Almohad doctrine
Almohad doctrine, formulated by the Berber theologian Muhammad ibn Tumart (c. 1080–1130) in the Atlas Mountains around 1120, constituted the ideological foundation of the Almohad movement, which overthrew the Almoravid dynasty and established a caliphate spanning North Africa and al-Andalus from 1130 to 1269. [1][2] Centered on tawḥīd—the absolute unity and transcendence of God—it rejected anthropomorphic interpretations of the divine, such as ascribing human-like attributes or similitudes to Allah, deeming them heretical compromises of monotheism. [3][1] Ibn Tumart, who proclaimed himself the Mahdi (guided one), compiled his teachings in works like Aʿazz mā yuṭlab, advocating a creed accessible through memorized murshidas that paired Qur'anic proofs with rational demonstrations of God's existence. [2][3] This doctrine diverged sharply from Almoravid Maliki orthodoxy by condemning taqlīd (uncritical imitation of legal scholars) and promoting ijtihād (independent reasoning) to interpret scripture, positioning reason as a complementary source to revelation in theological inquiry. [1][2] It enjoined ḥisba—the communal obligation to command right and forbid wrong—as a core ethical imperative, fueling militant reform against perceived moral decay, including luxurious practices and lax enforcement of Islamic norms. [3] Under successors like Abd al-Mu'min, the doctrine facilitated tribal unification via Berber-language sermons and a hierarchical structure of talaba (students) and councils, enabling conquests that extended Almohad rule from the Maghreb to Ifriqiya and Iberia. [1] While initially enforcing doctrinal purity through purges and restrictions on non-Muslims—prompting conversions or exiles, as with philosopher Maimonides—the later caliphs patronized rationalist philosophy, supporting figures like Ibn Rushd (Averroes) in reconciling Aristotelian logic with Shari'a, thus blending puritan zeal with intellectual flourishing. [2] This tension between austere unitarianism and pragmatic governance marked defining characteristics, contributing to the empire's cultural legacy in architecture, such as austere mosques, before its fragmentation amid internal strife. [3][1]