Jafar al-Sadiq was the founder of the Ja?fari school of Islamic jurisprudence and the sixth Imam of the Twelver and Isma?ili denominations of Shi?a Islam.
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Ja?far Jafar al-Sadiq was born around 700 CE, perhaps in 702.
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Jafar al-Sadiq was about thirty-seven when his father, Muhammad al-Baqir, died after designating him as the next Imam.
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Jafar al-Sadiq was the victim of some harassment by the Abbasid caliphs and was eventually, according to Shi?ite sources, poisoned at the instigation of the caliph al-Mansur.
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Jafar al-Sadiq's house was burned by order of al-Mansur, though he was unharmed, and there are reports of multiple arrests and attempts on his life by the caliph.
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Ja?far Jafar al-Sadiq was about thirty-seven when his father, al-Baqir, died after designating him as the next Shi?ite Imam.
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In contrast, similar to his father and his grandfather, Jafar al-Sadiq adopted a quiescent attitude and kept aloof from politics.
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Jafar al-Sadiq viewed the imamate and caliphate as separate institutions until such time that God would make the Imam victorious.
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Several influential followers of Jafar al-Sadiq are recorded to have first followed Abdullah and then changed their allegiance to Musa.
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Jafar al-Sadiq was buried in the al-Baqi Cemetery in Medina, and his tomb was a place of pilgrimage until 1926.
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The governor learned that Jafar al-Sadiq had chosen four people, rather than one, to administer his will: al-Mansur himself, the governor, the Imam's oldest son Abdullah al-Aftah, and Musa al-Kazim, his younger son.
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Jafar al-Sadiq was known as Hamida the Pure and respected for her religious learning.
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Amir-Moezzi considers him possibly the most brilliant scholar of his time, and the variety of views ascribed to Jafar al-Sadiq suggest that he was an influential figure in the history of early Islamic thought, as nearly all the early intellectual factions of Islam wished to incorporate Jafar al-Sadiq into their history in order to bolster their schools' positions.
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Jafar al-Sadiq is cited in a wide range of historical sources, including the works of al-Tabari, Ya'qubi, al-Masudi, and Ibn Khallikan.
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Jafar al-Sadiq argued that God's law is occasional and unpredictable and that Muslims should submit to the inscrutable will of God as revealed by the Imam.
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Gleave and Bowering suggest that Tafsir al-Quran, Manafe' Sowar al-Quran, and Kawass al-Qoran al-Azam, three mystical commentaries of the Quran attributed to Jafar al-Sadiq, were composed after his death because these works demonstrate a mastery of the recent lexicon of Muslim mysticism.
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Many Twelver Shi'i traditions state that al-Baqir and Jafar al-Sadiq did not have supernatural abilities and did not perform the miracles attributed to them.
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Nevertheless, al-Mufaddal's status as a close confidant of Ja'far Jafar al-Sadiq led to a large number of writings being attributed to him by later authors, including major works such as the Kitab al-Haft wa-l-azilla and the Kitab al-Sirat.
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Jafar al-Sadiq describes his own argument with an atheist Indian doctor in it.
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