al-Shawkani
1759 CE–1834 CE · Sana'a (Yemen)
Muhammad ibn Ali al-Shawkani (1759-1834 CE / 1173-1250 AH) was a Yemeni jurist, hadith scholar and Qur'anic commentator who became one of the most influential religious figures of his era. He took his name from Hijrat al-Shawkan, a village outside the highland city of Sana'a where he was born; his father Ali was a judge there, and al-Shawkani was raised and educated entirely within the Sana'a region. He studied first with his father and then with the city's leading teachers, mastering hadith (reports of the Prophet's sayings and deeds) and law.
Raised in the Zaydi tradition — a branch of Shia Islam long dominant in Yemen — al-Shawkani came to argue that scholars should derive rulings directly from the Qur'an and authenticated hadith rather than follow a single legal school. He sharply criticized taqlid (uncritical adherence to an established school) and called instead for ijtihad (independent legal reasoning). In 1795 he was appointed chief judge (qadi al-qudat) of the Zaydi imamate at Sana'a, an office he held until his death in 1834, serving successive imams. He was extraordinarily productive, credited with roughly 250 works; his best-known are the hadith-law commentary Nayl al-Awtar and the Qur'an commentary Fath al-Qadir. Later Sunni reform and Salafi movements claim him as a forerunner, though how far he himself broke with Zaydism is debated among modern scholars.
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Sana'a (Yemen)צנעאYemen
What they did here
Al-Shawkani was raised and educated entirely in Sana'a, studying under his father and the city's leading scholars of hadith and law. He spent essentially his whole career there, was appointed chief judge (qadi al-qudat) of the Zaydi imamate in 1795, held the post until his death, and died in Sana'a in 1834 CE (1250 AH). Sources do not record significant travel or a pilgrimage; on present evidence his documented life is confined to the Sana'a region. (EI2; Oxford Reference; British Yemeni Society review of Haykel; Wikipedia.)
About Sana'a (Yemen)
Center of Yemenite Jewry; home of Yihya Qafih (the Wars of God).
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