Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Primary Hadith Collection (Primary Hadith books are those books which are collected, compiled and written by author or their students themselves). The Book of Sulaym ibn Qays by Sulaym ibn Qays; Kitab ul Momin by Hussain bin Saeed Ahwazi; Al-Mahasin by Ahmad b. Muhammad al-Barqi; Qurb al-isnad by Abd Allah b. Ja'far al-Himyari; Al-Amali of ...
A 14/15th-century manuscript of Sahih al-Bukhari. Hadith [b] refers to the Islamic oral anecdotes containing the purported words, actions, and the silent approvals of the prophet Muhammad that survive in the historical works of writers from the second and third centuries of the Muslim era (c. 700−1000 CE).
Hammad bin Zayd bin Dirham (Arabic: حماد بن زيد بن درهم (716–795)) was an Islamic scholar and jurisprudent from Basrah, Iraq. He was a blind, hujjah (proofed) and an able hadith narrator who memorized all his hadiths well. Hamad used tadlis (concealment). [1]
He then defines a hadith that is ṣaḥīḥ lighairihi ("ṣaḥīḥ due to external factors") as a hadith "with something, such as numerous chains of narration, strengthening it." [3] [full citation needed] In the Sunni branch of Islam, the canonical hadith collections are the six books (Kutub al-Sittah) listed below.
The scholars of the science of hadith criticism hold that a khabar and, therefore, a hadith can be a true report or a concoction. It is on the basis of this premise that the Muslim scholars hold that a hadith offers a ẓannī (inconclusive/probably true) evidence. It is as though a hadith may have many possibilities on the plane of reliability ...
Hadith studies is the academic study of hadith, a literature typically thought in Islamic religion to be a record of the words, actions, and the silent approval of the Muhammad as transmitted through chains of narrators.
A number of Islamic scholars have sought to produce additional collections to supplement the six canonical hadith collections with additional useful and/or sound hadith. Many hadith in larger and important works, for example the Musnad of Ahmad ibn Hanbal , are not found in the six (along with works of Tabarani, Abu Ya'la, and Bazzar).
Sahih al-Bukhari (Arabic: صحيح البخاري, romanized: Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī) is the first hadith collection of the Six Books of Sunni Islam. Compiled by Islamic scholar al-Bukhari (d. 870) in the musannaf format, the work is valued by Muslims, alongside Sahih Muslim, as the most authentic after the Qur'an.