The Great History
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''The Great History'' () is a book by ninth-century
Islamic scholar In Islam, the ''ulama'' ( ; also spelled ''ulema''; ; singular ; feminine singular , plural ) are scholars of Islamic doctrine and law. They are considered the guardians, transmitters, and interpreters of religious knowledge in Islam. "Ulama ...
Muhammad ibn Ismail al-Bukhari in the field of
biographical evaluation Biographical evaluation (; literally meaning'' 'Knowledge of Men', ''but more commonly understood as the ''Science of Narrators)'' refers to a discipline of Islamic religious studies within hadith terminology in which the narrators of hadith are ...
(''ʿilm ar-rijāl'').Al-Kattani, Muhammad ibn Ja‘far; ''Al-Risalah al-Mustatrafah'', pg. 128–9, (Beirut: Dar al-Basha'ir al-Islamiyyah); seventh edition, 2007.


Overview

Bukhari's ''Great History'' focuses on reconstructing the full network of transmitters 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 ...
, but does not take up an interest in describing the full names or biographies of these transmitters. As such, Bukhari only comments on the reliability of as few as 6% of the hadith reports he mentions and almost never comments on the reliability of transmitters themselves. A typical biographical entry in this work runs as follows:
Ad'ham al-Sadusi, Abui Bishr. Hajjaj al-Aʿwar quoted Shuʿbah, "He was client to Shaqiq ibn Thawr." He heard ʿAbd Allah ibn Buraydah. There related (hadith) from him Shucbah and Hushaym. His hadith is among the Basrans.
According to Firabri, Bukhari composed this text as a young man in
Mecca Mecca, officially Makkah al-Mukarramah, is the capital of Mecca Province in the Hejaz region of western Saudi Arabia; it is the Holiest sites in Islam, holiest city in Islam. It is inland from Jeddah on the Red Sea, in a narrow valley above ...
, long before composing his
Sahih Hadith terminology () is the body of terminology in Islam which specifies the acceptability of the sayings (''hadith'') attributed to the Prophets in Islam, Islamic prophet Muhammad by other early Islamic figures of significance such as the compa ...
. Several manuscripts of the text are known from the 9th century, and the tradition is known through the transmission of Abū al-Ḥasan Muḥammad ibn Sahl ibn ʿAbl Allāh, a reciter and grammarian of the Quran from
Basra Basra () is a port city in Iraq, southern Iraq. It is the capital of the eponymous Basra Governorate, as well as the List of largest cities of Iraq, third largest city in Iraq overall, behind Baghdad and Mosul. Located near the Iran–Iraq bor ...
, who is only known for his transmission of his text. Extant manuscripts of this text contain biographies of 12,300 individuals, none of whom are women. While Al-Ḥākim claims that according to Abū ʿAlī al-Husayn al-Māsarjisī, the text contained roughly 40,000 biographical entries of both men and women, Melchert has argued that the evidence consisted of Bukhari having assembled the ''Great History'' roughly in the form it exists today, although having undergone some editing and rearrangement. Some entries in Bukhari's Great History are dedicated to polemicizing against other scholars he is critical of. For example, his entry on the jurist
Abu Hanifa Abu Hanifa (; September 699 CE – 767 CE) was a Muslim scholar, jurist, theologian, ascetic,Pakatchi, Ahmad and Umar, Suheyl, "Abū Ḥanīfa", in: ''Encyclopaedia Islamica'', Editors-in-Chief: Wilferd Madelung and, Farhad Daftary. and epony ...
claims that he was part of the
Murji'ah Murji'ah (, English: "Those Who Postpone"), also known as Murji'as or Murji'ites (singular Murji'), were an early Islamic sect. The Murji'ah school of theology prioritized the importance of one's professed faith over the acts, deeds, or rituals th ...
, a sect al-Bukhari deemed to be heretical. In addition, he asserts that the scholarly community had renounced Abu Hanifa and his "speculative" jurisprudence.


Reception

Bukhari's ''Great History'' was quickly received, and it gained fame much earlier than the work that Bukhari is more famous for today, ''
Sahih al-Bukhari () is the first hadith collection of the Six Books of Sunni Islam. Compiled by Islamic scholar al-Bukhari () in the format, the work is valued by Sunni Muslims, alongside , as the most authentic after the Qur'an. Al-Bukhari organized the bo ...
''. The first mention of someone narrating from the ''Great History'' is a century earlier than that of his ''Sahih'', and it becomes used as a model for another biographical work nearly seventy years before another figure uses the ''Sahih'' as a template for their hadith collection. Ibn Abi Hatim wrote the first response to any part of Bukhari's works, specifically by responding to his ''Great History'', though his book was aimed at detecting errors in it. However, he would soon enter a dispute regarding having plagiarized from the ''Great History''. A student replied, however, that Ibn Abi Hatim had considered the work so impressive that he along with his students were using it as the basis of a new work.
Al-Hakim al-Nishapuri Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Abd Allah al-Hakim al-Nishapuri (; 933 - 1014 CE), also known as Ibn al-Bayyiʿ, was a Persians, Persian Sunni scholar and the leading hadith studies, traditionist of his age, frequently referred to as the "Imam of t ...
used the ''Great History'' to support his contention, against other scholars, that many authentic and reliable hadith that had not yet been written down continued to exist and be passed on during his day. Having calculated the number of transmitters in the ''Great History'' as roughly 40,000, the number of transmitters among them mentioned in Sahih al-Bukhari as about 2,000, and the number of weak transmitters according to the ''Kitāb al-ḍuʿafāʾ'' as about 700, he subtracted both of these numbers from 40,000 and concluded that there was a large reservoir of untapped reliable transmitters (over thirty thousand) that could have continued to transmit reliable hadith.


Related works

Bukhari also authored two other books of history, titled The Medium History (''al-Tarikh al-Awsat'') and The Small History (''al-Tarikh al-Saghir'' ). The latter is lost.


References


Citations


References

* Hadith Sunni literature Hadith studies Biographical dictionaries 9th-century Arabic-language books {{bio-dict-stub