The Sources of Ismaili Law
The Sources of Ismaili Law
The Sources of Ismaili Law
Title: The Sources of Ismaili Law Author: Professor Wilferd Madelung Source: This is an edited version of an article that originally appeared in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies 35 No.1, University of Chicago Press, 1976, pp 29-40. Abstract: This paper was delivered at the Congress of the American Oriental Society in Santa Barbara in March 1974. In it, Wilferd Madelung presents his exhaustive research into the origins and sources of a monumental document that was considered lost to history; the Kitab al-idah Qadi al-Numan's first legal work - a vast collection of legal traditions transmitted from the family of the Prophet (ahl al-bayt), indicating their points of consensus (ijma) and conflict (ikhtilaf) and elucidating what was firmly established doctrine in them with evidence and proofs. This article provides an invaluable resource for academics and students of Islamic studies and related fields.
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THE SOURCES OF ISMALI LAW Wilferd Madelung This is an edited version of an article that originally appeared in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies 35 No.1, University of Chicago Press, 1976, pp 29-40. Article Under the reign of the fourth Fatimid Caliph, al-Muizz li-Din Allah (341-365 AH / 952-975 CE), the Qadi al-Numan b. Muhammad b. Hayyun (d. 363/974) composed his well-known Daaim al-islami, which to this day has remained the most authoritative exposition of the law for the Tayyibi Ismailis. The Daaim was not his first legal treatise. Some time earlier he had written a short compendium of the law entitled Kitab al-iqtisarii. In its introduction he explains that he had at first composed a vast collection of legal traditions transmitted from the family of the Prophet (ahl al-bayt), indicating their points of consensus (ijma) and conflict (ikhtilaf) and elucidating what was firmly established doctrine in them with evidence and proofs. This work, entitled Kitab alidah, comprised about 3,000 folios. He then excerpted from the K. al-idah, by omitting chains of transmission and other details, a shorter book called Kitab alikhbar. Of the latter work, the K. al-iqtisar and an urjuza (a poem composed in the Arab metre of rajaz) poem named al-Muntakhaba were further abridgments.iii The K. al-idah was until recently considered totally lost, even by such experts on Ismaili literature as W. Ivanow and A. A. A. Fyzee.iv However, in the collection of Ismaili manuscripts acquired recently by the University Library of Tbingen, there is one claiming in its title to contain "what is extant (ma wujida) of the K. al-idah."v A second manuscript containing the same fragment is in the possession of Professor Abbas Hamdani,vi and further copies may quite likely be discovered in the future in Ismaili libraries. There is no reason to doubt the authenticity of the fragment. Its contents correspond exactly to the description of the K. al-idah given by al-Numan in the K. al-iqtisar. In contrast to al-Numan's practice in his other legal works, the chain of transmission is fully quoted for each tradition. On each legal matter the author cites several relevant traditions from the family of the Prophet (ahl al-bayt) and points out their agreement or disagreement. If there is apparent conflict, he usually resolves it either by harmonising the alternatives or by explaining why one side deserves preference over the other. This is in contrast to al-Numans practice in the Daaim, where he usually quotes only a single tradition on any question in support of the actual doctrine or simply formulates it himself, disregarding any conflict (ikhtilaf). With the massiveness of the complete K. al-idah as described by al-Numan corresponds the fact that the fragment, which contains only a part of the book on
ritual prayer (salat), covers in 260 pages about the same ground as is covered by the printed text of the Daaim in 35 and by the K. al-iqtisar in 4 pages.vii Owing to these characteristics and to the fact that the K. al-idah was Qadi alNuman's first legal work, written perhaps still under the first Fatimid caliph, alMahdi (297-322/ 909-934),viii the fragment is apt to shed important new light on the sources and the genesis of Ismaili law. Al-Numan probably was originally a Sunnite and apparently never received formal training in Shiite hadith and fiqh.ix In quoting the traditions of the ahl al-bayt, he could not claim authorised oral transmission directly to himself but had to rely on literary sources available to him. In the fragment, he regularly names the book from which he is quoting and then cites the chain of transmission from the author back to the origin of the tradition. He thus departed from the common practice of the time which was to trace the isnad (chain of transmission) back from the final narrator or collector without mentioning a literary source even if the initial part of the chain merely covered a literary transmission. The fragment thus provides valuable information on earlier collections of Shiite legal traditions and, in a number of cases, facilitates the identification of the literary source, as well as the separation of the literary from the original isnad, of identical traditions in Imami collections like the Kitab al-kafi of al-Kulayni. Al-Numan names about 20 books as sources of his quotations throughout the fragment. In a few instances it is not certain whether a previously mentioned work or a different one is meant. All of these books, with a single partial exception,x appear to be no longer extant. Only a few, mostly early ones, are mentioned in the Fihrist of Ibn al-Nadim and in Imami bibliographies.xi Some authors cannot be identified with the available sources.xii In time of composition, the books range from the Kitab al-masail and the Jami of Ubayd Allah al-Halabi, who transmits directly from Imam Jafar al-Sadiq (d. 148/765) and who died in his lifetime,xiii through the Kitab of Hammad b. Isa (d. 208/823-24 or 209/824-25), who usually transmits from Jafar's father, Imam Muhammad al-Baqir, on the authority of two intervening transmitters,xiv down to later compilations of authors who died during the lifetime of al-Numan. As has been noted, a small proportion of the traditions related by al-Numan are identically found in the canonical Imami collections of hadith. They are invariably traditions from Muhammad al-Baqir and Jafar al-Sadiq, who are imams of both the Imamis and the Ismailis, and the source of the bulk of their legal hadiths. AlNuman totally ignores the traditions of the later imams of the Imamis - beginning with Musa al-Kazim - who are not recognised by the Ismailis, although he not infrequently quoted traditions related by Musa al-Kazim from his father Jafar.xv Another notable difference between the traditions used by Qadi al-Numan and those received in the four canonical collections of the Imamis becomes evident upon
