Abū ʿAbd Allāh al-Shīʿī (born, Sanaa, Yemen—died ad 911) was an Ismāʿīlī propagandist and commander, architect of the Fāṭimid Muslim ascendancy in North Africa.
Al-Shīʿī appeared among the Kutāma, a Berber tribe of North Africa, at the end of the 9th century, proclaiming himself a precursor of the mahdi (messianic deliverer) and urging the people to revolt. He had met the Berbers at an earlier time during a pilgrimage to Mecca. After several years of preparation, the Berbers, under al-Shīʿī’s leadership, captured portions of present-day Tunisia and eastern Algeria from the Aghlabids (nominal vassals of the Baghdad caliphs) and entered al-Qayrawān, the Aghlabids’ capital, in March 909.
When news of al-Shīʿī’s success reached ʿUbayd ʿAllāh al-Mahdī, the leader of the Ismāʿīlīs, at his headquarters at Salamiyya, ʿUbayd disguised himself as a merchant and traveled toward northwest Africa. He was captured and jailed by the Khārijī emir of Sijilmāssa but was then rescued by al-Shīʿī in August 909. In January of the following year, ʿUbayd made a triumphal entry into Qayrawān, proclaiming himself caliph. This marked the beginning of Fāṭimid power in North Africa. Al-Shīʿī was executed soon after on the orders of the caliph for plotting against him.