Nashwan bint al-Gamal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Died19 Rajab 800 AH
Resting placeHowsh al-Hanabila (Hanbali cemeteries)
PartnerAmin al-Din bin Yahya
Nashwan bint al-Gamal al-Kinania al-Asqalani al-Masria al-Hanbalia
نشوان بنت الجمال الكنانية العسقلانية المصرية الحنبلية
Personal life
Died19 Rajab 800 AH
Resting placeHowsh al-Hanabila (Hanbali cemeteries)
PartnerAmin al-Din bin Yahya
CitizenshipEgyptian Mamluk Sultanate
EraMamluk era (Islamic Golden Age)
Occupationscholar of history, religion, and calligraphy and others
Religious life
ReligionIslam
SchoolHanbali
CreedSunni
Muslim leader
Influenced by
  • Abdullah bin Ali bin Mahammad al-Kinani al-Asqalani Gamal al-Din “The Soldier Ibn al-Alaa al-Hanbali”
Influenced
  • Muhammad bin Barakat bin Hassan bin Ajlan al-Hassani Jamal al-Din, Kamal al-Din al-Jaafari al-Nabulsi, Al-Suyuti

Nashwan bint al-Gamal (Arabic: نشوان بنت الجمال), also called Sawda (سودة) (d. Tuesday night, 19th of Rajab in 800 AH), but this name was abandoned so she became known only by the first. She was the daughter of al-Gamal Abdullah bin al-Alaa Ali bin Mahammad bin Ali bin Abdullah bin Abi al-Fath al-Kinani, al-Asqalani, al-Qahiri, al-Hanbali. She is remembered as one of the greatest Egyptian scholars in the era of the Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate. She was a scholar of history, religion, and calligraphy, and knowledgeable of all other sciences.[1][2]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI