Alrisala Almadania is a manuscript classified within Faith Sciences It was writte by Ibn Taymiyyah, Ahmed bin Abdul Halim bin Abdul Salam, died in 728AH Copied by Ibrahim bin Issa in the Nasta'liq font in the thirteenth century AH. The number of papers was 4 sheets, the number of lines was 26, and the size was 22 × 16 cm. Beginning of the manuscript: (Sheikh Al-Islam said... In his letter known as the Almadania, he answered a question to some of them: As for what you have mentioned regarding the request for the four reasons that are necessary in diverting speech from its reality to its metaphor, then I mention a summary of the speech...) End of the manuscript: (... Then I told him these hadiths are interpretation or are they definitive texts... So, the man showed repentance and the truth became clear to him, so this is what I referred to. May God bless you to write it, and this is a wide matter, and whoever does not make God for him light, he has no light... God bless our Prophet Muhammad and his family and him.) From Q1 A to Q4 A, it was written in black ink, the transcriber did not mention his name, and he is well-known for the script. It was mentioned in another letter.
Alrisala Almadania
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died in 728 AH
Sheikh Al-Islam said... In his letter known as the Almadania, he answered a question to some of them: As for what you have mentioned regarding the request for the four reasons that are necessary in diverting speech from its reality to its metaphor, then I mention a summary of the speech...
... Then I told him these hadiths are interpretation or are they definitive texts... So the man showed repentance and the truth became clear to him, so this is what I referred to. May God bless you to write it, and this is a wide matter, and whoever does not make God for him light, he has no light... God bless our Prophet Muhammad and his family and him.
Copies; back to 13th century AH.
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Nasta'liq
Number of papers: 4, Number of lines: 26, Size: 22 x 16 cm.
686 / Ifta
From Q1 A to Q4 A, it was written in black ink, the transcriber did not mention his name, and he is well-known for the script. It was mentioned in another letter.