al-Hasan al-Basri
642 CE–728 CE · Basra
Al-Hasan al-Basri (c. 642-728 CE / 21-110 AH) was one of the most influential religious figures of early Islam, a member of the Tabi'un — the generation of Muslims who succeeded the Prophet Muhammad's Companions. Tradition holds that he was born in Medina to Khayra, a freedwoman attached by a bond of clientage (wala') to the Prophet's wife Umm Salama, and to a father of Persian origin named Yasar (also given as Peroz). He grew up in Medina and, by tradition, settled in Basra in southern Iraq, where he spent the rest of his life as a preacher, jurist, Qur'an interpreter and renowned ascetic (zahid).
His sermons on piety, the fear of God and detachment from the world made him a towering moral authority in Basra. Reports describe him serving briefly as a judge (qadi) and clashing with the powerful Umayyad governor al-Hajjaj, whose policies he openly criticised; he is said to have rejected armed rebellion while withholding approval from the regime.
Later movements claimed him as a forerunner: Sufis place him in their spiritual chains, Mu'tazili rationalists cited a letter on free will (qadar) attributed to him — whose authenticity scholars dispute — and Sunni pietists revered him as a model of righteousness. Many anecdotes about him belong to later devotional literature rather than documented history. He died in Basra in 110 AH.
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Medina
What they did here
Classical sources report that al-Hasan was born in Medina around 21 AH/642 CE and spent his early life there, where his mother Khayra served in the household of the Prophet's wife Umm Salama. The widely repeated story that he was brought as an infant before the Prophet is chronologically impossible (the Prophet died in 632, a decade before his traditional birth) and belongs to later piety. Tradition places his departure from Medina around the time of the Battle of Siffin (657).
In Medina at the same time
Ammar ibn Yasir, Uthman ibn Affan, Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf, Umar ibn al-Khattab, Sa'id ibn Zayd, Abdullah ibn Mas'ud
Works
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