fbpx
Wikipedia

al-Shaykh al-Mufid

Abu 'Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn al-Nu'man al-'Ukbari al-Baghdadi, known as al-Shaykh al-Mufid (Arabic: الشیخ المفید) and Ibn al-Mu'allim (c. 948–1022 CE), was a prominent Twelver Shia theologian.[1][2] His father was a teacher (mu'allim), hence the name Ibn al-Mu'allim. The title "al-Mufid" was given to him either by Muhammad al-Mahdi, the twelfth Shia Imam,[3] or by al-Rummani, a Sunni scholar, after a conversation with him.[4] The leader of the Shia community,[5] he was a mutakallim, theologian, and Shia jurist.

Abu 'Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn al-Nu'man
Titleal-Shaykh al-Mufid
Personal
Born948 CE
Died1022 (aged 73–74)
ReligionIslam
EraIslamic golden age
DenominationShia
JurisprudenceJa'fari
CreedTwelver
Main interest(s)Kalam, Hadith, Ilm ar-Rijal, Usul and Fiqh
Notable work(s)Al-Amali, Awail Al Maqalat and Kitab al-Irshad
OccupationMuslim scholar
Muslim leader
Influenced by

He was taught by Al-Shaykh al-Saduq, Ibn Qulawayh, Abu Abdallah al-Basri and al-Rummani, and Sharif al-Murtaza and Shaykh Tusi were among his students. Only 10 of his 200 works have survived, among which are Amali, Al-Irshad, Al-Muqni'ah, and Tashih al-Itiqadat.

Early life and education edit

Al-Mufid was born in 'Ukbara, a small town to the north of Baghdad, on 11th Dhul Qa'dah in 336 Hijra. According to Shaykh Tusi, however, he was born in 338 AH,[1] and later migrated with his father to Baghdad, where the Shia Buwayhids were ruling. He studied with Ibn Babawayh.

Sharif al-Murtaza and Shaykh Tusi were among his students. His career coincided with that of the Mu'tazili theologian and leader of the Bahshamiyya school, 'Abd al-Jabbar. Al-Mufid was often attacked, and his library and school were destroyed.[6]

He was also called Ibn Muallim, meaning "son of the teacher";[7] Muallim was his father. Among his teachers were the Shia theologian Abu Ali al-Iskafi, Abu Abdallah al-Marzubani, Abu Abdallah al-Basri, Abu al-Hassan, and Ali ibn Isa al-Rummani.[4]

Commonly known as the leader of the Shia,[5][8][9] Al-Mufid is regarded as the most famous scholar of the Buyid period and an eminent jurist,[2][5] mainly due to his contributions in the field of kalam. According to Ibn al-Nadim, who knew al-Mufid personally, he was the head of the Shia Mutekallimun in the field of kalam, and al-Tawhidi, who was also personally familiar with al-Mufid, described him as "eloquent and skillful at dialectic (jadal)". His skill in polemical debate was such that he was said to be capable of convincing his opponents "that a wooden column was actually gold".[4] He was taught the Islamic science of hadith by Al-Shaykh al-Saduq.[2]

His nickname "al-Mufid" edit

It is said that al-Mufid earned his name "al-Mufid" as a result of a dispute about the relative merits of two events, the Ghadir Khumm and the Cave. Al-Mufid participated in a lecture given by Isa al-Rummani, where in a response to a question al-Rummani claimed that Ghadir Khum was based merely on riwayah (transmitted tradition), while the story of the Cave was based on diraya (knowledge). After the lecture, al-Mufid visited al-Rummani and asked him about Aisha, Talha, and Zubayr, who had rebelled against Ali, "a legitimate Imam". Al-Rummani responded that they had repented, and al-Mufid claimed that their repenting was merely based on riwaya, whereas the war was based in diraya. Al-Rummani then sent al-Mufid to al-Basri, with a note nicknaming the bearer "al-Mufid" ("the Instructor").[4] However, according to Ibn Shahr Ashub, in his Ma'alimul Ulamaa, the name was given to him by Muhammad al-Mahdi, the twelfth Shia Imam.[1][3]

