Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad ibn Amr ibn Hazm explained

Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad ibn Amr ibn Hazm (Arabic: أبو بكر بن محمد بن عمرو بن حزم) (died 120/737) was an 8th-century Sunni Islamic scholar based in Madinah.[1]

He is among those who compiled hadiths at Umar II’s behest.[2] Umar asked him to write down all the hadiths he could learn in Madinah from 'Amra bint 'Abd al-Rahman, who was at the time the most respected scholar of hadiths narrated by Aisha.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thetruereligion.org - Articles-Uncomfortable Questions - an Authoritative Exposition: An Answer to the Mischievous Writings of Jay Smith . thetruereligion.org . 12 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928015614/http://thetruereligion.org/modules/wfsection/article.php?articleid=259&page=10 . 28 September 2007 . dead.
  2. Web site: PAR246 Hadith Criticism . 2006-09-28 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070311144448/http://people.uncw.edu/bergh/par246/L21RHadithCriticism.htm . 2007-03-11 .
  3. Book: Siddiqi, Muhammad. Hadith Literature. 1993. The Islamic Texts Society. Oxford. 0946621381. 6.