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Sahih al-Bukhari is revered as the most important hadith collection in Sunni Islam. Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim, the hadith collection of Al-Bukhari's student Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj, are together known as the Sahihayn (Arabic: صحيحين, romanized: Saḥiḥayn) and are regarded by Sunnis as the most authentic books after the Quran.
Muhammad Bukhari was born in Degel, a small town in the Hausa kingdom of Gobir. His father Usman dan Fodio was a noted Islamic scholar and preacher from the Fulani clan of Torodbe. His mother Aisha came from a family with a long tradition of scholarship. [1] Bukhari studied under his father, and his uncle, Abdullahi. Because he was raised in ...
Bukhari's Great History was quickly received, and it gained fame much earlier than did the work that Bukhari is more famous for today, Sahih al-Bukhari.The first mention of someone narrating from the Great History is a century earlier than that of his Sahih, and it becomes used as a model for another biographical work nearly seventy years before another figure uses the Sahih as a template for ...
13 Shawwāl, primary traditionist of the Sunni Muslims, Muhammad al-Bukhari, was born in 194 AH. 18 Shawwal, urs of Sufi Mystic And Poet Amir Khusro. 22 Shawwāl 1284 AH, death of Haji Dost Muhammad Qandhari, an Afghan Sufi master of Naqshbandi tradition. 25 Shawwāl 148 AH, martyrdom of Imām Ja‘far as-Sādiq.
al-Bukhari (810–870), Islamic hadith scholar and author of the Sahih al-Bukhari; Muhammad al-Bukhari bin Uthman dan Fodio (1785–1840), Sokoto poet, military leader, and son of Usman dan Fodio. Bukhari Daud (1959–2021), Indonesian academic and regent of Aceh Besar
This commentary covers various aspects, including the biography of Muhammad al-Bukhari, the methodology and conditions of compiling Sahih al-Bukhari, the narrators of the Hadiths, the connections between chapter headings and the Hadiths within them, discussions on beliefs , and attempts to derive legal rulings from the Hadiths.
The start of the Second World War saw Asad interned by the British Government as an enemy alien; his work on Sahih al-Bukhari continued in the internment. Soon after the war ended, the bloody disorder which accompanied the Partition of India (1947) came as a "great personal loss" to Asad.
Muhammad Said Ramadan Al-Bouti (Arabic: مُحَمَّد سَعِيد رَمَضَان ٱلْبُوطِي, romanized: Muḥammad Saʿīd Ramaḍān al-Būṭī) (1929 – 21 March 2013) was a renowned Syrian Sunni Muslim scholar, writer and professor, where he was vice dean in the Damascus University and served as the imam of the Umayyad Mosque.