Karima al-Marwaziyya

11th century hadith scholar
The basics

Quick Facts

Intro11th century hadith scholar
PlacesTurkmenistan
Muhaddith Scholar
Work fieldReligion
Gender
Female
Birth975, Merv, Mary Region, Turkmenistan
Death1070
The details

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.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 20 Apr 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.