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Developed from Makasib by Morteza Ansari, Kifayat al-Usul has replaced Mirza Qomi's book and Qawanin al-usul as the main text in the advanced classes at Iranian seminaries. This book published in 1903, established Akhund Khorasani as the supreme authority on Shia theology, [ 9 ] where he presented the Shi'ite jurisprudential principles in a ...
al-Kifaya fi ma'rifat usul 'ilm al-riwaya by Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi [19] al-Ilma ila Maʿrifa Usul al-Riwaya wa Taqyid al-Samaʿ by Qadi Ayyad; Al-Muqizah fi 'Ilm Mustalah al-Hadith by Al-Dhahabi; Alfiyatu Iraaqee by Zain al-Din al-'Iraqi [20] Muqaddimah al-Badr al-Munir by Ibn al-Mulaqqin; Nukhbat al-Fikar by Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani
Sharia rulings fall into one of five categories known as "the five rulings" (al-aḥkām al-khamsa): mandatory (farḍ or wājib), recommended (mandūb or mustaḥabb), neutral (mubāḥ), reprehensible (makrūh), and forbidden (ḥarām). [7] [11] It is a sin or a crime to perform a forbidden action or not to perform a mandatory action. [7]
Al-mustasfa min 'ilm al-usul (Arabic: المستصفى من علم الأصول) or On Legal theory of Muslim Jurisprudence is a 12th-century treatise written by Abū Ḥāmid Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad al-Ghazali (Q.S) the leading legal theorist of his time. [1] A highly celebrated work of al-Ghazali on Usul Al-Fiqh. It is ranked as one of the ...
Uddat al-Usul contains some preliminary parts and 92 chapters, divided over two volumes. According to Tusi, Uddat al-Usul is the first complete book about the principles of Islamic jurisprudence . Also this book is not concerned with theological and logical problems and properly concerned to principles of fiqh .
Al-Amwaal lil Abu Ubaid al-Qasim bin Salam (d. 224 AH) Al-Tahur lil Abu Ubaid al-Qasim bin Salam (d. 224 AH) Gharib Hadith lil Abu Ubaid al-Qasim bin Salam(d. 224 AH) Sunan Sa'id ibn Mansur (d. 227 AH) Musnad Musadad bin Masarhad (d. 228 AH)) Musnad Abd al-Rahman bin Awf lil Imam Ahmad bin Muhammad al-Barti (d. 228 AH) Musnad Ibn al-Ja'd (230 AH)
Abu al-Hasan 'Ali ibn Muhammad al-Bazdawi (Arabic: أبو الحسن علي بن محمد البَزدَوي) (c. 1010-1089 A.D.), known with the honorific title of Fakhr al-Islam (the pride of Islam), was a leading Hanafi scholar in the principles of Islamic jurisprudence.
Shi'a Muslims use different books of hadith from those used by Sunni Muslims, [b] who prize the six major hadith collections.In particular, Twelver Shi'a consider many Sunni transmitters of hadith to be unreliable because many of them took the side of Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman and Ali instead of only Ali (and the rest of Muhammad's family) and the majority of them were narrated through certain ...