As a theologian edit

Taught by Abdallah al-Basri, the Mutazili theologian and hanafi jurist,[10] al-Mufid adopted many theological opinions.[11] Macdermott believes[citation needed] that al-Mufid's theology is closer to the old Baghdad school of Mutazilism than to Abdul Jabbar's late Basran system. His methodology is closer to that of the Baghdad school, and he seems to have followed the Baghdad school and Mutazilism in his views concerning such questions as God's unity and justice. However, al-Mufid differs from Mutazilism on the problem of Imamate and the position of grave sin in this life. Al-Mufid tried to defend the role of reason – he described it as Al-Nazar – and also disputed for the truth and put away faults with the help of argument and proofs. Also, al-Mufid believed that the task of a theologian was according to reason and argument. His views were adopted by his pupils, 'Abd al-Jabbar and Sharif al-Murtaza.[6]

God's attributes edit

Al-Mufid defined God's unity in this way:

I say that God is one in divinity and eternity. Nothing resembles Him, nor can anything be compared with Him. He alone deserves adoration. He has no second with Him in this, in any respect or connection.[6]

According to al-Mufid, all believers in God's unity, save for "some eccentric anthropomorphists", agree with this. Like Mutazilis, al-Mufid rejected "the simple realism of the Ash'arite theory of attribution". However, al-Mufid and 'Abd al-Jabbar give different explanations of what an attribute is, and whether it is in an object or in the mind.[6]

Prophecy edit

According to al-Mufid, there is an absolute necessity for prophets, since in order to know God and moral principles man needs revelation, and he noted that "every apostle (rasul) is a prophet but every prophet (nabi) is not an apostle". Although he took care to make a distinction between an apostle and a prophet as the Quran does, he did not believe that there was a difference in their functions, which enabled him to put the Imams on the level of the prophets and the apostles except in terms of their names.[6]

Imamah edit

Al-Mufid defined the Imamiya as those who believe in the necessity of Imamah, Ismah and personal nass, i.e., personal designation. He tended to the belief that the Imams are superior to all the prophets and apostles, with the exception of Muhammad. According to al-Mufid, Imams can "take the place of the prophets in enforcing judgments, seeing to the execution of the legal penalties, safeguarding the Law, and educating mankind", a definition which makes an Imam not only "the head of the community in administrative, judicial, and military matters", but an "authoritative teacher of mankind". This attitude regarding Shia Imam is the basis of other teaching in Mufid theology such as Imam's immunity from sin and error, the necessity of having an imam in all the times and the way the Imam should be designated.[6]

His criticisms of Al-Shaykh al-Saduq edit

On a number of occasions al-Mufid was critical of his teacher, Al-Shaykh al-Saduq, and his Tashih al-Itiqadat was a correction of al-Saduq's Risalat al-Itaqadat. Not limiting himself to theological matters, al-Mufid rejected al-Saduq's resort to akhbar al-ahad (single tradition), particularly when a legal statement is to be issued. However, he did not object to al-Saduq's views concerning the extent of the Quran; he only criticized his views on the nature of the Quran.[5] Unlike al-Saduq, al-Mufid accepted "religious and speculative theology".[4] While al-Saduq allowed controversy "only in the form of quoting and explaining the words of God, the Prophet, and the Imams", reporting a tradition from Ja'far al-Sadiq, the sixth Imam of Shia, al-Mufid believed that there were two kinds of disputation – namely, "true" and "vain".[6]

Works edit

Shaykh al-Mufid is said to have written 200 works, of which only a few more than ten have survived.[2] Some of his works are as follows:

  • Al-Amali (of Shaykh Mufid), also known as "Al-Majaalis", traditions recorded by al-Mufid's pupils during the sessions where al-Mufid gave the chain of narration ending up with himself[1]
  • Tashih al-Itiqadat, a correction of al-Saduq's Risalat al-Itiqadat
  • َAwail Al Maqalat, an elaboration of al-Mufid's theology and "a practical catalogue of Imamite positions on disputed questions"[2][12]
  • Kitab al-Irshad or Al-Irshad fi ma'rifat hujaj Allah 'ala al-'ibad, on the lives of the Shia Imams
  • Al-Fusul al-`Ashara fi al-Ghaybah[13]
  • Ahkam al-Nisa, on legal obligations regarding women[10]
  • Fifth Risalah on Ghaybah[14]
  • Al-Muqni'ah (The Legally Sufficient) The commentary on this book by Shaykh Tusi, Tadhhib al-Ahkam fi Sharh al-Muqni'ah, is among the Shia four books.[15][16]

Tawqees edit

Al-Mufid received two Tawqees by Muhammad al-Mahdi during major occultation.[17]

