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The ''Book of Idols'' ('), written by the Arab scholar Hisham ibn al-Kalbi (737–819), is the most popular Islamic work about the
religion in pre-Islamic Arabia In pre-Islamic Arabia, the dominant religious practice was that of Arab polytheism, which was based on the veneration of various deities and spirits, such as the god Hubal and the goddesses al-Lāt, al-‘Uzzā, and Manāt. Worship was ...
. Arabian religion before
Muhammad Muhammad (8 June 632 CE) was an Arab religious and political leader and the founder of Islam. Muhammad in Islam, According to Islam, he was a prophet who was divinely inspired to preach and confirm the tawhid, monotheistic teachings of A ...
is described as
polytheistic Polytheism is the belief in or worship of more than one Deity, god. According to Oxford Reference, it is not easy to count gods, and so not always obvious whether an apparently polytheistic religion, such as Chinese folk religions, is really so, ...
and idolatrous. Ibn al-Kalbi portrays this state of religion as a degradation from the pure monotheism introduced by
Abraham Abraham (originally Abram) is the common Hebrews, Hebrew Patriarchs (Bible), patriarch of the Abrahamic religions, including Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. In Judaism, he is the founding father who began the Covenant (biblical), covenanta ...
and his son
Ishmael In the Bible, biblical Book of Genesis, Ishmael (; ; ; ) is the first son of Abraham. His mother was Hagar, the handmaiden of Abraham's wife Sarah. He died at the age of 137. Traditionally, he is seen as the ancestor of the Arabs. Within Isla ...
, only restored by the coming of
Islam Islam is an Abrahamic religions, Abrahamic monotheistic religion based on the Quran, and the teachings of Muhammad. Adherents of Islam are called Muslims, who are estimated to number Islam by country, 2 billion worldwide and are the world ...
. Ibn al-Kalbi relied on Arab oral tradition to write his work. Historians agree that the Book of Idols is not a reliable source for Arabian religion before Islam.


Overview

The ''Book of Idols'' is essentially an itemized list of short descriptions of idols and sanctuaries in pre-Islamic Arabia. For each idol, he describes their geography and tribe. Sometimes Ibn al-Kalbi offers additional information, such as how the idol was destroyed in the Islamic era. In the primary manuscript, the text is 56 pages and each page contains 12 lines. The longest entry is about the goddess
al-Uzza Al-ʻUzzá or al-ʻUzzā (, , ) was one of the three chief goddesses of Arabian religion in pre-Islamic times and she was worshipped by the pre-Islamic Arabs along with Al-Lat and Manāt. A stone cube at Nakhla (near Mecca) was held sacred a ...
, mentioned in Surah 53 as one of the "Daughters of Allah" alongside
Al-Lat Al-Lat (, ), also spelled Allat, Allatu, and Alilat, is a pre-Islamic Arabian goddess, at one time worshipped under various associations throughout the entire Arabian Peninsula, including Mecca, where she was worshipped alongside Al-Uzza and ...
and Manat. Ibn al-Kalbi says that the cult of al-Uzza was centered in
Mecca Mecca, officially Makkah al-Mukarramah, is the capital of Mecca Province in the Hejaz region of western Saudi Arabia; it is the Holiest sites in Islam, holiest city in Islam. It is inland from Jeddah on the Red Sea, in a narrow valley above ...
, Al-Lat in
Taif Taif (, ) is a city and governorate in Mecca Province in Saudi Arabia. Located at an elevation of in the slopes of the Hijaz Mountains, which themselves are part of the Sarat Mountains, the city has a population of 563,282 people in 2022, mak ...
, and Manat in
Medina Medina, officially al-Madinah al-Munawwarah (, ), also known as Taybah () and known in pre-Islamic times as Yathrib (), is the capital of Medina Province (Saudi Arabia), Medina Province in the Hejaz region of western Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, ...
. The entries on these goddesses appear sequentially (one after the other), as do the five entries on the five pagan deities of Surah 71. Beyond this, no other organizing principle appears in the text to govern the order in which Ibn al-Kalbi discusses local idols. In addition, Ibn al-Kalbi occasionally cites
pre-Islamic Arabic poetry Pre-Islamic Arabic poetry is a term used to refer to Arabic poetry composed in pre-Islamic Arabia roughly between 540 and 620 AD. In Arabic literature, pre-Islamic poetry went by the name ''al-shiʿr al-Jāhilī'' ("poetry from the Jahiliyyah" or " ...
and, more rarely, the
Quran The Quran, also Romanization, romanized Qur'an or Koran, is the central religious text of Islam, believed by Muslims to be a Waḥy, revelation directly from God in Islam, God (''Allah, Allāh''). It is organized in 114 chapters (, ) which ...
. Entries are sometimes interrupted to explain the origins of idolatry after God's introduction of
monotheism Monotheism is the belief that one God is the only, or at least the dominant deity.F. L. Cross, Cross, F.L.; Livingstone, E.A., eds. (1974). "Monotheism". The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (2 ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. A ...
with
Abraham Abraham (originally Abram) is the common Hebrews, Hebrew Patriarchs (Bible), patriarch of the Abrahamic religions, including Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. In Judaism, he is the founding father who began the Covenant (biblical), covenanta ...
.


