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When his guardian died in 1386, Ibn Hajar's education in Egypt was entrusted to hadith scholar Shams ad-Din ibn al-Qattan, who entered him in the courses given by Sirajud-Din al-Bulqini (d. 1404) and Ibn al-Mulaqqin (d. 1402) in Shafi'i fiqh, and Zain al-Din al-'Iraqi (d. 1404) in hadith, after which he travelled to Damascus and Jerusalem, to ...
Lisan al-Mizan (Arabic: لسان الميزان, romanized: Lisān al-Mīzān) is one of the classic book of Ilm al-Rijal (Science of Narrators or Biographical evaluation) written by Hafiz Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani (d.852 AH) in the 9th century of Islamic History.
Al-Isabah fi tamyiz al Sahabah ; Author: Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani: Original title: الإصابة في تمييز الصحابة: Language: Arabic (originally) Subject: Hadith,Muhammad,632 Arabian Peninsula,Sahabah Biography. Genre: Sharh: Publisher: Dar al-kutub al-Ilmiyyah, Beirut
Nuzhat al-Khawatir wa Bahjat al-Masam' wa al-Nawazir (Arabic: نزهة الخواطر وبهجة المسامع والنواظر, lit. 'Promenade of Thoughts and Delight of the Ears and Eyes'), commonly abbreviated as Nuzhat al-Khawatir, is an 8-volume Arabic historical account of Greater Indian Muslim figures, primarily scholars, spanning the 1st to 14th centuries AH, corresponding to the 7th ...
Ibn Hajar may refer to: Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani (1372–1449), Shafi'i and Hadith scholar; Ibn Hajar al-Haytami (1503–1566), Shafi'i scholar
[51] He goes on to quote Al-Nawawi (1233–1277), [52] who stated that "a number of scholars discovered many hadiths" in the two most authentic hadith collection Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim "which do not fulfill the conditions of verification assumed by these men" (i.e. by the hadith collectors Muhammad al-Bukhari and Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj).
The celebrated 12th-century historian Ali ibn al-Athir, who had frequently traveled to Iraq during the era of Saladin and had written his monumental work al-Kamil fi at-Tarikh (The Complete History), writes in his work 'al-Nihâyah': "Najd is the highland region. This name is given to area beyond the Hijâz towards Iraq". [14]
English: Al-Haafidh Shihabuddin Abu'l-Fadl Ahmad ibn Ali ibn Muhammad, better known as Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani, was a medieval Shafiite Sunni scholar of Islam. Originally from Ashkelon in Palestine, Ibn Hajar lived between 1372 CE and 1449 CE (773-852 AH). Al-Asqalani was born in Cairo in 1372, the son of the Shafi'i scholar and poet Nur al-Din 'Ali.