أبو عبد الله محمد بن إدريس بن العباس الشافعي القرشي
Imam Muhammad ibn Idris ash-Shafi'i (767-820 CE) founded the Shafi'i school of jurisprudence and authored Ar-Risalah, the first systematic treatise on usul al-fiqh (principles of Islamic jurisprudence). He synthesized the methodologies of the Iraqi and Madinan schools, creating a balanced approach that is widely followed in East Africa, Southeast Asia, Yemen, and Egypt.
Muhammad ibn Idris ash-Shafi'i was born in Gaza, Palestine, in 767 CE (150 AH) — the same year Imam Abu Hanifa died. Orphaned young, he was raised in মক্কা মুকাররমা by his mother under difficult financial circumstances. Despite poverty, he displayed extraordinary intellectual gifts, memorizing আল-কুরআন by age seven and Imam Malik's Al-Muwatta by age ten. He traveled to মদীনা মুনাওয়ারা to study directly under Imam Malik, becoming one of his most distinguished students.
Ash-Shafi'i's unique intellectual position was shaped by his training in two distinct legal traditions. Having studied under Imam Malik in মদীনা মুনাওয়ারা, he absorbed the hadith-focused methodology of the Madinan school. He then traveled to Iraq, where he studied the works and methodology of Imam Abu Hanifa's students, immersing himself in the reason-based approach of the Iraqi school. This dual education enabled him to synthesize both approaches into a new, more systematic methodology that addressed the strengths and limitations of each.
His greatest intellectual achievement was Ar-Risalah (The Treatise), the first systematic work on usul al-fiqh — the principles and methodology of Islamic jurisprudence. Before ash-Shafi'i, scholars derived law from আল-কুরআন and Sunnah through individual expertise and tradition, but no one had articulated the underlying methodology as a formal discipline. Ar-Risalah established the hierarchy of legal sources (কুরআন, Sunnah, consensus, analogical reasoning), defined the rules for interpreting texts, and created a framework that all subsequent legal theory built upon. He died in Egypt in 820 CE (204 AH) and is buried in Cairo, where his shrine remains a site of reverence.
Ar-Risalah (The Treatise) — the foundational work of Islamic legal theory (usul al-fiqh), establishing the methodology of deriving law from sacred texts
Kitab al-Umm (The Mother Book) — his comprehensive compilation of Islamic jurisprudence across all areas of law
Ikhtilaf al-Hadith (The Divergence of Hadith) — on reconciling apparently contradictory prophetic narrations
Ahkam al-কুরআন (Legal Rulings of আল-কুরআন) — on deriving legal rulings from কুরআনic verses
Jima' al-Ilm (The Collection of Knowledge) — on the authority of hadith and the obligation to follow it