Jump to content

Mirza Husain Noori Tabarsi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Husain Noori Tabarsi)
Mirza Husain Noori Tabarsi Mazandarani
Mirza Noori Tabrasi
Born3 January 1839
Died29 September 1902 (aged 64)
Notable work
  • Mustadrak al-Wasāʼil
  • An-Najm Al-Thāqib
  • Salman The Persian
  • LoʼLoʼ va Marjān
TitleAllameh Nouri , Khatamalmohaddesin , Muhaddis Noori
Parent(s)Mohammad Taqi Noori دورهٔ نوزایی , عصر نوزایی , دورهٔ نوزایش شیعه اسلامی

Mirza Husain Noori Tabarsi (Persian: میرزا حسین نوری طبرسی, Arabic: الميرزا حسين النوري الطبرسي) (3 January 1839 – 29 September 1902) popularly known as Muhaddis Noori or Al-Mohaddith Al-Noori, was a Shi'a Islamic Scholar and Shi'a Renaissance.[1]

He came from the town of Noor, Northern Iran in province Tabarestan and was a descendant of the Paduspanids, Spahbed of East dynasty. Mirza Husain Nouri died at the age of 66 years in Najaf and was laid to rest on the right side of the entrance to the Mausoleum of Imam Ali.

Life

[edit]

Noori was born on 18 Shawwal 1254 AH (3 January 1839[a]) at the northern Iranian city of Noor in Mazandaran. Following the completion of his preliminary studies, he strove to scrutinize the vast hadith literature and became an authority in this regard.

Education

[edit]

Noori studied in Iraq under Morteza Ansari and Mirza Mohammed Hassan Husseini Shirazi.

Noori's masters were:

  • Clergyman Mola Fatholah Soltan Abadi
  • Molla Shekh Ali Khalili, the jurisprudent
  • Mo’ez aldin Seyed Mehdi Ghazvini
  • Mirza Mohammad Hashem Khansari
  • Ayatollah Haj Molla Kani

Some of his works

[edit]

Noori was an authority on Islamic sciences, including hadith, exegesis of the Holy Qur'an, theology, and biography of ulema. He had numerous students, including Shaikh Abbas Qomi, the author of the famous prayer and supplication manual "Mafatih al-Jinaan" (Keys of Paradise). He wrote numerous works in both Persian and Arabic, many of them were translated to other languages including English and Urdu. His works include:

  • Mustadrak al-Wasāʼil wa-mustanbaṭ al-masāʼil. One of the Shia Hadith-collection books comprising approximately 18 volumes.[2]
  • Mustadrak Al-Vasayel and Mustanbetu Al-Ahkam (1320 AH). This book included many hadiths which dropped from the Vasayel Al-shia.[clarification needed][3][4]
  • Mustanbetu Al-Ahkam by Mirza Hossein Noori
  • An-Najm Al-Thāqib fī Aḥwāl Al-Imām Al-Ḥujja Al-Ghāʼeb (translated to English as the Shooting star). A comprehensive book regarding the twelfth Imam of Twelver Shias,[5] written originally in Persian, and was translated lately to English, Arabic and Urdu.[6]
  • Kashf Al-Astār ʿAn Wajh Al-Ghāʼeb ʿAn Al-Abṣār. A refutation to Sunnis regarding the twelfth Imam too, written in Arabic.[7]
  • Jannat Al-Maʼwā fīman Fāz Biliqāʼ Al-Ḥujja fī Al-Ghayba Al-Kubrā. A collection of tales of those who claim to have met the twelfth Imam during the Major Occultation period, and it was written in Arabic.[8]
  • Nafas Ar-Raḥmān fī Faḍāʼil Salmān. A biography of Salman the Persian.[9]
  • Al-Fayḍ Al-Qudsī fī tarjamat al-ʿAllāmah al-Majlisī. A comprehensive biography of the 17th century renowned cleric Muhammad Baqir Majlisi, and it was printed with Biḥār al-Anwār, and lately printed again separately.[10]
  • Faṣl al-khiṭāb fī ithbāt taḥrīf kitāb Rabb al-arbāb. (Shīʻah > Shīʻah Doctrines, Published 1881, al-Nūrī al-Ṭabarsī, HathiTrust Digital Library.) Title translated as: "The Final Verdict Proving the Corruption of the Book of the Lord of the Lord's". A book proving the Qur'an is corrupted according to Shi'ah thought.
  • Min Behar Al Anwar Maa Takmila (Digital Library of India Item 2015.324119).
  • Dār As-Salām fīmā Yataʿallaq Bi Ar-Ruʼyā wal Manām. A treatise on dreams interpretation.
  • Jannat al-Maʼwá : fī dhikr man fāza bi-liqāʼ al-ḥujjah, 3 editions published in 1992 in Arabic
  • The shooting star : English translation of An-Najmus saaqib fee ahwaal-e-Imaamul ghaaeb : an account of the concealment of Imam Mahdi (a.s.), the twelfth Imam of the twelver Shia Muslims (1 edition published in 2009 in English)
  • Najm al-s̲āqib : mushtamil bar, aḥvāl-i Imām-i Ghāʼib (4 editions published between 1989 and 1996 in Persian)[11]
  • al-Ṣaḥīfah al-ʻAlawīyah al-mubārakah al-thānīyah : min adʻīyat al-Imām ʻAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib
  • Kashf al-astār ʻan wajh al-ghāʼib ʻan al-abṣār (5 editions published between 1992 and 2011 in Arabic and Persian)
  • Kitāb kalimah ṭayyibah (in Persian)
  • Risālah fī ādāb al-mujāwarah : mujāwarat mashāhid al-Aʼimmah
  • al-Najm al-thāqib fī aḥwāl al-Imām al-Ḥujjah al-Ghāʼib
  • Supplement to Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan al-Ḥurr al-ʻĀmilī's Wasāʼil al-Shīʻah ilá taḥṣīl masāʼil al-sharīʻah
  • Fayz̤-i qudsī : zindagīnāmah-i ʻAllāmh Muḥammad Bāqir Majlisī (2 editions published in 1995 in Persian)
  • Taḥiyat al-zāʼir wa-bulqhat al-mujāwir (2 editions published in 1909 in Persian)
  • Kalimah ṭayyibah (3 editions published between 1885 and 1924 in Persian)

