Nur ad-Din Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Sultan Muhammad al-Hirawi al-Qari (Arabic: نور الدين أبو الحسن علي بن سلطان محمد الهروي القاري; d. 1605/1606), known as Mulla Ali al-Qari (ملا علي القاري) was an Islamic scholar.
Ali al-Qari علي القاري | |
---|---|
Title | Mulla (Grand scholar) |
Personal life | |
Born | 15 century |
Died | 1605/06 (1014 AH)[1][2] |
Nationality | Ottoman Empire |
Region | Khurasan and Makkah |
Main interest(s) | Islamic Jurisprudence, Hadith, Theology |
Notable work(s) | Mirqat al-Mafatih, Minah al-Rawd al-Azhar |
Religious life | |
Religion | Islam |
Denomination | Sunni |
Jurisprudence | Hanafi |
Creed | Maturidi[3] |
Muslim leader | |
Influenced by |
He was born in Herat, where he received his basic Islamic education. Thereafter, he travelled to Mecca and studied under the scholar Shaykh Ahmad Ibn Hajar al-Haytami Makki, and al-Qari eventually decided to remain in Mecca where he taught, died and was buried.
He is considered in Hanafi circles [1] to be one of the masters of hadith and imams of fiqh, Qur'anic commentary, language, history and tasawwuf. He was a hafiz (memoriser of the Quran) and a famous calligrapher who wrote a Quran by hand every year.
Al-Qari wrote several books, including the commentary al-Mirqat on Mishkat al-Masabih in several volumes, a two-volume commentary on Qadi Ayyad's Ash-Shifa,[4] a commentary on the Shama'il al-Tirmidhi, and a two-volume commentary on Al-Ghazali's abridgement of the Ihya Ulum ad-Din (The Revival of the Religious Sciences) entitled `Ayn al-`Ilm wa Zayn al-Hilm (The spring of knowledge and the adornment of understanding). He also wrote Daw' al-Ma'ali Sharh Bad' al-Amali (Arabic: ضوء المعالي شرح بدء الأمالي), an exposition of Qasida Bad' al-Amali by Siraj al-Din al-Ushi.[2][5]
His most popular work is a collection of prayers (dua), taken from the Quran and the Hadith, called Hizb ul-Azam.[6] The collection is divided into seven chapters, giving one chapter for each day of the week. This work is sometimes found in a collection with the Dalail al-Khayrat.
He died in Makkah and was buried in Jannat al-Mu'alla Cemetery graveyard.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2006-11-04.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ a b "Mulla Ali al-Qari". www.sunnah.org. Archived from the original on 2019-06-30. Retrieved 2006-11-04.
- ^ Minah al-Rawd al-Azhar fi sharh al-Fiqh al-Akbar p.35
- ^ Yedali. "شرح الشفا للقاضي عياض - القاري" – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Tohfat al-A3ali Sharh bad' al-Amali" – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "EBook Hizbul Azam" – via Internet Archive.