Walë al-Dën AbÃ
« Zur'ah Aḥmad ibn 'Abd al-Raḥëm , more commonly known as Walë al-Dën al-'IrÃÂqë or sometimes Ibn al-'IrÃÂqë ; 723-804 AH/ 1323âÂÂ1401 CE) was a Sunni Egyptian scholar and a prominent figure in the intellectual life of the medieval Islamic world. A multidisciplinary scholar, he specialized in Shafi'i jurisprudence, legal theory, hadith sciences, Quran exegesis, and Arabic language. Renowned for his meticulous scholarship and rigorous research, he was widely regarded as one of the leading ḥadëth authorities of his era. He was the son of Zain al-Din al-Iraqi.
Early life
Birth
He was born at dawn on Monday, the third day of Dhu al-Hijjah in the year 762 AH (4 October 1361 CE) in Cairo.
Education
is father, Zayn al-Dën al-ÿIrÃÂqë, was a well-known hadith scholar of his time. His mother, Umm Aḥmad ÿÃÂþisha al-ÿAlÃÂþë, was also a woman interested in hadith; in 765 (1364), she accompanied her husband when he travelled to Damascus for study and benefited from the hadith scholars there. Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë first studied under his father, and later under scholars such as AbÃ
«'l-Ḥaram Muḥammad b. Muḥammad al-QalÃÂnisë, ÿIzz al-Dën Ibn JamÃÂÿa, and Ibn NubÃÂta al-Miá¹£rë. His father took him to Damascus when he was three years old, ensuring that he attended the lessons of hadith scholars such as AbÃ
«âÂÂl-MaḥÃÂsin al-Ḥusaynë, Ibn RÃÂfiÿ, and Sittu'l-ÿArab. From there, his father brought him to Jerusalem, where he received ijÃÂzas from the leading scholars of Damascus. When Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë returned to Cairo, he began memorizing the Quran and various texts from different disciplines. He benefited from scholars such as Ibn ÿAbd al-Barr al-Subkë, NÃÂá¹£ir al-Dën Muḥammad b. ÿAlë al-ḤarÃÂwë, Juwairiya bint Aḥmad al-HakkÃÂriyya, and JamÃÂl al-Dën ÿAbdullÃÂh b. ÿAlë al-BÃÂjë.
In 768 (1367), he travelled with his father to Hejaz. In Medina he heard hadith from Badr al-Dën Ibn FarḥÃ
«n, and in Mecca from BahÃÂþ al-Dën Ibn Aqël, Umm al-Ḥasan FÃÂá¹Âima bint Aḥmad al-KharÃÂzë, and AbÃ
«'l-Faá¸Âl Muḥammad b. Aḥmad al-Numayrë. After 780 (1378), he made a second journey to Damascus with his brother-in-law and teacher NÃ
«r al-Dën al-Haythamë, benefiting from various scholars there. Having trained himself in various sciences especially hadith, jurisprudence (fiqh), and legal theory (usul al-fiqh). He wrote comparative notes (á¹ÂibÃÂq), recorded names meticulously, and read to the leading scholars who heard his recitation. He continued to rise in rank due to his sharp intelligence until he excelled and distinguished himself.
Teachers
His most important teachers include:
Scholarly life
Career
Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë was both a legal and hadith instructor in Cairo. He held teaching posts in hadith at the KÃÂmiliyya DÃÂr al-Ḥadëth, QÃÂnibayhiyya QarÃÂsunguriyya, and the Mosque of Ibn Tulun, and in Shafi'i jurisprudence at the JamÃÂliyya al-NÃÂá¹£iriyya and FÃÂá¸Âiliyya madrasases. His father revived the tradition of hadith-dictation circles following a long hiatus, Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë continued them after his father's death, beginning in ShawwÃÂl 810 (March 1408), and dictated hadith in more than six hundred sessions. From the early 790s (1388) onward, over a span of twenty years, he served at various times as deputy judge (qÃÂá¸Âë nÃÂþib) in place of Aḥmad b. ÿêsàal-Karakë, and he also held the judgeship of ManÃ
«fiyya. During this period, he additionally assumed the office of haykh al-shuyÃ
«kh at the JamÃÂliyya al-NÃÂá¹£iriyya Madrasa. Following the death of JalÃÂl al-Dën al-Bulqënë, he was appointed by Sultan Sayf al-Din Tatar as the chief judge (Qadi al-Qudat) of Egypt on 15 ShawwÃÂl 824 (13 October 1421). His companion Ibn Ḥajar al-ÿAsqalÃÂnë occasionally served as his deputy during this tenure, which lasted thirteen months and twenty-one days. His dismissalâÂÂafter being accused before the Mamluk Sultan al-Malik al-Ashraf Sayf al-Dën BarsbÃÂy by several individuals, including some of his own studentsâÂÂcaused him great distress.
