The term "wahabbi" comes from a scholar of Islam named "Muhammad bin Abd al-Wahhaab". The condition of the Muslims in his time was a dire one and is described by historians and by both Imaam al-Shawkani (d. 1834CE) and Imaam al-San'aanee (d. 1769CE) (both contemporaries) as one in which the people had turned to worshipping graves, stones, trees
Major figures in the definition of the salafi perspective and approach are Ahmad ibn Hanbal (d. 855), the founder of the Hanbali school, and Ahmad ibn Taymiyya (1263-1328). The fundamental concern of modern Salafiyya, who recognize that Muslim power and influence is in decline relative to the West, is the relationship between Islam and modernity.
For this we must assume that salafi's themselves are in consensus of the meaning of the term we maybe than could give a proof most salafi's are more or less following the hanbali school of fiqh, but the major difference between them and the other four schools is not a fiqh (jursiprudence) rather than a 'aqidah (interpretation of the belief
Wahhabiya, sometimes called the Salafi school, is an early modern, 18th century offshoot of the Hanbali madh'hab. Although defeated and deprived of influence in 1818, new life was breathed into the Wahhabi movement in the early 20th century by the ascendancy to power in the Arabian peninsula on the part of the Sa'udi dynasty.
.
difference between hanbali and salafi