Sa'id ben Hasan of Alexandria

Sa'id ben Hasan of Alexandria (Arabic: سعيد بن حسن الاسكندراني, romanized: Saʿīd bin Ḥasan al-Iskandarī; fl.

Sa'id ben Hasan authored an apologetic tract titled Kitāb Masālik al-Naẓar, composed in Damascus in April 1320.

Sa'id accuses the Jews of corrupting the Biblical text and substituting other names for those of Muhammad and Ishmael.

According to his narrative, while on his deathbed, he had a dream in which a heavenly voice instructed him to recite the surah Al-Fatiha in order to escape death.

[3] Sa'id envisioned Islam as the supreme and only religion, and advocated for extreme measures against other beliefs, including the closure of non-Islamic houses of worship.