Ahmad ibn Ishaq Ash'ari Qomi
Shia hadith scholar from 9th century / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ahmad ibn Ishaq Ash'ari Qomi (Persian: احمد بن اسحاق اشعری قمی, died between 874 and 877 CE) was one of the most trusted hadith narrators of the Shiites. He is said to have been a delegate (wafid) from Qom to al-Askari. It is also said that al-Hadi paid Ahmad's debts worth thirty-thousand dinars.[3] He met the last four Shiite Imams (Muhammad al-Jawad, Ali al-Hadi, Hasan al-Askari and Muhammad al-Mahdi) and was one of their companions and the agent of the 11th Shiite Imam.[4][5][1]
Ahmad ibn Ishaq Ash'ari Qomi | |
---|---|
احمد بن اسحاق اشعری قمی | |
Born | |
Died | between 874 and 877 CE[1][2] Hulwan, Iran |
Burial place | His tomb in Sarpol-e Zahab, Iran |
Nationality | Iranian |
Occupation(s) | Religious agent, Hadith scholar |
Parent | Ishaq ibn Abdullah ibn Sa'd (father) |
His tomb is located in Sarpol-e Zahab, Kermanshah Province, Iran. The international congress in his honor was held in March 2011 and while issuing his stamp, the reconstruction of his tomb began.[6][7]