Entity Periods
Data license: MIT · Data source: jebboone/deitydb
- confidence
- {'description': 'high / medium / low — certainty of the period assignment'}
- rationale
- {'description': 'Justification with source citations'}
72 rows where period_id = "PER_ISL_CLASSICAL"
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Suggested facets: confidence, source_id
| Link | entity_id | period_id | confidence | rationale | source_id | review_status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ENT_AST_DECANS,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | The Thirty-Six Decans (Wujuh) of the Zodiac ENT_AST_DECANS | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Picatrix II.11 gives the magical images of the 36 decans (faces, wujuh), the three ten-degree divisions of each sign, as astral powers engraved on talismans. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_JUPITER_SPIRIT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Spirit of Jupiter (al-Mushtari) ENT_AST_JUPITER_SPIRIT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | The Picatrix prayer to Jupiter (al-Mushtari) invokes the planet as the benefic spirit of expansion, law, religion and honor. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_LUNAR_MANSIONS,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | The Twenty-Eight Lunar Mansions (Manazil al-Qamar) ENT_AST_LUNAR_MANSIONS | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Picatrix I.4 sets out the works of the Moon through each of her 28 mansions (manazil al-qamar), used to elect favorable times for talismans and operations. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_MARS_SPIRIT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Spirit of Mars (al-Mirrikh) ENT_AST_MARS_SPIRIT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | The Picatrix prayer to Mars (al-Mirrikh) addresses a hot, dry, malefic spirit of war, iron and bloodshed. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_MERCURY_SPIRIT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Spirit of Mercury (Utarid) ENT_AST_MERCURY_SPIRIT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | The Picatrix prayer to Mercury (Utarid) invokes the mutable spirit of intellect, writing, commerce and learning, governing quicksilver. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_MOON_SPIRIT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Spirit of the Moon (al-Qamar) ENT_AST_MOON_SPIRIT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | The Picatrix prayer to the Moon (al-Qamar) addresses the swift spirit of flux, growth and change, governing silver and the 28 mansions. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_PERFECT_NATURE,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Perfect Nature (al-Tiba al-Tamm) ENT_AST_PERFECT_NATURE | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | In Picatrix III.6 the Perfect Nature is the sage's personal celestial guardian-spirit, called by four names (Meegius, Betzahuech, Vacdez, Nufeneguediz), contacted through ritual to obtain hidden wisdom. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_PLANETARY_SPIRITS,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | The Seven Planetary Spirits of the Picatrix ENT_AST_PLANETARY_SPIRITS | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Picatrix Book III treats the seven planets as living spiritual powers ritually invoked (the Harranian Sabian planetary prayers), each with its Arabic name, governing spirit and prayer. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_SATURN_SPIRIT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Spirit of Saturn (Zuhal) ENT_AST_SATURN_SPIRIT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | The Picatrix planetary prayer to Saturn (Zuhal) addresses the planet as a cold, dark spirit of restriction, old age and death, governing lead. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_SUN_SPIRIT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Spirit of the Sun (al-Shams) ENT_AST_SUN_SPIRIT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | The Picatrix prayer to the Sun (al-Shams) invokes the solar spirit of power, kingship, light and vitality, governing gold. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_AST_VENUS_SPIRIT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Spirit of Venus (al-Zuhra) ENT_AST_VENUS_SPIRIT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | The Picatrix prayer to Venus (al-Zuhra) addresses the benefic spirit of love, beauty, music and pleasure, governing copper. | SRC_PICATRIX | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_ABWAB_JAHANNAM,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | The Seven Gates of Hell (abwab jahannam) ENT_ISLR_ABWAB_JAHANNAM | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'an 15:44 'it has seven gates, to each gate a portion assigned.' Classical sources name seven descending levels; modeled here as the structuring set. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_ABWAB_JANNAH,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | The Eight Gates of Paradise (abwab al-janna) ENT_ISLR_ABWAB_JANNAH | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Hadith tradition (e.g. al-Bukhari) enumerates eight gates of Paradise (the gate of prayer, of fasting/al-Rayyan, of charity, etc.), against seven of Hell. Modeled here as a collective set. | SRC_LANGE_PARADISE_HELL | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_ARAF,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Aʿraf (the Heights) ENT_ISLR_ARAF | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic al-aʿraf (Q 7:46-48), names Sura 7; the heights with the Men of the Aʿraf who see both abodes. A liminal realm in the cosmic geography. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_BARZAKH,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Barzakh (the intermediate state) ENT_ISLR_BARZAKH | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic barzakh (Q 23:100), developed in hadith and theology as the intermediate realm where Munkar and Nakir question the dead. Central to classical eschatology (Lange). | SRC_LANGE_PARADISE_HELL | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_COSMOS,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Islamic cosmic geography (al-akhira) ENT_ISLR_COSMOS | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Hub/organizing entity for the Qur'anic and classical-Islamic otherworldly topography. Not a single named place in scripture but the standard scholarly framing (Lange) of the akhira as a layered cosmos; introduced here as a structural hub. | SRC_LANGE_PARADISE_HELL | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_DAR_AL_QARAR,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Dar al-Qarar (the Abode of Permanence) ENT_ISLR_DAR_AL_QARAR | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic dar al-qarar (Q 40:39), the abiding home of the hereafter; in classical eschatology read as a name of Paradise (Lange). | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_DAR_AL_SALAM,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Dar al-Salam (the Abode of Peace) ENT_ISLR_DAR_AL_SALAM | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic dar al-salam (Q 6:127, 10:25); classical exegesis treats it as an appellation/level of Jannah. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_FIRDAUS,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Jannat al-Firdaus (the highest Paradise) ENT_ISLR_FIRDAUS | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic al-firdaws (Q 18:107, 23:11). In hadith the loftiest part of Jannah, beneath the Arsh; a level within Jannah. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_HAWIYAH,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Hawiyah (the Abyss) ENT_ISLR_HAWIYAH | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic al-hawiya (Q 101:9-11). Often taken as the deepest level of Hell in classical seven-fold schemes (Lange). | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_HUTAMAH,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Hutamah (the Crusher) ENT_ISLR_HUTAMAH | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic al-hutama (Q 104:4-9). Counted among the seven levels/gates of Hell in classical eschatology (Lange). | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_JAHANNAM,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Jahannam (Gehenna, Hell) ENT_ISLR_JAHANNAM | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | The most common Qur'anic name for Hell (jahannam, cognate of Gehenna); abundantly attested (e.g. Q 4:140, 15:43-44). Also the name of one of the seven levels. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_JAHIM,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Jahim (the Hellfire) ENT_ISLR_JAHIM | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic al-jahim, frequent (e.g. Q 2:119, 5:10). Counted among the seven levels/gates of Jahannam in classical schemes. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_JANNAH,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Jannah (the Garden, Paradise) ENT_ISLR_JANNAH | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic al-janna, frequently in the plural jannat. Well attested across the Qur'an (e.g. Q 2:25, 13:35, 47:15) and classical eschatology (Lange). | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_JANNAT_ADN,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Jannat ʿAdn (the Garden of Eden / perpetual abode) ENT_ISLR_JANNAT_ADN | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic jannat ʿadn (Q 9:72, 13:23). Distinct from the primordial garden of Adam in scholarly reading; a named level of Jannah. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_LAZAA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Lazaa (the Blazing Flame) ENT_ISLR_LAZAA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic lazaa (Q 70:15-16). In classical seven-level schemes counted among the gates/levels of Jahannam. | SRC_LANGE_PARADISE_HELL | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_SAIR,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Saʿir (the Blaze) ENT_ISLR_SAIR | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic al-saʿir, frequent (e.g. Q 4:10, 67:5). Counted among the seven levels/gates of Jahannam. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_SAQAR,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Saqar (the Scorching Fire) ENT_ISLR_SAQAR | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic saqar (Q 74:26-30, 54:48). One of the named levels/gates of Hell; associated with the nineteen guardians. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_SIDRAT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Sidrat al-Muntaha (the Lote-Tree of the Boundary) ENT_ISLR_SIDRAT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Qur'anic sidrat al-muntaha (Q 53:14-15), reached at the Miʿraj, beside jannat al-maʾwa. The cosmic boundary-tree at the limit of created knowledge. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISLR_SIRAT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | As-Sirat (the bridge over Hell) ENT_ISLR_SIRAT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Eschatological al-sirat of hadith (drawing on Qur'anic sirat imagery, Q 37:23-24); the bridge to Paradise over Hell. Standard in classical accounts (Lange). | SRC_LANGE_PARADISE_HELL | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_ABU_HANIFA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Abu Hanifa ENT_ISL_ABU_HANIFA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Abu Hanifa al-Nu'man ibn Thabit (c. 699-767 CE) of Kufa, eponymous founder of the Hanafi school, the most widely followed Sunni legal tradition. | SRC_ISLAMIC_TRADITION | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_AHMAD_IBN_HANBAL,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Ahmad ibn Hanbal ENT_ISL_AHMAD_IBN_HANBAL | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Ahmad ibn Hanbal (780-855 CE) of Baghdad founded the Hanbali school, emphasized hadith over speculative reasoning, and compiled the vast Musnad. | SRC_ISLAMIC_TRADITION | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_AL_SHAFII,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Shafi'i ENT_ISL_AL_SHAFII | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Muhammad ibn Idris al-Shafi'i (767-820 CE) founded the Shafi'i school and is regarded as the father of Islamic legal theory in his Risala. | SRC_ISLAMIC_TRADITION | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_ASKARI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Hasan al-Askari ENT_ISL_ASKARI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | A | Classical Islamic period (the later Imams, 8th-9th c.). | reviewed | |