a closer study of their chains of transmission. In the Imami collections the authority of the scholars of Qumm is paramount. In fact, more than 80 percent of the traditions contained in the Kafi of al-Kulayni are related by the traditionists of Qumm. If the traditions related by the scholars of Rayy, who had close ties with the school of Qumm, are added to them, their share reaches well above 90 percent. In the K. man la yahdaruhu l-faqih, Ibn Babuya, himself from Qumm, relates nearly exclusively on the authority of transmitters of that town. In the remaining two works, the tahdhib and the istibsar of Shaykh al-Tusi, only rarely is an isnad found that did not pass through a Qumman phase. Most of the traditions in these collections were initially transmitted by Kufan traditionists and then passed on to Qumm. This town in the third/ninth century became the chief centre of Imami learning where the traditions first handed down in Kufa and elsewhere were sifted and collected. This aspect is completely missing in the traditions related by Qadi al-Numan. Apparently not a single author of the collections used by him, nor any of their transmitters, belonged to the scholars of Qumm. The majority of them, as far as can be ascertained, were Kufans, with a few Medinese, Baghdadis, Basrans, and Egyptians. Did al-Numan intentionally repudiate the school of Qumm? This is not unlikely, though it is also possible that the choice of his sources was rather dictated by their availability in the Maghrib. Al-Numan does not quote any traditions ascribed to the Ismaili imams after Jafar al-Sadiq. Such traditions evidently did not exist, and these imams were, according to Ismaili belief, living in a time of occultation, so much so that al-Numan in all of his works does not even reveal their identity.xvi Nor does al-Numan anywhere in the fragment rely on a statement of the present imam, the Fatimid caliph, whoever he was. More surprising, especially in view of the total exclusion of traditions from the imams of the Imami line after Jafar al-Sadiq, is the fact that al-Numan relies frequently on traditions from Alids who were not considered imams by either Imamis or Ismailis. These traditions he takes from a single source, the Kutub of a Kufan Zaydi, Abu Abd Allah Muhammad b. Sallam b. Sayyar,xvii who must have lived in the second half of the third/ninth century. While this Ibn Sallam apparently is nowhere mentioned as a transmitter in later Zaydi literature, the traditions he relates are well known in Zaydi fiqh. His work evidently contained a large part of the legal hadiths used by the Zaydis of his time. He quotes the traditions found in the Majmu al-fiqh ascribed to Zayd b. Ali, the traditions of Ali b. Abi Talib transmitted by al-Husayn b. Abd Allah b. Dumayra with a family isnad, which were unknown among the Imamis but were used by the Zaydi imam al-Qasim b. Ibrahim and other Zaydis; the traditions which Jafar b. Muhammad al-Tabari, known in Zaydi literature as alNayrusi, related from al-Qasim b. Ibrahim; as well as the legal doctrine which Muhammad b. Mansur al-Muradi, the great collector of Zaydi hadith flourishing in Kufa about the middle of the third/ninth century, transmitted from Zaydi Alids such
as Ahmad b. Isa b. Zayd, Abd Allah b. Musa b. Abd Allah, Ubayd Allah b. Ali, and others. How much weight is al-Numan willing to give to the legal doctrine of these Alids whom he does not recognise as imams? It is to be noted that he speaks regularly in the fragment of the consensus or disagreement of the ahl al-bayt, i.e., the descendants of Ali and Fatima in general. This fully agrees with the Zaydi (Jarudi) doctrine and practice which considers the teaching of all qualified members of the family of the Prophet, not only just of those recognised as imams, as authoritative. Al-Numan in one place specifically commends a legal view of the Zaydi Alid alQasim b. Ibrahim calling it "a good doctrine (qawl hasan)"xviii. Elsewhere, however, he rejects the view of al-Qasim on the grounds that it clashed with the view of the imams.xix The legal doctrine of these Zaydi Alids thus was definitely authoritative for Qadi al-Numan, though less so than the doctrine of the Ismaili imams. Ismaili law thus appears in the K. al-idah, both materially and theoretically, as a compromise between Imami and Zaydi law. Materially, it is based on sources accepted as authoritative in Imami fiqh as well as those accepted as authoritative in Zaydi fiqh. Theoretically, al-Numan recognises, in agreement with the Zaydis, the authority of the ahl al-bayt in general, not merely that of the imams. But he makes a concession to the Imami position in granting the imams superior authority to that of the other Alids. In particular, the importance of Imam Jafar, whose role is quite limited in Zaydi law but paramount in Imami law, is evident in the fragment of the K. al-idah. In some of his later legal works Qadi al-Numan departed from his position in the K. al-idah, at least on the theoretical level. In the introduction of the Daaim al-islam he states his intention to confine himself to the firmly established doctrine of the imams of the ahl al-bayt as related to him.xx Similarly, in his Ikhtilaf usul almadhahib, a work on the principles of the law (usul al-fiqh), he recognises the Quran, the sunna of the Prophet, and the teachings (madhahib) of the imams as the only authoritative sources of law.xxi This change of attitude was evidently influenced by the view of the Caliph al-Muizz.xxii Yet on the material level, the legal doctrine of the Daaim appears nearly identical with the positions worked out by al-Numan in the K. al-idah. In the Daaim he quotes a few traditions not found in the K. al-idah, but mostly in support of the same views. Only exceptionally his doctrine seems to differ on minor points of detail. In spite of his promise to present only the doctrine of the imams, he does in a few places quote the views of the Zaydi Alids Zayd b. Ali, Muhammad b. Abd Allah (al-Nafs al-Zakiyya), and al-Qasim b. Ibrahim as the basis of the law.xxiii In a major point of conflict with Imami law, the prohibition of the temporary marriage (muta) admitted in the latter, he relies on traditions from Jafar al-Sadiq and Ali used also by the Zaydis.xxiv The description of the legal doctrine of the K. al-idah as a compromise between Imami and Zaydi law thus is applicable to Ismaili fiqh in general.
