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AHMAD See also: death, of the Hanbalite school of See also: canon See also: law, was See also: born at See also: Bagdad in A.H
.
164 (A.D
.
780) of parents from Mery but of Arab stock
.
He studied the See also: Koran and its traditions (hadith, sunna) there and on a student journey through See also: Mesopotamia, See also: Arabia and See also: Syria
.
After his return to Bagdad he studied under ash-See also: Shaft i between 195 and 198, and became, for his See also: life, a devoted Shafi-`ite
.
But his position in both See also: theology and law was more narrowly traditional than that of ash-Shafi'I; he rejected all reasoning, whether orthodox or heretical in its conclusions, and stood for acceptance on tradition (nagl), only from the Fathers
.
(See further on this, See also: MAHOMMEDAN See also: RELIGION and MAHOMMEDAN LAW.) In consequence, when al-Ma'mun and, after him, al-Mo'tasim and al-Wathiq tried to force upon the See also: people the rationalistic Mo'tazilite See also: doctrine that the Koran was created, See also: Ibn IJanbal, the most prominent and popular theologian who stood for the old view, suffered with others grievous imprisonment and scourging
.
In 234, under al-Motawakkil, the Koran was finally decreed uncreated, and Ibn IJanbal, who had come through this trial better than any of the other theologians, enjoyed an immense popularity with the mass of the people as a See also: saint, See also: confessor and ascetic
.
He died at Bagdad in 241 (A.D
.
855) and was buried there
.
There was
much popular excitement at his funeral, and his See also: tomb was known and visited until at least the 14th century A.D,
On his See also: great See also: work, the Musnad, a collection of some See also: thirty thou-See also: sand selected traditions, see See also: Goldziher in ZDMG, 1
.
4§5 if
.
For his life and See also: works generally see W
.
M
.
Patten, Ahmed cbn Hanbal and the Mihna; C
.
Brockelmann, Geschichte der Arab
.
Lit. i. r81 ff.; F
.
Wiistenfeld, Schafe'iten, 55 ff
.
; M'G. de Slane's transl. of Ibn Khallikan, i
.
44 ff.; See also: Macdonald, Development of Muslim Theology, 11o, 157, See also: index
.
(D
.
B
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