Zurarah ibn A'yan
Zurarah ibn A'yan (about 690-768 AD) (Arabic: زُرارة بن أعیُن) was one of the famous and close companions of Imam Baqir.[1] He was Muhaddith and Islamic scholar with had great knowledge in religion,[2] and was also one of the Consensus companions of whom Shia scholars accept every hadith which has been narrated by them unquestioningly.[3] Muhaddith Qumi in his book Tuhfah Al ahbab said about him that "his excellence and status are too great to mention here".[4]
The origin of his family
His real name was Abde Rabbi (Arabic: عبدربه), and he was titled Abi Zurarah or Abul Hassan. He was the son of noble family; his father was a Roman slave released in Islam and his grandfather was a monk.[5]
Authencity of Zurarah
Zararah ibn Ayan Sheibani,who more than 2000 hadiths narrated, was one of the chief companions of Imam Baqir and Imam Al-Sadiq. He was so respected and trustworthy that said: 'If it were not for zurarah,I would have said that the saying of my father will vanish soon'.[6]
Death
The exact year of the death of zurarah is not clear .but he must have died between 148-150 HQ in the Kufa.[1]
References
- 1 2 Sabzvārī, Muḥammad ʻAlī. Tuḥfah Yi-ʻAbbāsī: The Golden Chain of Sufism in Shīʻite (2008 ed.). University Press of America. p. 68.
- ↑ Sachedina (1998), p.157
- ↑ Walbridge (2001), p.190
- ↑ muhadith qumi. "tuhfat al ahbab". lib.ahlolbait.com. موسسه اهل بیت علیهم السلام.
- ↑ al- Nadim, muhammad ibn ishagh (1346). translation of The Fihrist of al- Nadim. tehran: چاپخانه بانک بازرگاني ايران. pp. 403–404.
- ↑ اختيار معرفة الرجال، ج1، ص345.، تاریخ بازیابی: 2 دی ماه 1391.