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Intro | 11th century hadith scholar | |
Places | Turkmenistan | |
Muhaddith Scholar | ||
Work field | Religion | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 975, Merv, Mary Region, Turkmenistan | |
Death | 1070 |
Biography
Karima bint Ahmad bin Muhammad bin Hatim al-Marwaziyya (969-1069) was an 11th-century scholar of hadith.
Biography
Karima was born in the village of Kushmihan near Merv. She later settled in Mecca.
Karima was an authority on Sahih al-Bukhari. She taught the text of al-Bukhari to students and her scholarship and teaching was widely respected. She was known as the "musnida of the sacred precinct." Thirty-nine men and one woman transmitted material on her authority. Karima was known for her prestigious isnad. Her teaching and scholarship was praised by Abu Dharr of Herat.
Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi and Abu al-Ghana’im al-Nursi narrated from her.
By the end of her life, she was renowned as a teacher and scholar. She was a Hanafi. Karima never married and was celibate and ascetic. Louis Massingon connected her to the women's futuwwa movement founded by Khadija al-Jahniyya. This was the female equivalent of the male futuwwa societies that advocated chivalry, morality, and worship.