APPENDIX The following books are quoted in the fragment of the K. al-idah: 1. Kitab Hammad b. Isa: Abu Muhammad Hammad b. Isa al-Juhani (d. 208-9/ 823-25) was a well-known Shiite traditionist of Kufan origin residing in Wasit and Basra.xxv His reliability as a transmitter is considered high by the Imami authorities and low by Sunnites. The "book" quoted by al-Numan may be the Kitab al-salat mentioned by the Imami sources, which also ascribe some other books to him. The isnad most often used by him is: Hammad an Hariz b. Abd Allah an Zurara b. Ayan an Abi Jafar (= al-Baqir). A number of traditions quoted by al-Numan from this source are found identically in the Kafi of al-Kulayni. 2. Al-Kutub al-Jafariyya, min riwayat Abi Ali Muhammad b. Muhammad b. alAshath al-Kufi: Mostly traditions of the Prophet Muhammad, Ali or the early imams are quoted from this source with the isnad Muhammad b. Muhammad b. alAshath an Abi l-Hasan Musa b. Ismail b. Musa b. Jafar (= al-Sadiq) continuing as a family isnad through Imam Jafar al-Sadiq to Ali or one of the early imams. Occasionally Ibn al-Ashath uses a different isnad. The al-Kutub al-Jafariyya are at least partially identical with the hadith collection known in Imami tradition as alAshathiyyat or al-Jafariyyat. This work was known to some Imami scholars down to the Allama al-Hilli (d. 726/1325), but its traditions were not included in the canonical collections on which Imami fiqh is based. It was unknown to al-Hurr alAmili (d. 1104/1693) and al-Majlisi (d. 1111/1700), who in their works Wasail alshia and Bihar al-anwar broadened the base of hadiths to be used in Imami fiqh. A copy of it was discovered by Shaykh Husayn al-Nuri al-Tabarsi and provided the main stimulus for him to compose his Mustadrak wasail al-shia (written in 1305/1887) in which he collected further hadiths to be used in Imami ijtihad.xxvi The edition of this workxxvii has not been available to me. Of the traditions quoted in the fragment, only one seems to be quoted also in the Mustadrak al-wasa'il. Muhammad b. Muhammad b. al-Ashath, a Kufan by origin living in Egyptxxviii, was an informant of the Egyptian historian al-Kindi (d. 350/961)xxix. He transmitted the Jafariyyat as late as the year 314/926-27xxx. Sunnite sources accuse him of having forged the whole bookxxxi. The Imami sources, on the other hand, mention the Alid Musa b. Ismailxxxii and his father Ismail b. Musa al-Kazimxxxiii as authors of books transmitted by Ibn al-Ashath. They lived in Medina and Egypt. 3. K. al-salat, min riwayat Abi Dharr Ahmad b. al-Husayn b. Asbat: It is mentioned only by Ibn Shahrashubxxxiv. The author is otherwise unknown. Traditions of the Imams Muhammad al-Baqir and Jafar are quoted, usually with an isnad of one or two transmitters. It is not unlikely, however, that the author lived much later and that the isnads are regularly interrupted. Several of the traditions quoted are also found in the Kafi of al-Kulayni.
4. Jami Ali b. Asbat: The Kufan Abu l-Hasan Ali b. Asbat b. Salim Bayya alZutti was a prominent Shiite faqih and a companion of the Imams Ali al-Rida and Muhammad al-Jawad (203-220/818-835). He belonged to the Fathiyya, who held that the imamate passed from Jafar al-Sadiq first to his son Abd Allah al-Aftah and only after the latter's death to Musa al-Kazim. According to al-Najashi, Ibn Asbat repudiated this heresy before his death. This is denied, however, by al-Kishshixxxv. The names of several books of his are mentioned by al-Najashi, but none with the title Jami. In the fragment, the book is quoted for a tradition of Imam Jafar with one intervening transmitter and for traditions of Ali "with his (= Ibn Asbats) chain of transmission (bi-isnadih)." 5. & 6. Kitab al-Halabi al-maruf bi l-masail and Jami al-Halabi: The author of the two books is nowhere in the fragment identified aside from his nisba al-Halabi. The Imami sources mention several members of the Kufan family Al Abi Shuba, who because of their trade connections with Aleppo were given the nisba al-Halabi, as highly reliable transmitters from the imams. The most famous among them was Ubayd Allah b. Ali b. Abi Shuba al-Halabi, whose collection of traditions of Imam Jafar was said to have been corrected and praised by the latter and was widely transmitted with slight variationsxxxvi. There is evidence that it was used as a basic legal compendium as late as the fifth/eleventh century. The Sharif al-Murtada (d. 436/1044) was asked by members of the Imami community in Mayyafariqin what book they should rely upon concerning legal problems: the Risala of Ali b. alHusayn b. Musa b. Babuya, the Kitab of al-Shalmaghani or the Kitab of Ubayd Allah al-Halabi. He answered that the works of Ibn Babuya and al-Halabi should be preferred to that of al-Shalmaghanixxxvii.The Imami sources and Ibn al-Nadimxxxviii refer to the book only as Kitab and do not mention any other book of Ubayd Allah. Another Kitab, however, is ascribed to his brother Muhammad b. Ali al-Halabixxxix. Al-Numan treats the author of the Jami and the author of the Masail as the same al-Halabixl. Unless he is mistaken, it is to be assumed that the two books are either variant versions or two different sections of the Kitab of Ubayd Allah mentioned in the Imami sources. Some traditions quoted by al-Numan from either book are also found in the Kafi of al-Kulayni. Ubayd Allah and Muhammad al-Halabi both died before the death of Imam Jafar (148/765)xli. 7. Al-Jami, min kutub Tahir b. Zakariyya b. al-Husayn: mentioned by Ibn Shahrashubxlii. The author is otherwise unknown. Traditions of Imam Jafar are quoted, frequently without a chain of transmission and occasionally with a chain of one or two intervening transmitters. The author probably lived later and omitted or cut the isnads. 8. Kutub Abi Abd Allah Muhammad b. Sallam b. Sayyar al-Kufi: mentioned by Ibn Shahrashubxliii. The author is otherwise unknown. His chief informant, the Kufan Zaydi Muhammad b. Mansur al-Muradi, still taught in 292/905xliv. The work is solidly Zaydi. It contains the whole range of the transmission of al-Muradixlv. Many of the traditions quoted by al-Numan from the Kutub of Ibn Sallam are
