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Abu Sa'id ibn Abi al-Hasan Yasar al-Basri, often referred to as Hasan of Basra or Hasan al-Basri, [a] was an ancient Muslim preacher, ascetic, theologian, exegete, scholar, and judge. [1] Born in Medina in 642, [2] Hasan belonged to the second generation of Muslims, all of whom would subsequently be referred to as the tābiʿūn in Sunni ...
The Mausoleum of Imam Hasan of Basra (Arabic: مرقد الإمام الحسن البصري) is a historic shrine in Basra commemorating the renowned ulama Hasan of Basra. [1] Hasan of Basra was a Sunni Islamic ulama, nicknamed as Abi Sayeed, born two years before the end of the era of the second Caliph Umar. The mausoleum is located in the ...
Hasan al-Basri (642–728, buried in Az Zubayr, highly important figure in the development of Sunni Sufism) Hazrat Babajan (d. 1931, buried in Pune, master to Meher Baba) Hayreddin Tokadi; Yusuf Hamdani (1062–1141, buried in Merv) Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani (1314–1384, buried in Khatlon Region, spread the Kubrawiya order throughout Asia) [19 ...
There is no evidence in the historical archive that Rabia ever met Hasan al-Basri; however, the following stories, which first appeared in Attar of Nishapur's Tazkirat al-Awliya, is a common trope in the modern period: [8] After a life of hardship, she spontaneously achieved a state of self-realization. When asked by Hasan al-Basri how she ...
In an Iraqi tale collected by E. S. Drower with the title The Story Of Hasan Al-Basri, a Jewish jeweler and silversmith convinces a youth named Hasan Al-Basri to be his apprentice. They travel the desert and reach a mountain; the Jew skins a sheep and bids Hasan enter the sheepskin, so he is carried by an eagle to the mountaintop and he throws ...
Hasan al-Basri (d. 728) too said that he saw Talha and Zubayr pledging to Ali with a sword over their head in a walled garden. [102] Alternatively, a report by al-Baladhuri implies that Talha voluntarily paid his allegiance to Ali, [90] while other reports by Ibn Sa'd (d. 845), al-Tabari, [90] al-Ya'qubi (d.
In Arabic onomastics ("nisbah"), Al-Basri denotes a relationship to or from Basra and may refer to: Ibn Hisham (died 833), Abu Muhammad 'Abd al-Malik bin Hisham ibn Ayyub al-Himyari al-Mu'afiri al-Baṣri, biographer of Muhammad; Ibn al-Haytham (c. 965–c. 1040), Arab mathematician, astronomer, and physicist
Amr bin Ubayd was known to have been critical towards Hadith.He only accepted Mutawatir reports and denied the Ahaad narrations. His narrations, some of which include Hasan al-Basri, are rejected and viewed as fabrications ().