Qatada ibn Di'ama explained

Qatada ibn Di'amah al-Sadusi or Abu Khattab (died 117 AH/735 AD) was a mufassir and Muhaddith who lived in Basra, Iraq.

Life

He came from the clan of Sadus, from the northern Arab tribe of Banu Shayban.[1] Little is known about his life, and the earliest accounts of him were compiled by Ibn Sa'd in his "Book of the Major Classes".[2] He was blind; he relied on his memory in passing on his knowledge in the fields of hadith, tafsir, Arabic poetry and genealogy, which was already considered proverbial in his lifetime. He was a student and a companion of al-Hasan al-Basri for several years. According to some reports mentioned by al-Mizzī and al-Dhahabī in their scholarly biographies, Qatāda died of the plague in Wasit in 117 (Hijri Calendar)/735 A.D.

Works

Notes and References

  1. The Encyclopaedia of Islam. New Edition. Brill. Leiden. Bd. 9, S. 391
  2. Ibn Saad: Biography... (Eduard Sachau). Brill, Leiden 1918. Bd. VII. Theil II. S. 1–3. S. XXXIV (In German language)
  3. Ed. Ḥātim Ṣāliḥ aḍ-Ḍāmin. Beirut 1988. The statement by Fuat Sezgin (1967), pp. 20 and 24: "Apart from the above-mentioned K. an-Nāsiḫ wa-l-mansūḫ of QATĀDA, which we have received ..." is to be corrected. See ibid. P. 31
  4. Fuat Sezgin (1967), p. 32
  5. Heinrich Schützinger: The Kitāb al-Mu'ǧam of Abū Bakr al-Ismā'īlī . Franz Steiner, Wiesbaden 1978. pp. 41-43; Treatises for the Customer of the East (AKM), volume XLIII, 3
  6. Fuat Sezgin (1967), pp. 91-92
  7. Ed. 'Āmir Ḥasan Ṣabrī. Dār al-baschā'ir al-islāmiyya.