115:(infidel) judicious ruler?" None gave a response to this question but Ibn Tawus who said: "A Kâfir judicious is better." And the other scholars followed him in this reply. A reply that saved the life of many people in the city. Afterwards Hulagu Khan let Ibn Tawus to return to Hilla. However, Hulagu Khan gave the leadership of
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and was named Tawus (peacock). One of his forefathers was a handsome man with ugly legs so his progeny too inherited the title from him. During his first 14 years of his life he was brought up and taught under many teachers including his father and grandfather. Later on he married Zahra
Khatoon the
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Al-Muhimmat wa al-tatimmat in 10 volumes, and each volume has been published by an independent subject; such as, Falah al-sa'il, Zuhrat al-rabi' , Jamal al-usbu', Iqbal al-a'mal. Ibn Tawus has written this book as a complementary to Misbah al-mutahajjid written by al-Shaykh
83:, however he refused to be involved in any political affairs. There is not exact information about his family and number of his children. His children were known by the name of their mother. It is said that he had returned to Hilla in 641 and had gone to
50:, who according to Shiites is living in occultation. He is known for his library and his numerous works which are still available in their original form and help us learn about the interests of
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Ibn Tawus inherited a big library and he himself wrote numerous books on different topics from theology and ethics to jurisprudence and astronomy some of which have been translated into
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and he was given Isme Âzam, but was not permitted to teach it to his children. He was buried in Hilla, Iraq, where his tomb remains a visitation site for Shia followers.
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because he thought such "knowledge about the original sources of religion was the actual understanding of religion". some of his works can be listed as follows:
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Ibn Tawus died in
Baghdad on 8 August 1266 and seemingly was buried in the same city. Ibn Tawus had direct contact with
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which is in ethic and encompasses his wills to his children and also different level of his life, in his own words.
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443:
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Medieval Muslim
Scholar at Work: Ibn Tawus and His Library (Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science)
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is among his works which relates the tragic events of
Karbala and is translated into English.
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433:
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351:. Translated by Husain Risvi. Teharn: Naba Cultural Organization. pp. 11–12, 199–204.
8:
301:
Encyclopaedia of the
History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures
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in 652 and on reaching
Baghdad he stayed there until Mongols captured the city.
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79:. Ibn Tawus apparently had good relations with the Caliphs of his time like
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al-Duru' al-waqiyya min al-akhtar fima ya'mal kull shahr 'ala al-tikrar
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jurist, theologian, historian and astrologer. He was a descendant of
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through his mother. It is said that he met the twelfth Shiite imam,
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Sayyed Radhi ud-Deen Ali ibn Musa ibn Tawus al Hasani wal
Husaini
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daughter of the Shia Vazir of Nâsir bin Zaidi and settled in
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advised him to save his life by accepting it and he did so.
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al-Yaqin bi-ikhtisas mawlana 'Ali (a) bi-Imrat al-mu'minin
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Fath al-abwab bayn dhawa l-albab wa bayn rabb al-arbab
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16:Shia jurist, theologian and historian (1193–1266)
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123:to him which Ibn Tawus was reluctant to accept.
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181:Jamal al-usbu' fi bi-kamal al-'amal al-mashru'
397:Davani, Ali (2012). "Razi al-Din Ibn Tawus".
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239:Ilzam al-nawasib bi-imamat 'Ali b. Abi Talib
303:. Springer, Dordrecht. pp. 1121–1122.
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220:Faraj al-mahmun fi tarikh 'ulama' al-nujum
424:Astrologers of the medieval Islamic world
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251:al-Ibana fi ma'rifat al-kutub al-khazana
190:al-Tara'if fi ma'rifat mazhab al-tawa'if
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266:Al-Masra' al-shin fi qatl al-Husain (a)
217:Qiath sultan al-wara li sukkan al-thara
42:through his father and a descendant of
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419:13th-century Muslim scholars of Islam
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260:Farhat al-nazir wa bahjat al-khawatir
211:Muhaj al-da'awat wa manhaj al-'ibadat
371:. Brill Academic Pub. pp. 1–4.
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299:Matar, Zeina (2008). "Ibn Ṭāwūs".
178:Aman al-akhtar fi wazayif al-asfar
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248:Turaf min al-anba' wa al-manaqib
263:A commentary on Nahj al-balagha
22:(1193-1266 AD) commonly called
309:10.1007/978-1-4020-4425-0_9244
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193:al-Mujtana fi du'a' al-mujtaba
1:
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208:al-Luhuf 'ala qatlay al-tufuf
166:Al-Muhajjal Samaratal Muhajja
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54:scholars at the end of the
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429:Burials at Imam Ali Mosque
245:Muntakhabat asrar al-salat
175:al-Iqbal li salih al-a'mal
119:and then some cities like
99:Under the reign of Mongols
187:Sa'd al-nufus li al-su'ud
70:589 (21 January 1193) in
66:Ibn Tawus was born on 15
454:13th-century Arab people
349:Lohoof (Sighs of Sorrow)
347:Seyed Ibn Tâwûs (2006).
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160:Lohoof (Sighs of Sorrow)
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367:Kohlberg, Etan (1992).
205:al-Malahim wa al-fitan
257:Al-Sa'adat al-'ibadat
62:Birth and family life
125:Nasir al-Din al-Tusi
87:in 645 and then to
449:Iraqi Shia Muslims
318:978-1-4020-4559-2
280:Muhammad al-Mahdi
199:Misbah al-shari'a
196:Muhasibat al-nafs
48:Muhammad al-Mahdi
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24:Sayyed Ibn Tawus
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40:Hasan ibn Ali
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401:(24): 51–56.
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32:سید بن طاووس
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439:1266 deaths
434:1193 births
153:Ahl al-Bayt
105:Hulagu Khan
413:Categories
286:References
107:conquered
81:Muntansir
269:Al-Mazar
242:Al-Hujja
172:al-Tusi.
151:and the
149:Muhammad
117:Alawites
68:Muharram
34:) was a
145:English
137:Persian
121:Baghdad
109:Baghdad
93:Samarra
89:Karbala
77:Baghdad
56:Abbasid
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52:Muslim
36:Shiite
28:Arabic
274:Death
131:Works
113:Kafir
103:When
85:Najaf
72:Hilla
58:era.
373:ISBN
313:ISBN
143:and
141:Urdu
305:doi
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26:(
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