(Arabic: Qaramita and singular: Qarmati), the name given to the adherents of a branch of the IsmailisAdherents of a branch of Shi’i Islam that considers Ismail, the eldest son of the Shi’i Imam Ja尪far al-廜〢diq (d. 765), as his successor. during the 3rd AH/9th century CE. Originally, the term was evidently applied primarily to those Ismailis who had been converted by Hamdan Qarmat b. Ashat, the chief leader of the Ismaili餃硃w硃in the Sawad of Kufa (a district in the countryside surrounding Kufa) and other parts of southern Iraq.
Hamdan succeeded in winning many converts, who were soon designated as the Qaramita. Hamdans surname Qarmat, also reported asQarmatiyya泭(Firaq al-Shia, p. 61; Qummi, p. 83), which is probably of Aramaic origin (see Massignon, 1927, p. 767), is vari簫ously explained as meaning short-legged or red-eyed.
Author
Dr Farhad Daftary
Co-Director and Head of the Department of Academic Research and Publications
An authority in Shi’i studies, with special reference to its Ismaili tradition, Dr. Daftary has published and lectured widely in these fields of Islamic studies. In 2011 a Festschrift entitledFortresses of the Intellectwas produced to honour Dr. Daftary by a number of his colleagues and peers.