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Atharis

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Osama bin Laden
Osama bin Muhammad bin 'Awad bin Laden was the founder and first general emir of al-Qaeda from 1988 until his death in 2011. A pan-Islamist, bin Laden organized and funded numerous jihadist or anti-Western militants and terrorist attacks worldwide. Al-Qaeda's attacks against the United States on 11 September 2001 (9/11) directly killed 2,977 victims, causing the global war on terror.
Ahmad ibn Hanbal
Muslim jurist and theologian (780–855)
Ibn Taymiyyah
Islamic scholar, jurist and philosopher (1263–1328)
Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab
Islamic Saudi scholar, jurist and eponym of Wahhabi movement (1703–1792)
Hassan al-Banna
Egyptian Islamist leader and politician (1906—1949)
Ibn Kathir
Syrian Islamic historian, exegete and scholar (c.1300–1373)
Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya
Syrian Islamic jurist, theologian and spiritual writer (1292-1350)
Ibn Majah
Persian Hadith compiler (824–886)
Rida Muhammad Rashid
Syrian Muslim scholar and reformer (1865-1935)
Ibn Qutaybah
Persian jurist and scholar (c.828-889)
Al-Dhahabi
Shams ad-Dīn Al Dhahabī (5 October 1274 – 3 February 1348) was a Syrian Sunni Muslim historian, biographer, and hadith scholar. He authored major biographical and historical works including ''Siyar A'lam al-Nubala, Tadhkirat al-Huffaz, and Tarikh al-Islam''.
Khwaja Abdullah Ansari
11th-century Sufi scholar and saint
Muḥammad Nāṣir al-Dīn al-Albānī
Muhammad Nasir al-Din al-Albani (born Muhamed Nasirudin Nexhati; 16 August 19143 October 1999), commonly known as al-Albani, was an Albanian Islamic hadith scholar (muhaddith), regarded as one of the prominent figures of modern Salafism. He was known for his rigorous re-evaluation of hadith literature and for rejecting adherence to traditional schools of jurisprudence. Al-Albani became a controversial yet-influential reformer within Sunni Islam.
Abd al-Aziz Ibn Baz
Saudi Arabian Islamic scholar and mufti (1912–1999)
Bilal Philips
Canadian Muslim scholar and Salafist (born 1947)
Ibn Qudamah
Arab Muslim scholar and Jurist (1147–1223)
Dawud al-Zahiri
Islamic scholar
Yahya ibn Ma'in
Iraqi Muslim scholar (774–847)
Ishaq Ibn Rahwayh
muhaddith and Hafiz (0778-0853)
Ibn 'Abd al-Barr
Moorish scholar
Abubakar Muhammad Zakaria
Bangladeshi Islamic scholar
Athari
Atharism ( / , "of athar") is a school of theology in Sunni Islam which developed from circles of the , a group that rejected rationalistic theology in favor of strict textualism in interpreting the Quran and the hadith.
Ibn Rajab
Muslim Arab scholar of Islam
Al-Darimi
Abd Allah ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Darimi (; 797–869 CE) was a Muslim scholar and Imam of Arab or Persian ancestry. His best known work is Sunan al-Darimi, a book collection of hadith, considered one of the Nine Books (Al-Kutub Al-Tis’ah).
Ali ibn al-Madini
Sunni Islamic scholar (778–849)
Abu Hatim Muhammad ibn Idris al-Razi
9th-century Persian hadith scholar
Yusuf ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Mizzi
Syrian Islamic Scholar (1256–1341 CE)
Al-Hasan ibn 'Ali al-Barbahari
Iraqi Muslim theologian and religious leader (867–941)
Muhammad Hayat al-Sindi
18th-century Islamic scholar
Muḥammad Ibn-ʿAlī aš-Šaukānī
Muḥammad ibn Ali ibn Muḥammad ibn Abd Allah, better known as al-Shawkani () (11 July 1759–30 October 1834) was a prominent Yemeni Sunni Islamic scholar, jurist, theologian and reformer. Al-Shawkani was one of the most influential proponents of Athari theology and is respected as one of their canonical scholars by Salafi Muslims. His teachings played a major role in the emergence of the Salafi movement. Influenced by the teachings of the medieval Hanbali scholar Ibn Taymiyya, al-Shawkani became noteworthy for his staunch stances against the practice of Taqlid (imitation to legal schools), calls
Shuaib Arnaut
Syrian-Albanian scholar (1928–2016)
Siddiq Hasan Khan
Indian Muslim scholar and community leader (1832–1890)
al-Khallal
late 9th/early 10th-century Muslim jurist
Abu Ya'la
11th-century Islamic jurist
Abu Zur'a al-Razi
9th-century Persian Muslim scholar
Ḥumaydī, ʻAbd Allāh ibn al-Zubayr
muslim writer
Ibn Abi al-Izz
Islamic studies scholar
Ibn al-Mundhir
Islamic legal scholar
Sanaullah Amritsari
Islamic scholar (1868-1948)
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).
Tahir al-Jazairi
Algerian Islamic scholar
Seffarini
Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Saffārīnī (1114 AH, 1702/3 AD, Saffarin, Tulkarm – 1188 AH, 1774 AD, Nablus) also written as Muhammad bin Ahmad al-Saffarini al-Hanbali, was a Levantine Hanbali cleric, jurist, muhaddith, writer and historian. His full name was Shams al-Din Abu al-Aun Muhammad bin Ahmad bin Salim bin Sulayman al-Saffarini al-Nablusi.
Ibn Muflih
Islamic scholar
G̲h̲ulām al-K̲h̲allāl
Hanbali jurist
Ibrahim al-Kurani
18th-century Islamic scholar
Abul Fazl Burqae Qomi
Iranian jurist and author (1908–1993)
Muhammad Shams-ul-Haq Azimabadi
Islamic scholar
Yūsuf Ibn-al-Ḥasan Ibn-al-Mibrad
Islamic scholar
Syed Nazeer Husain
Indian Muslim scholar of the reformist Ahl-i Hadith movement (1805-1902)
Abdul Mannan Wazirabadi
Islamic Scholar
Sulayman ibn Abd al-Wahhab
18th-century Islamic scholar and brother of Muhammad Ibn Abd Al-Wahhab
Abdur-Rahman al-Mu'allimee al-Yamani
Abd al-Rahman ibn Yahya ibn Ali (; 1894–1966), commonly known by the '''al-Mu'allimi al-Yamani''' (), was a Yemeni Islamic scholar. He played a significant role within the Salafi movement, aligning with the teachings of Ibn Taymiyya, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, and Athari theology.