Muḥammad Ali Mungeri | |
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First Chancellor of Darul Uloom Nadwatul Ulama | |
In office 26 September 1898 – 19 July 1903 | |
Preceded by | "office created" |
Succeeded by | Masihuzzaman Khan |
Personal | |
Born | |
Died | 13 September 1927 | (aged 81)
Religion | Islam |
Children | Minnatullah Rahmani (son) |
Notable work(s) | Ā'īna-e-Islām, Sāti' al-Burhān, Barāhīn-e-Qāti'ah, Faisla Āsmāni, Shahādat-e-Āsmāni |
Alma mater | Mazahir Uloom |
Relatives | Wali Rahmani (grandson) |
Organization | |
Founder of | |
Muḥammad Ali Mungeri (28 July 1846 – 13 September 1927) was an Indian Muslim scholar who was the founder Nadwatul Ulama and first chancellor of its Darul Uloom, a major Islamic seminary in Lucknow. He extensively wrote against Christianity and Ahmadiyya. His books include Ā'īna-e-Islām, Sāti' al-Burhān, Barāhīn-e-Qāti'ah, Faisla Āsmāni and Shahādat-e-Āsmāni.
Muḥammad Ali was a student of Ahmad Ali Saharanpuri and an authorized disciple of Fazl Raḥmān Ganj Murādābādi. He resigned from the Nadwatul Ulama in 1903 and shifted to Munger where he established the Khānqah Raḥmāniya. His son Minnatullah Rahmani was among the founders of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board and his grandson Wali Rahmani established the institution of Rahmani30.