Mulakhas Al-Fawakih Al-adidat fi Al-Masayil Al-Mufida

Manuscript Description:

Mulakhas Al-Fawakih Al-adidat fi Al-Masayil Al-Mufida is a manuscript classified under the Hanbali jurisprudence and this manuscript was copied in Al-Naskh script in the fourteenth century Hijiri. The number of papers was 113, the number of lines was 30, and the size was 24 × 16.5 cm. The beginning of the manuscript: (Praise be to Allah, who is praised for His actions, described with the attributes of His perfection and majesty... And after that, when I saw the brothers with them taking care of the Al-Manqour collection in this age, I wanted to summarize it and arrange it on chapters to make it easier for the educated...) And the end of the manuscript: ... Ibn Dhahlan said, his saying, and if he sells something or gives it as a gift and then acknowledges it to someone else ... then he takes from their value or their price. The last point is, praise be to Allah, Lord of the Worlds, and may God’s blessings, his angels, and all his creation be upon Muhammad... and may the peace and blessings of Allah be abundant until the Day of Judgment.) It is a correspondent edition with its original edition transcribed on Safar 29, 1345 Hijiri. It was owned by Sheikh Muhammad bin Abd al-Latif, dated 1352 AH. He used black ink in writing, and what is to be distinguished was written in red.

Manuscript Title:

Mulakhas Al-Fawakih Al-adidat fi Al-Masayil Al-Mufida

Manuscript Subject:
Other Title (subtitle):

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date of his death:

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Beginning of the manuscript:

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End of the manuscript:

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Transcribers Name:
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Date of transcription/Copy:

Al-Naskh; It goes back to 14 AH

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

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Font type:

Al-Naskh

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

number of papers: 113; number of lines: 30; Size: 24 x 16.5 cm.

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

521 / Al-Iftaa

General Notes:

It is a correspondent edition with its original edition transcribed on Safar 29, 1345 Hijiri. It was owned by Sheikh Muhammad bin Abd al-Latif, dated 1352 AH. He used black ink in writing, and what is to be distinguished was written in red.