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Al-Qābiṣī's authority and reputation rose after the death of Ibn Abī Zayd (996) and Ibn Shiblūn (999) and he became the leading jurisconsult in northern Africa and al-Andalus. At the time of his death he was still teaching eighty students. His successors, who carried on his work, were Abū Bakr ibn
189:ʿAbd al-Raḥmān and Abū Imrān al-Fāsī. The culmination of the work of these Mālikī scholars of al-Qayrawān was the triumph of the Mālikī school in Africa west of Egypt and the breach between the Mālikī
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95:(journey) in the east from 963 until 968. During his journey, because he was blind, his companions acted as his secretaries.
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62:(Gabès) and his mother was from al-Qayrawān. According to oral tradition, he was the first cousin of Ibn Abī Zayd and
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145:, popular in al-Andalus; a treatise on the conduct of schoolmasters, inspired by the writings of
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with Ashʿarī leanings and partial to the writings of Ibn al-Mawwāz. He had deep knowledge of the
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135:, an account of its transmission. His other works include a collection of
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85:; and Ibn Masrūr al-Dabbāgh. Accompanied by Darrās al-Fāsī and the
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Al-Qābiṣī's father was born in the village of al-Maʿāfiriyyīn near
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al-Ḳābisī), means "one from Qabis". Sometimes it is given as a
17:
Abu ʾl-Ḥasan ʿAlī ibn Muḥammad ibn Khalaf al-Maʿāfirī al-Qābiṣī
73:
In Africa al-Qābiṣī was taught by Abu ʾl-ʿAbbās al-Ibyānī, a
181:). In his old age, he is said to have introduced the young
241:), Ibn al-Qābiṣī, i.e., "son of the one from Qabis".
98:Before he took up jurisprudence, al-Qābiṣī taught
8:
149:; an incomplete collection of traditions of
66:, the sons of his mother's sisters. He was
381:The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition
316:The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition
153:; and numerous letters on everything from
389:. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 936–937.
129:s, in northern Africa and wrote for it a
41:). In 996, he succeeded his first cousin
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209:
221:أبو الحسن علي بن محمد القابسي المعافري
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7:
324:. Leiden: E. J. Brill. p. 341.
220:
250:These dates correspond to 324–403
14:
395:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_3374
330:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_3742
89:al-Aṣīlī, he went on a lengthy
1:
433:Blind scholars and academics
469:
19:(935–1012) was a leading
438:Tunisian Maliki scholars
118:s. He helped spread the
108:). As a jurist he was a
163:s, the rituals of the
157:, the architecture of
81:; Darrās al-Fāsī, an
35:Islamic jurisprudence
448:11th-century jurists
443:10th-century jurists
293:H. R. Idris (1978).
104:(recitation of the
51:) of the school in
360:araf al-Qayrawānī"
229:, al-Qābiṣī (also
169:, the theology of
125:, a collection of
173:and refuting the
155:Qurʾānic exegesis
64:Muḥriz ibn Khalaf
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123:of al-Bukhārī
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77:scholar from
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31:Mālikī school
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110:traditionist
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55:(Kairouan).
46:
43:Ibn Abī Zayd
38:
24:
16:
15:
428:1012 deaths
385:Volume III:
376:Schacht, J.
372:Pellat, Ch.
307:Pellat, Ch.
295:"al-Ḳābisī"
185:to poetry.
177:(i.e., the
53:al-Qayrawān
45:as leader (
423:935 births
417:Categories
320:Volume IV:
271:References
263:352–57 AH.
235:patronymic
183:Ibn Sharaf
179:Khārijites
171:al-Ashʿarī
87:Andalusian
403:495469525
364:Lewis, B.
338:758278456
303:Lewis, B.
231:romanized
139:s of the
29:) of the
23:scholar (
21:Ifrīqiyan
378:(eds.).
354:(1971).
322:Iran–Kha
313:(eds.).
198:Fāṭimids
193:and the
175:Bakrites
142:Muwaṭṭaʾ
101:qirāʾāt
83:Ashʿarī
75:Shāfiʿī
401:
387:H–Iram
374:&
336:
309:&
223:. His
217:Arabic
191:Zīrids
147:Saḥnūn
137:ḥadīth
132:riwāya
127:ḥadīth
115:ḥadīth
106:Qurʾān
48:shaykh
362:. In
356:"Ibn
297:. In
239:nasab
226:nisba
204:Notes
195:Shīʿa
160:ribāṭ
121:Ṣaḥīḥ
92:riḥla
79:Tunis
68:blind
60:Qabis
26:uṣūlī
399:OCLC
334:OCLC
166:ḥajj
151:fiḳh
39:fiḳh
391:doi
326:doi
33:of
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370:;
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358:Sh
332:.
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305:;
301:;
279:^
252:AH
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237:(
37:(
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