Ali ibn Babawayh Qummi
Ali ibn Babawayh Qummi | |
|---|---|
على بن بابُوَیْه قمی | |
| Personal life | |
| Born | Qom, Iran |
| Died | 939 CE |
| Religious life | |
| Religion | Islam |
| Denomination | Shia |
| Jurisprudence | Ja'fari |
| Creed | Twelver |
| Muslim leader | |
Influenced by | |
Influenced | |
| Part of a series on Shia Islam |
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Ali ibn Babawayh al-Qummi (Persian: علی بن بابویه قمی, romanized: ʿAlī ibn Bābawayh Qummī; Arabic: عَلِيّ بْن بَابَوَيْه ٱلْقُمِيّ, romanized: ʿAlī ibn Bābawayh al-Qummī; died 939) was an Iranian Twelver Shia Muslim scholar from the time of the Ghaybat al-Sughra (Minor Occultation), who was also a companion of Hasan al-Askari (868–874).[1] He's the father of the prominent Shaykh Saduq, whose work Man La Yahduruhu al-Faqih is one of the canonical Four Books of Twelver Shia Islam in hadith.
A prominent scholar in Imami circles, he is famous for having sent a letter to the 12th Imam Muhammad al-Mahdi through his third deputy Ibn Ruh al-Nawbakhti, asking for the Imam's prayer for him to have a child, as the physicians of the time had told him he could not have one. Al-Mahdi's sent back assuring him of his prayer, and informed him he will have two sons. Thus his son, Shaykh Saduq, was always famously called: "Oh you who was born by the prayer of al-Mahdi!".
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