Death edit

Al-Mufid died on the third day of Ramadan in 413 AH. According to the Shia writer Shaykh Tusi, "The day of his death drew the largest crowd ever seen in any funeral, and both friends and foes wept uncontrollably". He remained buried in his own house for two years, after which his body was moved to Al Kadhimiya Mosque and buried next to his teacher, Ibn Qulawayh al-Qummi.[18][19] His grave is near the feet of two of the Shia Imams, Musa al-Kadhim and his grandson Muhammad al-Jawad.[3]

In popular culture edit

The ninth day of Azar in Iran's official calendar is the commemoration day of Shaykh al-Mufid.[20] An image of Mofid has been shown as imaginary in a paint.[21]

See also edit

Secondary studies edit

  • Paul Sander, Zwischen Charisma und Ratio, Berlin, 1994
  • Tamima Bayhom-Daou, Shaykh Mufid, Makers of the Muslim World, Oxford, 2005

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Al-Amali, The Dictations of Shaykh al-Mufid". Al-Islam.org. Retrieved 14 February 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e Marcinkowski, Christoph (2010). Shi'ite identities : community and culture in changing social contexts. Wien: Lit. p. 59. ISBN 978-3-643-80049-7.
  3. ^ a b c Ak̲h̲tar, Vaḥīd (1 January 1988). Early Shīʻite Imāmiyyah Thinkers. Ashish Publishing House. ISBN 978-81-7024-196-6.
  4. ^ a b c d e Kraemer, Joel L. (1992). Humanism in the Renaissance of Islam: The Cultural Revival During the Buyid Age. BRILL. pp. 67–. ISBN 90-04-09736-8.
  5. ^ a b c d McAuliffe, Jane Dammen (1991). Qurānic Christians : an analysis of classical and modern exegesis (digital ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-521-36470-6.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g McDermott, Martin J. (1978). The Theology of Al-Shaikh Al-Mufīd. Dar el-Machreq éditeurs. ISBN 978-2-7214-5601-4.
  7. ^ Glassé, Cyril (1991). The Concise Encyclopedia of Islam. HarperSanFrancisco. p. 279. ISBN 978-0-06-063126-0.
  8. ^ Shaykh Abu Jaʻfar Mohammad ibn Hasan ibn ʻAli al-Tusi (2008). Al-nihayah : concise description of Islamic law and legal opinions (al-Nihayah fī mujarrad al-fiqh wa al-fatawa). by A. Ezzati. London: ICAS Press. p. i. ISBN 978-1-904063-29-2.
  9. ^ Walbridge, Linda S. (6 August 2001). The Most Learned of the Shi'a : The Institution of the Marja' Taqlid: The Institution of the Marja' Taqlid. Oxford University Press. pp. 216–. ISBN 978-0-19-534393-9.
  10. ^ a b Powers, David; Spectorsky, Susan; Arabi, Oussama (25 September 2013). Islamic Legal Thought: A Compendium of Muslim Jurists. BRILL. p. 175. ISBN 978-90-04-25588-3.
  11. ^ Heemskerk, Margaretha T. (2000). Suffering in the Mu'tazilite Theology: ʻAbd Al-J̆abbār's Teaching on Pain and Divine Justice. BRILL. ISBN 90-04-11726-1.
  12. ^ J. McDermott, Martin (18 August 2011). "AWĀʾEL AL-MAQĀLĀT". Irannica.
  13. ^ Young, M. J. L.; Latham, J. D.; Serjeant, R. B. (2 November 2006). Religion, Learning and Science in the 'Abbasid Period. Cambridge University Press. pp. 30–. ISBN 978-0-521-02887-5.
  14. ^ Rizvi, Sayyid Saeed Akhtar. Prophecies about Occultation of Imam al-Mahdi (a.s.). Bilal Muslim Mission of Tanzania. p. 13. ISBN 978-9987-620-23-4.
  15. ^ Nāṣirī, ʻAlī (28 February 2013). An Introduction to Hadith: History and Sources. MIU Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-1-907905-08-7.
  16. ^ Dabashi, Hamid (7 May 2012). Shi'ism. Harvard University Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-674-05875-0.
  17. ^ Hadad Adel, Gholam Ali (1375). The Islamic world encyclopedia (in Persian). Vol. 3 (second ed.). Tehran: Islamic Encyclopedia Foundation. p. 577.
  18. ^ "The Past Master: Sheikh Al-Mufid". Al-Islam.org. Retrieved 14 February 2016.
  19. ^ McDermott, Martin. "EBN QŪLAWAYH, ABU'L- QĀSEM JAʿFAR". Irannica. Vol. 8. p. 47.
  20. ^ Staff. "Shakh Mofid; The great reviver of Islamic sciences". Islamic Development Organization. Retrieved 24 December 2015.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 April 2017. Retrieved 17 April 2017.

