Adi ibn Musafir
| Adī ibn Musāfir | |
|---|---|
| The sarcophagus of Sheikh Adi | |
| Born | 1072–1078 Bait Far, Abbasid Caliphate (present-day Beqaa Valley, Lebanon) | 
| Died | 1162 | 
| Resting place | Lalish, Iraq | 
| Occupation | Adawi sheikh | 
| Era | Late Abbasid | 
| Predecessor | None | 
| Successor | Sakhr Abu l-Barakat | 
| Family | Umayyad dynasty | 
| Part of a series on the Yazidi religion | 
| Yazidism | 
|---|
Adi ibn Musafir (Kurdish: شیخادی, romanized: Şîxadî, Arabic: عَدِيُّ بْنُ مُسَافِرْ; born 1072–1078, died 1162) was a Sunni Muslim sheikh who founded the Adawiyya order. He is also considered a Yazidi saint. The Yazidis consider him as an avatar of Tawûsî Melek, which means "Peacock Angel". His tomb at Lalish, Iraq is a focal point of Yazidi pilgrimage. He was an Arab from the Umayyad dynasty. He had distant Kurdish heritage as a direct descendant of Marwan II, who was born to a Kurdish mother.