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A fact from Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Nasafi appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 12 October 2022 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.
... that Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Nasafi wrote a treatise asserting that the sharia had been suspended, and the era of lawlessness would end only upon the return of the Mahdi? Source: Daftary, Farhad (2007). The Ismāʿı̄lı̄s: Their History and Doctrines (Second ed.)
Cplakidas and LordPeterII: Could you guys help me comprehend, He espoused the idea that the sharīʿa, the religious law of Islam announced by Muhammad, was suspended with the coming of Muhammad ibn Isma'il, and that the subsequent era was one of lawlessness, which would last until Muhammad ibn Isma'il's imminent return, when the true, inner meaning of religion would be revealed. I feel this should be reworded. The article elsewhere says, Al-Nasafi and his followers still subscribed to the original precepts of early Isma'ilism, that centred on the return of the seventh Isma'ili imam, Muhammad ibn Isma'il, as the Mahdī. That's to say, Alt0 would need some amendments but that's something I'd advise later. The first statement I quoted from article looks WP:PUFF to me and can me made more neutral. That's everything I have for now. Looking forward to reading your comments. Best, ─ The Aafī(talk)15:46, 1 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Cplakidas, I'm sorry for the confusion. Such things happen because of your differences in understanding certain ideas and policies. The part imminent return, when the true, inner meaning of religion looked non-neutral to me and I thought it can be reworded but if it is due to my different understanding, I'll not do bludgeoning. That said, it is pretty clear that Nasafi considered Muhammad ibn Ismail to be the Mahdi, but it isn't something that everyone supports. So, I propose changing Mahdi into Muhammad ibn Ismail, to make the fact look more accurate. I've two hooks in my mind that I think go in line according to my opinion. What do you say on this? ─ The Aafī(talk)07:42, 2 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@TheAafi: now I understand. Yes, the claim is of course correct in the context of the article, but the DYK hook should differentiate. Nevertheless, the 'return' of Muhammad ibn Isma'il is important because he was supposed to be the Mahdi, so this needs to be mentioned. I propose ALT0: ... that Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Nasafi wrote a treatise asserting that the sharia had been suspended, and the era of lawlessness would end only upon the return of Muhammad ibn Isma'il as the Mahdi? Constantine ✍ 16:22, 2 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Cplakidas, I'd to happy to approve that one but I've a question. I was skimming through The Ismāʿı̄lı̄s: Their History and Doctrines (p. 226) which has been cited as the source for the hook. It does mention Muhammad ibn Isma'il's coming back to revive the law etc. but I'm not able to find any word relevant to Mahdi. Could you please help with that? ─ The Aafī(talk)16:46, 3 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@TheAafi: An imam who is in hiding and will return to issue a new and final law or the end times is the definition of the Mahdi in Shi'ism. The whole chapter on 'Early Isma'ilism' examines precisely that. Just as a sample, p. 96: "Muhammad b. Ismā'ı̄l was regarded as their seventh and last imam, who was expected to reappear as the Mahdı̄ or Qā'im, ‘riser’" or p. 108: "the Ismā'ı̄lı̄ da'wa, then promising the imminent advent of Muhammad b. Ismā'ı̄l as the Mahdı̄ and the restorer of religion and justice". Constantine ✍ 18:24, 3 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Overall: Article was new and long enough on the day it was nominated for DYK. QPQ has been provided. No plagiarism. All checks go okay. This is good to go! ─ The Aafī(talk)13:59, 5 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see any issues with images, layout, stability, neutrality, and copyright. I would recommend a few prose tweaks or more elaboration in some parts:
Is there perhaps a more specific word than "preponderance" for the lead?
Clarified.
Some early 20th-century scholars read the nisbah as al-Barda'i, indicating an origin from Barda'a, but this is erroneous. Which scholars, and why is this known to be erroneous?
Added the scholars, but the explanation would be too much of a detail for the scope of the article. The reference is there and the article is online, it can be looked up.
A brief mention of the extent of the "contemporary Islamic world" could be helpful.
Hmmm. The focus here is that it was in the periphery of Islamic civilization; mentioning that this civilization stretched to North Africa and Spain is not really relevant, IMO.
