al-Murtada al-Zabidi
1732 CE–1791 CE · Cairo
Muhammad Murtada al-Husayni al-Zabidi (1145 AH / 1732 CE – 1205 AH / 1790-91 CE) was one of the foremost Arabic philologists and hadith (Prophetic-tradition) scholars of the eighteenth century. He was born in Bilgram in northern India, into a family of Husayni sayyid lineage that traced its roots to Wasit in Iraq. As a young man he moved to the Arabic-speaking heartlands, spending his formative years (roughly 1749–54) in Zabid, a learning town in the Tihama lowlands of Yemen, from which he took the nisba (place-name) "al-Zabidi." He made repeated journeys to the Hijaz to study and to perform the pilgrimage, then settled in Cairo around 1754, where he lived for the rest of his life and became a celebrated figure consulted by scholars and rulers across the Muslim world.
His monumental dictionary, Taj al-Arus ("The Bride's Crown"), an expansion of al-Firuzabadi's Qamus, is among the largest Arabic lexicons ever compiled; he worked on it for about fourteen years, completing it in 1774. He also wrote Ithaf al-sada al-muttaqin, a large commentary on al-Ghazali's classic devotional work Ihya Ulum al-Din, finished in 1787. A Sufi (Muslim mystic) with documented ties to several orders, he was deeply interested in chains of spiritual and scholarly transmission. He died in Cairo during a plague epidemic.
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Bilgram
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Born in Bilgram, a town in northern India (present-day Uttar Pradesh), into a family of Husayni sayyid descent whose roots are traced to Wasit in Iraq. Birth year 1145 AH / 1732 CE is given consistently by his biographers and by modern scholarship (Reichmuth). Bilgram is not in the gazetteer.
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