Person
Hadith narrator

Muhammad ibn ʽAbdullah ibn Numayr

محمد بن عبد الله بن نمير
728 CE – 814 CE (110 AH – 199 AH)(aged ~86) Born in Basra Died in Basra

Muhammad ibn ʽAbdullah ibn Numayr was a prominent 3rd generation hadith narrator from Basra, renowned for his reliability and precision in transmission. He narrated from many notable tabi'in and taught key Islamic scholars.

Muhammad ibn ʽAbdullah ibn Numayr belonged to the generation following the companions of the Prophet Muhammad, known as the Tabi'in. He lived during the early Islamic era, primarily in Basra, a major centre of Islamic learning. He was highly regarded for his trustworthy and accurate narration of hadiths, transmitting knowledge from prominent tabi'in. His role as a teacher influenced many subsequent scholars, contributing significantly to the preservation and dissemination of prophetic traditions. His narrations are frequently cited in major hadith collections, underscoring his importance in Islamic scholarship. Details about his birth and death years remain uncertain, but his scholarly activity places him in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AH. His contributions helped shape the hadith sciences during a formative period of Islamic history.

Significance

He is significant as a reliable transmitter of hadith and a key link between the tabi'in and later Islamic scholars.

Reputation in tradition

Praised in Sunni tradition for his reliability and precision as a hadith narrator.
Classical grade
thiqa
Generation
Tābiʿ al-Tābiʿīn
Narrations by collection
  • sahih bukhari: 0
Why they matter in hadith

His narrations are considered trustworthy and are frequently cited in major hadith collections.

Sources: Wikipedia and classical Islamic biographical literature compiled by automated researchers. Every page is being continuously refined — if something looks off, please check back in a few days.