Some general mention of why his initial attempts to convert members of the Samanid court failed would help, as well as how long those attempts lasted.
This is not known; information is scarce, and has to be gleaned from later writers who often followed their own agendas. The article presents a reconstruction of events by modern scholars. Al-Nasafi's departur of Bukhara and return to Nasaf is interpreted as a sign that his early efforts failed.
These developments caused a reaction among the Sunni establishment, and especially the Samanids' Turkic soldiery. "Caused a reaction" alone is rather vague; the next lines make it clear that it was a negative one, so specifying in this sentence would help.
Rephrased.
According to Nizam al-Mulk The previous line was also about Nizam al-Mulk's claims, so you could just say "him".
Hmmm, I think there is a danger of confusion here: the last person mentioned is 'one of their commanders'. It is better to be repetitive here than have a reader have to check twice what is meant.
As the historian Samuel Miklos Stern notes Mentioning his nationality and/or what year he said this wouldn't hurt.
Done.
Two other manuscripts, held at a private library in India, are also ascribed to al-Nasafi. India is a fairly large country; does your source go into any further detail about location?
Unfortunately no. Some of the modern sources are also frustratingly vague with their information.
Yes, definitely easy enough to understand. I can see why you were unable to address some of these issues, and why you preferred to leave some things alone. I don't think there are any major problems (the image matter brought up below is unfortunate, but not your fault, and the statements you made are valid), and the article is very likely as good as it could possibly be, so I will pass it. Very good work overall. An anonymous username, not my real name22:38, 2 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@Cplakidas: yes I don't say that the map isn't accurate. Just that per WP:GACR we want "a list of all references (sources of information)" from reliable sources. And currently it doesn't seem to be the case. A455bcd9 (talk) 19:33, 2 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@A455bcd9:Hmmm, this is a case of AGF, I think. The Cambridge History of Iran is definitely WP:RS, as is Encyclopaedia Iranica. I would of course also prefer a more detailed breakdown of the sources, but unless I have reason to believe that the sources were not actually consulted, or somehow misconstrued, then I do consider that criterion met. Given my past interaction with both of the above-mentioned users, I would be very surprised if that were the case. Constantine ✍ 19:40, 2 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, I didn't get what you were saying the second time either, apparently. Now I understand: you suggest the sources for the map should be in the article? That is not what we do, though: media are stand-alone works, and their sources should be listed on their own page. This is just like the works I cite: they also cite their own sources, but it would be problematic if I also had to include them here. And the map was not used as a source for the article, it is there to give a reader an idea of the extent of the Samanid domains. Constantine ✍ 19:43, 2 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@Cplakidas: sorry, I wasn't clear enough in my initial message. My point: all sources used to create the map should be listed in the file description. Any reader should be able to verify the facts. Unfortunately, currently the file description says after "Cambridge History of Iran" (definitely RS) "etc. Might add a more detailed list in the future." So I assume that several sources were used to create this image but only one of them is cited. That's why we should add:
The full citation of the Cambridge History of Iran, with the specific page number(s) (or URL to the web version)
Ah, OK, then I did understand (sort of) correctly first. Well, in this case, again: a) this is an issue for the image and its authors (I've pinged them, though Ro4444 at least is long inactive, perhaps HistoryofIran can help), and b) it is my understanding that the GA criteria do not place any requirements on the sourcing of the media files used, only on the article itself. I have encountered the requirement for maps to have RS in FA candidacies, but not consistently, and never before at GA. Constantine ✍ 22:17, 2 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@Cplakidas: First of all, my comment is just... a comment :) I didn't review the whole article and only noticed that point, and I don't know whether this is enough to oppose the nomination of what seems to be a well-written article.
Then, I've also encountered the WP:RS requirement for images in WP:FAC. So believed it applied to WP:GAN as well. Indeed, WP:GACR says that a GA is "Verifiable" and WP:V says that: "all material must be attributable to reliable, published sources [...] everything in articles, lists, and captions, must be verifiable". WP:V says it applies to "any of the information within Wikipedia articles". (see also this long discussion...)