Ibn al-Haj studied under many scholars of high standing in various cities and provinces, including
Tunis,
Al-Qairawan,
Alexandria,
Cairo, in addition to
Madinah and
Makkah. Ibn al-Haj al-Abdari wrote
Madkhal Ash-Shara Ash-Shareef Ala Al-Mathahib (
Introduction to Islamic Jurisprudence According to Schools of Thought). The book was published in 4 volumes of over 300 large pages each. It treats many different subjects. In the first volume the author includes 22 chapters, each addressing one question where practice is at variance with Islamic teachings. He scrutinizes the practice and points out the proper way to follow. Thus we have chapters on intention, pursuing knowledge, prayer, the position of a mosque as a place of education, offering prayers at home, the behavior of scholars during scholarly debate, etc. The second volume has 62 chapters with a similar number of questions, including the Prophet's birthday, the position of Madinah, the manners to be followed by students, women's behavior, etc. The whole book is written in this way, without any particular thread for the arrangement of its chapters and questions. It is not a book on Fiqh in the usual sense, nor is it a book of education and its methods, or a book of Hadith or Qur'anic commentary, but it includes something of all these disciplines. His views are very much influenced by
al-Ghazali's
Ihya’ ‘Ulum al-Din. He spent much of his life in
Tunis and
Egypt and, for some time, taught at the university of
Fes,
Al-Qarawiyyin. He was buried in
Qarafa (Egypt). He is not to be confused with
Mohammed al-Abdari al-Hihi (full name :Abu Abdallah Mohammed ibn Mohammed ibn Ali ibn Ahmed ibn Masoud ibn Hajj al-Abdari al-Hihi, fl. ca. 1289) who wrote accounts of his travels. That writer is the author of
The Moroccan Journey (
Al-Rihlah al-Magribiyyah), an account of his journey to Mecca in 1289. ==References==