Al-Ba'uni
Al-Bā'ūnī is an Arabic family name most famously denoting the prominent dynasty of scholars and jurists descending from Nāṣir b. Khalīfa b. Faradj al-Nāṣirī al-Bā'unī al-Shāfi'ī, who began life as a weaver in the village of Bā'ūn in Hauran. Leaving around 750/1349 for Nazareth, Nāṣir had the following prominent descendants before the dynasty disappears from the historical record:
- Nāṣir
- * Ismā'īl
- * Aḥmad. He 'was at various times the Friday preacher at the al-Aqṣá Mosque in Jerusalem, the Friday preacher at the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, the Shafi‘i judge of Damascus and, for two months, of Egypt, as well'. Aḥmad became shaykh al-shuyūkh under Sultan Barqūq, 'but he fell from royal grace for refusing to lend the sultan funds from religious endowments. Aḥmad wrote a commentary on the Quran and a poem on proper religious belief, and was considered an excellent preacher'.
- ** Ibrāhīm. 'His fine literary abilities won him the title "Master of Literature in the Land of Syria".'
- ** Muḥammad
- ** Yūsuf Yusuf had at least five sons. His most prominent children were:
- *** 'A'isha
- *** Aḥmad
- *** Muḥammad