Muhammad ibn Muhammad at-Tarabulsi al-Hattab al-Ru'yani | |
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Title | Al-Hattab |
Personal | |
Born | 1497 CE (902 AH) Mecca, Mamluk Sultanate |
Died | 1547 CE (954 AH) Tajura, Tripoli, Ottoman Empire |
Religion | Islam |
Era | (Beginning of Ottoman Caliphate era) |
Region | Mecca and Tripoli (modern day Libya) |
Jurisprudence | Maliki |
Main interest(s) | Fiqh |
Notable work(s) | Mawahib al-Jalil |
Muhammad Abu 'Abd Allah ibn Muhammad at-Tarabulsi al-Hattab al-Ru'yani (May 21, 1497 – 1547 CE) (902 AH – 954 AH) (Arabic: محمد أبو عبدالله بن محمد الحطاب الرعيني), more commonly referred to in Islamic scholarship as al-Hattab or Imam al-Hattab, was a 16th-century CE Muslim jurist from Tripoli, the capital of modern-day Libya. Al-Hattab was a scholar of the Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh). His book Mawahib al-Jalil, which was one of the first major commentaries on Khalil's Mukhtassar (Concise Text), is considered one of the best and most thorough commentaries in the Maliki school of law.[1]