Muhammad bin Jarir Al-Tabari
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Abu Ja'afar Muhammad bin Jarir bin Yazid Al-Tabari (Persian: محمد بن جریر طبری, Arabic: أبو جعفر محمد بن جرير بن يزيد الطبري) was an Islamic scholar, historian, and polymath. He wrote many highly influential works on the subjects of the the Qur'an, history, fiqh, and hadith which have come down to us. A native of the Tabaristan region of Persia, he was most likely of Persian ethnicity but wrote in Arabic. A child prodigy, he is said to have memorized the Qur'an by the age of 7, led prayers by 8 and wrote down hadith at 9, and left his home at 12 "in pursuit of knowledge" id est as a student. He travelled widely in the Middle East, returning to Baghdad around 870 to write his books and pass on his knowledge to students. His tafsir is considered authoritative to this day, and in his Taarikh al-muluuk wal rasuul he preserves large portions of of the maghaazi of ibn Ishaq which otherwise would have been lost to us.
Al-Tabari | |
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Born | Muhammad ibn Abdullah c. 839 Amul, Tabaristan, Persia |
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Died | c. 923 (aged c. 84) Baghdad, Iraq |
Notable works | Tafsir al-Tabari (Qur'an Commentary of Al-Tabari), Taarikh al-muluuk wal rasuul (History of the Kings and Messengers of God), Ta'hdhib al-Athar (The Refinement of Antiquites), Ikhtilaf al-Fuqaha'(The Differences of the Jurists) |