Encounters with Jogis in Indian Sufi Hagiography by Simon Digby

Series: The Life and Works of Simon Digby (Volume II)

Title: Encounters with Jogis in Indian Sufi Hagiography

AUTHOR- Simon Digby

SERIES EDITOR: David Lunn

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INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR : Simon Digby
  • HB ISBN : 978-93-6883-046-7
  • Year : 2025
  • Extent : 328
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Encounters with Jogīs in Indian Sūfī Hagiography is a meticulous and magisterial analysis of myriad anecdotes from early medieval Indian Sūfī literature in which Sufis and Yogis interacted with each other. These meetings—almost always contests—regularly featured magical feats of levitation, divination and transmutation. As these are recounted from the side of the Sufis—whether from their own lips or by their pious devotees—the Sūfī is usually the victor. Yet, despite their partisanship, they offer invaluable insights into attitudes of mind and thought, patterns of settlement as well as of literary transmission, considerations of conflict versus accommodation, and the history of yoga itself.

Evolving from a previously unpublished though widely circulated 1970 seminar paper of the same name, Digby’s book-length study of the encounters recorded in Indian malfūzāt and tazkiras is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of contacts between Islam and Hinduism in the medieval environment. Charismatic Sufis were at the vanguard of Islam’s spread in India, which was often—but not always—peaceful. Here we learn much of how they and their devotees saw their role as well as that of their equally charismatic opponents.

The Author

Simon Digby (1932–2010) was one of the foremost scholars on pre-Mughal India as well as a prolific writer, translator and collector. He was Honorary Librarian of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, curator in the Department of Eastern Art of the Ashmolean Museum, and a member of the Oriental Institute of the University of Oxford. His contribution to the study of Indian history can be seen through his wide-ranging research into fields as disparate as art and architecture, travellers’ tales and religious tracts, numismatics and furniture, Kipling and Qalandars, toys and fairy tales.

The Series Editor

David Lunn was the Simon Digby Postdoctoral Fellow at SOAS University of London, where he also taught extensively between 2007 and 2023. He has published on Hindi–Urdu and Hindu–Muslim relations in pre-Independence India, early Hindustani cinema, and the poetry of Emperor Shāh ‘Ālam II, among other topics. He is currently an independent scholar.