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The ten proven and verified recitations of the Imams Qāriʾs of the Quran are in order: [19] Nafiʽ al-Madani recitation. Ibn Kathir al-Makki recitation. Abu Amr of Basra recitation. Ibn Amir ad-Dimashqi recitation. Aasim ibn Abi al-Najud recitation. Hamzah az-Zaiyyat recitation. Al-Kisa'i recitation. Abu Jaafar al-Madani recitation.
In 1944, Al-Hussary won Egypt Radio's Qu'ran Recitation competition [10] which had around 200 participants, among them some veterans like Muhammad Rifat, Ali Mahmud, and Abd Al-Fattah Ash-Sha'sha'i. [5] Al-Azhar awarded him the title Shaykh al-Maqāriʾ (Arabic: شـيخ المقارِئ, lit. 'Scholar of the Reciting Schools') in 1957.
Qari Mishary bin Rashid Alafasy (Arabic: مشاري بن راشد العفاسي) is a Kuwaiti qāriʾ (reciter of the Quran), imam, preacher, and nasheed artist. [1] [2] [3] He studied in the Islamic University of Madinah's College of Qur'an, specializing in the ten qira'at and tafsir. [4] Alafasy has released nasheed albums.
'reader', plural قُرَّاء qurrāʾ or قَرَأَة qaraʾa) is a person who recites the Quran with the proper rules of recitation . [ 1 ] Although it is encouraged, a qāriʾ does not necessarily have to memorize the Quran , just to recite it according to the rules of tajwid with melodious sound.
Mufti Afzal Hoosen Elias, 2007, Quran Made Easy - Arabic & English; Tahereh Saffarzadeh, translated Qur'an in Persian and English (bilingual). Justice Mufti Taqi Usmani, 2008, comprehensive Translation with explanatory notes, THE NOBLE QURAN, (ISBN 978-969-564-000-5)
Mustafa Ismail Mustafa Ismail (center, dressed in white) with King Farouk of Egypt. Mustafa Ismail (June 17, 1905 – December 26, 1978) was an Egyptian Quran reciter.The quadrumvirate of El Minshawy, Abdul Basit, Mustafa Ismail, and Al-Hussary are generally considered the most important and famous qurrāʾ of modern times to have had an outsized impact on the Islamic world.
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 ...
He made the recitation, transmitted through reciters of every generation, a science with defined rules, terms, and enunciation. [28] [29] Abu Bakr Ibn Mujāhid (859 - 936 CE) wrote a book called Kitab al-Sab’ fil-qirā’āt. He is the first to limit the number of reciters to the seven known.