Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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.
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 ...
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 ...
Abū Naṣr Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad al-Bukhārī, is known for writing the Persian-language Tāj al-qiṣaṣ around 475 AH (1082–83 CE) at Balkh. This was an extensive, Islamic account of the lives of the Prophets, beginning with Adam and concluding with Muḥammad. [ 1 ]
Abū al-Ḥusayn Muslim ibn al-Ḥajjāj ibn Muslim ibn Ward al-Qushayrī an-Naysābūrī [note 1] (Arabic: أبو الحسين مسلم بن الحجاج بن مسلم بن وَرْد القشيري النيسابوري; after 815 – May 875 CE / 206 – 261 AH), commonly known as Imam Muslim, was an Islamic scholar from the city of Nishapur, particularly known as a muhaddith (scholar of ...
Ibn Hisham (died 833) wrote early history and As-Sirah an-Nabawiyyah, Muhammad's biography: Isma'il ibn Ja'far (719–775) Musa al-Kadhim (745–799) Ahmad ibn Hanbal (780–855) wrote Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal jurisprudence followed by Sunni, Sunni sufi and hadith books: Muhammad al-Bukhari (810–870) wrote Sahih al-Bukhari hadith books
The Black Guard or ‘Abid al-Bukhari (Arabic: عبيد البخاري, lit. 'Slaves of al-Būkhārī '; also known as ‘Abīd ad-Dīwān "slaves of the diwan ", Jaysh al-‘Abīd "the slave army", and ‘Abid as-Sultan "the sultan’s slaves") [ 1 ] were the corps of black-African slaves and Haratin slave-soldiers assembled by the 'Alawi ...
al-Bukhari (810–870), editor of Sahih al-Bukhari, the book of Hadith; Abū Naṣr Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad al-Bukhārī (eleventh century), author of Tāj al-qiṣaṣ; Abu Ishaq al-Saffar al-Bukhari (1067–1139), Hanafi-Maturidi scholar; Shah Jewna or Hazrat Pir Shah Jewna Al-Naqvi Al-Bukhari, famous saint of Kannauj and a paternal descendant ...