The Most Wondrous of Crafts in Arrangement of Paths | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

The Most Wondrous of Crafts in Arrangement of Paths
(بدائع الصنائع في ترتيب الشرائع)

İsim The Most Wondrous of Crafts in Arrangement of Paths
İsim Orijinal بدائع الصنائع في ترتيب الشرائع
Yazar Al-Kāsānī, Abū Bakr ibn Masʻūd, died 1191
Basım Yeri - Sharikat al-Maṭbūʻāt al-ʻIlmīyah and Maṭbaʻat al-Jamālīyah
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Fiziksel Boyutlar 1 online resource.
Kütüphane: Kongre Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası 2021666294
Kayıt Numarası 22053602
Örnek Metin Badāʼiʻ al-ṣanāʼiʻ fī tartīb al-sharāʼiʻ (The most wondrous of crafts in arrangement of paths) by the Hanafi scholar Abu Bakr al-Kasani (died 1191) is a compendium of the judicial principles and practices established by the eighth century jurist Nu'man ibn Thabit, better known as Abu Hanifa, the founder of the most widespread school of sharia (Islamic law). Al-Kasani is one of a number of medieval fuqaha' (legal authorities) influenced by Abu Hanifa and his early followers. The work covers the fundamental tenets of Islam and the obligations of Muslims. Topics are examined in multiple facets, including historical, textual, circumstantial, and procedural. In the section on purification before prayer where no pure running water is available (tayammum, or dry ablution), for example, al-Kasani examines principles established in the Qur'an and by the practice of the Prophet Muhammad, customary practice, and the methods of performing tayammum. The last part of the work covers adab al-qadi (the conduct of judges) and includes procedure for manumission of slaves, punishment for a variety of crimes, jihad, testimony, and evidence. Al-Kasani, dubbed "king of hadith scholars" by his contemporaries, was a student of Muhammad al-Samarqandi, whose daughter, Fatima, he married. His mahr (marriage offering) was said to be this book, which he wrote for the occasion and which Fatima's father readily accepted in preference to offerings from richer but less learned and less pious suitors. Fatima was a prominent Hanafi authority and judge in her own right who assisted her husband in his judicial opinions. Al-Kasani died in Aleppo, Syria, and is buried with Fatima bint Muhammad al-Samarqandi. The work was published in 1909-10 in Cairo in seven volumes by Muhammad Amin al-Khangi who, along with others, financed publication.
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The Most Wondrous of Crafts in Arrangement of Paths

(بدائع الصنائع في ترتيب الشرائع)
Yazar Al-Kāsānī, Abū Bakr ibn Masʻūd, died 1191
Basım Yeri - Sharikat al-Maṭbūʻāt al-ʻIlmīyah and Maṭbaʻat al-Jamālīyah
Tür Kitap
Dil Arapça
Dijital Hayır
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar 1 online resource.
Kütüphane Kongre Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası 2021666294
Kayıt Numarası 22053602
Örnek Metin Badāʼiʻ al-ṣanāʼiʻ fī tartīb al-sharāʼiʻ (The most wondrous of crafts in arrangement of paths) by the Hanafi scholar Abu Bakr al-Kasani (died 1191) is a compendium of the judicial principles and practices established by the eighth century jurist Nu'man ibn Thabit, better known as Abu Hanifa, the founder of the most widespread school of sharia (Islamic law). Al-Kasani is one of a number of medieval fuqaha' (legal authorities) influenced by Abu Hanifa and his early followers. The work covers the fundamental tenets of Islam and the obligations of Muslims. Topics are examined in multiple facets, including historical, textual, circumstantial, and procedural. In the section on purification before prayer where no pure running water is available (tayammum, or dry ablution), for example, al-Kasani examines principles established in the Qur'an and by the practice of the Prophet Muhammad, customary practice, and the methods of performing tayammum. The last part of the work covers adab al-qadi (the conduct of judges) and includes procedure for manumission of slaves, punishment for a variety of crimes, jihad, testimony, and evidence. Al-Kasani, dubbed "king of hadith scholars" by his contemporaries, was a student of Muhammad al-Samarqandi, whose daughter, Fatima, he married. His mahr (marriage offering) was said to be this book, which he wrote for the occasion and which Fatima's father readily accepted in preference to offerings from richer but less learned and less pious suitors. Fatima was a prominent Hanafi authority and judge in her own right who assisted her husband in his judicial opinions. Al-Kasani died in Aleppo, Syria, and is buried with Fatima bint Muhammad al-Samarqandi. The work was published in 1909-10 in Cairo in seven volumes by Muhammad Amin al-Khangi who, along with others, financed publication.
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