, note 77), vol. 3, p. 420. Cf. also al-Tirmidi (above,
note 90), vol. 9, p. 90-98; Durr al-Nizdm (above, note 86), f. 13a.
99 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 219, no. 320; quoted from Ibn al-Muragga
Mugir al-Din, al-Uns al-6alfl (above, note 12), vol. 2, p. 407.
'10 This entire issue is discussed with great care and extensive documentation by
A. Elad, MedievalJerusalem (above, note 23), pp. 134-136. Elad suggests that 'the ch
gate near Ramla' is to be identified with St. George's church in Lod. According to
him, the killing of al-Daggal at Lod or at the gate of St. George's church might be
drawn from the Christian legend about St. George's slaying a dragon.
101 See the sources mentioned in note 96. According to the Christian tradition the
antichrist belongs to the people of Israel (the tribe of Dan); see, e.g., B. McGinn, Vsions
of the End: Apocalyptic Traditions in the Middle Ages (New York, 1979), 49. He will be born
in Babylon and educated by the forces of evil. See Limor (above, note 37), p. 137. On
the origin of the dagdl in the east, according to the Muslim legend, see, e.g., Ibn Mag
(above, note 78), vol. 2, p. 1354; al-Tabarani, al-Mu'gam al-$a4fr (Medina, 1968), vo
1, p. 260; Abui Nu'aym al-Isbahani, A4bdr Isbahdn (above, note 78), vol. 2, pp. 4, 49.
The anti-Iraqi traditions describing Iraq as a land of evil and magic and as the land
of Satan might be connected with such a conception, see, e.g., 0. Livne-Kafri, 'On
Jerusalem in Early Islam', Cathedra 51 (1989), p. 55, and see there on the political
significance against the background of the Syrian-Iraqi struggle. On the dagdl emerg-
ing in Iraq, see also 'Abd al-Razzaq al-San'ani, al-Musannaf (above, note 97), vol. 11,
p. 396. Cf. 0. Livne-Kafri, The Sanctity of Jerusalem in Islam, Ph.D. Dissertation, Th
Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 1985, p. 276, end of note 298.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
402 NOTES ET DOCUMENTS
in the Muslim tradition. 'The Ark of the Covenant (tdbiut al-saktna) will be revealed
by the mahdt in the lake of Tiberias, and it will be carried and set before the mahat
in Bayt al-Maqdis; when the Jews will look at it they will become Muslims, except
for a few. After that the mahdi will die'.'02 Jews as well as Christians are rejected
in the 'lottery tradition', and the Muslims appropriated the vision of 'the wolf will
live with the lamb. . .' (Isaiah 11:6). Jesus appears as a Muslim messenger, who
elsewhere is described as breaking the symbols of Christianity and leading the world
in the ways of Muslim prayer.'03 Other elements mentioned in the traditions, like
the appearance of Elisha and Elijah, the revival of the dead and the killing of al-
Hjadir, and the angel Michael serving as a shield agaist the dagl, basically return
to the Christian legend, but also to the Jewish legend.'04 The figure of the just
imam might be paralleled somehow with the emperor of the last day, who will
destroy the enemies of Christianity and will abdicate his place in favor of the
Devine rule.'05 Another important sign connected withJerusalem (Gog and Magog)
102 Ibn al-Muragga (above, note 5), p. 222, no. 323; cf. al-Maqdisi, Mutlr al-Gardm
(above, note 16), f 89a; Mugir al-Din, al-Uns al-6aril (above, note 12), vol. 1, p. 237;
al-Suyilt!, Ithaf (above, note 42), f. 57a; al-Luqaymi, Latd'jf al-Uns (above, no
f. 32b; al-Suyuti, Al-'Urf al-Wardi (above, note 68), p. 244. Cf. a saying of Jewish sages:
'From there [riberias] Israel shall have redemption' (The Hebrew Encyclopedia, vol. 18
col. 104).
103 See H. Lazarus-Yafeh, 'On the Messianic Idea in Islam', in Messianirm and Eschatologv
(above, note 11), p. 172. f. ibid., p. 173; cf. al-Tabarani (above, note 101), vol. 1,
p. 34.
104 Compare the appearance of Elijah and Enoch (who never died, according to the
Biblical text), to protect the Christians from the antichrist and their revival. See, e.g.,
McGinn (above, note 101), pp. 50, 87; Limor (above, note 37), p. 138. On the role of
Michael against the antichrist, see McGinn, p. 87. On the figure of Elijah as the prophet
of the end see also Flusser (above, note 79), pp. 281-282. On Elijah as the herald of
the Messiah according to Jewish tradition, see, e.g., Cf. The Hebrew Encyclopaedia, s.v.
'aharit hayamim', col. 457; Even Shmuel (above, note 10), e.g., pp. 86, 122, 131, 136,
225; Hirschberg, Footpnints (above, note 83), pp. 119-120. On the figure of Michael see,
e.g., Even Shmuel, pp. 131, 224-225. For 'melting the da&dg& see Isaiah 11:4 '.... w
the breath of his lips he will slay the wicked'. Cf. The Hebrew Encyclopedia, col. 449 below;
Even Shmuel, p. 87 concerning Menahem ben Amiel (the messiah) who will kill Armilus
in this way, or Messiah son of David (p. 97, and the editor's notes on p. 92). The
number 'forty' (forty years of ymot ma?iah) in the tradition mentioned (above, note 97),
returns to the Jewish tradition. See, e.g., 7he Hebrew Enyclopedia, col. 455, chapter 4;
Even Shmuel, pp. 137, 224. In the traditions In Praise of Syria and Damascus it is
said that al-9am will be destroyed forty years after the destruction of the world (Ibn
al-Muragga [above, note 5], p. 320, no. 531), and likewise Damascus (al-Raba'c [above,
note 86]), p. 38, no. 66; Ibn 'Asakir, MadEnat Dimasq (above, note 86), vol. 1, part 2,
p. 7 below). On the stay of the dagdl on earth see e.g., Ibn Hanbal (above, note 77),
vol. 6, p. 454, line 12; p. 459, line 16. Compare a saying of a Jew to Yazid b. 'Abd
al-Malik that he will rule for forty years (G. Van Floten, Recherches sur la domination arab
le Chiitisme et les croyance messianiques sous le khalfat des Omayades [Amsterdam, 1984],
p. 56). See also al-Suyiiut, Al-'U?f al-Wardi (above, note 68), pp. 238-239; al-Suyiti., al-
Durr al-Manpir (above, note 30), vol. 3, p. 113.
105 On the development of the legend of the last emperor see, e.g., Limor (above,
note 37), p. 139 ff; B. McGinn, (above, note 101), pp. 49-50; 75-76.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
NOTES ET DOCUMENTS 403
106 See e.g., Livne-Kafri, Jerusalem in Muslim Traditions (above, note 11), pp. 49-50.
107 See in detail, ibid., pp. 50-56. The conception of a Sufyrni (begun in the Umayyad
period, and named after Aba Sufyan, father of Mu'awiya, the founder of the Umayyad
dynasty) plays an important role in such traditions, some of which were created dur-
ing the first 'Abbasid period. He appears both as a figure of the dadl and as a hero,
depending on the trend reflected. Cf. note 71.
This content downloaded from 194.230.155.124 on Sat, 14 Jul 2018 09:25:33 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms