Fazlallah Astarabadi

Fazlallah Astarabadi
Personal life
Born1339 or 40
Astarabad (present-day Gorgan)
Died1394 (aged 53-55)
ChildrenAmīr Nūrullāh, Salāmullāh, Kalīmullāh, Kalīmatullāh-ē 'Ulyā, 'Ā'išah, Fātimah, Bībī, Umm'ul-kitāb, Fātihat'ul-kitāb
RegionAstarābād
Main interest(s)Lettrism
Notable work(s)Jāwidānnāmah-i Kabir, Maḥabbatnāmah, Nawnnāmah
Religious life
ReligionIslam
JurisprudenceŠāfiʿī (formerly)
MovementHurufism

Fażlu l-Lāh Astar-Ābādī (Persian: فضل‌الله استرآبادی, 1339/40 in Astarābād – 1394 in Nakhchivan), also known as Fażlullāh Tabrīzī Astarābādī by a pseudonym al-Ḥurūfī and a pen name Nāimī, was an Iranian mystic who founded the Ḥurūfī movement. The basic belief of the Ḥurūfiyyah was that the God was incarnated in the body of Fażlullāh and that he would appear as Mahdī when the Last Day was near in order to save Muslims, Christians and Jews. His followers first came from the village of Toqchi near Isfahan and from there, the fame of his small community spread throughout Khorasan, Iraq, Azerbaijan and Shirvan. The center of Fażlullāh Nāimī's influence was Baku and most of his followers came from Shirvan. Among his followers was the famous Ḥurūfī poet Seyyed Imadaddin Nasimi, one of the greatest Turkic mystical poets of the late 14th and early 15th centuries.