Composition and authorship

The ''Book of Idols'' is considered a composite work comprising materials from many sources. It emerged as a result of accretion, reworkings, and interpolation, which resulted in the production of repetitions, variations, and interruptions in the text. On a number of occasions, the text treats the same subject more than once, in each case offering a contradictory account. Nyberg argued that the core of the ''Book'' goes back to Ibn al-Kalbi, transmitted through Abu Bakr Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Jawhari (d. 944–45), whose name appears as the final link in the shorter
isnad In the Islamic study of hadith, an isnād (chain of transmitters, or literally "supporting"; ) refers to a list of people who passed on a tradition, from the original authority to whom the tradition is attributed to, to the present person reciting ...
s (chains of transmission) that are listed in the second half of the text. Al-Jawhari is thought here to have added to Ibn al-Kalbi's core several reports that he thought also, in some way, went back to Ibn al-Kalbi. Later, an appendix with information about more idols was also added to the text. Other recensions of the text have not survived but are likely to have existed.
Yaqut al-Hamawi Yāqūt Shihāb al-Dīn ibn-ʿAbdullāh al-Rūmī al-Ḥamawī (1179–1229) () was a Muslim scholar of Byzantine ancestry active during the late Abbasid period (12th–13th centuries). He is known for his , an influential work on geography con ...
(d. 1229) quoted the text at length, and these quotations contain some material not found in manuscripts of the ''Book of Idols''. Ibn al-Kalbi therefore cannot be considered the author of the work, which is a centuries-long accumulation of individual reports.


Discovery

In the first half of the 20th century, Ahmad Zaki Pasha, the Egyptian
philologist Philology () is the study of language in oral and written historical sources. It is the intersection of textual criticism, literary criticism, history, and linguistics with strong ties to etymology. Philology is also defined as the study of ...
, discovered the text; he bought the sole extant manuscript at auction in
Damascus Damascus ( , ; ) is the capital and List of largest cities in the Levant region by population, largest city of Syria. It is the oldest capital in the world and, according to some, the fourth Holiest sites in Islam, holiest city in Islam. Kno ...
and the manuscript, one of many in his extensive collection, was donated to the state after his death in 1934. Zaki Pasha announced his discovery at the XIVth International Congress of Orientalists.


