Region: | Iraq |
Era: | Islamic golden age |
Ibn Abi Asim ابن أبي عاصم | |
Imam, Qadi | |
Birth Date: | 206 AH (821/2 AD) |
Birth Place: | Basra |
Death Date: | 287 AH (900 AD) |
Death Place: | Isfahan |
Religion: | Islam |
Denomination: | Sunni |
Creed: | Athari |
Main Interests: | Hadith, Fiqh |
Occupation: | Muhaddith, Islamic Scholar, Muslim jurist |
Influences: | Dawud al-Zahiri, Al-Bukhari, Abu Hatim Muhammad ibn Idris al-Razi |
Influenced: | Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani, Muqbil bin Hadi al-Wadi'i |
Abu Bakr Ahmad bin `Amr ad-Dahhak bin Makhlad ash-Shaibani (Arabic: أبو بكرأحمد بن عمرو بن الضحاك بن مخلد الشيباني), widely known as Ibn Abi Asim (Arabic: ابن أبي عاصم), was an Iraqi Sunni scholar of the 9th century. He is most famous for his work in the field of hadith science.[1]
Ibn Abi Asim was born in Basra, Iraq in 822.[2] He grew up in an academic household, as both his father and his grandfather were scholars of Prophetic traditions in their own right.[1] Due to his family's scholarly background, he was educated in the religious sciences at an early age. While religious learning was often begun in a madrasa or masjid starting in the early teens, Ibn Abi Asim had a head start relative to his time period.
Eventually, Ibn Abi Asim left Basra for the city of Isfahan, further to the east. Late in life, he was granted a position as a judge at his new city of residence.[3]
Ibn Abi Asim died in Isfahan in the year 900.[2] [3] He was 81 years old and at the time of his death, he was still holding his position as a judge. According to Iranian historian Abu Nu`aym, Ibn Abi Asim was buried in Isfahan's Doshabaz cemetery.[4]
Ibn Abi Asim compiled numerous Prophetic traditions into two volumes, organized into chapters based on different theological and creed-related topics. He had also written about the first-generation Muslim and Umayyad caliph, Mu'awiya,[2] tho
Historians Abu al-Abbas al-Niswi and Abu Nu`aym both reported Ibn Abi Asim as having been a Zahirite.[7] [8] Although he has become an important figure for the Zahiri school in the modern day, few of his works in jurisprudence have survived to the modern era.
. Ibn 'Asakir. Ibn 'Asakir. The History of Damascus. 7. 87.