| ENT_ISL_DIV,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Div ENT_ISL_DIV | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | medium | The div (Persian dev), a malevolent demonic being of Persianate Islamic and pre-Islamic Iranian tradition (cf. the Avestan daeva), assimilated to the jinn in Islamic-era folklore and prominent in epics such as the Shahnameh. | SRC_ISLAMIC_JINN_LORE | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_FOUR_IMAMS,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | The Four Imams of the Sunni Schools of Law ENT_ISL_FOUR_IMAMS | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Sunni Islam recognizes four orthodox schools of law, each named for a jurist of the 8th-9th centuries CE whose legal methodology it codified. | SRC_ISLAMIC_TRADITION | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_GHUL,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Ghul ENT_ISL_GHUL | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | medium | The ghul (English 'ghoul'), a shape-shifting desert demon of pre-Islamic Arabian and classical Islamic lore that lures and devours lone travellers, classed among the jinn but of marginal, debated status in orthodox cosmology. | SRC_ISLAMIC_JINN_LORE | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_HADI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Ali al-Hadi ENT_ISL_HADI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | A | Classical Islamic period (the later Imams, 8th-9th c.). | reviewed | |
| ENT_ISL_IDRIS,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Idris ENT_ISL_IDRIS | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | medium | SRC_VAN_BLADEL_ARABIC_HERMES | reviewed | |
| ENT_ISL_ISA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | ʿĪsā ibn Maryam ENT_ISL_ISA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | B | Islamic-tradition figure of the classical period. | reviewed | |
| ENT_ISL_JAWAD,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Muhammad al-Jawad ENT_ISL_JAWAD | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | A | Classical Islamic period (the later Imams, 8th-9th c.). | reviewed | |
| ENT_ISL_JINN_CLASSES,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | The Classes of the Jinn ENT_ISL_JINN_CLASSES | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | medium | A grouping node for the ranked classes of jinn enumerated in classical Islamic lore (al-Jahiz, al-Damiri) — jinni, shaytan, ifrit, marid, ghul, si'lat and others; the roster and hierarchy differ between authors and are not Quranically fixed. | SRC_ISLAMIC_JINN_LORE | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_KAZIM,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Musa al-Kazim ENT_ISL_KAZIM | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | A | Classical Islamic period (the later Imams, 8th-9th c.). | reviewed | |
| ENT_ISL_MALIK_IBN_ANAS,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Malik ibn Anas ENT_ISL_MALIK_IBN_ANAS | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Malik ibn Anas (c. 711-795 CE) of Medina founded the Maliki school and authored the Muwatta, an early collection of hadith and law. | SRC_ISLAMIC_TRADITION | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_RIDA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Ali al-Rida ENT_ISL_RIDA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | A | Classical Islamic period (the later Imams, 8th-9th c.). | reviewed | |
| ENT_ISL_SADIQ,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Ja'far al-Sadiq ENT_ISL_SADIQ | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | A | Classical Islamic period (the later Imams, 8th-9th c.). | reviewed | |
| ENT_ISL_SHAYTAN,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Shaytan / Shayatin ENT_ISL_SHAYTAN | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | medium | The shayatin are the devils, the rebellious and tempting class of evil spirits led by Iblis; the Qur'an repeatedly names al-shaytan as humanity's open enemy who whispers temptation. | SRC_QURAN | reviewed |
| ENT_ISL_SILAT,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Si'lat ENT_ISL_SILAT | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | medium | The si'lat (or si'la), a cunning, often female class of jinn in classical Arabian lore, sometimes paired with or distinguished from the ghul; sparsely and inconsistently described. | SRC_ISLAMIC_JINN_LORE | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_BAKHTIAR_KAKI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Qutb al-Din Bakhtiar Kaki ENT_SUF_BAKHTIAR_KAKI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Chishti saint of Delhi (d. 1235), foremost disciple of Mu'in al-Din Chishti; his shrine at Mehrauli anchors the Delhi Chishti tradition. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_BAQA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Baqa ENT_SUF_BAQA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Doctrine formalised by al-Junayd (d. 910). | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_BISTAMI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Abu Yazid al-Bistami ENT_SUF_BISTAMI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Died 874 CE. | SRC_HUJWIRI_KASHF | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_CHISHTI_MUIN,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Mu'in al-Din Chishti ENT_SUF_CHISHTI_MUIN | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Persian saint (d. 1236) who established the Chishtiyya in India; his shrine (dargah) at Ajmer is among the most venerated in South Asia. Titled Gharib Nawaz. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_DHIKR,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Dhikr ENT_SUF_DHIKR | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Core practice of the formative period. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_DHUL_NUN,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Dhul-Nun al-Misri ENT_SUF_DHUL_NUN | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Died 859 CE. | SRC_HUJWIRI_KASHF | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_FANA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Fana ENT_SUF_FANA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Doctrine formalised in classical Sufism (9th-10th c.). | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_GHAZALI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Ghazali ENT_SUF_GHAZALI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Died 1111 CE. | SRC_GHAZALI_IHYA | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_HALLAJ,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Hallaj ENT_SUF_HALLAJ | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Executed 922 CE. | SRC_HUJWIRI_KASHF | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_IBN_ARABI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Ibn al-Arabi ENT_SUF_IBN_ARABI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Died 1240 CE, within Classical Islam. | SRC_IBN_ARABI_FUSUS | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_INSAN_KAMIL,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Insan al-Kamil ENT_SUF_INSAN_KAMIL | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Developed by Ibn al-Arabi (d. 1240). | SRC_IBN_ARABI_FUSUS | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_ISHRAQ,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Ishraq ENT_SUF_ISHRAQ | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Founded by Suhrawardi (d. 1191). | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_JILANI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani ENT_SUF_JILANI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Died 1166 CE. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_JUNAYD,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Junayd al-Baghdadi ENT_SUF_JUNAYD | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Died 910 CE. | SRC_HUJWIRI_KASHF | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_KIRMANI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Awhad al-Din Kirmani ENT_SUF_KIRMANI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Persian Sufi master and poet (d. 1238) known for the contemplation of divine beauty in created forms (shahid-bazi) and for his ruba'iyat. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_KUBRA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Najm al-Din Kubra ENT_SUF_KUBRA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Persian mystic (d. 1221), eponymous founder of the Kubrawiyya; martyred at the Mongol sack of Khwarazm. Author of works on the visionary lights of the soul. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_KUBRAWI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Kubrawiyya ENT_SUF_KUBRAWI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Central Asian Sufi order founded by Najm al-Din Kubra, noted for its visionary psychology of luminous colours. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_MAHABBA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Mahabba ENT_SUF_MAHABBA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Articulated by Rabia (d. 801). | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_MARIFA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Marifa ENT_SUF_MARIFA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Articulated by Dhul-Nun (d. 859). | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_QUSHAYRI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | al-Qushayri ENT_SUF_QUSHAYRI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Died 1074 CE. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_RABIA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Rabia al-Adawiyya ENT_SUF_RABIA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Died 801 CE. | SRC_HUJWIRI_KASHF | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_SUHRAWARDI,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Suhrawardi ENT_SUF_SUHRAWARDI | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Executed 1191 CE. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_TARIQA,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Tariqa ENT_SUF_TARIQA | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Path-concept of classical Sufism; orders crystallise later. | SRC_SCHIMMEL_SUFISM | reviewed |
| ENT_SUF_WAHDAT_WUJUD,PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | Wahdat al-Wujud ENT_SUF_WAHDAT_WUJUD | Classical Islam PER_ISL_CLASSICAL | high | Articulated by Ibn al-Arabi (d. 1240). | SRC_IBN_ARABI_FUSUS | reviewed |
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CREATE TABLE "entity_periods" (
[entity_id] TEXT REFERENCES [entities]([entity_id]),
[period_id] TEXT REFERENCES [periods]([period_id]),
[confidence] TEXT,
[rationale] TEXT,
[source_id] TEXT,
[review_status] TEXT,
PRIMARY KEY ([entity_id], [period_id])
);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_periods_period_id]
ON [entity_periods] ([period_id]);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_periods_entity_id]
ON [entity_periods] ([entity_id]);