identically found in al-Muradi's Amali Ahmad b. Isaxlvi.Traditions contained in the Majmu al-fiqh ascribed to Zayd b. Ali are quoted with the isnad : Abu Abd Allah (= Ahmad b. Isa b. Zayd) an Husayn b. Ulwan an Abi Khalid (= al-Wasiti) an Zayd. The same isnad is used by al-Muradi in the Amali Ahmad b. Isaxlvii. Ibn Sallam most likely received these traditions from al-Muradi, who is merely omitted from the isnad as his common authority. Most of these traditions, though not all, are also quoted in the Amali Ahmad b. Isa. Traditions related by Jafar b. Muhammad al-Tabari (= al-Nayrusi) from the Zaydi imam al-Qasim b. Ibrahimxlviii are sometimes quoted expressly on the authority of al-Muradi. In other cases, where alMuradi is not mentioned, the isnad is probably incomplete. Apart from the transmission of al-Muradi, Ibn Sallam quoted the traditions of Ali transmitted by alHusayn b. Abd Allah b. Dumayra with a family isnad which were also quoted by alQasim b. Ibrahimxlix. Ibn Sallam's isnad for these traditions begins: Zayd b. Ahmad b. Ismail (b. Muhammad b. Ismail b. Jafar al-Sadiq)l an khalihi Zayd b. alHusayn (b. Isa b. Zayd)li an Abi Bakr b. Abi Uways and continues then like the isnad of al-Qasim b. Ibrahim from this transmitter. 9. Jami Ghiyath b. Ibrahim, riwayat Ismail anhu: Ghiyath b. Ibrahim al-Tamimi al-Usaydi was a Basran living in Kufa and transmitted from Imams Jafar and Musalii. Abu Jafar al-Barqi (d. 274/887-88 or 280/893-94) names him Ghiyath b. Ibrahim al-Nakhailiii He is thus probably identical with Ghiyath b. Ibrahim alNakhai mentioned by Sunnite sources as an unreliable transmitter from alAmashliv. According to the Allama al-Hilli, he was a Batri (Zaydi)lv. He compiled a book arranged according to subject matter (mubawwab) on the law. Ibn Shahrashub gives its name as al-Jamialvi. Ismail, who transmitted from Ghiyath, probably is the Kufan Ismail b. Aban b. Ishaq al-Azdi al-Warraq (d. 216/831) who appears as the transmitter of Ghiyath's book in the isnad of al-Najashilvii. In the fragment of the K. al-idah the Jami Ghiyath is quoted only oncelviii for a statement of Imam Jafar. It is not impossible that this is an indirect quotation through the Kutub of Ibn Sallam (see no. 8 above) since traditions with the isnad Ismail an Ghiyath an Jafar b. Muhammad (= al-Sadiq) occasionally occur there. 10. K. al-masail, min riwayat al-Husayn b. Ali: In some places al-Numan gives the full name of the author as Abu Abd Allah al-Husayn b. Ali b. al-Hasanlix b. Ali b. Umar b. Ali (= Zayn al-Abidin) b. al-Husayn. This genealogy identifies him as al-Husayn al-Shair al-Muhaddith (d. 312/924-25)lx, the brother of the Caspian Zaydi imam al-Hasan al-Utrush al-Nasir li l-haqq (d. 304/917) and ancestor of the Thairid Alids ruling Hawsam and Lahijan in the fourth-seventh/tenththirteenth centuries. Al-Husayn al-Shair lived in Medina and later in Egypt, where he was considered the shaykh of the family of the Prophetlxi. He is not mentioned in any of the Imami rijal works. The traditions quoted by al-Numan from this source have two different isnads: (a) Al-Husayn b. Ali an abihi an Ali b. Jafar b. Muhammad an akhihi Musa (= al-Kazim) an abihi. These traditions contain questions which Musa asked his father
Jafar and the answers of the latter. Imami sources ascribe to Imam Musa's brother Ali (d. 210/825-26) a book containing questions (masail) which he put to the imamlxii. Such questions of Ali b. Jafar and Musas answers are quoted in the canonical Imami collections. In al-Numan's quotations from the masail of al-Husayn alShair it is regularly Musa who puts the questions to his father and the latter who answers; (b) Al-Husayn b. Ali an Ibrahim b. Sulayman al-Hamdani an Ismaillxiii an alAla an Muhammad b. Muslim an Abi Jafar (= al-Baqir). The full name of the Kufan Ibrahim b. Sulayman is Abu Ishaq Ibrahim b. Sulayman b. Abd (or Ubayd) Allah b. Hayyan (or Khalid) al-Nahmi. The Imami rijal works list several books by himlxiv. Ismail could not be identified. Al-Ala is al-Ala b. Razin al-Qalla'lxv, and Muhammad b. Muslim is Abu Jafar Muhammad b. Muslim b. Riyah al-Thaqafi alTahhan (d. 150/767)lxvi. Both are Kufan Shiite transmitters highly esteemed by the Imamis. 11. K. al-masail riwayat Ibrahim b. Sulayman al-Hamdani: This title occurs only once.lxvii Most likely the previous work (no. 10) is meant, and the first rawi alHusayn b. Ali is omitted. The isnad from Ibrahim is identical with the second one mentioned under no. 10 above. If a different work is meant, al-masail might be a corruption al-manasik. This title is mentioned among the works of Ibrahim b. Sulaymanlxviii. Almost certainly truncated is the isnad in the quotation:lxix Kitab almasail an al-Ala an Muhammad b. Muslim an Abi Jafar. Either no. 11 or, more likely, no. 10 must be meant. 