Zaydiyyah, sect of Shiʿi Muslims owing allegiance to Zayd ibn ʿAlī, grandson of al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī. Zayd was a son of the fourth Shiʿi imam, ʿAlī ibn Ḥusayn, and a brother of Muḥammad al-Bāqir. At a time when the designation and role of the Shiʿi imam was being defined, the followers of Zayd contended that the imam should be the descendant of the Prophet Muhammad (see Ahl al-Bayt) who was most knowledgeable in religious learning. The followers of Muḥammad al-Bāqir, however, tended to emphasize that religious knowledge was transmitted through lineage to a divinely designated imam, and these followers accepted Muḥammad as the fifth imam and later became the Twelver and Ismāʿīliyyah Shiʿis. While Muḥammad had a higher pedigree than Zayd, Zayd had achieved a higher level of religious learning and was accepted as imam by a minority of Shiʿis. Though the Zaydīs have had numerous imams throughout their history, some outsiders have referred to them as “Fivers” because Zayd was the fifth imam of the sect.
Doctrinally, the Zaydīs are closer to the majority Sunnis than are the other Shiʿis. Unique among the other major branches of Shiʿi Islam, Zaydīs believe that the imam receives religious knowledge (and therefore leadership) through learning rather than through divine designation. Thus, jurisprudence through ijtihād (reasoning) and qiyās (analogy) is prioritized over obedience and mysticism.
Given the nature of the imamate passing through merit, Zaydī imams do not necessarily remain imams for life. Zaydī sayyids, an elite class derived from the lineage of the Prophet Muhammad, traditionally rose to leadership by demonstrating themselves as more just and righteous than the existing leadership. a concept known as khurūj. Historically, this has often taken the form of an uprising or rebellion. Since the mid-20th century, Zaydī religious scholars have interpreted khurūj as achievable through participation in electoral politics.
Zaydīs became dominant in Yemen early in the 10th century, and thereafter Zaydī imams were the spiritual rulers of that area. From the departure of the Turks in 1917 until 1962, they were also the temporal rulers of Yemen. The Zaydī imamate thereafter ceased to exist, and no overt efforts have been made to assert a new imam. The subsequent suppression and marginalization of Zaydīs in Yemen was a key grievance leading to the Houthi rebellion in the early 21st century as well as the civil war in the 2010s.