External links edit

  • Al-Amali
  • Kitab al-Irshad
  • Karbala Historical Resources
  • The Emendation of a Shi‘ite Creed
  • Kitab Al-Irshad

shaykh, mufid, allah, muhammad, muhammad, ukbari, baghdadi, known, arabic, الشیخ, المفید, allim, 1022, prominent, twelver, shia, theologian, father, teacher, allim, hence, name, allim, title, mufid, given, either, muhammad, mahdi, twelfth, shia, imam, rummani,. Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn al Nu man al Ukbari al Baghdadi known as al Shaykh al Mufid Arabic الشیخ المفید and Ibn al Mu allim c 948 1022 CE was a prominent Twelver Shia theologian 1 2 His father was a teacher mu allim hence the name Ibn al Mu allim The title al Mufid was given to him either by Muhammad al Mahdi the twelfth Shia Imam 3 or by al Rummani a Sunni scholar after a conversation with him 4 The leader of the Shia community 5 he was a mutakallim theologian and Shia jurist Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn al Nu manTitleal Shaykh al MufidPersonalBorn948 CEUkbaraDied1022 aged 73 74 ReligionIslamEraIslamic golden ageDenominationShiaJurisprudenceJa fariCreedTwelverMain interest s Kalam Hadith Ilm ar Rijal Usul and FiqhNotable work s Al Amali Awail Al Maqalat and Kitab al IrshadOccupationMuslim scholarMuslim leaderInfluenced by Shaykh al SaduqInfluenced Sharif Murtada Sharif Razi and Shaykh TusiHe was taught by Al Shaykh al Saduq Ibn Qulawayh Abu Abdallah al Basri and al Rummani and Sharif al Murtaza and Shaykh Tusi were among his students Only 10 of his 200 works have survived among which are Amali Al Irshad Al Muqni ah and Tashih al Itiqadat Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 His nickname al Mufid 2 As a theologian 2 1 God s attributes 2 2 Prophecy 2 3 Imamah 2 4 His criticisms of Al Shaykh al Saduq 3 Works 4 Tawqees 5 Death 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 Secondary studies 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education editAl Mufid was born in Ukbara a small town to the north of Baghdad on 11th Dhul Qa dah in 336 Hijra According to Shaykh Tusi however he was born in 338 AH 1 and later migrated with his father to Baghdad where the Shia Buwayhids were ruling He studied with Ibn Babawayh Sharif al Murtaza and Shaykh Tusi were among his students His career coincided with that of the Mu tazili theologian and leader of the Bahshamiyya school Abd al Jabbar Al Mufid was often attacked and his library and school were destroyed 6 He was also called Ibn Muallim meaning son of the teacher 7 Muallim was his father Among his teachers were the Shia theologian Abu Ali al Iskafi Abu Abdallah al Marzubani Abu Abdallah al Basri Abu al Hassan and Ali ibn Isa al Rummani 4 Commonly known as the leader of the Shia 5 8 9 Al Mufid is regarded as the most famous scholar of the Buyid period and an eminent jurist 2 5 mainly due to his contributions in the field of kalam According to Ibn al Nadim who knew al Mufid personally he was the head of the Shia Mutekallimun in the field of kalam and al Tawhidi who was also personally familiar with al Mufid described him as eloquent and skillful at dialectic jadal His skill in polemical debate was such that he was said to be capable of convincing his opponents that a wooden column was actually gold 4 He was taught the Islamic science of hadith by Al Shaykh al Saduq 2 His nickname al Mufid edit It is said that al Mufid earned his name al Mufid as a result of a dispute about the relative merits of two events the Ghadir Khumm and the Cave Al Mufid participated in a lecture given by Isa al Rummani where in a response to a question al Rummani claimed that Ghadir Khum was based merely on riwayah transmitted tradition while the story of the Cave was based on diraya knowledge After the lecture al Mufid visited al Rummani and asked him about Aisha Talha and Zubayr who had rebelled against Ali a legitimate Imam Al Rummani responded that they had repented and al Mufid claimed that their repenting was merely based on riwaya whereas the war was based in diraya Al Rummani then sent al Mufid to al Basri with a note nicknaming the bearer al Mufid the Instructor 4 However according to Ibn Shahr Ashub in his Ma alimul Ulamaa the name was given to him by Muhammad al Mahdi the twelfth Shia Imam 1 3 As a theologian editTaught by