12. K. al-masail, min riwayat Ahmad b. al-Husayn: This title occurs twicelxx. Ahmad b. al-Husayn is to be identified with the author of the Kitab al-qadaya (no. 13), for, like the latter, he transmitted from Abbad b. Yaqublxxi. Al-masa'il is either an error for al-qadaya or this is a separate work by the same author. 13. K. al-qadaya, min riwayat Abi Jafar Muhammad (or Ahmad) b. al-Husayn b. Hafs al-Khathami: In the fragment the name of the author is given about equally as often as Ahmad instead of Muhammad. Since both Ahmad and Muhammad are named with the kunya Abu Jafar , there can be little doubt that one and the same person is meant. Ibn Shahrashub also calls him Ahmadlxxii. In the other sources his name is given as Muhammad, and he was an important informant of Abu l-Faraj alIsfahanilxxiii. Al-Samani calls him a reliable transmitter and gives his full name as Abu Jafar Muhammad b. al-Husayn b. Hafs b. Umar al-Ushnani al-Kufi stating that he was born in 221/836 and died in Safar 315/April-May 927lxxiv. According to al-Tusi, however, he died in 327/929. Al-Tusi's information apparently goes back to the Imami traditionist Harun b. Musa al-Talukbari, who heard al-Khathami in 315/927lxxv. In the quotations of the fragment, al-Khathami invariably relates from Abbad b. Yaqub, i.e., the Kufan Abu Said Abbad b. Yaqub al-Asadi al-Rawajini (d. 250/864). The Imami rijal works call Abbad a non-Shiite (ammi al-
madhhab)lxxvi. The Sunnite sources consider him a trustworthy (saduq) transmitter but describe him as an extreme Shiite (min ghulat al-shia) who cursed Uthman and kept his sword ready hoping to rise with the Mahdilxxvii. He was evidently a prominent figure in Kufan non-Imami Shiism. In the quotations from the K. alqadaya he relates frequently traditions about Ali with the following isnad: an Ubayd b. Muhammad b. Qays al-Bajali an abihi an Abi Jafar (= al-Baqir). Abu Abd Allah Muhammad b. Qays al-Bajali (d. 151/768) is known to the Imami sources as the author of a K. qadaya Amir al-muminin (= Ali ) which he related from Imam al-Baqirlxxviii. The book was transmitted by his son Ubayd among otherslxxix. In several instances Muhammad b. Sallam is mentioned together with Muhammad b. al-Husayn as the initial relater (from Abbad b. Yaqub). Most likely Muhammad b. Sallam b. Sayyar, the author of the Kutub (no. 8) is meant. This may mean that the anonymous writer of the copy of the K. al-qadaya, who had perhaps heard both Ibn Sallam and Muhammad b. al-Husayn, joined the two isnads; or there may have been among the Kutub of Ibn Sallam a Kitab al-qadaya, and al-Numan combined the two reports. 14 K. al-qadaya, min riwayat Ahmad b. Harun b. Hani al-Q-h-mi (?): occurs only once in the fragmentlxxx. The author is unknown. The tradition is quoted "with his isnad (bi-isnadih)" and is introduced with "he said (qala)" without identification of the subject. 15. K. al-qadaya, min riwayat al-Hasan b. al-Husayn: is quoted only oncelxxxi. The isnad continues: an Ali b. al-Qasim al-Kindi an Muhammad b.Ubayd (in MS Abd) Allah b. Abi Rafi an abihi an jaddihi an Ali (b. Abi Talib). This is the same as the final part of al-Najashi's isnad for the K. al-sunan wa l-ahkam wa lqadaya of Abu Rafilxxxii. Al-Najashi gives the nisba of al-Hasan b. al-Husayn as alAnsari. This identifies him further as al-Hasan b. al-Husayn al-Urani al-Kufi, who is described by the Sunnite sources as a chief of the Shii (min ruasa al-shia)lxxxiii. He is mentioned among the scholars who pledged allegiance to the Alid Yahya b. Abd Allahlxxxiv, and Abu l-Faraj al-Isfahani quotes him reporting about the revolt of Ibrahim b. Abd Allahlxxxv. Although he is credited with the authorship of a book on the transmitters from Imam Jafar lxxxvi, he stood evidently closer to Zaydism than to Imami Shiism. The K. qadaya Amir al-muminin of Ubayd Allah b. Abu Rafi, the "scribe of Ali," is known in Imami tradition, though it was apparently not transmitted by the school of Qumm in the third/ninth century. The Sunnite sources characterise Ali b. alQasim al-Kindi as an extreme Shiitelxxxvii and Muhammad b. Ubayd Allah b. Abi Rafi as belonging to the Kufan Shia and relating objectionable (munkar) traditionslxxxviii. Ubayd Allah b. Abi Rafi, on the other hand, is judged reliablelxxxix. 16. K. al-nahy, min riwayat al-Hasan b. Jafar: Both author and book are mentioned only by Ibn Shahrashub, who gives the full name of the author as al-
Hasan b. Jafar b. Qahwanxc. From this source al-Numan quotes traditions of the Prophet containing a prohibition. The isnad is regularly: al-Hasan b. Jafar an Ishaq b. Musa an Ali b. Jafar an akhihi Musa (= al-Kazim) b. Jafar an Jafar (alSadiq) b. Muhammad an abihi an abaihi. Ishaq b. Musa could not be identified. The transmission of Ali b. Jafar from his brother Musa al-Kazim is well known and is quoted in the K. al-masail of alHusayn b. Ali (no. 10), but there it is used for statements of Imam Jafar, not for traditions of the Prophet. 17. K. usul madhahib al-shia, min riwayat Muhammad b. al-Salt: is mentioned by Ibn Shahrashubxci. The author is otherwise unknown. He is regularly quoted relating from his maternal uncle (khal) Muhammad b. Abi Umayr, i.e., the Baghdadi Abu Ahmad Muhammad b. Ziyad b. Isa al-Azdi (d. 217/832), a prominent Imami traditionist and author of booksxcii. The isnad regularly continues: an Hammad b. Isa an Ubayd Allah al-Halabi relating traditions of Imam Jafar. 