Page:Thomas Patrick Hughes - Notes on Muhammadanism - 2ed. (1877).djvu/240

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219

XLVIII.—THE WAHHA′BI′S.

This sect was founded by Muhammad, son of Abdul Wahháb, but as their opponents could not call them Muhammadans, they have been distinguished by the name of the father of the founder of their sect, and are called Wahhábís.[1]

Shekh Muhammad was born at Ayína, a village in the province, of Arad, in the country of Najd, in the year A.D. 1691. Having been carefully instructed in the tenets of the Muslim religion, according to the teachings of the Hambalí sect, he in due time left his native place, in company with his father, to perform the pilgrimage to Mecca. At Madina, he was instructed by Shekh Abdullah-ibn-Ibrahím, of Najd; and, it is supposed, that whilst sitting at the feet of this celebrated teacher, the


  1. Vide a Wabhábí book entitled Sulh-ul-Aklwán, by Sayyid Allama Daud, of Bagdad.