Themes


Monotheism and polytheism

Five pagan gods are named in Quran 71:23:
Wadd Wadd () (Ancient South Arabian script: 𐩥𐩵) or Ved, if translated to English, was the national god of the Kingdom of Ma'in, inhabited by the Minaean peoples, in modern-day South Arabia. Wadd is mentioned once in the Quran as part of a l ...
, Suwāʿ, Yaghūth, Yaʿūq and Nasr. Ibn al-Kalbi and Ibn Ishaq associated their worship with
South Arabia South Arabia (), or Greater Yemen, is a historical region that consists of the southern region of the Arabian Peninsula in West Asia, mainly centered in what is now the Republic of Yemen, yet it has also historically included Najran, Jazan, ...
. Another three pagan gods are named in Quran 53:19–20, the " Daughters of Allah":
al-Lāt Al-Lat (, ), also spelled Allat, Allatu, and Alilat, is a Religion in pre-Islamic Arabia, pre-Islamic Arabian List of pre-Islamic Arabian deities, goddess, at one time worshipped under various associations throughout the entire Arabian Peninsu ...
, al-‘Uzzā and Manāt of Quran 53:19–20. Their worship was associated with north and central Arabian tribes, and because they were closer to the
Hejaz Hejaz is a Historical region, historical region of the Arabian Peninsula that includes the majority of the western region of Saudi Arabia, covering the cities of Mecca, Medina, Jeddah, Tabuk, Saudi Arabia, Tabuk, Yanbu, Taif and Al Bahah, Al-B ...
, they had a higher status. Altogether, Ibn al-Kalbi portrays the eight pagan gods named in the Quran as dominating the religious world of pre-Islamic Arabia. According to Ibn al-Kalbi, the North Arabian tribe Nizār commonly exclaimed:
‘Here I am, Allāh! Here I am! (Labbayka Allāhumma! Labbayka!) Here I am! You have no partner (sharīk) save one who is yours! You have dominion over him and over what he possesses.’ They were used to declare his unity through the ''talbiyāt'' while associating their gods with him, placing their affairs in his hand.
At the same time, while Arabia worshiped idols, Ibn al-Kalbi claims that remnants of Abraham's pure monotheism survived among a small group of hanifs, or pre-Islamic Arabian monotheists:
But n spite of the idolatry and polytheism which had spread among the Arabsthere were survivals of the time of Abraham and Ishmael which they
he Arabs He or HE may refer to: Language * He (letter), the fifth letter of the Semitic abjads * He (pronoun), a pronoun in Modern English * He (kana), one of the Japanese kana (へ in hiragana and ヘ in katakana) * Ge (Cyrillic), a Cyrillic letter cal ...
followed in their rituals – revering the sanctuary, circumambulating it, ''ḥajj'', ''ʿumra'', standing upon ʿArafa and Muzdalifa, offering beasts for sacrifice, and making the ''ihlāl'' .e., the ''talbiya''in the ''ḥajj'' and the ''ʿumra'' – together with the introduction of things which did not belong to it.


Origins of Arabian monotheism

Ibn al-Kalbi offers two origins myths ( etiologies) to explain how the original monotheism of Abraham was succeeded by polytheism until Muhammad. The first begins with 'Amr bin Luhay, the chief of the Arab Banu Khuza'ah. 'Amr seized chieftainship over Mecca. 'Amr later travelled to al-Balqāʾ in
Syria Syria, officially the Syrian Arab Republic, is a country in West Asia located in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Levant. It borders the Mediterranean Sea to the west, Turkey to Syria–Turkey border, the north, Iraq to Iraq–Syria border, t ...
, where he learned about the veneration of idols. He collected some idols there and brought them back to the Kaaba, where he set them up. Subsequently, whenever someone came to Mecca to perform pilgrimage, they would carry away stones and idols from the away as a token of reverence and affection. This caused the spread of idolatrous and polytheistic practices and led to the forgetting of the original faith of Abraham. This story is also known from the writings of
Ibn Ishaq Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Ishaq ibn Yasar al-Muttalibi (; – , known simply as Ibn Ishaq, was an 8th-century Muslim historian and hagiographer who collected oral traditions that formed the basis of an important biography of the Islamic proph ...
. The second, and longer, explanation begins early on. Adam's ancestors through his two sons
Seth Seth, in the Abrahamic religions, was the third son of Adam and Eve. The Hebrew Bible names two of his siblings (although it also states that he had others): his brothers Cain and Abel. According to , Seth was born after Abel's murder by Cain, ...
and
Cain Cain is a biblical figure in the Book of Genesis within Abrahamic religions. He is the elder brother of Abel, and the firstborn son of Adam and Eve, the first couple within the Bible. He was a farmer who gave an offering of his crops to God. How ...
(Qābīl) undergo different paths relative to the original, true faith. While Seth's descendants maintain their faith, Cain's descendants begin to create statues of their ancestors for innocent reasons (to remember them). As time passes on, people begin to venerate these statues in the hope that they will intercede on their behalf. Later still, this evolves into idol worship. The second version reported by Ibn al-Kalbi has been compared to a legend of the origins of idolatry in the Syriac ''
Cave of Treasures The ''Cave of Treasures'' (, , Ge'ez: ''Baʿāta Mazāgebet'', Tigrinya: መዝገብ ገዛ), is an apocryphal and pseudoepigraphical work, that contains various narratives related to the Christian Bible. It was written in the Syriac language ...
'', especially through its early Arabic translation as the ''Kitāb al-Majāll''. It has also been compared to another legend about the origins of idolatry described by the 5th-century historian
Sozomen Salamanes Hermias Sozomenos (; ; c. 400 – c. 450 AD), also known as Sozomen, was a Roman lawyer and historian of the Christian Church. Family and home Sozoman was born around 400 in Bethelia, a small town near Gaza, into a wealthy Christia ...
.


