AL FUROUA’ (P.2)

Manuscript Description:

AL FUROUA’ (P.2) is a manuscript classified under Hanbali jurisprudence. It was written by Ibn Muflih, Muhammad bin Muflih bin Muhammad, who died in 763 AH. It was copied in Naskh script in the ninth century AH. The number of papers is 246 paper, the number of lines is 29 line, and the size is 24.5 x 17 cm. This is an old copy that includes the second half of the book, from the beginning of which 13 pages were missed, and 5 pages were missed from the end. This missing was completed by Sheikh Saleh bin Saif Al-Ateeqi on the 5th of Dhul-Qa’dah 1219 AH. It has correspondence and the letters of its words are transcripted. There are corrections on its sidelines. It contains the Waqf theory of Sheikh Muhammad bin Abdul Rahman Al-Hussein on Muslim scholars and their common folk, especially the Hanbalis, and Ibrahim bin Hussein bin Rizk, Abdul Rahman bin Hamad Al-Mutawa and the writer of the Waqf theory, Ali bin Muhammad bin Mustafa testified to this. The black ink was used in writing while the chapters’ headings were written in red.

Manuscript Title:

AL FUROUA’ (P.2)

Manuscript Subject:
Other Title (subtitle):

-

date of his death:

died in 763 Hijiri

Beginning of the manuscript:

End of the manuscript:

Transcribers Name:
-
Date of transcription/Copy:

copies; belong to the 9 th century AH

Century:AH:
Place of transcription (if any):

Font type:

Alnaskh

Number of papers: Number of lines: Size: X cm

Number of papers: 246; Number of lines: 29; Size: 24.5×17 cm.

Language
The place where the manuscript is preserved:
Archiving No:

712 / Al-Iftaa

General Notes:

An old version that includes the second half of the book, from the beginning of which 13 pages were missed, and 5 pages were missed from the end. This missing was completed by Sheikh Saleh bin Saif Al-Ateeqi on the 5th of Dhul-Qa’dah 1219 AH. It has correspondence and the letters of its words are transcripted. There are corrections on its sidelines. It contains the Waqf theory of Sheikh Muhammad bin Abdul Rahman Al-Hussein on Muslim scholars and their common folk, especially the Hanbalis, and Ibrahim bin Hussein bin Rizk, Abdul Rahman bin Hamad Al-Mutawa and the writer of the Waqf theory, Ali bin Muhammad bin Mustafa testified to this. The black ink was used in writing while the chapters’ headings were written in red.