Ibn al-Dubaythi
Jamāl al-Dīn Abū ʿAbdallāh Muḥammad b. Saʿīd b. Yaḥyā b. ʿAlī b. al-Ḥajjāj al-Wāsiṭī, commonly known as Ibn al-Dubaythī, was an Iraqi muhaddith, historian and an expert in ilm al-rijal who composed, among other major works. He was one of the major historians of the late Abbasid era, and considered one of the best scholars of his time in hadith and its sciences.
Biography
He was born in Wasit on Monday, 26 Radjab 558/Sunday, 30 June 1163. His early education took place in his hometown Wasit where he studied the Qu'ran, hadith, and literature. He then migrated and settled into Baghdad and narrated hadiths from hundreds of sheikhs. It was there he studied Shafi'i jurisprudence, hadith sciences, Qur'anic recitations, adab, Arabic sciences and other religious sciences under on a number of scholars in Baghdad, and he wanted to increase his attainment and seek knowledge, so he left and performed Hajj in the year in 579/1183–4, and he consulted and sought knowledge from the scholars of hejaz, and travelled to Egypt to gain more knowledge. He died in Baghdad on Monday, 8 Rabi II 637/7 November 1239.Works
Continuation of the History of Baghdad
This manuscript is meant to be the continuity or a dhayl of the lost work of Ibn al-Sam'ani who himself had continued the work of Al-Baghdadi author of Ta'rikh Baghdad. Ibn al-Dubaythi's job was to add the names of the dead preceptors after Al-Sam'ani. He listed the Baghdadis among them were the caliphs and the rulers of their covenants, ministers, lords of states, jurists, captains, judges, justices, preachers, jurists, hadith narrators, readers, people of virtue and literature, poets, Sufis, doctors, pharmacists, and others, and some of the characters quoted in Ibn Al-Dubaythi's work were preceptors whom he knew personally and wrote about his scholarly life, studies, travels, elders, and part of his relationships.On his death in 1239 it was his famous pupil Ibn-al-Najjār who continued his work and expanded on it entitled "A Extract from the continuation of the Ta'rikh Baghdad".