n on spears, and invited the combatants to resolve the problem by recourse to the Holy Book. ‘Al
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was forced to accept arbitration by most of his army, and was thus politically outmanœuvred by Mu‘
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00006.jpg)
wiyya's stratagem. ‘Al
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's support diminished, a section of his army rebelled (those averse to arbitration) and these were crushed at Nahrawan (658 (AH 38)). The remnants of this defeated group later became known as the
Kharijites
. During ‘Al
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's preparations for further battle, he was assassinated by a Kharijite in the mosque of K
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fa (661 (AH 40)).
Since the period of ‘Al
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00013.jpg)
's caliphate is a controversial time in Islamic history, it is open to various interpretations. Both Sunni and Sh
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‘a sources agree that ‘Al
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00013.jpg)
was a powerful orator, a leading authority on the Qur’
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n and the
Sunna
of the Prophet Mu
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ammad, and that his piety was beyond question. ‘Al
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00013.jpg)
's sermons, lectures, and discourses have been preserved in
Nahj-ul-Balagha
(collected in the 11th cent.). However, while Mu
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00012.jpg)
ammad,
Abu Bakr
, and ‘Umar had displayed great pragmatism in the handling of worldly affairs, ‘Al
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00013.jpg)
lacked political insight: on the assumption of authority, he reversed all of ‘Uthm
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00006.jpg)