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  1. Hanafi (light green) is the Sunni school predominant in Turkey, Central Asia, Bosnia, the Western Middle East, Western and Nile river region of Egypt, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and parts of Southeast Europe, India, China and Russia.

    • Abu Hanifa

      Abu Hanifa (Arabic: أَبُو حَنِيفَة, romanized: Abū Ḥanīfa;...

    • List of Hanafis

      The following is the list of notable religious personalities...

  2. The Hanafi school or Hanafism is one of the four major schools of Islamic jurisprudence within Sunni Islam. It was established by the 8th-century scholar, jurist, and theologian Abu Hanifa, a follower whose legal views were primarily preserved by his two disciples Abu Yusuf and Muhammad al-Shaybani.

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  4. An Introduction to Hanafi Madhhab. Hanafi is one of the four schools (madhabs) of Fiqh or religious law within Sunni Islam. Founded by Imam Abu Hanifa, it is considered to be the school most open to modern ideas. Its followers are sometimes known in English as Hanafites or Hanifites (cf Malikites, Shafiites, Hambalites for the other schools of ...

  5. The main principles of Hanafi legal theory: The definite nature of the general word (‘aam) upon which the general principle is based. The use of a general principle as a proposition from which legal reasoning is to proceed and the law to be extended (deduction).

  6. Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. HANAFI SCHOOL OF LAW One of the four approaches to Sunni Muslim law, often called schools. Source for information on Hanafi School of Law: Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa dictionary.

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