{"title":"Ahmed Bâba at-Timbuktî","authors":"Hamadou Adama","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.957","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Ahmed Bâba (1556–1627) was among the most prolific and the most celebrated of Timbuktu scholars of the 16th and 17th centuries. During his childhood he was educated and trained in Arabic law and Islamic sciences by his father, Ahmad, and other relatives. His principal teacher, the man he named the regenerator (al-mujaddid), was the Juula scholar Mohammed Baghayogho al-Wangarî, whose teaching he followed for more than ten years.\n Following the Moroccan occupation of Timbuktu in 1591, he was exiled to Marrakesh in 1594 and jailed for two years before he was released but obliged to remain in the city for many years. He was widely known both for his teaching and for the fatwas (legal opinions) he issued. He was offered administrative positions but declined them all in favor of teaching.\n In 1608, he was permitted to return to his hometown, Timbuktu, where he continued to write and teach until his death in 1627, but he held no public office there.\n His special field of competence was jurisprudence. He was also recognized for his abilities in hadith and wrote several works on Arabic grammar. He is probably best known for his biographical compendium of Mâlikî (founded by Malik ibn Anas died A.D. 795 is orthodox school of Muslim jurisprudence predominating in Sudanic Africa and the Maghreb) scholars, Nayl al-Ibtihâj bi tadrîs ad-dibâdj, a valuable supplement for the Western Islamic world to Ibn Farhûn’s ad-Dibâj al-Mudhahhab.\n His work specifically addresses issues relating to the significance of racial and ethnic categories as factors in the justification of enslavement. In the Bilâd as-Sûdân, Ahmed Bâba influenced the debate over slavery by relying on interpretations of Islamic precedent, which was invoked to protect freeborn individuals from enslavement. By extension, he impacted the transatlantic slave trade on the basis of religious identification with Islam and the desire to avoid the sale of slaves to non-Muslims, especially Christian Europeans on the coast of West Africa.","PeriodicalId":166397,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History","volume":"74 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-11-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.957","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
Ahmed b(1556-1627)是16和17世纪廷巴克图最多产、最著名的学者之一。童年时,他在父亲艾哈迈德和其他亲戚的指导下接受了阿拉伯法律和伊斯兰科学的教育和培训。他的主要老师,他称之为再生者(al-mujaddid)的人,是Juula学者Mohammed Baghayogho al-Wangarî,他跟随他的教导超过十年。1591年摩洛哥占领廷巴克图后,他于1594年被流放到马拉喀什,在被释放前被关押了两年,但被迫在这座城市呆了很多年。他以他的教导和他发布的法特瓦(法律意见)而广为人知。有人请他担任行政职务,但他都拒绝了,宁愿当教师。1608年,他被允许回到他的家乡廷巴克图,在那里他继续写作和教学,直到1627年去世,但他在那里没有担任任何公职。他的专长是法学。他在圣训方面的能力也得到了认可,并写了几本关于阿拉伯语语法的著作。他最出名的可能是他的传记纲要Mâlikî(由马利克·伊本·阿纳斯创立,死于公元795年,是在苏丹非洲和马格里布地区占主导地位的正统穆斯林法学学派)学者,Nayl al- ibtih j bi tadr s ad- dib j al- mudhahab,这是西方伊斯兰世界对伊本·法尔赫 n的ad- dib j al- mudhahab的宝贵补充。他的著作专门论述了与种族和族裔类别作为为奴役辩护的因素的重要性有关的问题。在bild as- s d中,Ahmed b通过对伊斯兰先例的解释影响了关于奴隶制的辩论,伊斯兰先例被用来保护生来自由的个人不受奴役。进一步说,他影响了跨大西洋奴隶贸易,这是基于对伊斯兰教的宗教认同,以及避免将奴隶卖给非穆斯林,特别是西非海岸的基督教欧洲人的愿望。
Ahmed Bâba (1556–1627) was among the most prolific and the most celebrated of Timbuktu scholars of the 16th and 17th centuries. During his childhood he was educated and trained in Arabic law and Islamic sciences by his father, Ahmad, and other relatives. His principal teacher, the man he named the regenerator (al-mujaddid), was the Juula scholar Mohammed Baghayogho al-Wangarî, whose teaching he followed for more than ten years.
Following the Moroccan occupation of Timbuktu in 1591, he was exiled to Marrakesh in 1594 and jailed for two years before he was released but obliged to remain in the city for many years. He was widely known both for his teaching and for the fatwas (legal opinions) he issued. He was offered administrative positions but declined them all in favor of teaching.
In 1608, he was permitted to return to his hometown, Timbuktu, where he continued to write and teach until his death in 1627, but he held no public office there.
His special field of competence was jurisprudence. He was also recognized for his abilities in hadith and wrote several works on Arabic grammar. He is probably best known for his biographical compendium of Mâlikî (founded by Malik ibn Anas died A.D. 795 is orthodox school of Muslim jurisprudence predominating in Sudanic Africa and the Maghreb) scholars, Nayl al-Ibtihâj bi tadrîs ad-dibâdj, a valuable supplement for the Western Islamic world to Ibn Farhûn’s ad-Dibâj al-Mudhahhab.
His work specifically addresses issues relating to the significance of racial and ethnic categories as factors in the justification of enslavement. In the Bilâd as-Sûdân, Ahmed Bâba influenced the debate over slavery by relying on interpretations of Islamic precedent, which was invoked to protect freeborn individuals from enslavement. By extension, he impacted the transatlantic slave trade on the basis of religious identification with Islam and the desire to avoid the sale of slaves to non-Muslims, especially Christian Europeans on the coast of West Africa.