Abū ʻUbayd al-Qāsim ibn Sallām, approximately 773-approximately 837
Enlarge text Shrink text- Sellheim, R. Die klassisch-arabischen Sprichwörtersammlungen insbesondere die des Abū ʻUbaid, 1954.
- Enc. of Islam(Abū ʻUbayd al-Ḳāsim b. Sallām, grammarian, Quranic scholar and lawyer; b. at Herat about 154/770; d. about 224/834)
- Brockelmann,I, p. 105 (A. ʻUbaid al-Q. b. Sallām al-Herewī; b. ca. 154/770; d. ca. 223 or 224/837)
Abu Ubaid al-Qasim ibn Sallam al-Khurasani al-Harawi (Arabic: أبو عبيد القاسم بن سلاّم الخراساني الهروي, romanized: Abū ‘Ubayd al-Qāsim ibn Sallām al-Khurāsānī al-Harawī; c. 770–838) was an Arab philologist and the author of many standard books on lexicography, Qur’anic sciences, hadith, and fiqh. He was born in Herat, the son of a Byzantine slave. He left his native town and studied philology at the Basra school under many famous scholars such as al-Asmaʿi (d. 213/828), Abu ʿUbayda (d. c.210/825), and Abu Zayd al-Ansari (d. 214 or 215/830–1), and at the Kufa school under Abu ʿAmr al-Shaybani (d. c.210/825), al-Kisaʾi (d. c.189/805), and others. He was the first to develop a recorded science for tajwid, giving the rules of tajwid names and putting it into writing in his book called al-Qirā'āt. He wrote about 25 reciters, including the 7 mutawatir reciters. He made the reality, transmitted through reciters of every generation, a science with defined rules, terms, and enunciation. He wrote extensively on the originally revealed, but then abrogated, verses from the Qur’an.
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