Kaabas

Ibn al-Kalbi and Al-Azraqi portray
Hubal In Arabian mythology, Hubal () was a god worshipped in pre-Islamic Arabia, notably by the Quraysh at the Kaaba in Mecca. The god's icon was a human figure believed to control acts of divination, which was performed by tossing arrows before the ...
as the primary god of the pre-Islamic
Kaaba The Kaaba (), also spelled Kaba, Kabah or Kabah, sometimes referred to as al-Kaba al-Musharrafa (), is a stone building at the center of Islam's most important mosque and Holiest sites in Islam, holiest site, the Masjid al-Haram in Mecca, Sa ...
in
Mecca Mecca, officially Makkah al-Mukarramah, is the capital of Mecca Province in the Hejaz region of western Saudi Arabia; it is the Holiest sites in Islam, holiest city in Islam. It is inland from Jeddah on the Red Sea, in a narrow valley above ...
and its
Quraysh The Quraysh () are an Tribes of Arabia, Arab tribe who controlled Mecca before the rise of Islam. Their members were divided into ten main clans, most notably including the Banu Hashim, into which Islam's founding prophet Muhammad was born. By ...
tribe. Other Muslim sources also represent Hubal being venerated in the Kaaba alongside lesser deities and baetyls. Archaeologically, Hubal is only mentioned in one of the
pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions Pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions are inscriptions that come from the Arabian Peninsula dating to before the rise of Islam. They were written in both Arabic and other languages, including Sabaic, Hadramautic, Minaic, Qatabanic. These inscripti ...
: a
Nabataean The Nabataeans or Nabateans (; Nabataean Aramaic: , , vocalized as ) were an ancient Arab people who inhabited northern Arabia and the southern Levant. Their settlements—most prominently the assumed capital city of Raqmu (present-day Petr ...
text which uses 'Hubal' as an epithet for another god,
Dushara Dushara (Nabataean Arabic: 𐢅𐢈𐢝𐢛𐢀 ''dwšrʾ''), also transliterated as Dusares or Dhu Shara, is a pre-Islamic Arabian god worshipped by the Nabataeans at Petra and Madain Saleh (of which city he was the patron). Safaitic inscripti ...
. Ibn al-Kalbi describes three pre-Islamic sanctuaries called " Kaabas" other than the one in Mecca, including the Kaaba of Najran.


Physical idols

Ibn al-Kalbi writes that an idol, or an ''aṣnām'', is a venerated figurine resembling a human that is made out of wood, gold, or silver. However, if made of stone, it is called an ''awthān''. In the Quran, the words used for 'idol' or 'statue' include ''wathan'' (plural ''awthān'') and ''ṣanam'' (plural ''aṣnām''). These terms are used primarily in describing those who lived in past ages (with the exception of Quran 22:30), whereas it uses terms such as ''ṭāghūt'' and ''jibt'' for contemporary situations, although the precise meaning of both terms is imprecise and the latter is a ''hapax legomenon'' (meaning it is only used once) that appears in Quran 4:51. These two terms might be used to describe some kind of accusation of idolatry against rival monotheistic groups.


