The Classification Of Hadith: According To The Links In The Isnad
Musnad
Al-Hakim defines a musnad ("supported") hadith
as follows:
"A hadith which a traditionist reports from
his shaikh from whom he is known to have
heard (ahadith) at a time of life suitable
for learning, and similarly in turn for
each shaikh, until the isnad reaches a well-
known Companion, who in turn reports from
the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant
him peace)."
By this definition, an ordinary muttasil hadith
(i.e. one with an uninterrupted isnad) is
excluded if it goes back only to a Companion or
Successor, as is a marfu' hadith which has an
interrupted isnad.
Al-Hakim gives the following example of a musnad
hadith:
We reported from Abu 'Amr 'Uthman b. Ahmad
al-Sammak al-Baghdadi === Al-Hasan b.
Mukarram === 'Uthman b. 'Amr === Yunus ---
al-Zuhri --- 'Abdullah b. Ka'b b. Malik ---
his father, who asked Ibn Abi Hadrad for
payment of a debt he owed to him, in the
mosque. During the ensuing argument, their
voices were raised until heard by the
Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace), who eventually lifted the
curtain of his apartment and said, "O Ka'b!
Write off a part of your debt" - he meant
remission of half of it. So he agreed, and
the man paid him.
He then remarks,
"Now, my hearing from Ibn al-Simak is well-
known, as is his from Ibn Mukarram; al-
Hasan's link with 'Uthman b. 'Amr and the
latter's with Yunus b. Zaid are known as
well; Yunus is always remembered with al-
Zuhri, and the latter with the sons of Ka'b
b. Malik, whose link to their father and
his companionship of the Prophet (may Allah
bless him and grant him peace) are well-
established."
The term musnad is also applied to those
collections of ahadith which give the ahadith of
each Companion separately. Among the early
compilers of such a Musnad were Yahya b. 'Abd al-
Hamid al-Himmani (d. 228) at Kufah and Musaddad
b. Musarhad (d. 228) at Basrah. The largest
existing collection of ahadith of Companions
arranged in this manner is that of Imam Ahmad b.
Hanbal (d. 241), which contains around thirty
thousand ahadith. Another larger work is
attributed to the famous Andalusian traditionist
Baqi b. Makhlad al-Qurtubi (d. 276), but
unfortunately it is now untraceable.
Mursal, Munqati', Mu'dal, & Mu'allaq
If the link between the Successor and the
Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him
peace) is missing, the hadith is mursal
("hurried"), e.g. when a Successor says, "The
Prophet said ...".
However, if a link anywhere before the Successor
(i.e. closer to the traditionist recording the
hadith) is missing, the hadith is munqati'
("broken"). This applies even if there is an
apparent link, e.g. an isnad seems to be
muttasil ("continuous") but one of the reporters
is known to have never heard ahadith from his
immediate authority, even though he may be his
contemporary. The term munqati' is also applied
by some scholars to a narration such as where a
reporter says, "a man narrated to me ...",
without naming this authority.
If the number of consecutive missing reporters
in the isnad exceeds one, the isnad is mu'dal
("perplexing"). If the reporter omits the whole
isnad and quotes the Prophet, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, directly (i.e. the link
is missing at the beginning, unlike the case
with a mursal isnad), the hadith is called
mu'allaq ("hanging") - sometimes it is known as
balaghah ("to reach"); for example, Imam Malik
sometimes says in Al-Muwatta', "It reached me
that the Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him
and grant him peace) said ..."
Example of a munqati' hadith
Al-Hakim reported from Muhammad b. Mus'ab === al-
Auza'i --- Shaddad Abu 'Ammar --- Umm al-Fadl
bint al-Harith, who said: I came to the
Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace) and said, "I have seen in a
vision last night as if a part of your body was
cut out and placed in my lap." He said, "You
have seen something good. Allah Willing,
Fatimah will give birth to a lad who will be in
your lap." After that, Fatimah gave birth to al-
Husain, who used to be in my lap, in accordance
with the statement of the Messenger of Allah
(may Allah bless him and grant him peace). One
day, I came to the Messenger of Allah (may Allah
bless him and grant him peace) and placed al-
Husain in his lap. I noticed that both his eyes
were shedding tears. He said, "Jibril came to
me and told me that my Ummah will kill this son
of mine, and he brought me some of the reddish
dust of that place (where he will be killed)."
Al-Hakim said, "This is a sahih hadith according
to the conditions of the Two Shaykhs (i.e.
Bukhari & Muslim), but they did not collect it."
Al-Dhahabi says, "No, the hadith is munqati' and
da'if, because Shaddad never met Umm al-Fadl and
Muhammad b. Mus'ab is weak."
