Laythi school: Difference between revisions
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Iskandar323 (talk | contribs) m Iskandar323 moved page Laythi to Laythi school: Adding an actual noun, as opposed to having the title as a bare adjective, using the most common name in English that also provides reasonable naturalness and recognizability, with 'school' being clearer than 'madhhab' or 'fiqh', as well as making it consistent with the page Shafi'i school |
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Revision as of 06:50, 24 February 2023
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The Laythi madhhab (Arabic: المذهب الليثي) was an 8th-century religious law school of Fiqh within Sunni Islam whose Imam was Al-Layth ibn Sa'd. One of known characteristics of al-Layth jurisprudence was his rejection towards Maliki usage of Madina custom as an independent source of law.[1] One of the reasons the school went extinct was because he instructed his principal student, Ammar ibn Sayf, to destroy and burn all of his works.[1]
References
- ^ a b Philips, Bilal (1990). The Evolution of Fiqh. International Islamic Publishing House. pp. 85–86. ISBN 8172313551. Retrieved 23 December 2021.