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Saud ibn Ibrahim ibn Muhammad al-Shuraim (Arabic: سعود بن ابراهيم بن محمد الشريم); born 19 January 1966 [1]) is a Quranic reciter who was one of the prayer leaders and Friday preachers at the Grand Mosque Masjid al-Haram in Makkah. He also holds a Ph.D degree in Sharia (Islamic studies) at the Umm al-Qura University in
Abu 'Abd al-Rahman Muhammad Bin al-Husayn al-Sulami al-Shafi'i (Arabic: محمد بن حسين السلمي), commonly known as al-Sulami [3] (947-1034), was a Shafi'i muhaddith (Hadith Master), muffassir (Qur'anic commentator), shaykh of the Awliya, Sufi hagiographer, and a prolific writer. [4] [5] Al-Dhahabi said of him: "He was of very high ...
Most of these ten recitations are known by the scholars and people who have received them, and their number is due to their spreading in the Islamic world. [5] [6]However, the general population of Muslims dispersed in most countries of the Islamic world, their number estimated in the millions, read Hafs's narration on the authority of Aasim.
Abu 'Imarah, Hamzah Ibn Habib al-Zayyat al-Taymi Persian (Taymi by loyalty) Khalaf: 150 AH 229 AH (844 CE) [12] Abu Muhammad al-Asadi al-Bazzar al-Baghdadi Not commonly recited Khallad? 220 AH (835 CE) [12] Abu 'Isa, Khallad Ibn Khalid al-Baghdadi Quraishi Not commonly recited Al-Kisa'i: 119 AH 189 AH (804 CE) [12] Abu al-Hasan, 'Ali Ibn Hamzah ...
Abū ‘Abdir-Raḥmān As-Sulamī is thought to have died in either AH 73 (692/693 CE) or AH 74 (693/694 CE), in Bishr ibn Marwān province in Al-Kūfah. [ 1 ] Abū ‘Abdir-Raḥmān was known to have discussed the Qur’ān with Tajwīd , an ability he gained from ‘Uthmān , ‘Alī , Zaid ibn Thābit , Abdullāh ibn Mas‘ūd , and Ubayy ...
The seven readings of the Qira'at were first limited and noted by Abu Bakr Ibn Mujāhid, who canonized them in the 8th century CE, in his book called Kitab al-Sab’ fil-qirā’āt. [9] Before Ibn Mujāhid, there was Abu Ubaid al-Qasim bin Salam, who was the first to gather the recitations of the seven mutawatir reciters. [10]
Abu 'Amr ibn al-'Ala' al-Basri was a Qāriʾ from a branch of the Banu Tamim, [9] He studied under Ibn Abi Ishaq, and was a renowned scholar of Arabic grammar in addition to his knowledge of the Quran, founding the Basran school of grammar. [10] Among his own pupils were Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi, [11] [12] Yunus ibn Habib [13] and Harun ...
Reader is referred to as Shaykh al-Maqâriʾ [6] (Arabic: شيخ المقارئ, lit. 'Scholar of the Recitation Schools'). Muhammad Rifat (1882–1950) Mohamed Salamah (1899–1982) Mustafa Ismail (1905–1978) Mahmoud Khalil Al-Hussary (1917–1980), Shaykh al-Maqâriʾ; Muhammad Siddiq Al-Minshawi (1920–1969), Shaykh al-Maqâriʾ