18. Al-Musnad: The compiler is nowhere mentioned. The final transmitters in the isnads are: Abu Nuaym (= al-Fadl b. Dukayn), Kufan d. 219/834xciii; Ahmadxciv (b. Isa b. Zayd), the Zaydi Alid living mostly in Basra (157 -247/773-861)xcv; Abu Ghassan, perhaps Malik b. Ismail al-Nahdi (d. 219/834), a Kufan Zaydi considered a reliable transmitter by the Sunnite sourcesxcvi; Nasr b. Muzahimxcvii (= al-Minqari), Kufan Zaydixcviii (d. 212/827-28), quoted with the isnad an Abi Khalid (= al-Wasiti) an Zayd for a tradition contained in the Majmu al-fiqh of Zayd b. Ali; Amr b. Khalid (= Abui Khalid al-Wasiti), Kufan Zaydi (d. ca. 150/767);xcix Safwan b. Isa, perhaps the Basran al-Zuhri al-Qassam (death dates given range from 198-208/813824)c; Said b. Salim al-Qaddah, active Murjiite of Khurasanian or Kufan origin living in Mekka (d. before 200/816)ci; Abu Asim, perhaps the Basran al-Dahhak b. Makhlad al-Shaybani (d. between 212 and 214/827-29)cii; Hammad b. Maslama, could not be identified, an al-Hajjaj (b. Artat al-Nakhai), Kufan (d. 145 or 147/762-64)ciii; Said b. Abi Arubaciv, Basran (d. 156 or 157/773 or 774)cv; Mukhawwal (b. Ibrahim al-Nahdi), Zaydi supporter of Yahya b. Abd Allahcvi; Muhammad b. Abd al-Malik (b. Abi Shawarib), Basran (d. 244/858)cvii, an Yusuf b. (Yaqub) al-Majishun (d. between 183 and 185/799-801)cviii; Hushaym, i.e., b. Bashir al-Wasiti (d. 183/799)cix. Some of the isnads are obviously cut off. Most of the traditions are from Ali, one from Imam al-Baqir and one from Imam Jafar. The compiler cannot have flourished before the first half of the third/ninth century and probably was a Zaydi or other non-Imami Shiite. 19. Kutub Abi l-Hasan (or Abi l-Husayn) Ali b. al-Husayn b. Warsand (or Farsand?) al-Bajali: quoted only twice. The author is unknown. He relates from Imam Muhammad al-Baqir with an isnad of four intermediaries. 20. K. yawm wa-layla: The author is not mentioned. Only traditions of Imam Jafar are quoted, usually without isnad and occasionally through a single transmitter. The compiler may be regularly omitting or cutting the isnad. The Imami sources mention
Abu Jafar Ahmad b. Abd Allah b. Mihran al-Karkhi, known as Ibn Khanaba, as the author of a K. al-tadib which is the K. yawm wa-layla.cx He was a secretary of Ishaq b. Ibrahim b. Musabcxi (d. 235/849-50), police prefect of Baghdad, and thus lived in the first half of the third/ninth century. A K. yawm wa-layla was also compiled by the Kufan Abu l-Qasim Muawiya b. Ammar al-Duhni (d. 175/79192), a prominent transmitter from the Imams Jafar and Musacxii. 21. Kitab Ali, an Ali: quoted oncecxiii. Just before the quotation there is a gap in the text. It is possible that the written source of the tradition was mentioned there and that the preserved text is merely the end of the isnad and should be read [ ... an... wa-huwa] min kuttab Ali an Ali.
A.A.A Fyzee, ed., Daaim al-islam, Vols. 1 and 2 (cairo, 1951/61). Mohammad Wahid Mirza, ed., Kitab al-iqtisar, (Damascus, 1957). iii Al-iqtisar, pp. 9 f. iv Cf. W. Ivanow, Ismaili Literature (Tehran, 1963), p. 34; A. A. A. Fyzee, Compendium of Fatimid Law (Simla, 1969), introduction, p. xxvii. v A microfilm of the manuscript has been kindly made available to me by Dr. E. Kummerer, director of the Oriental section of the University Library of Tubingen. vi Letter of Professor Hamdani dated March 9, 1975. vii The fragment begins abruptly with what must be very near the beginning of the kitab alsalat and ends abruptly in the chapter entitled dhikr ma yuqra fi l-salat min al-suwar. There are a few, apparently minor, gaps in the text. The arrangement of material mostly parallels that of the Daaim. The material covered corresponds approximately to Daaim , Vol. 1, pp. 159-94 and al-iqtisar, pp. 21-24. viii Al-Numan entered the service of al-Mahdi in 313/925-26. Cf. A. A. A. Fyzee, "Qadi anNuman, The Fatimid Jurist and Author," Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (JRAS), 1934, p. 7.
i ii
On the disputed question whether al-Numan originally belonged to the Maliki or the Hanafi school, see my notes in Journal of the American Oriental Society (JAOS) 84 (1964): 424 and now I. K. Poonawala, "A Reconsideration of al-Qadi al-Numan 's Madhhab," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (BSOAS) 37 (1974): 572 ff. Poonawala's additional arguments strengthen the case for the identity of al-Numan's father with the Muhammad b. Hayyan mentioned by al-Khushani as a convert to Ismailism from the Maliki school. x Cf. appendix, no. 2. xi Cf. appendix, nos, 1, 2, 4, 5, and 9. xii Several of these authors and their books are listed only by Ibn Shahrashub in his maalim al-ulama. Ibn Shahrashub also has an entry on al-Numan and names the K. al-idah among his books (Abbas Iqbal, ed., Maalim al-ulama, p. 113). It is evident that the book was available to him and that the authors and books quoted in it were known to him only through this source. xiii Cf. appendix, nos. 5 and 6. xiv Cf. appendix. no. 1. xv Cf. appendix, nos. 2, 10, and 16. xvi Cf. W. Madelung, "Das Imamat in der fatimidischen Lehre," Der Islam 37 (1961): 88, n. 235. xvii Cf. appendix, no. 8. xviii Fol. 22r. xix Fol. 85v. xx Daaim, Vol. 1, p. 2. xxi Al-Numan b. Muhammad, Ikhtilaf usul al-madhahib, ed. Mustafa Ghalib (Beirut, 