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Malik was born as the son of Anas ibn Malik (not the Sahabi with the same name) and Aaliyah bint Shurayk al-Azdiyya in Medina, c. 711. His family was originally from the al-Asbahi tribe of Yemen , but his great grandfather Abu 'Amir relocated the family to Medina after converting to Islam in the second year of the Hijri calendar , or 623 CE.
Anas ibn Malik's father was Malik ibn Nadr and his mother was Umm Sulaym. [4] His father, Malik ibn Nadr was a non-Muslim and was angry with his mother, Umm Sulaym for her conversion to Islam. Malik bin Nadr went to Damascus and died there. [2] She remarried to a new convert, Abu Talha al-Ansari. Anas's half-brother from this marriage was ...
Malik ibn Anas (2010) [1st pub. 1989]. Al-Muwatta Of Iman Malik Ibn Anas : the first formulation of Islamic law. Translated by Bewley, Aisha Abdurrahman. Routledge. ISBN 9781136150982. OCLC 862076830. Online preview with introduction. Aisha Bewley's website, full English text, including some corrections and changes to the original translation.
Maliki school of thought was founded in the Medina, Hejaz. by Imam Malik ibn Anas (93 AH/715 AD - 179 AH/796 AD). [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Shafi'i school of thought was founded in Baghdad by Imam Muhammad ibn Idris al-Shafi'i (150 AH/766 AD - 204 AH/820 AD) and subsequently expanded in Egypt .
al-Baraa' ibn Malik Mosque in Benghazi, Libya. Al-Barāʾ ibn Mālik al-Anṣārī (Arabic: البراء بن مالك الأنصاري; died c. 641) [1] was one of the Sahaba (companions of Muhammad), an Ansar belonging to the Banū al-Najjār branch of the Banu Khazraj. [1] He was the brother of Anas ibn Malik.
Malik Dinar (Arabic: مالك دينار, romanized: Mālik b. Dīnār , Malayalam : മാലിക് ദീനാര്) (died 748 CE) [ 2 ] was a Muslim scholar and traveller. He was one of the first known Muslims to have come to India in order to teach Islam in the Indian Subcontinent after the departure of King Cheraman Perumal .
The Great Mosque of Kairouan or the Mosque of Uqba had the reputation, since the 9th century, of being one of the most important centers of the Maliki school. [1]The Malikization of the Maghreb was the process of encouraging the adoption of the Maliki school (founded by Malik ibn Anas) of Sunni Islam in the Maghreb, especially in the 11th and 12th centuries, to the detriment of Shia and ...
Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan ibn Farqad ash-Shaybānī (Arabic: أبو عبد الله محمد بن الحسن بن فرقد الشيباني; 749/50 – 805), known as Imam Muhammad, the father of Muslim international law, [1] was an Arab Muslim jurist and a disciple of Abu Hanifa (later being the eponym of the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence), Malik ibn Anas and Abu Yusuf.