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  2. Maliki school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maliki_school

    The Maliki school differs from the other Sunni schools of law most notably in the sources it uses for derivation of rulings. Like all Sunni schools of Sharia, the Maliki school uses the Qur'an as primary source, followed by the sayings, customs/traditions and practices of Muhammad , transmitted as hadiths.

  3. Malikization of the Maghreb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malikization_of_the_Maghreb

    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 ...

  4. Ibn Abi Zayd al-Qayrawani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibn_Abi_Zayd_al-Qayrawani

    Belonging to the Ash`ari school, Ibn Abi Zayd al-Qayrawani (310–386) studied under Abu Bakr ibn {Abd al-Mu'min, who in turn was a student of Ibn Mujahid, a pupil of Abu al-Hasan al-Ash`ari. Qadi Iyad stated that in 368, Ibn Abi Zayd dispatched two of his pupils to personally deliver a few of his books to Ibn Mujahid, who had made a request ...

  5. History of early Islamic Tunisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_early_Islamic...

    The fuqaha congregated at Kairouan, then the legal center of the entire al-Maghrib. [87] The more liberal Hanafi school of Muslim law at first predominated in Ifriqiyah. Soon, however, a strict form of the Maliki school came to prevail, which in fact became the only widespread madhhab, not only in Kairouan, but throughout North Africa. [88]

  6. Sahnun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sahnun

    Maliki [1] Sahnun ibn Sa'id ibn Habib at-Tanukhi ( Arabic : سحنون بن سعيد بن حبيب التنوخي , romanized : Saḥnūn ibn Saʿīd ibn Ḥabīb at-Tanūkhī ) (c. 776/77 – 854/55) (160 AH – 240 AH ) was a jurist in the Maliki school from Qayrawan in modern-day Tunisia .

  7. Asad ibn al-Furat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asad_ibn_al-Furat

    As a Hanafi, Asad played a major role in resolving conflicts between the Maliki in Kairouan. He was able to strengthen Hanafi legal theory as the basis of Fiqh in the Ifriqiya of the Aghlabids . Although the Maliki rite was born in Medina , Asad Ibn al-Furat and Sahnun Ibn Sa'id, founder of the Ifriqiya Maliki school, were able to reformulate ...

  8. Malik ibn Anas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malik_ibn_Anas

    Malik ibn Anas (Arabic: مَالِك بْن أَنَس, romanized: Mālik ibn ʾAnas; c. 711 –795) was an Arab Islamic scholar and traditionalist who is the eponym of the Maliki school, one of the four schools of Islamic jurisprudence in Sunni Islam.

  9. Abu al-Hassan al-Lakhmi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_al-Hassan_al-Lakhmi

    It is a commentary on one of the Maliki school's most famous works, al-Mudawwana, by Sahnun b. Sa'id (d. 240/854). This book is a reference that takes up the great books that preceded it as al-Wadiha of Ibn Habib and which will then be taken up by the Malikite scholars later as Ibn Rushd or al-Khalil in his Mukhtasar.