Sharh al-Muqni’ (Part 5) is a manuscript classified within Hanbali Fiqh. Written by Ibn Qudamah, Abd al-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn Ahmad, who died in 682 AH. It was copied in Naskh font in the ninth century AH. The number of papers was 329 sheets, the number of lines was 23, and the size was 24.5 × 17 cm. Begining of Manuscript: The book of usurpation, which is the appropriation of money, which is by force without right, and it is forbidden by the Qur’an, Sunnah and consensus. As for the book… End of Manuscript: (An issue, and if he freed them, then he freed us, so we took a third of them, then money appeared to him, and they took out a third of it. The ruling on their behavior is the ruling on the behavior of free men, so if a slave marries one of them without the permission of his master.) An antique copy representing the fifth part of the Great Commentary, written on glossy Arabic paper on the margins of some corrections and comments. Black ink writing. The first of them was the ownership of Musa bin Ahmed Al-Hajjawi by purchase from Sheikh Muhammad bin Al-Saqqa, undated, the Hanbali jurist, and another ownership by Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman Al-Wahaibi, also undated, used in writing the black ink.
Sharh al-Muqni’ (Part 5)
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died. 682AH
The book of usurpation, which is the appropriation of money, which is by force without right, and it is forbidden by the Qur’an, Sunnah and consensus. As for the book…
... An issue, and if he freed them, then he freed us, so we took a third of them, then money appeared to him, and they took out a third of it. The ruling on their behavior is the ruling on the behavior of free men, so if a slave marries one of them without the permission of his master.
copies; back to 9 th century AH.
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Naskh
Number of papers: 329, Number of lines: 23, Size: 24.5 x 17 cm.
371 / Ifta
An antique copy representing the fifth part of the Great Commentary, written on glossy Arabic paper on the margins of some corrections and comments. Black ink writing. The first of them was the ownership of Musa bin Ahmed Al-Hajjawi by purchase from Sheikh Muhammad bin Al-Saqqa, undated, the Hanbali jurist, and another ownership by Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman Al-Wahaibi, also undated, used in writing the black ink.