Baháʼí timeline

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following is a basic timeline of the Bábí and Baháʼí religions emphasizing dates that are relatively well known. For a more comprehensive chronology of the timeline, see the references at the bottom.

1795

1817

1819

1826

  • Shaykh Ahmad dies and
    Siyyid Kázim
    is appointed leader of the Shaykhi sect.

1828

  • Mírzá Muhammad Ridá, the Father of the Báb, dies. The Báb is placed in the care of his maternal uncle, Hají Mirzá Siyyid 'Alí

1835

1843

  • Mulla Husayn, to find the Promised One, the Mahdi
    .

1844 AD / 1 BE

1845 AD / 2 BE

1846 / 3 BE

  • Bahíyyih Khánum is born to Navváb and Baháʼu'lláh.
  • September, the Báb leaves Shiraz for Isfahan.[5]

1847 / 4 BE

  • July, The Báb is imprisoned at
    Bayán.[5]

1848 / 5 BE

  • Mírzá Mihdí is born to Navváb and Baháʼu'lláh.
  • Bábís
    of the city.
  • March 20, Mullá Husayn visits the Báb in Maku
  • April 10, the Báb is moved to the prison of Chihriq, due to his growing influence in Maku. He was largely kept there until a few days before his execution.
  • June - July, the Conference of Badasht was held.[6]
  • July, during public interrogation at Tabriz the Báb makes a dramatic public declaration. He is returned to Chihriq.
  • July 21, Mullá Husayn hoists the Black Standard and marches with 202 other Bábís to Mashhad.
  • October 10, Mullá Husayn and a host of other Bábís are besieged at
    fort Tabarsi
    .
  • October 20, Quddús arrives at fort Tabarsí.

1849 AD / 6 BE

  • Baháʼu'lláh marries Fátimih in Tihrán.
  • February 2,
    Shaykh Tabarsí
    .
  • May 10, Battle of Fort Tabarsi ends after a negotiated surrender in which the victors promise to let the Bábís go. Immediately afterward, the victors break their oath and kill many of the defenders.
  • May 16, Quddús is tortured and executed.

1850 AD / 7 BE

  • July 9, the Báb is publicly executed in Tabriz.
  • Brief newspaper coverage of the Bábí religion reaches several newspapers in Britain and the United States in the autumn.[7]

1851 AD / 7-8 BE

Dr. Rev. Austin Wright sent materials of the Báb and a letter/paper about events related to the religion to the American Oriental Society - he wrote the letter February 1851 and it was published June.[8] The letter/paper was published in June a Vermont newspaper as well.[9] Some of it was also translated into German by his supervisor, Rev. Justin Perkins, and was thought for many years to have not been published in English though even in its German form Wright had been named as the first person to write a paper on the Bábí-Baháʼí period.[10]: pp.10, 73 

1852 AD / 9 BE

1853 / 9 BE

  • January 12, Baháʼu'lláh is exiled from Tehran to Baghdad.

1854 / 11 BE

  • April 10, Baháʼu'lláh retreats to the Sulaymaniyah mountains within Kurdistan due to a rising tensions between Mírzá Yahyá and himself.
  • Henry Aaron Stern (1820-1885) published a book that mentions "Baba, the Persian socialist" for a couple pages.[14][10]: pp.14–15 

1856 / 13 BE

1857 / 14 BE

  • The
    Four Valleys
    are written by Baháʼu'lláh

1860 / 17 BE

  • Seven Valleys
    are written by Baháʼu'lláh

1861 / 18 BE

  • The
    Book of Certitude
    is written in late 1861 or early 1862 in two days and nights

1862 / 19 BE

  • May 10, the Persian ambassador requests that the Ottomans move the Bábís farther from Persia.

1863 / 20 BE

1865 / 22 BE

1867 / 24 BE

  • 53 Baháʼís in Baghdad on March 16, 1867 petitioned the United States Congress for assistance for Baháʼu'lláh's release and for assistance for the Baháʼís in general.[16]
  • Baháʼu'lláh begins writing and sending his Tablets to the Kings.

1868 / 25 BE

  • August 5, Baháʼu'lláh and a large group of followers are sent from Edirne to the penal colony of Akká, Palestine (now Acre, Israel).
  • August 31, Baháʼu'lláh arrives in ʻAkká.

1869 / 26 BE

1870 / 27 BE

  • June 23,
    Mirzá Mihdí
    dies after falling through a skylight.

1873 / 30 BE

1886 / 43 BE

  • Navváb dies.
  • Abdu'l-Bahá
    writes the original Arabic text of Traveller's Narrative later translated and published in 1891.

1889 / 46 BE

  • February 25,
    E.G. Browne
    mentions the Baháʼí Faith as part of a series academic talks and papers through 1889 in England.

1890 / 47 BE

E. G. Browne, a famed Cambridge orientalist interviewed Baháʼu'lláh and was His guest at Bahjí from 15 April to 20 April 1890. Browne was the only Westerner to meet Baháʼu'lláh and leave an account of his experience. In Browne's 1893 publication entitled A Year Among the Persians, he wrote a sympathetic portrayal of Persian society. After his death in 1926 it was reprinted and became a classic in English travel literature. Browne described Baha'u'llah as, "The face of Him on Whom I gazed, I can never forget, though I cannot describe it. Those piercing eyes seemed to read one's very soul; power and authority sat on that ample brow… No need to ask in whose presence I stood, as I bowed myself before one who is the object of a devotion and love which kings might envy and emperors sigh for in vain..."[17]

1892 / 49 BE

  • May 29,
    will
    he appointed ʻAbdu'l-Bahá to be his successor and head of the Baháʼí Faith.

