PhotosBiographyFacebookTwitter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ali ibn Ziyad at-Tarabulsi al-Tunisi al-'Absi
TitleAli ibn Ziyad
Personal
BornUnknown
Died799 CE (183 AH)
Religion Islam
Era Abbasid Caliphate
RegionMedina and Tunis
Jurisprudence Maliki
Creed Sunni
Main interest(s) Fiqh
Occupation Muslim jurist

Ali ibn Ziyad at-Tarabulsi al-'Absi (d. 799 CE) (183 AH) ( Arabic: علي بن زياد الطرابلسي التونسي العبسي), more commonly referred to in Islamic scholarship as Ali ibn Ziyad or Imam al-Tarabulsi, was an 8th-century CE Libyan Muslim jurist from Tripoli. Ibn Ziyad was an important early scholar of the Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence ( fiqh) and a companion of Imam Malik. Ali ibn Ziyad was responsible for bringing the Muwatta of Imam Malik to Ifriqiya. [1] He died in 799 CE and is buried in the remains of the Silsila Cemetery in the Qasba quarter of Tunis's medina (old-town).

References

  1. ^ Nasir ud-Deen Muhammad al-Sharif, Al-Jawahir al-Ikliliya fi A'yaan 'Ulama Libya min al-Malikiyya (Amman: Dar al-Bayareeq, 1999), 40.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ali ibn Ziyad at-Tarabulsi al-Tunisi al-'Absi
TitleAli ibn Ziyad
Personal
BornUnknown
Died799 CE (183 AH)
Religion Islam
Era Abbasid Caliphate
RegionMedina and Tunis
Jurisprudence Maliki
Creed Sunni
Main interest(s) Fiqh
Occupation Muslim jurist

Ali ibn Ziyad at-Tarabulsi al-'Absi (d. 799 CE) (183 AH) ( Arabic: علي بن زياد الطرابلسي التونسي العبسي), more commonly referred to in Islamic scholarship as Ali ibn Ziyad or Imam al-Tarabulsi, was an 8th-century CE Libyan Muslim jurist from Tripoli. Ibn Ziyad was an important early scholar of the Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence ( fiqh) and a companion of Imam Malik. Ali ibn Ziyad was responsible for bringing the Muwatta of Imam Malik to Ifriqiya. [1] He died in 799 CE and is buried in the remains of the Silsila Cemetery in the Qasba quarter of Tunis's medina (old-town).

References

  1. ^ Nasir ud-Deen Muhammad al-Sharif, Al-Jawahir al-Ikliliya fi A'yaan 'Ulama Libya min al-Malikiyya (Amman: Dar al-Bayareeq, 1999), 40.



Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook