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Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj was born in the town of Nishapur [5] in the Abbasid province of Khorasan, in what is now northeastern Iran.Historians differ as to his date of birth, though it is usually given as 202 AH (817/818), [6] [7] 204 AH (819/820), [3] [8] or 206 AH (821/822).
Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj – author of Sahih Muslim; Sahih al-Bukhari – another Sahih collection of hadith narrations and the other of the Sahihayn; Muhammad al-Bukhari – another hadith scholar, one of Muslim's teachers, and the author of Sahih al-Bukhari; Kutub al-Sittah – six most highly-regarded collections of hadith in Sunni Islam ...
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Al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf Al Thaqifi, who had played a crucial role during the Second Fitna for the Umayyad cause, was appointed the governor of Iraq in 694 AD. Hajjaj received governorship of Khurasan and Sistan in 697 and he sponsored Muslim expansions in Makran, Sistan, Transoxiana and Sindh. [46] [47]
Among these was a charge by an anonymous source recorded by al-Tabari that al-Hajjaj massacred between 11,000 and 130,000 men in Basra following his suppression of Ibn al-Ash'ath's revolt, in contrast to the older traditional Muslim sources, which held that al-Hajjaj granted a general pardon in Kufa and Basra after his victory for rebels who ...
Al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf (661-714), military governor of the Umayyad caliphate; Emad Hajjaj, Palestinian-Jordanian editorial cartoonist; Al-Ḥajjāj ibn Yūsuf ibn Maṭar (786-833), translated Euclid's Elements into Arabic; Al-Hajjaj ibn Ustadh Hurmuz (d. 1009), Buyid general and governor; Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj, Islamic author of Hadith
Her full name was Umm al-Hajjaj bint Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Thaqafi, she belonged to Thaqafi tribe. Yazid established marital ties to the family of al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf (d. 714), the powerful viceroy of Iraq for his father, Caliph Abd al-Malik, and brother, al-Walid I (r.
However, his appearance in the ḥadīth transmitted by individuals such as Sufyan al-Thawri, Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj and al-Bukhari show the prominent place he held in the early circles of ḥadīth transmitters and other scholars. Furthermore, there are many reports that mention the devotion of Shuʿba, including: helping the poor, avoiding ...