Information AboutHanafite |
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| sunni islam | |
| hanafisunni islam | |
| hanafi | |
| madhhab | |
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The Hanafi ( Arabic ''' '''حنفي) school is the oldest of the four schools of thought ''( Madhhab s)'' or jurisprudence ( Fiqh ) within Sunni Islam . The Hanafi madhhab is named after its founder, Abu Hanifa An-Nu‘man ibn Thābit (Arabic: النعمان بن ثابت) (699 - 767). OVERVIEW Among the four established Sunni schools of legal thought in Islam, the Hanafi school is the oldest, but it is generally regarded as the most liberal and as the one which puts the most emphasis on human reason. The Hanafi school also has the most followers among the four major Sunni schools. (Both the Ottoman Empire and the Mughal Empire were Hanafi so the Hanafi school is still widespread in their former lands). The other three schools of thought are Shafi , Maliki , and Hanbali . Today, the Hanafi school is predominant among the Sunnis of Central Asia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and the most of the Indian Subcontinent, China, Southeast Asia, as well as in Iraq, Turkey, Albania, the Balkans and the Caucasus. According to Abdalhaqq Bewley:
SOME DISTINCTIVE OPINIONS OF ABU HANIFA AND THE HANAFI SCHOOL
Despite these differences, there is little or no animosity between the four schools of religious law within Sunni Islam . Instead there is a cross-pollination of ideas and debate that serves to refine each school's understanding of Islam. NOTABLE HANAFIS
HANAFI GROUPS AND MOVEMENTS EXTERNAL LINKS
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