Hamdun ibn al Hajj (Arabic: حمدون بن الحاج المرداسي) or in full Abu al-Fayd Hamdun ibn Abd al-Rahman ibn Hamdun ibn Abd al-Rahman Mohammed ibn al-Hajj al-Fasi al-Sulami al-Mirdasi (1760–1817) was one of the most outstanding scholars of the reign of moulay Soulayman of Morocco.[1] He was a committed TijaniSufi[2] but also an outspoken critic of some of the practices of Sufism in that time. Hamdun ibn al Hajj was also one of the best known poets of the period and author of a diwan (Silsilat Dhakhair al-turath al-adabi bi-al-Maghrib).[3] He also wrote a commentary on Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani's Muqaddimah, a gloss on Taftazani's treatise on the Mukhtasar and a series of Diwans including a controversial poem dedicated to Amir Sau'ud b. 'Abd al-'Aziz.[4]
References
^E. J. van Donzel, Islamic desk reference, Brill, 1994 p. 149
^Scholar on the Desert Edge: Muhammad b. Ali al-Sanusi, p. 66
^al-Diwan_al-amm_li-Hamdun_ibn_al-Hajj_al-Salami Silsilat_Dhakhair_al-turath_al-adabi_bi-al-Maghrib[1] (retrieved August 8, 2010)