He was executed on Thursday the ninth of
Jumada al-awwal, 786 A.H. (ca. 1385) during the reign of Sultan
Barquq. His death was in accordance with the
fatwa of a jurist from the
Maliki madhab, which was endorsed by a jurisprudent of the
Shaf'i madhab. Accusations against him included
rafd, defamation of senior Islamic personages, the companions and family of Muhammad,
Aisha,
Abu Bakr and
Umar, following the
Nusayri faith, and permitting the drinking of wine. These accusations were first brought against him by two of his former students from Jabal Amil, who were also former Twelver Shiites. One of them, Yusuf ibn Yahya, submitted a report (which included the signatures of 70 former Shiites from Jabal Amil) to the authorities detailing al-Amili's "vile doctrines and abominable beliefs." However, according to Shia biographer
al-Khwansari, al-Amili denied these charges in a letter to the governor of Damascus, protesting his love for "the Prophet and all who loved him, all the Companions without exception." He was imprisoned for one year in the
Citadel of Damascus, then beheaded by sword. His corpse was then
crucified and stoned in the city whereby it was burned and the ashes were discarded into the air. ==See also==