Discerning who exactly is an adherent to the Ẓāhirī school of thought can be difficult. Harbi has claimed that most Muslim scholars who practiced independent reasoning and based their judgment only on the Qur'an and Sunnah, or Muslim prophetic tradition, were Ẓāhirīs. Additionally, historians would often refer to any individual who praised the Ẓāhirīs as being from them. Sufi
mystic Ibn Arabi has most often been referred to as a Ẓāhirī because of a commentary on one of Ibn Hazm's works, despite having stated twice that he isn't a follower of the Ẓāhirī school of thought. Similarly,
Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari would include Ẓāhirī opinions when comparing differing views of Sunni Muslims, yet he founded a distinct school of his own. The case of Muslim figures who have mixed between different schools have proven to be more problematic.
Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani, for example, referred to himself as a Ẓāhirī when pressed on the matter. When Ibn Hazm listed the most important leaders of the school, he listed known Ẓāhiralh bin Qasim, al-Balluti, Ibn al-Mughallis, al-Dibaji and Ruwaym, but then also mentioned
Abu Bakr al-Khallal, who despite his Ẓāhirī leanings is almost universally recognized as a Hanbalite.
Imam Bukhari Scott Lucas states "The most controversial aspect of al-Bukhari's legal principles is his disapproval of qiyas" and "A modern study of personal status laws in the Arab world by Jamal J. Nasir contains one sentence that explicitly mentions that the Ẓāhirīs and al-Bukhari rejected qiyas..." Lucas also points out that the legal methodology of Bukhari is very similar to that of Ibn Hazm.
Followers of the Ẓāhirī school •
Abd Allah al-Qaysi (died 885), responsible for spreading the school in Spain. • Abu l-'Abbās "Ibn Shirshīr" Al-Nāshī Al-Akbar (died 906 CE), prominent kalām theologian and teacher of Niftawayh. •
Muhammad bin Dawud al-Zahiri (died 909), son of the school's namesake. •
Ibn Abi Asim (died 909), early scholar of hadith. •
Ruwaym (died 915), spiritual pioneer from the second generation of Sufism. •
Niftawayh (died 935), student of the school's namesake and teacher of his son. •
Ibn al-Mughallis (died 936), credited with popularizing the school across the Muslim world. •
Al-Masudi (died 956), early Muslim historian and geographer. •
Mundhir bin Sa'īd al-Ballūṭī (died 966), early judge in Spain for the
Caliphate of Córdoba. •
Al-Qassab (died 970), Muslim warrior-scholar. •
Ibn Khafif (died 982), early mystic from the third generation of Sufism. •
Ibn Hazm (died 1064), Andalusian polymath, author of numerous
works. •
Al-Humaydī (died 1095), hadith scholar, historian and biographer in Spain and then Iraq. •
Ibn al-Qaisarani (died 1113), responsible for canonizing the
six hadith books of Sunni Islam. •
Ibn Tumart (died 1130), founder of the Almohad Empire •
Abd al-Mu'min (died 1163), first Almohad Caliph. •
Abu Yaqub Yusuf (died 1184), second Almohad Caliph, memorized
Sahih al-Bukhari and
Sahih Muslim. •
Ibn Maḍāʾ (died 1196), Andalusian judge and linguist, and an early champion of language education reform. •
Abu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur (died 1199), third Almohad Caliph, authored his own collection of hadith. •
Muhammad al-Nasir (died 1213), fourth Almohad Caliph. •
Idris I al-Ma'mun (died 1232), renegade who issued a challenge for the Almohad throne. •
Ibn Dihya al-Kalby (died 1235), hadith scholar from Spain and then Egypt. •
Abu al-Abbas al-Nabati (died 1239), Andalusian botanist, pharmacist and theologian. •
Abu Bakr Ibn Sayyid al-Nās (died 1261), Andalusian-Tunisian scholar of hadith. •
Fatḥ al-Din Ibn Sayyid al-Nās (died 1334), Andalusian-Egyptian biographer of Muhammad. •
Abu Hayyan Al Gharnati (died 1344), Andalusian linguist and Qur'anic exegete. •
Al-Maqrizi (died 1442), Egyptian historian, especially of the
Fatimid Caliphate.
Activist concerned with a modern revival •
Sa'id al-Afghani (died 1997), former Arabic language professor at
Damascus University, correspondent member of the Academy of the Arabic Language in Cairo and proponent of language education reform. •
Abu Turab al-Zahiri (died 2002), Indian-born Saudi Arabian linguist, jurist, theologian and journalist. •
Ihsan Abbas (died 2003), Palestinian scholar of Arabic and Islamic studies, widely considered to be at the forefront of both fields during the 20th century. •
Yahya al-Bahrumi (died 2017), American jihadist militant notable for his ideological and material support of the
Islamic State •
Abu Abd al-Rahman Ibn Aqil al-Zahiri (living), Saudi Arabian polymath and correspondent member of the Academy of the Arabic Language in Cairo. •
Muhammad Abu Khubza (died 2020), Moroccan polymath, authored the
library catalog for the
Bibliothèque générale et Archives. •
Abdul Aziz al-Harbi (living), professor of Qur'anic exegesis at Umm al-Qura University. ==References==