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Al-Bukhari spent the last twenty-four years of his life teaching the hadith he had collected. During the mihna, he fled to Khartank, a village near Samarkand, where he then also died on Friday, 1 September 870. [9] [20] Today his tomb lies within the Imam Bukhari Mausoleum [21] in Hartang, Uzbekistan, 25 kilometers from Samarkand. It was ...
This commentary features the original Arabic text of Sahih al-Bukhari alongside a literal Urdu translation, enhancing its accessibility to a wider audience. It provides biographical information about hadith scholars and narrators in the transmission chains, as well as delves into various facets of Islamic jurisprudence and theology .
Bukhari, a family name, is derived from the location of his birth from the city of Bukhara in the ancient administrative region of Bukhara Province Uzbekistan. [2] Sayyed Jalaluddin Bukhari, who was born in Bukhara but later settled in Bukkur located in sindh alongside his in laws descendant from Muhammad Al-Makki.
Shrine of Jalaluddin Bukhari (Urdu: مقبرہ جلال الدین بخاری) is the shrine of Jalaluddin Surkh-Posh Bukhari. It is located in Uch Sharif in present-day Punjab , Pakistan . [ 1 ] It is one of the five monuments in Uch, Pakistan which are on the tentative list of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites .
The Farewell Sermon (Arabic: خطبة الوداع, Khuṭbatu l-Widāʿ) also known as Muhammad's Final Sermon or the Last Sermon, is a religious speech, delivered by the Islamic prophet Muhammad on Friday the 9th of Dhu al-Hijjah, 10 AH (6 March 632 [1]) in the Uranah valley of Mount Arafat, during the Islamic pilgrimage of Hajj.
Syed Ata Ullah Shah Bukhari (Urdu سید عطاء اللہ شاہ بخاری) [1] (23 September 1892 – 21 August 1961), was a Muslim Hanafi scholar, religious and political leader [2] from the Indian subcontinent. He was one of the Majlis-e-Ahrar-e-Islam's founding members.
Sahih al-Bukhari was originally translated into English by Muhammad Taqi-ud-Din al-Hilali and Muhammad Muhsin Khan, titled The Translation of the Meanings of Sahih al-Bukhari: Arabic-English (1971), [29] derived from the Arabic text of Fath Al-Bari, published by the Egyptian Maktabat wa-Maṭba'at Muṣṭafá al-Bābī al-Ḥalabī in 1959. [30]
The author collected in this book the names and biographies of all, or most, of the hadith narrators mentioned in the six canonical hadith collections.These six books are Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim and the four Sunan books by Al-Nasa'i, al-Tirmidhi, Abu Dawood and Ibn Majah.