Death

[edit]

Noori died in Najaf, aged 66, on 27 Jumada al-Thani 1320 AH (29 September 1902[a]). He was buried on the right side of the entrance to the Mausoleum of Imam Ali. [citation needed]

Allameh Mohaddes Nouri University

[edit]
The Main Campus of Allameh Mohaddes Nouri University, Noor, Iran

Allameh Mohaddes Nouri University or AMNU (Persian: دانشگاه علامه محدث نوری), formerly known as Institute of Higher Education, is a non-governmental and non-profit university which was founded in 1996 in the town of Noor, Iran through an official license from Iran's Ministry of Science, Research and Technology (MSRT) with the mission to advance knowledge, science and technology, and train competent and creative talents at undergraduate and graduate levels. It was named after Noori.[12]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Converted using hijiricalendars.com. English version: [1] Both accessed 25 July 2024.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ in Persian:دورهٔ نوزایی شیعه اسلامی , عصر نوزایی شیعه اسلامی , دورهٔ نوزایش شیعه اسلامی
  2. ^ Agha Bozorg Tehrani (1983). adh-Dharīʿa ilā tasānīf ash-Shīʿa - volume 21 (in Arabic) (Hardcover ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Adwaa’. p. 7.
  3. ^ Nouri Mirza Hussain, Al-Mustadrak(2009). Qom: Jamiul Ahadith, Markaze Tahqiqate Computrye Ulume Islami.
  4. ^ Mohammad Hassan Mozafari (February 2015). "The Primary Sources of Shia Jurisprudence". Moja Pari. 35 (3): 143–166.
  5. ^ Agha Bozorg Tehrani (1983). adh-Dharīʿa ilā tasānīf ash-Shīʿa - volume 24 (in Arabic) (Hardcover ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Adwaa’. p. 69.
  6. ^ Mirza Husain Noori Tabarsi. "The Shooting Star - English Translation of An-Najmus Saaqib Fee Ahwaal-e-Imaamul Ghaaeb" (PDF). Translated by Sayyid Athar Husain S. H. Rizvi. Mumbai, India: Ja’fari Propagation Centre. Retrieved 2024-07-25.
  7. ^ Agha Bozorg Tehrani (1983). adh-Dharīʿa ilā tasānīf ash-Shīʿa - volume 18 (in Arabic) (Hardcover ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Adwaa’. p. 11.
  8. ^ Agha Bozorg Tehrani (1983). adh-Dharīʿa ilā tasānīf ash-Shīʿa - volume 5 (in Arabic) (Hardcover ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Adwaa’. p. 159.
  9. ^ Agha Bozorg Tehran (1983). adh-Dharīʿa ilā tasānīf ash-Shīʿa - volume 24 (in Arabic) (Hardcover ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Adwaa’. p. 264.
  10. ^ Agha Bozorg Tehrani (1983). adh-Dharīʿa ilā tasānīf ash-Shīʿa - volume 16 (in Arabic) (Hardcover ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Adwaa’. p. 408.
  11. ^ Najam us Saqib (English Edition) Kindle Edition by Mirza Husain Noori Tabarsi (Autor), Syed Athar Husain SH Rizvi (Übersetzer)
  12. ^ "About the University". Allameh Mohaddes Nouri University Website. Retrieved 1 February 2015.