Skip to content
Wellsprings
Muhammad Qasim Nanautawi

Muhammad Qasim Nanautawi

1832 CE1880 CE · Delhi

Muhammad Qasim Nanautawi (1832-1880) was an Indian Sunni scholar of the Hanafi school of law (madhhab) and Maturidi theology (kalam), and a Chishti Sufi. He is remembered above all as a principal founder of Darul Uloom Deoband, the seminary (madrasa) established in 1866 that gave its name to the worldwide Deobandi movement.

Sources trace his family — the Siddiqis — to the town of Nanauta near Saharanpur in north India, where he was born. From about age nine he studied at Deoband, then Persian at Saharanpur, and from the mid-1840s at Delhi College, where his teacher Mamluk Ali Nanautawi grounded him in logic and the rational sciences. He later worked as an editor at Muslim printing presses, including at Meerut, and performed the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca.

Tradition holds that Nanautawi took spiritual allegiance (bay'a) to the Chishti master Haji Imdadullah Muhajir Makki, and that both were drawn into the failed anti-colonial resistance of 1857 associated with Thana Bhawan and Shamli; the details of his personal role are reported rather than firmly documented. In 1876 he took part in a celebrated inter-religious debate at Chandapur, near Shahjahanpur. After the 1857 defeat, the Deoband school channelled energies into religious education under colonial rule. He died at Deoband on 15 April 1880, aged about 47, and is buried beside the seminary he helped create.

See Muhammad Qasim Nanautawi’s journey on the map →

Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the map →

Stop 2 of 41844–1850Studying

Delhi

What they did here

From the mid-1840s he studied at Delhi College, where Mamluk Ali Nanautawi taught him logic (mantiq) and philosophy. Sources say he often took private lessons at his teacher's home and graduated after roughly five to six years. (Wikipedia; EI3 s.v. Deoband.)

About Delhi

Delhi, in northern India, was the capital of the Delhi Sultanate (1206-1526) and later of the Mughal Empire, and a major centre of Islamic learning and Sufism in South Asia. The theologian and hadith scholar Shah Wali Allah al-Dihlawi (d. 1762) was born and taught there; the traveller Ibn Battuta served as a qadi in the city under the sultan Muhammad ibn Tughluq.

See other sages who lived in Delhi

The world in their lifetime

Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Muhammad Qasim Nanautawi’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.

Works

No works attributed in the corpus yet.