A brief
biographical sketch of the life of Shafii
1. Abū ʿAbd Allāh ash-Shāfiʿī, (born 767, Arabia—died Jan. 20, 820,
al-Fusṭāṭ, Egypt), Muslim legal scholar who played an important role in the
formation of Islāmic legal thought and was the founder of the Shāfiʿīyah school
of law.
2. He also made a basic contribution to
religious and legal methodology with respect to the use of traditions.
3. He belonged to the tribe of the
Quraysh, the tribe of the Prophet Muḥammad, to whom his mother was distantly
related.
4. His father died when he was very young,
and he was brought up, in poor circumstances, by his mother in Mecca.
5. He came to spend much time among the
Bedouins and from them acquired a thorough familiarity with Arabic poetry.
6. When he was about 20 he travelled to
Medina to study with the great legal scholar Mālik ibn Anas. On Mālik’s death
in 795, ash-Shāfiʿī went to Yemen, where he became involved in seditious (=the
use of words or actions that are intended to encourage people to oppose a
government) activities for which he was imprisoned by the caliph Hārūn
ar-Rashīd at ar-Raqqah (in Syria) in 803.
7. He was soon freed, however, and after a
period of study in Baghdad with an important jurist of the Ḥanafī school,
ash-Shaybānī, he went to al-Fusṭāṭ (now Cairo), where he remained until 810.
8. Returning to Baghdad, he settled there
as a teacher for several years. After some further travels, he returned to
Egypt in 815/816 and remained there for the rest of his life. His tomb in
al-Fusṭāṭ was long a place of pilgrimage.
9. Primarily he dealt with the question of
what the sources of Islāmic law were and how these sources could be applied by
the law to contemporary events. His book, the Risālah, written during the last
five years of his life, entitles him to be called the father of Muslim
jurisprudence.
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