Including: Karramiyya (Arabic: كرّاميّه, romanized: Karrāmiyyah) was a Hanafi-Mujassim-Murji'ah[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] sect in Islam which flourished in the central and eastern parts of the Islamic worlds, and especially in the Iranian regions, from the 9th century until the Mongol invasions in the 13th century.
[8] The sect was founded by a Sistani named Muhammad ibn Karram[9] (d. 896) who was a popular preacher in Khurasan in the 9th century in the vicinity of Nishapur.
After its decline, the Karrāmīya survived only in Ghazni and Ghor in the area of today's Afghanistan.
Ibn Karram considered that Allah was a substance and that He had a body (jism) finite in certain directions when He comes into contact with the Throne.
[12] The Karramiyya also held the view that the world was eternal and that Allah power was limited.