Author
Al-Thaalabi, Abdul Rahman bin Muhammad bin Makhlouf
Author Original
الثعالبي، عبد الرحمن بن محمد بن مخلوف
Type
belge
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Pages Count
100
Library
King Abdul-Aziz Al Saoud Foundation for Islamic Studies and Human Sciences
Record ID
affichage_numerics1448
Notes
The beginning of the manuscript: Praise be to God, with whose praise every important matter is opened, and may God’s blessings and peace be upon our master Muhammad and his family and companions, the best of companions and family. Now, brother, may God shine my heart and your heart with the lights of certainty and make me and you among his pious saints. When God made it easy for me to complete this summary and I finished correcting it, and there were many people wishing to obtain it, and praise be to God for obtaining it, some of my brothers asked me to add to it an explanation of the strange things that occurred in it, so that the purpose of the book would be fulfilled. And God grants success by His grace to the truth, so I answered them to that and added to it an explanation of words that occurred in other than it that are often rotated on the tongue and the student lacks knowledge of their greatness, including what occurred in Al-Muwatta, Al-Bukhari, Muslim and other six books, and in explaining and clarifying this I relied on the Sahih. Abu Nasr Ismail bin Hammad Al-Jawhari, called the Crown of Language, Sahih Al-Arabiya, Mukhtasar Al-Ayn by Abu Bakr Muhammad bin Hassan Al-Zubaidi, Sharh Al-Gharibin, Strange of the Qur’an and Strange of Hadith by Abu Ubaid Ahmad bin Muhammad Al-Harawi, and Mashriq Al-Anwar by Abu Al-Fadl Ayyad Al-Yahsbi, and if I quote anything from others, attribute it to the one from whom I transmit it. And God is responsible for granting us success in His pleasure and dwelling us and you in His spacious Paradise. Whoever copies this summary must write these papers that are in the Strange, as the purpose of the book is fulfilled in them. From God, I hope for a good return and its rank according to the letters of the dictionary: Chapter on the letter hamza
The end of the manuscript: The poor man says to God Almighty, Abdul Rahman bin Muhammad, may God be kind to him and pardon him. God Almighty has facilitated the completion of what we intended in explaining the strange in our summary, and it, praise be to God, is useful and exceeds its usefulness in all books, especially the books of hadith and interpretation, and know, brother (...) And what I am telling you about is that I saw in my book called Al-Jawahir Al-Hassan in the interpretation of the Qur’an, for which I wrote this strange thing, wonders and blessed things (...) Then I was at a time looking at it. Brief interpretation, so I looked at about twenty pages in it (...) Then I saw it after that, even if I investigated my opinions of this book and the opinions of some of my companions (...) And I conclude this book of mine with great supplications, may God grant us a good ending (...) O Most Merciful of the Merciful.
- Other copies: Public Treasury in Rabat: 892 D // Treasury of the Great Mosque of Meknes: 70: A hermitage copy from Sultan Muhammad bin Abdullah on the aforementioned treasury, which was copied by Ayyad bin Muhammad al-Nasiri al-Dari. (See the index of manuscripts from the treasury of the Great Mosque of Meknes on the electronic disk prepared by the Moroccan Ministry of Culture in 2000).
Sarkis indicated in his dictionary (vol. 1, p. 661) that this dictionary was printed with an explanation: “Al-Jawahir Al-Hassan fi Tafsir Al-Qur’an” in 1327 at the Algeria Press. Then the Algerian researcher Ammar Talbi republished it as an editor in the fifth part of “Al-Jawahir Al-Hassan” by the same author, as previously mentioned. This investigation was published in five parts by the National Book Foundation in Algeria in two editions in the years 1328 AH and 1406 AH.
Font type: integrated Moroccan