Bábism or
Bábíism (,
Babiyye), also known as the
Bábi,
Bâbi, or
Bábí faith, was a
new religious movement that flourished in
Persia from 1844 to 1852, then lingered on in exile in the
Ottoman Empire, especially
Cyprus, as well as underground. Its founder was ʿAli Muhammad Shirazi, who took the title
Báb ( "Gate") out of the belief that he was the gate to the
Twelfth Imam. The Bábí movement signaled a break with
Islam and started a new religious system. While the Bábí movement was violently opposed and crushed by the clerical and government establishments in the country in the mid-1850s, the Bábí movement led to the founding of the
Bahá'í Faith which sees the religion brought by the Báb as a predecessor to their own religion. "The relative success of Bahaism inside Iran (where it constitutes the largest religious minority) and in numerous other countries, where it claims the status of an independent religion, gives renewed significance to its Babi origins", as Bahaism continued many aspects of the earlier sect.