Kitāb al-qawl al-jāmiʻ fī al-ṭalāq | Kütüphane.osmanlica.com

Kitāb al-qawl al-jāmiʻ fī al-ṭalāq
(كتاب القول الجامع في الطلاق)

İsim Kitāb al-qawl al-jāmiʻ fī al-ṭalāq
İsim Orijinal كتاب القول الجامع في الطلاق
Basım Yeri xx -
Tür Kitap
Dil Arapça
Dijital Hayır
Yazma Hayır
Sayfa Sayısı 182
Fiziksel Boyutlar 182 p. 20 cm.
Kütüphane: Kongre Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası 70228274
Kayıt Numarası 7095112
Örnek Metin Al-Qawl al-jāmiʻ fī al-ṭalāq (The exhaustive opinion on unorthodox and successive divorces) is a counter-treatise on ṭalaq (divorce) in Islamic jurisprudence by Egyptian jurist Muhammad Bakhit al-Mutiʻi (1856-1935), a scholar who taught at al-Azhar in Cairo. It is a response to an unnamed "writer of the treatise on divorce in Islam published in al-Muayyid newspaper, issue 3664, on Saturday, 16 Safar, 1320 [May 24, 1902]." Al-Mutiʻi harshly criticizes the unnamed writer for having "encroached upon Islamic sharia" and "waded into a question that both early and contemporary scholars have exhausted." At issue is whether two particular types of unusual divorce are legal: the mutatabiʻ (successive) and the bidʻi (unorthodox). In a successive divorce, utterance of the talaq the maximum three times, a step necessary to initiate the divorce process, is done at once, with the aim of avoiding reconciliation. The bidʻi (unorthodox) divorce, on the other hand, is seen as invalid because it does not meet all the conditions stipulated by sharia for a legal divorce. While the author of the original treatise was not mentioned by name, some references by al-Mutiʻi suggest that he might have been an adherent of a Shiite school of jurisprudence. His opinion was said to have been based on the reasoning of the rawafid (naysayers), a pejorative term used by some Sunnis to refer to Shiites. Al-Mutiʻi also criticizes the author for criticizing Caliph Umar, a revered Sunni figure unpopular among Shiites. Al-Mutiʻi divides his treatise into three "introductions" meant to serve as a background and to make his opinion exhaustive. He concludes with a summary of his rebuttal. Founded in circa 972, al-Azhar is the oldest degree-granting Sunni institution in Egypt. The copy of the book presented here is from the collections of the Law Library of the Library of Congress. World Digital Library.
Sınıflandırma KBP558.43.M885 A35 1903
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Kitāb al-qawl al-jāmiʻ fī al-ṭalāq

(كتاب القول الجامع في الطلاق)
Basım Yeri xx -
Tür Kitap
Dil Arapça
Dijital Hayır
Yazma Hayır
Sayfa Sayısı 182
Fiziksel Boyutlar 182 p. 20 cm.
Kütüphane Kongre Kütüphanesi
Demirbaş Numarası 70228274
Kayıt Numarası 7095112
Örnek Metin Al-Qawl al-jāmiʻ fī al-ṭalāq (The exhaustive opinion on unorthodox and successive divorces) is a counter-treatise on ṭalaq (divorce) in Islamic jurisprudence by Egyptian jurist Muhammad Bakhit al-Mutiʻi (1856-1935), a scholar who taught at al-Azhar in Cairo. It is a response to an unnamed "writer of the treatise on divorce in Islam published in al-Muayyid newspaper, issue 3664, on Saturday, 16 Safar, 1320 [May 24, 1902]." Al-Mutiʻi harshly criticizes the unnamed writer for having "encroached upon Islamic sharia" and "waded into a question that both early and contemporary scholars have exhausted." At issue is whether two particular types of unusual divorce are legal: the mutatabiʻ (successive) and the bidʻi (unorthodox). In a successive divorce, utterance of the talaq the maximum three times, a step necessary to initiate the divorce process, is done at once, with the aim of avoiding reconciliation. The bidʻi (unorthodox) divorce, on the other hand, is seen as invalid because it does not meet all the conditions stipulated by sharia for a legal divorce. While the author of the original treatise was not mentioned by name, some references by al-Mutiʻi suggest that he might have been an adherent of a Shiite school of jurisprudence. His opinion was said to have been based on the reasoning of the rawafid (naysayers), a pejorative term used by some Sunnis to refer to Shiites. Al-Mutiʻi also criticizes the author for criticizing Caliph Umar, a revered Sunni figure unpopular among Shiites. Al-Mutiʻi divides his treatise into three "introductions" meant to serve as a background and to make his opinion exhaustive. He concludes with a summary of his rebuttal. Founded in circa 972, al-Azhar is the oldest degree-granting Sunni institution in Egypt. The copy of the book presented here is from the collections of the Law Library of the Library of Congress. World Digital Library.
Sınıflandırma KBP558.43.M885 A35 1903
Tür text
Library of Congress
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