In the
Islamic
Islam is an Abrahamic religions, Abrahamic monotheistic religion based on the Quran, and the teachings of Muhammad. Adherents of Islam are called Muslims, who are estimated to number Islam by country, 2 billion worldwide and are the world ...
study of hadith, an isnād (chain of transmitters, or literally "supporting"; ) refers to a list of people who passed on a tradition, from the original authority to whom the tradition is attributed to, to the present person reciting or compiling that tradition. The tradition an ''isnad'' is associated with is called the ''matn''. Isnads are an important feature of the genre of Islamic literature known as
hadith
Hadith is the Arabic word for a 'report' or an 'account f an event and refers to the Islamic oral tradition of anecdotes containing the purported words, actions, and the silent approvals of the Islamic prophet Muhammad or his immediate circle ...
and are prioritized in the process that seeks to determine if the tradition in question is authentic or inauthentic.
According to the traditional Islamic view, the tradition of the hadith sciences has succeeded in the use of isnads to distinguish between authentic and inauthentic traditions going back to
Muhammad
Muhammad (8 June 632 CE) was an Arab religious and political leader and the founder of Islam. Muhammad in Islam, According to Islam, he was a prophet who was divinely inspired to preach and confirm the tawhid, monotheistic teachings of A ...
and his
companions. The contemporary view in modern
hadith studies, however, is that isnads were commonly susceptible to forgery and so had to be scrutinized before being used to guarantee the transmission of a tradition.
Pre-Islamic background
Chains of transmission are found in many religious texts as an oral guarantor for the preservation of tradition (by contrast, written transmission was perceived to be unreliable). These include sources from
rabbinic,
Christian
A Christian () is a person who follows or adheres to Christianity, a Monotheism, monotheistic Abrahamic religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus in Christianity, Jesus Christ. Christians form the largest religious community in the wo ...
(including
Papias,
Ephrem, and the
Pseudo-Clementine Homilies), and
Manichaean backgrounds. In Christian circles, a criterion for authoritative transmission was that it would begin with an apostle and pass through a series of
bishops
A bishop is an ordained member of the clergy who is entrusted with a position of Episcopal polity, authority and oversight in a religious institution. In Christianity, bishops are normally responsible for the governance and administration of di ...
.
Apostolic succession
Apostolic succession is the method whereby the Christian ministry, ministry of the Christian Church is considered by some Christian denominations to be derived from the Twelve Apostles, apostles by a continuous succession, which has usually been ...
is the belief that the leadership of the Church has occurred through continuous transmission going back to the apostles, which legitimizes traditions by extension of the authority of
Jesus
Jesus (AD 30 or 33), also referred to as Jesus Christ, Jesus of Nazareth, and many Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament, other names and titles, was a 1st-century Jewish preacher and religious leader. He is the Jesus in Chris ...
and
the disciples. This practice has been compared to the Islamic idea of attributing the transmission of a tradition through a line of known tradents. These methods of transmission likely arose independently.
Joseph Horowitz proposed that the Islamic version of the practice of combining a tradition or saying with a chain of transmitters going back to an original authority stems from the instance of this tradition in rabbinic literature from whence it got adopted into the nascent
hadith sciences, before it underwent a much more elaborate native systematization in the Islamic tradition. According to
Michael Cook:
We can then go on to find elements in the Islamic edifice that look like specific borrowings from Judaism ... the chain of transmitters that accompanies an oral account, known on the Muslim side as the isnād, as in "Muḥammad ibn Yūsuf informed us from Sufyān from Abū ʾl-Zinād from Mūsā ibn Abī ʿUthmān from his father from Abū Hurayra from the Prophet who said..." The only other religious culture in which we find such a style of attribution is Judaism, as in “Rabbi Zeriqa said: Rabbi Ammi said: Rabbi Simeon ben Laqish said:...” What was different was that once adopted in Islam the practice was developed much more systematically and applied to a much wider range of material.
One Jewish chain of transmission is reiterated in the
Quran
The Quran, also Romanization, romanized Qur'an or Koran, is the central religious text of Islam, believed by Muslims to be a Waḥy, revelation directly from God in Islam, God (''Allah, Allāh''). It is organized in 114 chapters (, ) which ...
(5:44).
Origins in Islam
A number of propositions have been made concerning the time that isnads began to be used in conjunction with the passing on of tradition in the Islamic world. One of the most common pieces of evidence considered in these discussions is in a statement that has been attributed to the
Basran scholar
Ibn Sirin (d. 110/728 AD), which states:
Lam yakūnū yas’alūna ‘an al-isnād. Fa-lammā waqa‘at al-fitna qālū: "Sammū la-nā rijāla-kum fa-yunẓaru ilā ahl al-sunna fa-yu’khadhu ḥadīthu-hum wa-yunẓaru ilā ahl al-bida‘ fa-lā yu’khadhu ḥadīthu-hum."
They were not asking about the ''isnād''. When the ''fitna'' (civil war) broke out, they said, "name to us your informants (''rijāl''), so that we can recognize the people of rthodoxtradition and accept their ḥadīth, and recognize the people of ereticalinnovation and accept not their ḥadīth."
According to this tradition, the use of isnads begins with the era of the ''fitna''. However, this term is ambiguous, and so much scholarly debate has concerned the meaning of ''fitna'' in this passage, as it could be taken as a reference to the
First Fitna
The First Fitna () was the first civil war in the Islamic community. It led to the overthrow of the Rashidun and the establishment of the Umayyad Caliphate. The civil war involved three main battles between the fourth Rashidun caliph, Ali, an ...
