Biography:Ammar al-Basri
From HandWiki
Ammar al-Basri (Arabic: عمار البصري, ʿAmmār al-Baṣrī) was a 9th-century East Syriac theologian and apologist. Ammar's work is considered the first systematic Christian theology in Arabic.[1] Not much is known about his life except that he was a native of Basra.
Works
Several books two of them survived:
- The book of proof (كتاب البرهان، Kitāb al-burhān), which deals with the incarnation in a popular albeit creative and vigorous language.[2]
- The book of questions and answers (كتاب المسائل والأجوبة, Kitāb al-masāʾiI wa-l-ajwiba), is more systematic and in treats in four sections questions regarding the existence of God, the Incarnation, the four Gospels and other topics.[3]
See also
- Abu Raita al-Takriti
- Theodore Abu-Qurrah
Notes
- ↑ Thomas 2003, pp. 55
- ↑ Thomas 2003, pp. 61
- ↑ Thomas 2003, pp. 56
References
- Thomas, David (2003). Christians at the heart of Islamic rule: church life and scholarship in ʻAbbasid Iraq. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-12938-2. https://books.google.com/books?id=59XYAAAAMAAJ. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammar al-Basri.
Read more |