The perfect guide to the sciences of the Qurʾān

Bibliographic Information

The perfect guide to the sciences of the Qurʾān

Imām Jalāl-al-Dīn al- Suyūṭī ; translated by Ḥamid Algar, Michael Schub and Ayman Abdel Ḥaleem ; reviewed by Osman S.A. Ismaʿīl A. al-Bīlī

(The great books of Islamic civilization)

Garnet Pub., c2011

  • v. 1

Other Title

Al-Itqān fī ʿUlūm al-Qurʾān

Uniform Title

Itqān fī ʻulūm al-Qurʾān

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Note

Translated from the Arabic

Includes index

At head of title: Muḥammad b. Hamad Al-Thani Center for Muslim Contribution to Civilization

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Imam Jalal-Al-Din Al-Suyuti (849-911 AH / 1445-1505 AD) was born, lived and was buried in Cairo. The ascription 'Al-Suyuti' is a reference to Asyut, a town in Upper Egypt from which his family hailed. Known as the 'son of books' from the numerous books he studied and referred to in his works, he could equally be called the 'father of books' because of the many books he produced. From his early years, Al-Suyuti devoted his life to learning, reading, writing and teaching, holding notable positions in those fields in the city of Cairo at a time when it was the center of Islamic learning par excellence. He was an outstanding scholar, second to none in the field of Quranic Sciences ('Ulum Al-Qur'an), in which he produced many well-known works. However, being the all-round scholar that he was, his contributions covered almost all the fields of Arabic, the Qur'an, the Traditions (hadith) and History. His works were of such superb quality that they earned him the respect of his generation and the generations that followed to the present day. Most important of these in the field of Quranic Sciences was his "Al-Itqan". The work found its way to many circles both near and far in the Islamic world. It was first published in the years 1271, 1278, 1279, 1306, 1317 and 1318 AH, in two volumes, but the translation presented here is of a publication of four volumes published in 1387 AH (1967 AD). The translation at hand is of the first volume. "Al-Itqan" is perhaps the most outstanding work of its kind in the field of Qur'anic Sciences. Exhaustive in its sources and its subjects, thoughtfully and lucidly written, the work is also well arranged. Readers will be taken by the depth, breadth, scope and mastery of the author while noting how much Muslim scholars have devoted to the study of the Qur'an and how varied and diverse were the fields in which those studies were made. A must to the specialist of Quranic Studies, the work is highly recommended to the initiate.

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