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  1. Muhammad bin Idris bin Idris bin Abdullah (Arabic: محمد بن إدريس بن إدريس بن عبد الله) was the third Idrisid sultan of Morocco.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Al-Shafi'iAl-Shafi'i - Wikipedia

    Whilst other conspirators were put to death, al-Shafi'i's own eloquent defence convinced the caliph to dismiss the charge. Other accounts state that the famous Hanafi jurist, Muhammad al-Shaybani, was present at the court and defended al-Shafi'i as a well-known student of the sacred law. [15]

  3. Knowing of the serious differences between the legal schools of Iraq and Madinah, the latter being his own school, al-Shafi’i sought out Muhammad ibn Hasan al-Shaybani (750–805), the main living exponent of the Iraqi school, for an exchange of views.

  4. Muhammad ibn Idris al-Shafi˓i, the jurisprudent, was probably born in ˓Asqalan (Ashkelon) in Palestine. He was a pure Arab on both sides, and on his father's side he was a third cousin, six times removed, to the Prophet.

  5. Imam Shafi’i authored another work under the title Ikhtilaf al-‘Iraqiyyani, the word “‘Iraqiyyani” being dual indicating to the “two ‘Iraqis” namely Imams Ibn Abi Layla and Abu Hanifah.

  6. Muhammad ibn Idris ibn al-`Abbas, al-Imam al-Shafi`i, Abu `Abd Allah al-Shafi`i al-Hijazi al-Qurashi al-Hashimi al-Muttalibi (d. 204), the offspring of the House of the Prophet, the peerless one of the great mujtahid imams and jurisprudent par excellence, the scrupulously pious ascetic and Friend of Allah, he laid down the foundations of fiqh in...

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  8. Imam Al-Shafi'i. Abu 'Abdullah Muhammad ibn Idris al-Shafi'i (150–204 AH/768–820 CE) was born in Gaza and was only two years old when his mother took him to Makkah, where his father’s family came from.

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