Ibn Rajab
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Iraqi/Syrian scholar Medieval era |
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Name: | Ibn Rajab |
Birth: | 736 AH in Baghdad [1] |
School/tradition: | Hanbali |
Influences: | Ibn al-Qayyim [citation needed] |
Influenced: |
Imam Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali (1335-1392),[2] also known as Zaynudēn 'Abdur-Rahman ibn Ahmad ibn 'Abdir-Rahman or Rajab as-Salāmi, was an Islamic scholar of hadith (narrations of the Prophet Muhammad) from Damascus, Syria.
He was born Damascus in the year 1335. His teachers in Islamic knowledge included: Muhammad ibn Khabbaaz, Ibrahim ibn Dawood al-`Attar and Muhammad ibn al-Qalanēsī and others. Some of his primary works include: Al Istikhrāj fee Ahkāmil-Kharāj (printed), al-Qawā`idul-Fiqhiyyah (printed), Dhayl Tabaqātul-Hanābilah (printed), Fald `ilmis-Salaf `alā `ilmil-Khalaf (printed), Sharh Jāmi`it-Tirmidhī (lost except for his explanation of al-`Ilal from it) and others.
He died in the year 1392.
[edit] Notes
Prose contains specific citations in source text which may be viewed in edit mode.
- ^ http://www.islamweb.net/ver2/archive/article.php?lang=E&id=37699
- ^ This corresponds to 736 AH - 795 AH in the Islamic calendar