After Fazlallah's death his ideas were further developed and propagated by
Imadaddin Nasimi and "
certain accursed ones of no significance" in Azerbaijan and
Seyid Ishag in Turkey. The poet
Imadaddin Nasimi (?–1417) and other Hurufis make
kabbalistic tendencies subordinate to mystic concepts of Sufism, and specifically those of Mansur Al-Hallaj, who was another great influence on Imadaddin Nasimi. Through Nasimi's poetry Hurufi ideas influenced, to different degrees, people like
Niyazi-i Misri,
Fuzûlî, Habibi,
Ismail I, and
Rushani. The Bektashi Order, which is still active in
Anatolia and the
Balkans, was a repository for the Hurufi teachings and writings. One of Fazlallah's personal students, Rafî'î, emigrated into the Balkans. He transmitted a central thesis of Hurufism, that the cardinalities of the Arabic and Persian alphabet respectively enumerate all types of shape and sound, by axes of symmetry. A Hurufi rebellion in Kwarezem was suppressed by the Mongols, and that motivated the exodus of Hurufis to the Balkans. The Bektashi manuscripts show almost 500 years of Hurufism in the Balkans, with a peak in the 1700s. Other Sufi orders, such as the
Qadiriyya and the
Naqshbandi, contributed in the collection, retrieval, and translation of Hurufi manuscripts.
Hurufi manuscripts From the Balkans, a great number of records were recorded in what is today Albania, but the relation between Bektashism and Hurufism is evidenced from Greek transcriptions. In total, many of the Hurufi manuscripts that are existent today were safeguarded in the libraries of Bektashi lodges, including
Fadl’Allah Yazdânî’s Cāvidān-Nāma,
Shaykh Sāfî’s Hākikāt-Nāma, Ali’ûl-A’lâ’s Māhşar-Nāma,
Amîr Gıyâs’ad-Dîn’s İstivâ-Nāme,
Frişte Oğlu’s Ahirat-Nāma, and some other books written on "Hurufi Theology" like
Aşık-Nāma,
Hidāyat-Nāma,
Mukāddama’t-ûl-Hākayık,
Muhārram-Nāma-i Sayyid İshāk,
Nihāyat-Nāma,
Tûrāb-Nāma,
Miftāh’ûl-Gayb,
Tuhfat’ûl-Uşşak,
Risâla-i Noktā,
Risāle-i Hurûf,
Risāla-i Fāzl’ûl-Lah, and
Risāla-i Virān Abdāl. Hurufi terms and concepts permeate Bektāshi poetry.
Gül Baba provided an extensive compendium of Hurufi ideas in
The Key to the Unseen. == In contemporary culture ==