Students
He taught many students, including most notably:
Death
He died in Cairo on Thursday, the seventeenth of the month of Sha'bÃÂn in the year 826 AH (5 August 1423 CE). He was sixty-three years and eight months old. As Ibn Hajar mentions, the cause of his death was that he assumed the position of judge after QÃÂá¸Âë JalÃÂl al-Dën al-Balqënë. He held the office for a year and a quarter, administering it well, with chastity, integrity, and firmness in religion, until some members of the state became hostile toward him, and he was removed from the position. This distressed him greatly, and his temperament became disturbed until he died of illness in the abdomen, as a martyr, on Thursday. He was buried beside his father's grave in the desert outside the city.
Legacy
Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë's student Taqë al-Dën al-FÃÂsë stated that his teacher was a scholar well-versed in issues of jurisprudence, legal theory, QurâÂÂanic exegesis, and the Arabic language, and that he issued accurate legal verdicts. Scholars such as Ibn Ḥajar, Ibn Taghrëbirdë, and al-DÃÂwÃ
«dë noted that he was also distinguished by his prodigious memory and exceptional intellect, and that he was regarded as one of the most capable hadith masters (ḥuffÃÂáºÂ) of his age. Shortly before his death, when Zayn al-Dën al-ÿIrÃÂqë was asked which hadith masters he was leaving behind, he listed in order: Ibn Ḥajar, Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë, and NÃ
«r al-Dën al-Haythami. In this, one discerns a clear indication of Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë's full scholarly ripeness and his preeminent expertise in the science of ḥadëth. Ibn Ḥajar al-ÿAsqalÃÂnë remarked that Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë was known for his uncompromising stance in defending the truth and for his amiable nature that allowed him to get along with everyone. Ibn Taghrëbirdë highlighted his modest and pleasant personality.
Works
His list of works include:
- Al-MustefÃÂd min mubhamÃÂti'l-matn wa'l-isnÃÂd ("What Is Gained from Clarifying the Ambiguities of Texts and Chains of Transmission") â A multi-volume work dedicated to identifying anonymous narrators in Hadith chains and texts. It is considered the most comprehensive and systematic work on this specialized field, known as MubhamÃÂt al-IsnÃÂd, a sub-genre of Ilm al-Rijal (the science of narrators).
- Ṭarḥ al-tasrëb fë sharḥ al-Taqrëb ("Casting Light in the Commentary on al-Taqrëb") â A multi-volume legal commentary and analysis of the foundational Hadith collection Taqrëb al-AsÃÂnëd. Originally initiated by his father, Zain al-Din al-'Iraqi. The son Wali al-Din al-'Iraqi completed this work, providing detailed explanations of both the chains of narration (isnÃÂd) and the derived legal rulings (fiqh al-hadith) for thousands of hadiths.
- Al-Aá¹ÂrÃÂf (al-Iá¹ÂrÃÂf) bi-awhÃÂm al-Aá¹ÂrÃÂf("Identification of the Errors Found in the Works of Aá¹ÂrÃÂf") â Written to correct errors found in Jamal al-Din al-Mizzi's Tuḥfat al-ashrÃÂf bi-maÿrifat al-aá¹ÂrÃÂf.
- Al-BayÃÂn wa'l tawá¸Âëḥ li-man Ukhrija Lahu fë al-á¹¢aḥëḥ wa-mu'issa bi-arb min al-jarḥ ("Explanation and Clarification of Those Narrators Included in the á¹¢aḥëḥ Collections Who Were Subject to Some Degree of Criticism") â A study of transmitters whose narrations appear in al-BukhÃÂrë and Muslim but who were nonetheless criticized by some scholars. The author presents the statements of the critics first, then those who defended the narrators.
- Dhail ÿalàal-ÿIbar fë Khabar man Ghabar ("Supplement to âÂÂal-ÿIbarâ Regarding the Reports of Past Generations") â Al-Dhahabi wrote al-ÿIbar and a supplement to it; Zayn al-Dën al-ÿIrÃÂqë wrote a supplement covering the years 741âÂÂ763 AH (1340âÂÂ1362). Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë continued this work with his own supplement beginning from his birth year, 762 AH (1361), to the year 786 AH (1384).
- Dhail al-KÃÂshif ("Supplement to al-KÃÂshif") â A compilation of narrators found in al-Mizzë's Tahdhëb al-KamÃÂl and Ibn Ḥajar's Tahdhëb al-Tahdhëb whom al-Dhahabë omitted from al-KÃÂshif, as well as narrators appearing in Ahmad ibn Hanbal's Musnad but missing from the earlier works. The book includes 2,198 individuals. Edited by BÃ
«rÃÂn al-DannÃÂwë (Beirut 1406/1986). Ibn Ḥajar pointed out needed corrections in Taÿjël al-manfa'a and continued them in al-JawÃÂb al-jalël.
- Sharḥ Sunan Abë DÃÂwÃ
«d ("Commentary on Sunan AbÃ
« DÃÂwÃ
«d") â One of the author's early works, a seven-volume commentary reaching up to the chapter âÂÂProstration of Forgetfulness.â Two incomplete manuscripts survive in Süleymaniye Library; these likely represent this unfinished commentary.
