Al-Darimi

al-Darimi
الدارمي
Personal
Born181 AH (797 CE)
Died255 AH (869 CE)
ReligionIslam
EraIslamic Golden Age
RegionAbbasid Caliphate
DenominationSunni[1]
JurisprudenceShafi'i
CreedAthari[2][3][4][5]
Main interest(s)Hadith studies
Notable work(s) Sunan al-Darimi
OccupationMuhaddith[broken anchor], Hadith compiler, Islamic scholar

Abd Allah ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Darimi (Arabic: عبد الله بن عبد الرحمن الدارمي, romanizedAbd Allāh ibn ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Dārimī; 797–869 CE) was a Muslim scholar and Imam of Arab ancestry.[6] His best known work is Sunan al-Darimi, a book collection of hadith,[7] considered one of the Nine Books (Al-Kutub Al-Tis’ah).[8]

  1. ^ Dhahabi, Imam. Siyar 'Alam al-Nubala [ed. Shu'ayb al-Arnaut]. Vol. 17. p. 558.
  2. ^ Schmidtke, Sabine; Abrahamov, Binyamin (2014). "Scripturalist and Traditionalist Theology". The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Theology. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-19-969670-3.
  3. ^ Abrahamov, Binyamin (1998). "Chapter 1: The Foundations of Traditionalism". Islamic Theology: Traditionalism and Rationalism. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. p. 2. ISBN 0-7486-1102-9.
  4. ^ El Shamsy, Ahmed (2007). "The First Shāfiʿī: The Traditionalist Legal Thought of Abū Yaʿqūb al-buwayṭī (d. 231/846)". Islamic Law and Society. 14 (3). Brill Publishers: 324–325. JSTOR 40377944 – via JSTOR.
  5. ^ Namira Nahouza (April 2009). "Chapter 3: Contemporary perceptions of the Salaf- the Wahhabi case". Contemporary Wahhabism rebranded as Salafism: the issue of interpreting the Qur'anic verses and hadith on the Attributes of God and its significance. University of Exeter. p. 97.
  6. ^ Brown, Jonathan A. C. (2012-12-01). "al-Dārimī". Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE.
  7. ^ Studia Orientalia. The Society. 2006. ISBN 978-951-9380-66-7.
  8. ^ "The nine books of Hadith – Hadith Answers". Retrieved 2024-05-15.

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