Category
page 1915 deaths

Al-Nasa'i
Al-Nasāʾī (215 – 303 AH; 830 – 915 CE), full name Abū ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Aḥmad ibn Shuʿayb ibn ʿAlī ibn Sinān ibn Baḥr ibn Dīnar al-Khurasānī al-Nasāʾī (), was a noted collector of hadith (sayings of Muhammad), from the city of Nasa (early Khorasan and present day Turkmenistan), and the author of "As-Sunan", one of the six canonical hadith collections recognized by Sunni Muslims. From his "As-Sunan al-Kubra (The Large Sunan)" he wrote an abridged version, "Al-Mujtaba" or Sunan al-Sughra (The Concise Sunan). Of the fifteen books he is known to have written, six treat the science of hadīth
Regino of Prüm
Benedictine monk, chronicler and music theorist
Spytihněv I, Duke of Bohemia
Duke of Bohemia

Reginar I Longneck
Lotharingian noble
Adalbert II, Margrave of Tuscany
Margrave of Tuscany, Duke of Lucca (c.875–915)

Tuotilo
thumb|Two ivory tablets attributed to Tuotilo
Bertila of Spoleto
Holy Roman Empress
Jing Hao
Chinese (Tang Dynasty) landscape painter (855-915)
Sunyer II, Count of Empúries
Frankish noble
Alí ibn al-Fadl al-Qarmatí
Yemeni Isma'ili missionary (died 915)
Gregory IV of Naples
Italian noble
Ruwaym
Abu Muhammad Ruwaym bin Ahmad was an early Muslim jurist, ascetic, saint and reciter of the Qur'an. He was one of the second generation of practitioners of Sufism (tasawwuf).
Abu Salih Mansur
Samanid prince (died 915)
Ratbod
Roman Catholic archbishop
Abu'l-Tayyib Ahmad ibn Ali al-Madhara'i
director of finance in Tulunid Egypt (died 915)