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CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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a Khalifa in full and regular standing. This catholic recognition of the unity of Islam
we shall meet again and again.
Abandoning, then, any attempt to trace the details and to adjust the rights and wrongs
of this story, we return to the fixed fact of the election of Ali and the accession to
power of the legitimist party. This legitimist party, or parties, had been gradually
developing, and their peculiar and mutually discordant views deserve attention. These
views all glorified Ali, the full cousin of Muhammad and husband of his daughter Fatima,
but upon very different grounds. There could not but exist the feeling that a descendant
of the Prophet should be his successor, and the children of Ali, al-Hasan and al-Husayn
were his only grandchildren and only surviving male descendants. This, of course,
reflected a dignity upon Ali, their father, and gave him a claim to the Khalifate. Again,
Ali himself seems to have made a great and hardly comprehensible impression upon his
contemporaries. The proverb ran with the people, "There is no sword save Dhu-l-faqar,
and no youth save Ali." He was not, perhaps, so great a general as one or two others
of his time, but he stood alone as a warrior in single combat; he was a poet and an
orator, but no statesman. As one of the earliest of the Early Believers, it might be
expected that the Muhajirs would support him, and so they did; but the matter went much
farther, and he seems to have excited a feeling of personal attachment and devotion
different from that rendered to the preceding Khalifas. Strange and mystical doctrines
were afloat
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as to his claim. The idea of election was thrown aside, and his adherents proclaimed
his right by the will and appointment of God to the successorship of the Prophet. As God
had appointed Muhammad as Prophet, so He had appointed Ali as his helper in life and his
successor in death. This was preached in Egypt as early as the year 32.
It will easily be seen that with such a following, uniting so many elements, his
election could be brought about. Thus it was; but an evil suspicion rested upon him. Men
thought, and probably rightly, that he could have saved the aged Uthman if he had willed,
and they even went the length of accusing him of being art and part in the murder itself.
The ground was hollow beneath his feet. Further, there were two other old Companions of
the Prophet, Talha and az-Zubayr, who thought they had a still better claim to the
Khalifate; and they were joined by A'isha, the favorite wife of Muhammad, now, as a
finished intrigante, the evil genius of Islam. Ali had reaped all the advantage of
the conspiracy and murder, and it was easy to raise against him the cry of revenge for
Uthman. Then the civil war began. In the struggle with Talha and az-Zubayr, Ali was
victorious. Both fell at the battle of the Camel (A.H. 36), so called from the presence of
A'isha mounted on a camel like a chieftainess of the old days. But a new element was to
enter. The governorship of Syria had been held for a long time by Mu'awiya, an Umayyad,
and there the Umayyad influence was supreme. There, too, had grown up a spirit of
religious indifference, combined with a preservation
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