Abdallah al Basri the Mutazili theologian and hanafi jurist 10 al Mufid adopted many theological opinions 11 Macdermott believes citation needed that al Mufid s theology is closer to the old Baghdad school of Mutazilism than to Abdul Jabbar s late Basran system His methodology is closer to that of the Baghdad school and he seems to have followed the Baghdad school and Mutazilism in his views concerning such questions as God s unity and justice However al Mufid differs from Mutazilism on the problem of Imamate and the position of grave sin in this life Al Mufid tried to defend the role of reason he described it as Al Nazar and also disputed for the truth and put away faults with the help of argument and proofs Also al Mufid believed that the task of a theologian was according to reason and argument His views were adopted by his pupils Abd al Jabbar and Sharif al Murtaza 6 God s attributes editAl Mufid defined God s unity in this way I say that God is one in divinity and eternity Nothing resembles Him nor can anything be compared with Him He alone deserves adoration He has no second with Him in this in any respect or connection 6 According to al Mufid all believers in God s unity save for some eccentric anthropomorphists agree with this Like Mutazilis al Mufid rejected the simple realism of the Ash arite theory of attribution However al Mufid and Abd al Jabbar give different explanations of what an attribute is and whether it is in an object or in the mind 6 Prophecy edit According to al Mufid there is an absolute necessity for prophets since in order to know God and moral principles man needs revelation and he noted that every apostle rasul is a prophet but every prophet nabi is not an apostle Although he took care to make a distinction between an apostle and a prophet as the Quran does he did not believe that there was a difference in their functions which enabled him to put the Imams on the level of the prophets and the apostles except in terms of their names 6 Imamah edit Al Mufid defined the Imamiya as those who believe in the necessity of Imamah Ismah and personal nass i e personal designation He tended to the belief that the Imams are superior to all the prophets and apostles with the exception of Muhammad According to al Mufid Imams can take the place of the prophets in enforcing judgments seeing to the execution of the legal penalties safeguarding the Law and educating mankind a definition which makes an Imam not only the head of the community in administrative judicial and military matters but an authoritative teacher of mankind This attitude regarding Shia Imam is the basis of other teaching in Mufid theology such as Imam s immunity from sin and error the necessity of having an imam in all the times and the way the Imam should be designated 6 His criticisms of Al Shaykh al Saduq edit On a number of occasions al Mufid was critical of his teacher Al Shaykh al Saduq and his Tashih al Itiqadat was a correction of al Saduq s Risalat al Itaqadat Not limiting himself to theological matters al Mufid rejected al Saduq s resort to akhbar al ahad single tradition particularly when a legal statement is to be issued However he did not object to al Saduq s views concerning the extent of the Quran he only criticized his views on the nature of the Quran 5 Unlike al Saduq al Mufid accepted religious and speculative theology 4 While al Saduq allowed controversy only in the form of quoting and explaining the words of God the Prophet and the Imams reporting a tradition from Ja far al Sadiq the sixth Imam of Shia al Mufid believed that there were two kinds of disputation namely true and vain 6 Works editShaykh al Mufid is said to have written 200 works of which only a few more than ten have survived 2 Some of his works are as follows Al Amali of Shaykh Mufid also known as Al Majaalis traditions recorded by al Mufid s pupils during the sessions where al Mufid gave the chain of narration ending up with himself 1 Tashih al Itiqadat a correction of al Saduq s Risalat al Itiqadat Awail Al Maqalat an elaboration of al Mufid s theology and a practical catalogue of Imamite positions on disputed questions 2 12 Kitab al Irshad or Al Irshad fi ma rifat hujaj Allah ala al ibad on the lives of the Shia Imams Al Fusul al Ashara fi al Ghaybah 13 Ahkam al