Online Encyclopedia

MUSLIM IBN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 93 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MUSLIM

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IBN  AL-IjAJJAJ, the
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Imam, the author of one of the two books of
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Mahommedan tradition called
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Sahib, " sound," was born at Nishapur at some uncertain date after A.D . 815 and died there in 875 . Like al-Bukhari (q.v.), of whom he was a close and faithful friend, he gave himself to the
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collecting, sifting and arranging of traditions, travelling for the purpose as far as
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Egypt . It is plain that his sympathies were with the traditionalist school or opposed to that which sought to build up the
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system of
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canon law on a speculative basis (see MAHOMMEDAN LAW) . But though he was a student and friend of Ahmad
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ibn Ilanbal (q.v.) he did not go in traditionalism to the length of some, and he defended al-Bukhara when the latter was driven from Nishapur for refusing to admit that the utterance (lafz) of the
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Koran by man was as uncreated as the Koran itself (see MAHOMMEDAN RELIGION; and Patton's Ahmad ibn Hanbal, 32 sqq.) . His
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great collection of traditions is second in popularity only to that of al-Bukhari, and is commonly regarded as more accurate and reliable in details, especially names . His
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object was more to weed out illegitimate accretions than to furnish a traditional basis for a system of law . Therefore, though he arranged his material according to such a system, he did not add guiding rubrics, and he regularly brought together in one place the different parallel versions of the same tradition . His
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book is thus historically more useful, but legally less suggestive . His biographers give almost no details as to his
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life, and its early
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part was probably very obscure . One gives a list of as many as twenty
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works, but only his Saitih seems to have reached us . See further, de Slane's trans(. of lbn Khallikan, iii .

348 sqq, and of Ibn Khaldun's Prolegomenes, ii . 47o, 475;

Goldziher, Muhammedanische Studien, i 245 sqq., 255 sq ; Brockelmann, Geschichte der arab . Litt., i . 76o seq.; Macdonald, Development of Muslim
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Theology, 8o, 147 seq.; Dhahabi Tadhkira (edit. of Hyderabad), ii . 165 sqq . (D . B .

End of Article: MUSLIM IBN
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