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  2. Malik ibn Anas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malik_ibn_Anas

    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.

  3. Al Imran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Imran

    Al Imran (Arabic: آل عِمْرَانَ, āl ʿimrān; meaning: The Family of Imran [1] [2]) is the third chapter of the Quran with two hundred verses . This chapter is named after the family of Imran (Joachim), which includes Imran , Saint Anne (wife of Imran), Mary , and Jesus .

  4. Malik Dinar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malik_Dinar

    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 .

  5. Zabaniyah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zabaniyah

    Diya al-Din al-Maqdisi narrated a Hadith transmitted by Anas ibn Malik in his book, Shifah an-Nar; that Zabaniyah were created 1,000 year before hell created, while simultaneously their physical strength growing everyday, [41] to the point that the strength of each of Zabaniyah fingers could squeeze a human from each of their crowns to their ...

  6. Taqi al-Din al-Fasi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taqi_al-Din_al-Fasi

    Taqi al-Din Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Fasi (Arabic: تقي الدين أبي الطيب محمد بن أحمد الفاسي, 8 September 1373, in Mecca, Hejaz – 6 July 1429, in Mecca, Hejaz) was an Arab Muslim scholar, muhaddith (hadith scholar), faqih (jurist), historian, genealogist and a Maliki qadi (judge) in Mecca.

  7. Anas ibn Malik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anas_ibn_Malik

    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 ...

  8. Abu 'l-Hasan 'Ali ibn Khalaf al-Qabisi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_'l-Hasan_'Ali_ibn...

    Abu ʾl-Ḥasan ʿAlī ibn Muḥammad ibn Khalaf al-Maʿāfirī al-Qābiṣī [a] (935–1012) [b] was a leading Ifrīqiyan scholar of the Mālikī school of Islamic jurisprudence (fiḳh). In 996, he succeeded his first cousin Ibn Abī Zayd as leader ( shaykh ) of the school in al-Qayrawān (Kairouan).

  9. Al-An'am - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-An'am

    Bifolium from the Nurse's Qur'an (Mushaf al-Hadina) with fragment of the Surah Al-An'am. Kairouan, Zirid dynasty, 1020. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Al-An'am [1] (Arabic: ٱلْأَنْعَامْ, al-ʾanʿām; meaning: The Cattle) [2] is the sixth chapter of the Quran, with 165 verses .