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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 ...
Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj was born in the town of Nishapur [5] in the Abbasid province of Khorasan, in present-day 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).
It is a one of the oldest copies of Sahih Muslim. This copy has an Ijazah, leading to the author Muslim bin Hajjaj.While it has not been carbon dated yet, based on the notes on the margin it is evident that this copy was made before 486 AH (1093 CE) as one of the people that studied it is Abū Bakr Muhammad Bin Zahid al-Ṭūsī who died in the year 486 AH.
Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj, a 9th century sunni Islamic scholar comments in his Book Sahih Muslim: This hadith been narrated on the authority of Jurairi with the same chain of transmitters, and Ibn Hatim said in his narration:" A person said according to his personal opinion, and it was Umar." [11] A Sunni tafsir includes:
Later, al-Madini's student Muhammad al-Bukhari (810–870) authored a collection, now known as Sahih Bukhari, commonly accepted by Sunni scholars to be the most authentic collection of hadith, followed by that of his student Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj. [26] Al-Bukhari's methods of testing hadiths and isnads are seen as exemplary of the developing ...
Ibn Ḥajar al-ʿAsqalānī (Arabic: ابن حجر العسقلاني; [a] 18 February 1372 – 2 February 1449), or simply ibn Ḥajar, [1] was a classic Islamic scholar "whose life work constitutes the final summation of the science of hadith."
Ibn al-Hajjaj narrates this hadith in the chapter: "The merits of the people of Persia": Abu Huraira reported Allah's Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: "If the din were at the Pleiades, even then a person from Persia would have taken hold of it, or one amongst the Persian descent would have surely found it".
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