The Baqliyya or Būrāniyya were a subgroup of the Qarmatians that was active in southern Iraq in the early 10th century.
The group emerged after the defeat of the Qarmatian revolt of Zikrawayh ibn Mihrawayh by the Abbasid Caliphate in 907.
Zikrawayh died, but many of his followers in the Sawad (the fertile rural region around Kufa) believed that he was not dead and would return to lead them.
[1][2] In 907/908, a Zutt[3] dā'ī (an Isma'ili missionary) called Abu Hatim al-Zutti was active in the Sawad, and prohibited his followers from eating garlic, leeks, and turnips, slaughtering animals, and following certain customary Islamic religious observances.
[4] When the Qarmatians of Bahrayn under Abu Tahir al-Jannabi invaded Iraq in 927, they rose in revolt, but were defeated by the Abbasid general Harun ibn Gharib.