Reception

With the exception of
Al-Masudi al-Masʿūdī (full name , ), –956, was a historian, geographer and traveler. He is sometimes referred to as the "Herodotus of the Arabs". A polymath and prolific author of over twenty works on theology, history (Islamic and universal), geo ...
(d. 956) and
Yaqut al-Hamawi Yāqūt Shihāb al-Dīn ibn-ʿAbdullāh al-Rūmī al-Ḥamawī (1179–1229) () was a Muslim scholar of Byzantine ancestry active during the late Abbasid period (12th–13th centuries). He is known for his , an influential work on geography con ...
(d. 1229), the ''Book of Idols'' was largely unknown among Islamic scholars until a manuscript of it was discovered in Egypt and published in the 20th century. Yaqut quoted the text extensively in his ''Ma'jum al-buldan'', to the degree that
Julius Wellhausen Julius Wellhausen (17 May 1844 – 7 January 1918) was a German biblical scholar and orientalist. In the course of his career, his research interest moved from Old Testament research through Islamic studies to New Testament scholarship. Wellhau ...
(1844–1918) was able to work with Ibn al-Kalbi's work through Yaqut's citations before its main manuscript was discovered.


Reliability

Ibn al-Kalbi's Book of Idols is considered unreliable as a source about pre-Islamic Arabian religion by some scholars. Islamic traditions about an idolatrous past came to first be seriously studied by Gerald Hawting, in his book '' The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam'' (1999). For Hawting, accusations of idolatry against the
pre-Islamic Arabia Pre-Islamic Arabia is the Arabian Peninsula and its northern extension in the Syrian Desert before the rise of Islam. This is consistent with how contemporaries used the term ''Arabia'' or where they said Arabs lived, which was not limited to the ...
n past were absent from the
Quran The Quran, also Romanization, romanized Qur'an or Koran, is the central religious text of Islam, believed by Muslims to be a Waḥy, revelation directly from God in Islam, God (''Allah, Allāh''). It is organized in 114 chapters (, ) which ...
and depend on later Islamic sources. According to Hawting, accusations of idolatry were common rhetorical weapons against other monotheistic competitors. Due to this phenomenon, the Quranic ''mushrikun'' were transformed, after a long period of oral transmission and development in tradition, into polytheistic idol worshippers. Therefore, for historians like Hawting, depictions of pre-Islamic Arabian religion like that in Ibn al-Kalbi's ''Book of Idols'' are not reliable representations of the past. Furthermore, as opposed to it being a collection of Arabian traditions about Arabian religion, it is better understood as "a collection of characteristic monotheistic traditions and ideas adapted to reflect Muslim concepts and concerns". Hawting believes that some of the names of gods in tradition may be historical, but that such names may have been deduced from the theophoric names of contemporary Arabs. Islamic traditions about these gods, in turn, reflect later elaboration and speculation built on top of deductions of the existence of such gods from such theophoric names. Likewise, Christian J. Robin and Jérémie Schiettecatte commented that the genealogical origins of an ultimate ancestor named
Sheba Sheba, or Saba, was an ancient South Arabian kingdoms in pre-Islamic Arabia, South Arabian kingdom that existed in Yemen (region), Yemen from to . Its inhabitants were the Sabaeans, who, as a people, were indissociable from the kingdom itself f ...
in the ''Book of Idols'', stated to be the third descendant of
Qahtan The Qahtanites (; ), also known as Banu Qahtan () or by their nickname ''al-Arab al-Ariba'' (), are the Arabs who originate from modern-day Yemen. The term "Qahtan" is mentioned in multiple Ancient South Arabian script, Ancient South Arabian ins ...
(the mythical ancestor of the Southern Arabs), was a later, speculative reconstruction deduced from vague memories of geographical proximities and political alliances. The archaeological record has also come to be seen in conflict with Ibn al-Kalbi's text. For example, despite his portrayal of South Arabian religion on the eve of Islam, no polytheistic inscriptions are known from South Arabia after
Malkikarib Yuhamin Malkīkarib Yuha’min (r. 375–400) was a king (Tubba', ) of the Himyarite Kingdom (in modern-day Yemen), succeeding his father Tharan Yuhanim. Byzantine sources and contemporary historians credit him with converting the ruling class of the Himy ...
, the king of the
Himyarite Kingdom Himyar was a polity in the southern highlands of Yemen, as well as the name of the region which it claimed. Until 110 BCE, it was integrated into the Qataban, Qatabanian kingdom, afterwards being recognized as an independent kingdom. According ...
, adopted monotheism in the last quarter of the fourth century AD. No archaeological attestations of any of the eight pagan deities named in the Quran are known in pre-Islamic Arabia, more broadly, after the fourth century. As opposed to a simple archaeological silence, the archaeological record instead depicts an abrupt disappearance of polytheistic circles around the turn of the fifth century AD. Furthermore, Ibn al-Kalbi's association of pre-Islamic Hudhalī poetry with polytheism clashes with the type of religious rites actually described in the putative corpus of Hudhalī poetry. Broadly speaking, Ibn al-Kalbi's depiction of the ritual use of cultic stones or statues across Arabia has clashed with the fact that, archaeologically, neither of these are known anywhere in Arabia in any time period outside of northwest Arabia and Nabataea. Thus, Christian Julien Robin interprets Ibn al-Kalbi as having exaggerated the spatial extent of such practices and the use of these ritual objects more generally.


