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Al-Mu'jam al-Kabir (Arabic: المُعجَم الْكَبِير, romanized: Al-Muʿjam al-Kabīr) is a hadith collection compiled by al-Tabarani. It is part of his hadith book series by name of Mu'ajim Al-Tabarani. The other two books of the series are al-Mu'jam al-Awsat & al-Mu'jam as-Saghir. [1] [2]
A Strange Object; Abilene Christian University Press; Abode Press; Absolute Love Publishing; Alabrava Press; Alamo Bay Press; Amaya Books; Anaphora Literary Press
Musnad al-Haytham bin Kalib al-Shashi (d. 335 AH) Al Mujam us Sahaba lil ibn Qanee (d. 351 AH) Sahih Ibn Hibban (d. 354 AH) Al-Fawadi (Al-Ghilaniyat) lil Abi Bakr Muhammad bin Abdullah bin Ibrahim al-Shafi’i (354 AH) Al-Mu'jam al-Kabir (d. 360 AH) Al-Mu'jam al-Awsat (d. 360 AH) Al-Mu'jam as-Saghir (d. 360 AH)
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Al-Mu'jam as-Saghir (Arabic: المعجم الصغير), is one of the Hadith book written by great Hadith Narrator and compiler Imam Al-Tabarani (874–971 CE, 260–360 AH). It is part of his Hadith book series by name of Mu'ajim Al-Tabarani. The other two books of the series are Al-Mu'jam al-Awsat & Al-Mu'jam al-Kabeer. [1] [2]
Majma al-Zawa'id is a prominent example of the al-zawa'id methodology of hadith compilation. It contains 18,776 hadiths [2] extracted from Musnad of Ahmad ibn Hanbal, the Musnad by Abu Ya'la al-Mawsili, the Musnad of Abu Bakr al-Bazzar, and three of al-Tabarani's collections: Al-Mu'jam al-Kabir, Al-Mu'jam Al-Awsat and Al-Mu'jam As-Saghir.
The project suffered from a lack of funding, but Volume I, Part 1, covering hamza to " ʾ ḫ y ", was published in 1956. [1] In 428 two-column pages, it covers a lexical range to which Edward William Lane devoted about 100 columns in his Arabic–English Lexicon and to which Hans Wehr devoted about sixteen in his Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic.
He narrated from more than one thousand scholars, [citation needed] and authored a multitude of books on the subject. Abu al-Abbas Ahmad ibn Mansur stated, "I have narrated 300,000 narrations from at-Tabarani." [3] For most of the final years of his life, he lived in Isfahan, Iran, where he died on Dhu al-Qa'dah 27, 360 AH. [4] [5]