Al-Akhdari

Sayyidi ʻAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Muḥammad Al-Akhdari
سيدي عبد الرحمن بن محمد الأخضري
Personal
Born1515
Biskra
Died1575
ReligionIslam Sunni
Home townBiskra (Algeria)
LineageYemen Dynasty of Al-Akhdari
Other namesIbn Al-Akhdari
Profession
  • Alim
  • Astronomer
  • Logician
  • Muslim Poet
  • Jurist Sunni Maliki
Founder of
  • Sayyidi ‘Amr Ibn Al-Akhdari (680s)
  • Sayyidi ‘Abd al-Raḥmān Al-Akhdari (1515)
Senior posting
Profession
  • Alim
  • Astronomer
  • Logician
  • Muslim Poet
  • Jurist Sunni Maliki

Sayyidi ʻAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Muḥammad al-Ṣaghīr ibn Muḥammad ibn Sayyidi ʿĀmir al-Akẖḍarī al-Bīsīkrī Arabic :سيدي عبد الرحمن بن محمد الصغير بن محمد بن سيدي عمرو الأخضري, better known as Kabīlāt Al-Akẖḍariyah (Arabic: قبيلة الأخضرية), born in 1512 in Biskra, Algeria and died in 1575 in Biskra, Algeria, was an Algerian poet, logician, astronomer and maliki jurist.

He was the author of the highly popular didactic poem Al-Sullam al-murawnaq fī ʻilm al-manṭiq ("The Ornamented Ladder into the Science of Logic"). The 144-line poem, a versification of Al-Abhari's Kitab al-Isaghuji, outlines the principles of Islamic logic and explains how logic could be used to support the Islamic creed ('aqidah) and jurisprudence (fiqh). The work is studied across the Muslim world as a primer on logic[1] and is often read in conjunction with al-Akhdari's own prose commentary.

He is also known to have written another work, "al-Jawhar ul-Maknun" or "

Al-Jawahir al-Maknuna fi'l-ma'ni wa'l-bayan wa'l-badi'".

Origin

Sheikh Sayyidi'Abd al-Raḥmān ibn Muhammad al-Akẖḍarī was born in Algeria, plus an account in an Arab Algerian family Sherifian (noble descendant) of the Arab tribe Banu al-Akhdari (Arabic: بنو الأخضري) the region of Ibb in Yemen present in Algeria since the 680s, best known in Algeria and Libya as Kābilāt Al-Akḥdārīyyāh (Arabic: قبيلة الأخضرية).

Works

Al-Akhdari wrote many works on several sciences including intellectual, Shari'a, fiqh, linguistics, mathematics, and astronomy.

  • Al-Sullam al-munawraq fī ʻilm al-manṭiq ("The Ornamented Ladder into the Science of Logic") (السلم المُنَوْرَقِ في علم المنطق): A 144-line poem on Islamic logic. This work was translated by the French orientalist Lucien in 1921 CE and he considered it one of the greatest international books.
  • «مختصر الأخضري في العبادات» على مذهب الإمام مالك
  • «نظم الجوهر المكنون في ثلاثة فنون: في علم البلاغة والبيان والبديع»
  • «حلية اللب المصون على الجواهر المكنون»
  • «منظومة الدرة البيضاء في الفرائض والحساب»
  • «منظومة الدرة البيضاء في أحسن الفنون والأشياء»
  • «نظم السلم المرونق في المنطق»
  • «شرح السلم المرونق المذكور»
  • «نظم السراج في علم الفلك»
  • «نظم منثور ابن آجروم الدرر البهية على نظم الاجرومية»
  • «نظم أزهر المطالب في هيئة الأفلاك والكواكب في علم الاسطرلاب»
  • «قصيدة مدح النبي خالد بن سنان»
  • «شعر القدسية واللامية في التصوف»

See also

References

  1. ^ "Inheritors Ijaza" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 September 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2012.

External links

  • https://web.archive.org/web/20140326072939/http://al-akhdari.com/
  • Islam portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
2nd/8th
The Great Mosque of Kairouan in present day Tunisia
3rd/9th
4th/10th
5th/11th
6th/12th
7th/13th
8th/14th
9th/15th
10th/16th
11th/17th
12th/18th
13th/19th
14th/20th15th/21st
Scholars of other Sunni Islamic schools of jurisprudence
  • Hanafi
  • Hanbali
  • Shafi'i
  • Zahiri
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ash'ari school of Sunni theology
  •  Islam portal
  • Category
Ash'ari scholars
(Abu Hasan al-Ash'ari)
Malikis
Shafi'is
Hanbalis
Zahiris
Ash'ari leaders
Theology books
See also
Ash'ari-related templates
  • MaturidiHanafi
  • Maliki
  • Shafi'i
  • Islamic theology
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • FAST
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
    • 2
National
  • Norway
  • Spain
  • France
  • BnF data
  • Germany
  • Israel
  • United States
  • Sweden
Academics
  • CiNii
Other
  • IdRef
  • İslâm Ansiklopedisi