Ahle Bayt Repo

عربي

Abdullah ibne Omar

Hadith No: 1
1- Uffan ibn Muslim ibn Abdullah al-Saffar al-Basri: (From the men of Bukhari and Muslim)
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani - Taqrib al-Tahdhib - Letter 'Ayn - Mention of those named Ubaydah with a vowel opening the first letter
Volume: (1) - Page Number: (393)

4625 - Uffan ibn Muslim ibn Abdullah al-Bahili, Abu Uthman al-Saffar al-Basri, a trustworthy and established narrator. Ibn Madini said: He would leave out a word if he was unsure about a letter in the hadith, and he might sometimes make a mistake. Ibn Ma'in said: We found him to be mistaken in Safar in the year nineteen, and he died shortly thereafter, one of the elders of the tenth generation.

Reference: Taqreeb al Tahzeeb Book 1
Hadith No: 2
2 - Abd al-Wahid ibn Ziyad al-Abdi: (Among the men of al-Bukhari and Muslim)
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani - Taqrib al-Tahdhib - Letter 'Ayn - Mention of those named Abd al-Rahim and those after them
Volume: (1) - Page Number: (367)

4240 - Abd al-Wahid ibn Ziyad al-Abdi, their mawla, al-Basri, is trustworthy in his narration from al-A'mash alone. There is some criticism regarding him from the eighth level. He died in the year seventy-six, and it is said that he died later.

Reference: Taqreeb al Tahzeeb Book 1
Hadith No: 3
3- Ma'mar ibn Rashid al-Azdi al-Hadani: (Among the men of al-Bukhari and Muslim)
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani - Taqrib al-Tahdhib - Letter Meem - Mention of the Rest of the Letter Meem in Order
Volume: (1) - Page Number: (541)
6809 - Ma'mar ibn Rashid al-Azdi, their mawla, Abu Urwah al-Basri, a resident of Yemen, was trustworthy, reliable, and an excellent scholar, although there was something in his narration from Thabit, al-A'mash, Asim ibn Abi Najud, and Hisham ibn Urwah, as well as in what he reported in Basra, regarding the elders of the seventh generation. He died in the year 54 at the age of fifty-eight.

Reference: Taqreeb al Tahzeeb Book 1
Hadith No: 4
4- Al-Zuhri: (One of the men of al-Bukhari and Muslim)
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani - Taqrib al-Tahdhib - Letter M - Mentioning those named Muhammad
Volume: (1) - Page Number: (506)

6296 - Muhammad ibn Muslim ibn Ubaydullah ibn Abdullah ibn Shihab ibn Abdullah ibn al-Harith ibn Zuhrah ibn Kulab al-Qurashi al-Zuhri, Abu Bakr, the jurist and hafiz, is unanimously agreed upon for his greatness and mastery, and he is one of the heads of the fourth generation. He died in the year twenty-five, and it is said he died a year or two before that.

Reference: Taqreeb al Tahzeeb Book 1
Hadith No: 5
5- Al-Sa'ib ibn Yazid: (Among the Men of Bukhari and Muslim)
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani - Al-Isabah fi Tamyiz al-Sahabah - Chapter on the Unmarked Seen
The Seen is followed by an Aleph - Mention of Those Named Al-Sa'ib - 3084: Al-Sa'ib ibn Yazid ibn Said
Volume: (3) - Page Number: (22/23)
[The text is lengthy, so only the relevant excerpt is provided here]

3084 - Al-Sa'ib ibn Yazid ibn Said ibn Thumamah, also known as Al-'Aidh ibn al-Aswad al-Kindi or al-Azdiy. It is said that he was a Kindi and then a Layihti, and others say he was Hudhali. He is commonly known as the son of the sister of al-Namir, and al-Namir was the maternal uncle of his father, Yazid. Al-Namir ibn Jabal. Those who said he was the son of al-Namir ibn Qasit were mistaken, and something regarding this will appear in the biography of Yazid. Al-Zuhri said: "He is an Azdi allied with Banu Kinanah." He and his father had companionship (with the Prophet).

Reference: Al-Isaabah Fi Tamyeez al-Sahaabah Book 3
Hadith No: 6
Ibn Abd Rabboh - Al-Aqdat al-Farid
Book of the Second Uniqueness on Food and Drink - On Those Who Were Disciplined by the Nobles in Wine and Made Notorious for It
Volume: (8) - Page Number: (62)
[The text is lengthy, so only the relevant excerpt is provided here]
- .... Among them was: Abdullah ibn Umar ibn al-Khattab, who drank in Egypt, and Amr ibn al-As discreetly disciplined him there. However, when he came to Umar, he was publicly lashed again.

Reference: Al-ʿIqd al-Farīd Book 8
Hadith No: 7
Ibn Hazm - al-Muhalla bil-Athar - Book on Drinks and What is Permissible and Impermissible from Them - Issue on What Induces Intoxication in Large Quantities
Volume: (6) - Page Number: (191)
[The text is lengthy, so only the relevant excerpt is provided here]
- .... They said: "Here is Abdullah, who distinguished between wine and other intoxicating drinks, not considering them all as wine." And this is his brother Abdur-Rahman - who had companionship with the Prophet - and Abu Sarwah - who also had companionship - and Amr ibn al-As, who saw the prescribed punishment for intoxication from a drink they both consumed.

Reference: Al-Mahalli bi al-Aathaar Book 6