(656–616 AD) (the view of
Muhammad Mustafa Azmi), the
Second Fitna (680–692) (the view of
G.H.A. Juynboll), or the
Third Fitna (744–750) (the view of
Joseph Schacht, only possible if the tradition has been misattributed to, and therefore post-dates, Ibn Sirin). Since Juynboll, who has observed that the earliest sources most commonly associate the use of this word in isolation with the Second Fitna, it has become increasingly accepted that the tradition in question localizes the beginnings of the use of isnads to the era of the Second Fitna. Furthermore, Juynboll's assessment has alleviated the skepticism towards the question of whether Ibn Sirin made this claim.
Therefore, isnads emerged in the Islamic tradition in the late first Islamic century. This occurred during the beginnings of efforts to offer systematic support for collected traditions. In this early stage, however, isnads were still not systematically invoked. The pivotal figure in the emergence of traditions concerning the Prophetic biography,
Urwa ibn al-Zubayr, used isnads, but not consistently. Later on, as the
hadith sciences emerged and were formalized, they were documented more rigidly.
Reliability
In contemporary
hadith studies, isnads have been subjected to a heightened level of scrutiny, and virtually all authorities believe that isnads have been afflicted with higher levels of partial or complete forgery than had been commonly presumed. Complete forgeries would constitute a wholesale invention of an isnad, whereas partial forgery typically involves fabricating a list of early transmitters of a tradition to connect it with a figure of higher prestige, such as
Muhammad
Muhammad (8 June 632 CE) was an Arab religious and political leader and the founder of Islam. Muhammad in Islam, According to Islam, he was a prophet who was divinely inspired to preach and confirm the tawhid, monotheistic teachings of A ...
himself or one of his reputable
followers. One of the most skeptical instances of modern views on isnads comes from the influential writings of
Joseph Schacht (d. 1969), who, in his ''
Origins of Muhammadan Jurisprudence'' (1950), argued that isnads were sweepingly fabricated towards the end of the second
Islamic century. For Schacht, isnads "grew backwards", meaning that over time, the tradition was attributed to earlier and earlier authorities until they reached back to Muhammad. According to this view, as the
hadith sciences developed and increasingly prioritized complete Prophetic isnads (without any missing links and going back to Muhammad) in the post-150 AH period, there was a growing incentive to modify or forge isnads to meet these criteria. Isnads recorded in this era but do not meet these criteria are therefore more likely to be real, as they had not been furnished and shaped according to the emerging editorial standards of hadith scholars (''muhaddithin''). This view has materialized in Schacht's oft-quoted maxim: "the more perfect the isnad, the later the tradition".
Today, isnads are thought to have entered usage three-quarters of a century after Muhammad's death, before which hadith were transmitted haphazardly and anonymously. Once they began to be used, the names of authorities, popular figures, and sometimes even fictitious figures would be supplied.
[ Ibn Rawandi, "Origins of Islam", 2000: p.118] Over time, isnads would be polished to meet stricter standards.
[Patricia Crone, ''Roman, Provincial and Islamic Law'' (1987/2002 paperback), pp. 23–34, paperback edition] Additional concerns are raised by the substantial percentages of hadith that traditional critics are reported to have dismissed and difficulties in parsing out historical hadith from the vast pool of ahistorical ones.
[Crone, P., ''Roman, Provincial, and Islamic Law'', p.33][ Ibn Rawandi, "Origins of Islam", 2000: p.119-120] This perspective casts doubt on traditional methods of hadith verification, given their presupposition that the isnad of a report offers a sufficiently accurate history of its transmission to be able to verify or nullify it and the prioritization of isnads over other criteria like the presence of anachronisms in a hadith which might have an isnad that passes traditional standards of verification.
[Goldziher, I., ''Muslim Studies'', v.2, London, 1966, 1971, pp.140-141, quoted in Ibn Rawandi, "Origins of Islam", 2000: p.117]
Isnad-cum-matn analysis
In the 1990s, hadith historians developed a method known as
''isnad-cum-matn'' analysis (ICMA) as an alternative approach compared with traditional hadith sciences towards identifying the origins and developmental stages of hadith traditions. ICMA was invented twice independently in two publications that came out in 1996, one by Harald Motzki and the other by Schoeler. The primary advocate of ICMA in the initial stages of the development and application of the method was Motkzi; Motzki believed that the oral transmission of hadith would result in a progressive divergence of multiple versions of the same original report along different lines of transmitters. By comparing them to pinpoint shared wording, motifs and plots, the original version of a hadith that existed prior to the accrual of variants among different transmitters may be reconstructed. In addition, Motzki believed that a comparative study of the differences between reports could enable the identification of particular manipulations and other alterations. Put another way, ICMA seeks to date and trace the evolution of
hadith
Hadith is the Arabic word for a 'report' or an 'account f an event and refers to the Islamic oral tradition of anecdotes containing the purported words, actions, and the silent approvals of the Islamic prophet Muhammad or his immediate circle ...
by identifying how variation in the text or content (''matn'') of a hadith correlates with the variation in the listed chain of transmitters (''isnād'') across multiple versions of the same report.
References
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* {{Cite book , last=Zellentin , first=Holger , title=Within Judaism? Interpretive Trajectories in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam from the First to the Twenty-First Century , date=2023 , publisher=Lexington Books , editor-last=Runesson , editor-first=Anders , pages=282–308 , chapter=What Falls Within Judaism According to the Quran? , editor-last2=Zetterholm , editor-first2=Karin Hedner , chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/116144400/_What_Falls_Within_Judaism_According_to_the_Quran_in_Within_Judaism_Interpretive_Trajectories_in_Judaism_Christianity_and_Islam_from_the_First_to_the_Twenty_First_Century_ed_Anders_Runesson_and_Karin_Hedner_Zetterholm_Lanham_MD_Lexington_Books_Fortress_Academic_2023_282_308
Hadith
Hadith studies