Related Islamic writings

Alongside Ibn al-Kalbi's ''Book of Idols'', the main Muslim sources for (especially polytheistic) religion in pre-Islamic Arabia include the writings of
Al-Tabari Abū Jaʿfar Muḥammad ibn Jarīr ibn Yazīd al-Ṭabarī (; 839–923 CE / 224–310 AH), commonly known as al-Ṭabarī (), was a Sunni Muslim scholar, polymath, historian, exegete, jurist, and theologian from Amol, Tabaristan, present- ...
(primarily his History of the Prophets and Kings) and Ibn Ishaq ( Al-Sirah al-Nabawiyyah). There is also the '' Book of Reports about Mecca'' by Al-Azraqi. Additional attempts to describe pre-Islamic Arabian religion include those by the likes of Masʿūdī (d. 345/956), Shahrastānī (d. 548/1153), and even
Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb ibn Sulaymān al-Tamīmī (1703–1792) was a Sunni Muslim scholar, theologian, preacher, activist, religious leader, jurist, and reformer, who was from Najd in Arabian Peninsula and is considered as the eponymo ...
(d. 1206/1792), the founder of
Wahhabism Wahhabism is an exonym for a Salafi revivalist movement within Sunni Islam named after the 18th-century Hanbali scholar Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab. It was initially established in the central Arabian region of Najd and later spread to oth ...
.
Al-Jahiz Abu Uthman Amr ibn Bahr al-Kinani al-Basri (; ), commonly known as al-Jahiz (), was an Arab polymath and author of works of literature (including theory and criticism), theology, zoology, philosophy, grammar, dialectics, rhetoric, philology, lin ...
(d. 868) is said to have composed a work with the same title as Ibn al-Kalbi's, but it is lost.


Translations

* English translation.


Editions

* Ibn Al-Kalbī, Kitāb al-Aṣnām, ed. R. Klinke-Rosenberger. Leipzig: O. Harrassowitz, 1941. * Ibn al-Kalbī, Hishām ibn Muḥammad ibn al-Sāʾib. Kitab al-Aṣnām: ʿAn Abī al-Mundhir Hishām ibn Muḥammad ibn al-Sāʾib al-Kalbī. Edited by Aḥmad Zakī. 3rd ed. Cairo: Maṭbaʿat Dār al-Kutub al-Miṣriyyah, 1995.


References


Citations


Sources

* * * * * * * * *


Additional literature

*H. S. Nyberg. "Bemerkungen zum ''Buch der Götzenbilder'' von Ibn al-Kalbi." Lund: Svenska Institut i Rom. Ser. 2, Bd. 1, 1939. pp. 346–66. {{Authority control 12th-century manuscripts Arabian mythology Islamic literature Medieval Arabic literature Pre-Islamic Arabia Religion in Saudi Arabia