1973), p. 51. xxii Cf. the instructions of al-Muizz in his letter appointing al-Numan as qadi in alMansuriyya in 343/954, quoted in Ikhtilaf usul al-madhahib, p. 49. xxiii Daaim Vol. 1, pp. 102, 158, 309, 315, and 404. The share of legal doctrine derived from Zaydi sources in the Daaim is obviously much larger than these explicit quotations would indicate. In quoting hadiths also contained in the K. al-idah, al-Numan frequently paraphrases, abridges, and combines their text. This gives him some freedom to incorporate material from other sources into apparent statements of the imams or his own comments. For instance, in the quotation of Ali, Daaim, Vol. 1, p. 175 lines 5-6, only the first part (yastaqbilu ... wal-iqama) is a (paraphrased) statement of Ali according to the K. al-idah (fol. 52r). The second part is in the K. al-idah (fol. 52v) part of a statement (also paraphrased in the Daaim) of the Zaydi Alid Abd Allah b. Musa quoted in the Kutub of Ibn Sallam on the authority of al-Muradi. (In al-Muradi's Amali Ahmad b. Isa, MS Ambrosiana H 115 fol. 24v, it is quoted as a statement of al-Qasim b. Ibrahim. The erroneous substitution of Abd Allah b. Musa for al-Qasim may have been made by Ibn Sallam). The quotation of Quran 9: 28, Daaim, Vol. 1, p. 180 line 14, must appear as a continuation of the preceding statement of Ali or as part of a comment of al-Numan, while in the K. al-idah (fol. 76) it is part of a statement of al-Qasim b. Ibrahim. Al-Numan seems sometimes careless in his attribution of traditions to Ismaili imams. In Daaim, Vol. 1, p. 178 lines 6-7 he quotes a statement as an Jafar b. Muhammad, ostensibly meaning Imam Jafar al-Sadiq, while in the K. al-idah (fol. 69r, quoting the Kutub of Ibn Sallam) the isnad reads... an Jafar yani Ibn Muhammad al-Tabari (= al-Nayrusi) an Qasim b. Ibrahim. The same error probably occurred in the quotation an Jafar b. Muhammad, Daaim, Vol. 1, p. 186 lines 12 f. This quotation is missing in the fragment of the K. al-idah because of a gap
ix
in the text (fol. 53r). It is, however, identically contained (without the last three words) in the Amali Ahmad b. Isa with the isnad ... an Jafar b. Muhammad al-Tabari (= alNayruisi) an Qasim b. Ibrahim. The bulk of the Zaydi material in the Daaim is hidden by the omission of the Zaydi isnads for traditions of the Prophet, Ali, and other imams recognised by the Ismailis and Imamis, as in the case mentioned in the following note. xxiv Daaim, Vol. 2, pp. 226 f., nos. 858, 859. In the Amali Ahmad b. Isa, al-Muradi quotes the hadith of the Prophet on the authority of Ali (no. 858) with the isnad of Ibn Dumayra (text published by E. Griffini, "Corpus luris" di Zaid Ibn Ali [Milan, 1919], p. 332) and the tradition of Imam Jafar (no. 859) with the isnad Abbad b. Yaqub an Ibn al-Isbahani (Corpus p. 330, no. 1440). Al-Numan no doubt took these traditions from the Kutub of Ibn Sallam. xxv Al-Kishshi (al-Kashshi), Ikhtiyar marifat al-rijal, ed. Hasan al-Mustafawi (Mashhad, 1348 Sh./1969), pp. 316 f., 375; al-Najashi, al-Rijal (Tehran: Chapkhana- yi Mustafawi, n.d.), pp. 109 f.; al-Tusi, Fihrist kutub al-shia, ed. A. Sprenger et al. (Calcutta, 1853), pp. 116 f.; al-Dhahabi, Mizan al-itidal, ed. Ali Muhammad al-Bijawi (Cairo, 1382/1963), Vol. 1, p. 598; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib al-tahdhib (Hyderabad, 1325-27/ 1907-9), Vol. 3, pp. 18 f. xxvi See the entry on al-Ashathiyat in Agha Buzurg al-Tihrani, al-Dharia ila tasanif alshia (Najaf, 1355/ 1936- ), Vol. 2, pp. 109 ff. xxvii Al-Ashathiyat aw al-Jafariyat, lith. (Tehran, 1271/1892); cf. Kh. Mushar, Fihrist-i kitabhai-y chapi- yi arabi (Tehran, 1337-42/1958-63), col. 60. The work is missing in Brockelman, GAL and Sezgin, GAS. xxviii Al-Najashi, p. 294. xxix Al-Kindi, Akhbar qudat Misr, in R. Guest, The Governors and Judges of Egypt, Gibb Memorial Series (London, 1912), p. 437. xxx Cf. al-Tusi, Rijal al-Tusi, ed. Muhammad Sadiq Al Bahr al-Ulum (al-Najaf, 1381/1961), pp. 500 ff. xxxi Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 4, pp. 27 f.; Ibn Hajar, Lisan al-mizan (Hyderabad, 132931/1911-13), Vol. 5, p. 362. xxxii Al-Najashi, p. 321; al-Tusi, Fihrist, p. 341. xxxiii Al-Najashi, p. 21; Ibn Inaba, Umdat al-talib fi ansab al Abi Talib, ed. Muhammad Hasan al-Taliqani (al-Najaf 1380/1961), p. 232; al-Kishshi, pp. 437, 502. xxxiv Ibn Shahrashub, K. maalim al-ulama', ed. Abbas Iqbal, p. 20. xxxv Al-Najashi, p. 190; al-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 211 f.; al-Kishshi, pp. 345, 562. xxxvi Al-Najashi, pp. 171 f.; al-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 203 f. xxxvii A1-Murtada, al-Masail al-Mayyafariqiyyat, in MS Tehran University, Central Library, no. 2525, p. 8. xxxviii Ibn al-Nadim, al-Fihrist, ed. G. Flgel (Leipzig, 1871-72), p. 220; Abd Allah alHalabi read Ubayd Allah al-Halabi. xxxix Al-Najashi, pp. 248 f.; al-Tusi, Fihrist, p. 303. xl Cf. fol. 39r: fi kitab al-Halabi al-maruf bi l-masail wa-kitabih al-maruf bi l-jami. xli Al-Kishshi, p. 488. xlii Ibn Shahrashub, p. 54. xliii Ibn Shahrashub, p. 103. xliv See E. Griffini, "Lista di manoscritti arabi nuovo fondo della Biblioteca Ambrosiana di Milano," in Rivista degli Studi Orientali (RSO) 8 (1919-21): 249. xlv On the role of al-Muradi in the transmission of Zaydi hadith and doctrine see my book: Der Imam al-Qasim ibn Ibrahim und die Glaubenslehre der Zaiditen (Berlin, 1965), pp. 81 ff.
