THE active life of the pre-Muslim creeds of Persia, as opposed to outwardly Muhammadan heresies embodying and reviving Bih-áfarídh. in new forms pre-Muslim and non-Muslim ideas, finds its latest expression in the Pseudo-Prophet Bih-áfarídh the son of Máhfurúdhín, of whom scanty Al-Bírúní's account of him. accounts are preserved to us in the Fihrist (p. 344) and in al-Bírúní's Chronology of Ancient Nations (Sachau's transl., pp. 193-4), whereof the latter is as follows:—
“In the days of Abú Muslim, the founder of the 'Abbásid dynasty,
came forward a man called Bih-áfarídh the son of Máhfurúdhín in
Khwáf, one of the districts of Níshápúr, in a place called Sírá-
“He differed from the Magians in most rites, but believed in Zoroaster and claimed for his followers all the institutes of Zoroaster. He maintained that he secretly received divine revelations, and established seven prayers for his followers, one in praise of the one God, one relating to the creation of heaven and earth, one relating to the creation of the animals and their nourishment, one relating to death, one relating to the Resurrection and Last Judgment, one relating to those in heaven and hell and what is prepared for them, and one in praise of the people of Paradise.
“He composed for them a book in Persian. He ordered them to worship the substance of the Sun, kneeling on one knee, and in praying always to turn towards the Sun wherever it might be; to let their hair and locks grow; to give up the zamzama* at dinner; not to sacrifice small cattle unless they were already enfeebled; not to drink wine; not to eat the flesh of animals that have died a sudden death, as not having been killed according to prescription; not to marry their mothers, daughters, sisters, or nieces,* and not to exceed the sum of four hundred dirhams as dowry. Further, he ordered them to keep roads and bridges in good condition by means of the seventh part of their property and of the produce of their labour.
“When Abú Muslim came to Níshápúr, the múbadhs and herbadhs* assembled before him, telling him that this man had infected Islám as well as their own religion. So he sent 'Abdu'lláh b. Shu'ba to fetch him. He caught him in the mountains of Bádghís and brought him before Abú Muslim, who put him to death, together with such of his followers as he could capture.
“His followers, called Bih-áfarídhiyya, still keep the institutes of
their founder, and strongly oppose the Zamzamís amongst the
Magians. They maintain that the servant of their prophet had told
them that the prophet had ascended into heaven on a common dark-
According to the short account in the Fihrist (p. 344), Bih-áfarídh accepted Islám at the hands of two of Abú The Fihrist. Muslim's dá'ís named Shabíb b. Dáḥ and 'Ab du'lláh b. Sa'íd, and adopted the black raiment of the 'Abbásids; but afterwards apostatised and was slain. This account, which rests on the authority of Ibráhím b. al-'Abbás aṣ-Ṣúlí († A.D. 857-8), adds that “there are to this day in Khurásán a number of people who hold his doctrine.” The sect is also mentioned, with the alternative name of Saysániyya, by Shahristání (p. 187), who describes them as “the most hostile of God's creatures to the Zamzamí Magians,” adding that “they recognise the prophetic mission of Zoroaster, and honour those kings whom Zoroaster honours.”
The meagre information which we possess concerning Bih-
“They are such as hold extreme views (ghalaw) in respect to their Imáms, so that they raise them above the limits of created beings, The Ghulát or extreme Shí'ites. and ascribe to them Divine virtues, so that often they liken one of the Imáms to God, and often they liken God to mankind, thus falling into the two extremes of excess (ghuluww) and defect (taqṣír). These anthropomorphic tendencies of theirs are derived from the sects of the Ḥulúliyya [who believe that the Deity can pass into a human form], the Tanásukhiyya [who hold the doctrine of Metempsychosis], the Jews, and the Christians. For the Jews liken the Creator to the creature, while the Christians liken the creature to the Creator. And these anthropomorphic tendencies have so infected the minds of these ultra-Shí'ites that they ascribe Divine virtues to some of their Imáms. This anthropomorphism belongs primarily and essentially to the Shí'a, and only subsequently was adopted by certain of the Sunnís… The heretical doctrines of the ultra-Shí'ites are four:— Anthropomorphism (tashbíh), change of [Divine] Purpose (badá), return [of the Imám; rij'at], and Metempsychosis (tanásukh). In every land they bear different names; in Isfahán they are called Khurramiyya and Kúdiyya, in Ray Mazdakiyya and Sinbádiyya, in Ádharbayján Dhaqúliyya, in some places Muḥammira (wearing red as their badge), and in Transoxiana Mubayyiḍa (wearing white as their badge).”
These ultra-Shí'ite sects, then, which we have now to consider,
and which, under the leadership of Sinbádh the Magian,
al-Muqanna' “the Veiled Prophet of Khurásán,” Bábak, and
others, caused such commotion in Persia during this period,
do but reassert, like the later Isma'ílís, Báṭinís, Carmathians,
Assassins, and Ḥurúfís, the same essential doctrines of Anthropomorphism,
Incarnation, Re-incarnation or “Return,” and
Metempsychosis; which doctrines appear to be endemic in
Persia, and always ready to become epidemic under a suitable
stimulus. In our own days they appeared again in the
Bábí movement, of which, especially in its earlier form
(A.D. 1844-1852), they constituted the essential kernel;
though in later time, under the guidance of Bahá'u'lláh
(† A.D. 1892) and now of his son 'Abbás Efendí “the Most
Great Branch” (who appears to be regarded by his followers
as a “Return” of Jesus Christ, and is so considered by the
now fairly numerous adherents of this doctrine in America),
they have been relegated to a subordinate, or at least a less
conspicuous, position. The resemblance between these
numerous sects, whose history can be clearly traced through
the last eleven centuries and a half, is most remarkable, and
extends even to minute details of terminology, and to the
choice of particular colours (especially red and white) as
badges. Thus the early Bábís, like the Mubayyiḍa of the
period now under discussion, wore white apparel,*
while they
imitated the Muḥammira in their fondness for red by their
choice of ink of that colour in transcribing their books. An
interesting question, for the final solution of which material is
still wanting, is the extent to which these ideas prevailed in
other forms in pre-Muhammadan Persia. The various ultra-