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  2. Zina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zina

    [2] [14] In the 623-year history of the Ottoman Empire, the best-documented and most well-known pre-modern Islamic legal system, there is only one recorded example of the stoning punishment being applied for zina, when a Muslim woman and her Jewish lover were convicted of zina in 1680 and sentenced to death, the woman by stoning and the man by ...

  3. Stoning in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoning_in_Islam

    The punishment is recorded in number of traditions and the practice of Muhammad stands as an authentic source supporting it. This is the view held by all Companions, Successors and other Muslim scholars with the exception of Kharijites." [39] Hanbali Islamic law sentences all forms of consensual but religiously illegal sex as punishable with Rajm.

  4. Rape in Islamic law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rape_in_Islamic_law

    In Islam, human sexuality is governed by Islamic law, also known as Sharia.Accordingly, sexual violation is regarded as a violation of moral and divine law. [1] Islam divides claims of sexual violation into 'divine rights' (huquq Allah) and 'interpersonal rights' (huquq al-'ibad): the former requiring divine punishment (hadd penalties) and the latter belonging to the more flexible human realm.

  5. Islamic views on concubinage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_views_on_concubinage

    Islamic views on concubinage. In classical Islamic law, a concubine was an unmarried slave-woman with whom her master engaged in sexual relations. [ 1 ] Concubinage was widely accepted by Muslim scholars in pre-modern times. Most [ 2 ] modern Muslims, both scholars and laypersons, [ 3 ] believe that Islam no longer permits concubinage and that ...

  6. Islam and violence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_and_violence

    [197] [198] A map showing countries where public stoning is a judicial or extrajudicial form of punishment, as of 2013. [199] Zina is an Islamic law, both in the four schools of Sunni fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) and the two schools of Shi'a fiqh, concerning unlawful sexual relations between Muslims who are not married to one another through a ...

  7. Sexuality in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexuality_in_Islam

    Islam strictly prohibits fahisha, an Arabic word commonly meaning lewdness and indecency. [124] Salah is supposed to prevent one from indecency (fahisha) and evil deeds (munkar). Jurists also recommend to abstain from acts inciting zina and to hold on taqwa (abstinence from Haram) so that a solution must be gotten from God in reward according ...

  8. Islamic views on sin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_views_on_sin

    t. e. Sin is an important concept in Islamic ethics that Muslims view as being anything that goes against the commands of God or breaching the laws and norms laid down by religion. [1] Islam teaches that sin is an act and not a state of being. It is believed that God weighs an individual's good deeds against their sins on the Day of Judgement ...

  9. Islamic criminal jurisprudence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_criminal_jurisprudence

    Islamic criminal law (Arabic: فقه العقوبات) is criminal law in accordance with Sharia. Strictly speaking, Islamic law does not have a distinct corpus of "criminal law". It divides crimes into three different categories depending on the offense – Hudud (crimes "against God", [ 1 ] whose punishment is fixed in the Quran and the ...