Misplaced Pages

Tahdhib Al-Kamal fi Asma' Al-rijal

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bakkouz (talk | contribs) at 20:27, 26 December 2024. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 20:27, 26 December 2024 by Bakkouz (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
This article is actively undergoing a major edit for a little while. To help avoid edit conflicts, please do not edit this page while this message is displayed.
This page was last edited at 20:27, 26 December 2024 (UTC) (47 hours ago) – this estimate is cached, update. Please remove this template if this page hasn't been edited for a significant time. If you are the editor who added this template, please be sure to remove it or replace it with {{Under construction}} between editing sessions.
Book by Jamal al-Din al-Mizzi in the field of biographical evaluation

"Tahdhib Al-Kamal fi Asma' Al-rijal" is a book by Jamal al-Din al-Mizzi, where he refined, revised, and added upon the work of Abd al-Ghani al-Maqdisi in his book Al-Kamal fi Asma' al-Rijal. It contains biographies of hadith narrators from the six major hadith collections, evaluating their reliability and contributions. The book is an important resource in the field of biographical evaluation within Islamic studies.

Overview

While the book 'Al-Kamal' limited itself to mentioning the men of the Six Books, Al-Mizzi went further and supplemented what al-Maqdisi had missed of the narrators of these books, He scrutinized those mentioned and removed some who did not meet his criteria, and they were few. Then, he added to his book the narrators who appeared in some of the works he had selected from the authors of the Six Books. Thus, he increased the original biographies by more than seventeen hundred.

Al-Mizzi also added to most of the original biographies new historical material about the teachers of the subject of the biography, his students, what was said about him in terms of criticism, correction, or authentication, the date of his birth or death, and so on, so that most of the biographies expanded greatly.