Ahmad ibn Mohammed ibn Nasir al-Salawi (
Arabic: أحمد بن محمد بن ناصر السلاوي; 1791 in
Sale – 1840 in
Sudan) was a Maliki scholar,
Sufi teacher and writer, who played an important role in
Sudan during the reign of the colonial Turkish-Egyptian administration.[1] Al-Salawi was closely connected with Sudanese scholars like Ahmad ibn Isa al-Ansari, Ahmad al-Tayyib w. al-Bashir (whose daughter he married) and Ismail ibn Abd Allah al-Wali.[2]
Risala (Untitled and undated. A brief work in commendation of Ismaıl b. Abd Allah al-Walı and his tarıqa.) MS: National Records Office, Khartoum, Misc., Ismaıliyya 2, 292–300.
Sharh ala aqıdat al-Risala fı 'l-basmala wa'l-hamdala
Sharh ala 'l-Arba'ın al-Nawawiyya
Sharh ala 'l-Ibtihaj bi'l-kalam [or fı 'l-kalam] ala 'l-isra wa'l-mi raj, MS: al-Maktaba al-baladiyya, Alexandria, majmüfia alif, 139.
Tazım al-ittifaq fı ayat al-mıthaq
References
^R.S. O'Fahey, A Colonial Servant: Al-Salawi and The Sudan[1]Archived 2005-04-07 at the
Wayback Machine (retrieved on January 27, 2010)
^John O. Hunwick, R. S. O'Fahey, The writings of Eastern Sudanic Africa to c. 1900, Part 1, Volume 13, BRILL, 1994, p.58