Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of a series on |
|
Most famous | |
Sunni six major collections
Shi'a collections:
Ibadi collections:
|
|
Sunni collections | |
|
|
Shi'a collections | |
|
|
Mu'tazili collections | |
|
Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal is the collection of Hadith collected by the famous Sunni scholar Ibn Hanbal to whom the Hanbali madhab of Sunnis is attributed.
It is said by some that Ibn Hanbal made a comment in regards to his book which read as follows:
- "There is not a hadith that I have included in this book except that it was used as evidence by some of the scholars."
Anyone who has read the Musnad and has studied the general areas of Islamic sciences can verify this claim often attributed ot Ibn Hanbal. [citation needed]
Certain scholars after the time of Ahmad claimed that the Musnad contains fabricated hadith.These hadith are generally thought to be fabricated by interpolation (i.e. that narrator jumbling up information, mixing texts and authoritative chains) rather than being mere creations of a dubious narrators imagination.
An issue concerning Imam Ahmad's hadith collection, his Musnad, was that during his work on it, he struck out various hadith (as not belonging to his collection). This methodology was not understood by some of the copyists and they reinserted some of these hadith which Ibn Hanbal had made efforts to remove in their transcriptions.
[edit] Content
Among its content can be found:
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- http://www.resalah.com/bookdetails.asp?BookNo=21
- http://www.livingislam.org/n/maq_e.html
- http://www.ibnamin.com/Manhaj/ahmad.htm