xlvi
MS Ambrosiana H 115. E. Griffini, Corpus luris di Zaid Ibn Ali, p. cvii, n. 1. xlviii On these traditions see Der Imam al-Qasim, p. 133. xlix On these traditions see Der Imam al-Qasim, pp. 131 ff. l He is mentioned by al-Maqrizi, Ittiaz al-hunafa, ed. J. al-Shayyal (Cairo, 1967), Vol. 1, pp. 19f. His brother Ismail died in Egypt in 274/888, ibid., p. 18. li He is mentioned by Ibn Inaba, p. 295. He is probably identical with the Zayd b. al-Hasan (thus incorrectly for al-Husayn) al-Alawi mentioned by Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 3, p. 407. lii A1-Najashi, p. 234; al-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 251 f. Al-Tusi, Rijal p. 270, states that he transmitted from Imam Jafar indirectly (asnada) and from Imam Musa- directly (rawa). This seems to be incorrect. liii A1-Barqi, K. al-rijal, printed together with Ibn Daud al-Hilli, K. al-rijal (Tehran, 1343/1964), p. 42. liv Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 3, p. 337; Ibn Hajar, Lisan, Vol. 4, p. 422. He visited Isfahan. Abu Nuaym al-Isfahani, Dhikr akhbar Isfahan, ed. S. Dedering (Leiden, 1931-34), Vol. 2, p. 150. lv Al-Hilli, Khulasat al-aqwal fi marifat al-rijal, edited under the title Rijal al-Allama alHilli by Muhammad Sadiq Al Bahr al-Ulum (al-Najaf, 1381/ 1961), pp. 245 f. lvi Ibn Shahrashub, p. 80. lvii Al-Najashi, p. 234. On Ismail b. Aban cf. al-Najashi, pp. 25 f.; al-Tusi, Fihrist, p. 55. He is considered a reliable (saduq) transmitter by Sunnite scholars. Ibn Sad, Al-Tabaqat alkubra, ed. E. Sachau (Leiden, 1905-40), Vol. 6, p. 285; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 1, p. 213; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 1, pp. 269 f. lviii Fol. 64v. lix The MS regularly has the incorrect reading- al-Husayn. lx Ibn Inaba, pp. 308, 310. lxi Cf. Ibn Hajar, Lisan, Vol. 5, p. 362. lxii Al-Najashi, p. 190; al-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 212 f.; al-Tusi, Rijal p. 353; Ibn Shahrashub, p. 63; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 3, p. 117; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 7, p. 293. lxiii He is sometimes omitted. lxiv Al-Najashi, p. 15; al-Tusi, Fihrist, p. 13, al-Hilli, Khulasa, p. 5; Ibn Hajar, Lisan, Vol. 1, p. 65. lxv Al-Najashi, pp. 229 f.; al-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 207 f. lxvi A1-Najashi, pp. 247 f.; al-Tusi, Rijal, pp. 135, 300, 308; al-Kishshi, pp. 161-69. lxvii Fol. 29v. lxviii A1-Najashi, p. 15; al-Tusi, Fihrist, p. 13. lxix Fol. 45r. lxx Fols. 101v and 105v. lxxi Fol. 101b. lxxii Ibn Shahrashub, p. 20. lxxiii Cf. Abul-Faraj al-Isfahani, Maqatil al-Talibiyyin, ed. Ahmad Saqr (Cairo, 1949), pp. 9, 51, and elsewhere. As in the fragment, al-Khathami is quoted relating from Abbad b. Yaqub. lxxiv Al-Samani, al-Ansab, ed. Abd al-Rahmin al-Yamani (Hyderabad, 1962), Vol. 1, p. 274. lxxv A-Tusi, Rijal, p. 500. lxxvi A1-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 176 f.; Ibn Shahrashub, p. 78; al-Najashi, p. 225. lxxvii Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 2, pp. 379 f.; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 5, pp. 109 f.
xlvii
lxxviii lxxix
A1-Najashi, p. 247; al-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 313 f.; al-Tusi, Rijal, p. 298. Al-Najashi, p. 247; al-Tusi, Fihrist, p. 202 where al-Tusi quotes the book with the isnad: ... al-Talukbari-Muhammad b. al-Hasan b. Hafs (read thus for Jafar) al-Khathami-Abbad b. Yaqub-Ubayd b. Muhammad b. Qays al-Bajali an abih. lxxx Fol. 26v. lxxxi Fol. 112v. lxxxii Al-Najashi, p. 5. lxxxiii Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 1, pp. 483 ff.: on p. 484, line 7 he is called al-Ansari; Ibn Hajar, Lisan, Vol. 2, pp. 199 f. lxxxiv Van Arendonk, Les dbuts de l'imamat Zaidite au Yemen, p. 318. lxxxv Abu 1-Faraj, Maqatil, p. 354. lxxxvi AI-Najashi, pp. 40 f. lxxxvii Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 3, p. 151; Ibn Hajar, Lisan, Vol. 4, p. 249. lxxxviii Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 3, pp. 634 f.; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 9, p. 321. lxxxix Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 8, pp. 10 f. xc Ibn Shahrashub, p. 32. xci Ibn Shahrashub, p. 105. xcii Al-Najashi, pp. 250 f.; al-Kishshi, pp. 589-92; al-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 265 f. xciii See F. Rosenthal, s.v. "Abu Nuaym al-Mulai," Encyclopedia of Islam, 2d ed. (Leiden, 1951-). xciv Fol. 70v: Ahmad b. Husayn b. Ulwan an Abi Khalid most likely is to be read Ahmad an Husayn. ... This is the common isnad of Muhammad b. Mansur al-Muradi for traditions of Zayd b. Ali. xcv Der Imam al-Qasim, pp. 80 f. xcvi A-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 3, pp. 424 f.; Ibn Hajar,Tahdhib, Vol. 10, pp. 3 f. xcvii The MS (fol. 90r) has erroneously b. Abi Muzahim. xcviii Griffini, Corpus, pp. xci ff. xcix Griffini, Corpus, pp. cxx ff. c Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib,Vol. 4, p. 429 f. ci Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 2, p. 139; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 4, p. 35. cii Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 2, p. 325; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 4, pp. 450 ff. ciii Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 1, pp. 458 ff.; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 2, pp. 196 ff. civ The MS (fol. 110r) has erroneously Said an Abi Aruba. cv Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 2, pp. 151 ff.; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 4, p. 63. cvi Van Arendonk, Les dbuts, p. 318. cvii Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib,Vol. 9, pp. 316 f. cviii Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib,Vol. 11, pp. 430 f. cix Ibn Sad, Vol. 7, pt. 2, p. 70; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, Vol. 4, pp. 306 f.; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, Vol. 11, pp. 59 ff. cx Al-Najashi, p. 71; al-Tusi, Fihrist, p. 31; Ibn Shahrashub, p. 12. cxi Al-Kishshi, p. 566. cxii Al-Najashi, p. 322; al-Tusi, Fihrist, pp. 332 f.; al-Tusi, Rijal, p. 310; Ibn Shahrashub, p. 108. cxiii Fol. 2a.