- AmÃÂlë fë al-ḥadëth ("Hadith Dictations") â Al-KattÃÂnë states the work consists of around 600 sessions. One manuscript is at Köprülü Library. Other copies are listed in Brockelmann.
- Al-AḥÃÂdëth al-ÿushÃÂriyyÃÂt ("The Tens-Grouped Hadith Collection") â A collection of forty hadiths dictated by Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë. A manuscript is preserved at the Köprülü Library.
- Tuḥfat al-taḥṣël fë dhikr ruwÃÂt al-marÃÂsël ("The Gift of Attainment Concerning the Narrators of Mursal Reports")
- KitÃÂb al-(AkhbÃÂr) al-mudallisin ("The Book of the (Reports on) Mudallis Narrators") â Here the author adds thirteen more âÂÂobfuscatingâ transmitters (mudallisën) to the list cited by SalÃÂh al-Dën al-ÿAlÃÂþë in JÃÂmiÿ al-taḥṣël. Ibn Ḥajar completed this topic in ṬabaqÃÂt al-mudallisin. A copy exists in the Köprülü Library.
- Muqaddima bi'l-ḥukm bi'l-mÃ
«jib wa'l-ḥukm bi'l-á¹£iḥḥa ("An Introduction on Binding Rulings and Validity Rulings") â A work on fatwa methodology; manuscripts are preserved in Süleymaniye Library. Others are cited in Brockelmann.
- Taḥrër al-fatÃÂwë ÿalàal-Tanbëh waâÂÂl-MinhÃÂj waâÂÂl-ḤÃÂwë ("Refinement of Legal Verdicts Based on al-Tanbëh, al-MinhÃÂj, and al-ḤÃÂwë") â An evaluative compilation of works written on three foundational ShÃÂfiÿë texts.
- Al-Ajwiba al-mará¸Âiyya ÿan al-asþila al-Makkiyya ("Satisfactory Answers to the Meccan Questions") â Composed in 809 AH (1406) in response to thirty questions posed by Taqiyy al-Dën Ibn Fahd al-Makkë.
- Tanqëḥ al-LubÃÂb ("The Clarification of al-LubÃÂb") â An abridgement of Ibn al-MahÃÂmilë's al-LubÃÂb fi'l-fiqh.
- Mukhtaá¹£ar al-MuhimÃÂt ("A Concise Abridgment of al-MuhimÃÂt") â An abridgement of al-Isnawë's al-MuhimÃÂt ÿalàal-Rawá¸Âa. A manuscript is at DÃÂr al-Kutub al-Miá¹£riyya.
- Sharḥ ManáºÂÃ
«ma fë al-wuá¸ÂÃ
«Ã¾ al-mustahabb ("Commentary on a Poem Concerning Recommended Forms of Wuá¸ÂÃ
«") â A commentary on Zayn al-Dën al-ÿIrÃÂqë's poem listing forty recommended occasions for performing wuá¸ÂÃ
«.
- Al-Nehja (al-Bahja) al-mará¸Âiyya sharḥ al-Bahja al-wardiyya ("The Pleasing Path (or: The Satisfying Delight), a Commentary on al-Bahja al-Wardiyya") â A commentary on the versification of al-ḤÃÂwë al-á¹£aghër by ÿAbd al-GhaffÃÂr al-Qazwënë.
- Al-Ghays al-hÃÂmiÿ sharḥ Sharḥ Jamÿ al-jawÃÂmiÿ ("The Pouring Rain: A Commentary on the Commentary of Jam' al-Jawami'") â An abridgement of al-Zarkashi's commentary on Jam' al-Jawami' by TÃÂj al-Dën al-Subkë. A manuscript is found in Süleymaniye.
- Sharḥ al-Najm al-wahhÃÂj fë naáºÂm al-MinhÃÂj ("Commentary on al-Najm al-WahhÃÂj, the Poetic Versification of al-MinhÃÂj") â Zayn al-Dën al-ÿIrÃÂqë had extracted the hadiths of al-Bayá¸ÂÃÂwë's legal theory work MinhÃÂj al-wuá¹£Ã
«l and versified it in 1,367 lines (NaáºÂm MinhÃÂj al-wuá¹£Ã
«l). Ibn al-ÿIrÃÂqë wrote this commentary on the poem in 788 AH (1386). A manuscript is held in the Iranian Majlis Library.
Other
- Alfiyya fë tafsër gharëb alfÃÂẠal-QurþÃÂn ("A Thousand-Verse Poem on Explaining the Rare and Unfamiliar Vocabulary of the QurþÃÂn") âÂÂ
- Sharḥ al-ṣadr bi-dhikr laylat al-qadr ("Opening the Chest by Recalling Laylat al-Qadr")
- Sharḥ al-urjÃ
«za al-YÃÂsamëniyya ("Commentary on the YÃÂsamënë Poem (UrjÃ
«za)")
- Uns al-wÃÂḥid
- Al-Iná¹£ÃÂf
See also
References