1893 / 50 BE

  • September 23, the
    World Parliament of Religions
    in Chicago.

1894 / 51 BE

  • Thornton Chase is the first of five Baháʼís in the United States this year

1897 / 54 BE

  • March 1, Shoghi Effendi, the great-grandson of Baháʼu'lláh, is born.

1898 / 55 BE

  • The first Western pilgrims arrive in ʻAkká, including Phoebe Hearst and the first African-American believer, Robert Turner.

1900 / 58 BE

Sarah Farmer, founder of Green Acre Baháʼí School
, meets ʻAbdu'l-Bahá and converts.

1901 / 59 BE

1903 / 60 BE

1908 / 65 BE

  • September, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá is released from a lifetime of exile and imprisonment at 64 years of age.

1909 / 66 BE

  • March 21, the mortal remains of the Báb are laid to rest in the Shrine of the Báb after 59 years in hiding.

1910 / 67 BE

1911 / 68 BE

1912 / 69 BE

1916 / 73 BE

1917 / 74 BE

  • ʻAbdu'l-Bahá writes six more Tablets of the Divine Plan.

1918 / 75 BE

1920 / 76 BE

  • April 27, ʻAbdu'l-Bahá is knighted by the British Empire in recognition of his humanitarian work during WWI.

1921 / 77 BE

1932

1935

  • Shoghi Effendi translates the
    Arabic into English
    .

1937

  • Mírzá Muhammad ʻAlí, labeled the arch-Covenant breaker by ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, dies.
  • Shoghi Effendi launches the "Divine Plan" for the diffusion the Baháʼí Faith across the globe.
  • Shoghi Effendi marries Mary Maxwell, later known as
    Rúhíyyih Khanum
    , the daughter of a prominent Canadian Baháʼí.

1944 AD / 101 BE

  • Shoghi Effendi releases God Passes By to mark the 100th anniversary of the Baháʼí dispensation, which commenced with the Declaration of the Bab in 1844 AD / 1 BE.

1951

1953

1957

  • November 4, Shoghi Effendi dies without children and without appointing a successor Guardian. The temporary role of 'Head of the Faith' is taken up by 27 Hands of the Cause with plans to complete the Ten Year Crusade and elect the Universal House of Justice.

1960

  • Hand-of-the-Cause Mason Remey claims to be Effendi's successor Guardian. The other living Hands of the Cause and almost all of the Baha'i community reject his claim.

1963

  • A wave of persecution of Baháʼís in Morocco ends in mid April with a royal pardon against death sentences for being Baháʼí in Morocco after months of diplomatic newspaper.[20] and television coverage in the United States.[21]
  • April 21, the first
    Ten Year Crusade and the centenary of the Declaration of Baháʼu'lláh in the Garden of Ridván.[22][23]

1968

  • Second election of the Universal House of Justice

1973

  • Third election of the Universal House of Justice

1978

  • Fourth election of the Universal House of Justice

1979

1983

1985

  • October, the Universal House of Justice publishes The Promise of World Peace

1986

1987

  • Sixth election of the Universal House of Justice

1992

1993 AD / 150 BE

  • March 21, the Kitáb-i-Aqdas is released in English with notes, question and answers, supplementary materials and synopsis and codification. (1 Baha 150 BE)
  • Seventh election of the Universal House of Justice

1998

  • Eighth election of the Universal House of Justice

2000

  • January 19,
    Rúhíyyih Khanum
    dies, representing the last remnant of the family of Baháʼu'lláh who remained loyal to Shoghi Effendi and the Universal House of Justice.

2001

  • The
    the Arc
    .
  • there are 182 National
    Worldwide Baháʼí statistics
    )

2003

  • Ninth election of the Universal House of Justice

2006

2008

  • The Universal House of Justice announced the convocation in October of a series of 41 regional conferences around the world which finished by March 2009.[24]
  • Tenth election of the Universal House of Justice

2013

  • Eleventh election of the Universal House of Justice

Further reading

See also

Citations

  1. ^ Nabíl-i-Zarandí 1932, pp. 2–19.
  2. ^ Afnan & Rabbani 2008, pp. 20–22.
  3. ^ Cameron & Momen 1996, p. 19.
  4. ^ Momen 1999.
  5. ^ a b Perkins 1987, p. 212.
  6. ^ Amanat 1989, p. 324.
  7. ^ Baháʼí Library Online 2010.
  8. )
  9. ^ "A new Prophet" (PDF). Green Mountain Freeman. Vol. 8, no. 26. Montpelier, Vermont. June 26, 1851. p. 1 (5th col mid, 6th col top). Retrieved March 12, 2015.
  10. ^
  11. ^ The Attempted Assassination of Nasir al Din Shah in 1852: Millennialism and violence, by Moojan Momen, 2011
  12. ^ The Attempted Assassination of Nasir al Din Shah in 1852: Millennialism and Violence, by Moojan Momen, 2011
  13. .
  14. ^ Henry Aaron Stern (1854). Dawnings of light in the East. Purday. pp. 261–262.
  15. ^ lady Mary Leonora Woulfe Sheil; Sir Justin Sheil (1856). Glimpses of Life and Manners in Persia. J. Murray. pp. 176–81, 273–82.
  16. ^ Stauffer 1997.
  17. ^ Shoghi Effendi 1944, pp. 194–5.
  18. ^ Hainsworth nd.
  19. ^ Lambden 1999.
  20. ^ The Harvard Crimson 1963.
  21. ^ Rutstein 2008.
  22. ^ Francis 2004.
  23. ^ Smith 1999, pp. 109–110.
  24. ^ Baháʼí International Community 2009.

References

External links