Nisa on legal obligations regarding women 10 Fifth Risalah on Ghaybah 14 Al Muqni ah The Legally Sufficient The commentary on this book by Shaykh Tusi Tadhhib al Ahkam fi Sharh al Muqni ah is among the Shia four books 15 16 Tawqees editAl Mufid received two Tawqees by Muhammad al Mahdi during major occultation 17 Death editAl Mufid died on the third day of Ramadan in 413 AH According to the Shia writer Shaykh Tusi The day of his death drew the largest crowd ever seen in any funeral and both friends and foes wept uncontrollably He remained buried in his own house for two years after which his body was moved to Al Kadhimiya Mosque and buried next to his teacher Ibn Qulawayh al Qummi 18 19 His grave is near the feet of two of the Shia Imams Musa al Kadhim and his grandson Muhammad al Jawad 3 In popular culture editThe ninth day of Azar in Iran s official calendar is the commemoration day of Shaykh al Mufid 20 An image of Mofid has been shown as imaginary in a paint 21 See also editMuhammad al Kulayni Allamah Majlisi Shaykh al Hur al Amili Ja fari jurisprudence Holiest sites in Islam Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Shia Islam nbsp Education nbsp Iraq nbsp ReligionSecondary studies editPaul Sander Zwischen Charisma und Ratio Berlin 1994 Tamima Bayhom Daou Shaykh Mufid Makers of the Muslim World Oxford 2005References edit a b c d Al Amali The Dictations of Shaykh al Mufid Al Islam org Retrieved 14 February 2016 a b c d e Marcinkowski Christoph 2010 Shi ite identities community and culture in changing social contexts Wien Lit p 59 ISBN 978 3 643 80049 7 a b c Ak h tar Vaḥid 1 January 1988 Early Shiʻite Imamiyyah Thinkers Ashish Publishing House ISBN 978 81 7024 196 6 a b c d e Kraemer Joel L 1992 Humanism in the Renaissance of Islam The Cultural Revival During the Buyid Age BRILL pp 67 ISBN 90 04 09736 8 a b c d McAuliffe Jane Dammen 1991 Quranic Christians an analysis of classical and modern exegesis digital ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 46 ISBN 978 0 521 36470 6 a b c d e f g McDermott Martin J 1978 The Theology of Al Shaikh Al Mufid Dar el Machreq editeurs ISBN 978 2 7214 5601 4 Glasse Cyril 1991 The Concise Encyclopedia of Islam HarperSanFrancisco p 279 ISBN 978 0 06 063126 0 Shaykh Abu Jaʻfar Mohammad ibn Hasan ibn ʻAli al Tusi 2008 Al nihayah concise description of Islamic law and legal opinions al Nihayah fi mujarrad al fiqh wa al fatawa by A Ezzati London ICAS Press p i ISBN 978 1 904063 29 2 Walbridge Linda S 6 August 2001 The Most Learned of the Shi a The Institution of the Marja Taqlid The Institution of the Marja Taqlid Oxford University Press pp 216 ISBN 978 0 19 534393 9 a b Powers David Spectorsky Susan Arabi Oussama 25 September 2013 Islamic Legal Thought A Compendium of Muslim Jurists BRILL p 175 ISBN 978 90 04 25588 3 Heemskerk Margaretha T 2000 Suffering in the Mu tazilite Theology ʻAbd Al J abbar s Teaching on Pain and Divine Justice BRILL ISBN 90 04 11726 1 J McDermott Martin 18 August 2011 AWAʾEL AL MAQALAT Irannica Young M J L Latham J D Serjeant R B 2 November 2006 Religion Learning and Science in the Abbasid Period Cambridge University Press pp 30 ISBN 978 0 521 02887 5 Rizvi Sayyid Saeed Akhtar Prophecies about Occultation of Imam al Mahdi a s Bilal Muslim Mission of Tanzania p 13 ISBN 978 9987 620 23 4 Naṣiri ʻAli 28 February 2013 An Introduction to Hadith History and Sources MIU Press p 265 ISBN 978 1 907905 08 7 Dabashi Hamid 7 May 2012 Shi ism Harvard University Press p 66 ISBN 978 0 674 05875 0 Hadad Adel Gholam Ali 1375 The Islamic world encyclopedia in Persian Vol 3 second ed Tehran Islamic Encyclopedia Foundation p 577 The Past Master Sheikh Al Mufid Al Islam org Retrieved 14 February 2016 McDermott Martin EBN QuLAWAYH ABU L QASEM JAʿFAR Irannica Vol 8 p 47 Staff Shakh Mofid The great reviver of Islamic sciences Islamic Development Organization Retrieved 24 December 2015 كلية التربية تنظم ندوة فكرية حول المنمنمات في التراث الاسلامي Archived from the original on 17 April 2017 Retrieved 17 April 2017 External links editAl Amali Kitab al Irshad Karbala Historical Resources The Emendation of a Shi ite Creed Kitab Al Irshad Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Shaykh al Mufid amp oldid 1171604023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.