Jump to content

Akhbaris: Difference between revisions

m
→‎Heyday of Hadithism: correcting the demise date of al-Kulayni
imported>Mohammad.Kh
m (Revision)
imported>Bahrami
m (→‎Heyday of Hadithism: correcting the demise date of al-Kulayni)
Line 11: Line 11:


===Heyday of Hadithism===
===Heyday of Hadithism===
The fourth/tenth century is the period of the prominence of the hadithist school in [[Qom]]. Deductivist [[jurist]]s, such as [[Al-Hasan b. 'Ali al-Hadha' al-'Ummani|Ibn Abi 'Aqil al-Ummani]] and [[Ibn Junayd al-Iskafi]] were among the minority. Prominent scholars of fiqh in this period were [[Muhammad b. Ya'qub al-Kulayni]] (d. 328/940), [['Ali b. Babawayh al-Qummi]] (d. 329/941), [[Ibn Qulawayh al-Qummi]] (d. 367/977-78) and [[al-Shaykh al-Saduq]] (d. 381/991-92), who significantly contributed to the production of the oldest collections of jurisprudential hadiths.
The fourth/tenth century is the period of the prominence of the hadithist school in [[Qom]]. Deductivist [[jurist]]s, such as [[Al-Hasan b. 'Ali al-Hadha' al-'Ummani|Ibn Abi 'Aqil al-Ummani]] and [[Ibn Junayd al-Iskafi]] were among the minority. Prominent scholars of fiqh in this period were [[Muhammad b. Ya'qub al-Kulayni]] (d. 329/940-1), [['Ali b. Babawayh al-Qummi]] (d. 329/941), [[Ibn Qulawayh al-Qummi]] (d. 367/977-78) and [[al-Shaykh al-Saduq]] (d. 381/991-92), who significantly contributed to the production of the oldest collections of jurisprudential hadiths.


===Approach to Demonstrative Fiqh===
===Approach to Demonstrative Fiqh===
Anonymous user