Example of a mu'dal hadith
Ibn Abi Hatim === Ja'far b. Ahmad b. al-Hakam Al-
Qurashi in the year 254 === Sulaiman b. Mansur
b. 'Ammar === 'Ali b. 'Asim --- Sa'id ---
Qatadah --- Ubayy b. Ka'b, who reported that the
Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace) said, "After Adam had tasted
from the tree, he ran away, but the tree caught
his hair. It was proclaimed: O Adam! Are you
running away from Me? He said: No, but I feel
ashamed before You. He said: O Adam! Go away
from My neighbourhood, for By My Honour, no-one
who disobeys Me can live here near Me; even if
I were to create people like you numbering
enough to fill the earth and they were to
disobey Me, I would make them live in a home of
sinners."
Ibn Kathir remarks, "This is a gharib hadith.
There is inqita', in fact i'dal, between Qatadah
and Ubayy b. Ka'b, may Allah be pleased with
them both."
Authenticity of the Mursal Hadith
There has been a great deal of discussion
amongst the scholars regarding the authenticity
of the Mursal Hadith (pl. Marasil), since it is
quite probable that a Successor might have
omitted two names, those of an elder Successor
and a Companion, rather than just one name, that
of a Companion.
If the Successor is known to have omitted the
name of a Companion only, then the hadith is
held to be authentic, for a Successor can only
report from the Prophet (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace) through a Companion; the
omission of the name of the Companion does not
affect the authenticity of the isnad since all
Companions are held to be trustworthy and
reliable, by both Qur'anic injunctions and
sayings of the Prophet (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace).
However, opinions vary in the case where the
Successor might have omitted the names of two
authorities (since not all the Successors were
reliable in matters of Hadith). For example,
two widely-differing positions on this issue
are:
- the Marasil of elder Successors such as
Sa'id b. al-Musayyab (d. 94) and 'Ata' b. Abi
Rabah (d. 114) are acceptable because all their
Marasil, after investigation, are found to come
through the Companions only. However, the
Marasil of younger Successors are only
acceptable if the names of their immediate
authorities are known through other sources; if
not, they are rejected outright.
- the Marasil of Successors and those who
report from them are acceptable without any
investigation at all. This opinion is supported
by the Kufi school of traditionists, but is
severely attacked by the majority.
To be precise in this issue, let us investigate
in detail the various opinions regarding the
Mursal Hadith:
- The opinion held by Imam Malik and all Maliki
jurists is that the Mursal of a trustworthy
person is valid as proof and as justification
for a practice, just like a musnad hadith.
This view has been developed to such an extreme
that to some of them, the mursal is even better
than the musnad, based on the following
reasoning:
"the one who reports a musnad hadith leaves
you with the names of the reporters for
further investigation and scrutiny, whereas
the one who narrates by way of Irsal, being
a knowledgeable and trustworthy person
himself, has already done so and found the
hadith to be sound. In fact, he saves you
from further research."
- Imam Abu Hanifah (d. 150) holds the same
opinion as Malik; he accepts the Mursal Hadith
whether or not it is supported by another
hadith.
- Imam al-Shafi'i (d. 204) has discussed this
issue in detail in his al-Risalah; he requires
the following conditions to be met before
accepting a mursal hadith:
- In the narrative, he requires that one of
the following conditions be met:
that it be reported also as musnad through
another isnad;
that its contents be reported as mursal
through another reliable source with a
different isnad;
that the meaning be supported by the sayings
of some Companions; or
that most scholars hold the same opinion as
conveyed by the mursal hadith.
- Regarding the narrator, he requires that
one of the following conditions be met:
that he be an elder Successor;
that if he names the person missing in the
isnad elsewhere, he does not usually name an
unknown person or someone not suitable for
reporting from acceptably; or
that he does not contradict a reliable person
when he happens to share with him in a
narration.
On the basis of these arguments, al-Shafi'i
accepts the Irsal of Sa'id b. al-Musayyab, one
of the elder Successors. For example, al-
Shafi'i considers the issue of selling meat in
exchange for a living animal: he says that Malik
told him, reporting from Zaid b. Aslam, who
reported from Ibn al-Musayyab that the Messenger
of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him
peace) forbade the selling of meat in exchange
for an animal. He then says, "This is our
opinion, for the Irsal of Ibn al-Musayyib is
fine."
- Imam Ahmad b. Hanbal (d. 241) accepts mursal
and (other) da'if (weak) ahadith if nothing
opposing them is found regarding a particular
issue, preferring them to qiyas (analogical
deduction). By da'if here is meant ahadith
which are not severely weak, e.g. batil, munkar,
or maudu', since Imam Ahmad classified ahadith
into sahih and da'if rather than into sahih,
hasan and da'if, the preference of most later
traditionists. Hence, the category da'if in his
view applied to ahadith which were relatively
close to being sahih, and included many ahadith
which were classed as hasan by other scholars.
Overlooking this fact has caused
misunderstanding about Imam Ahmad's view on the
place of da'if ahadith in rulings of Fiqh and in
matters of Fada'il al-A'mal (virtues of various
acts of worship).
- Ibn Hazm (d. 456) rejects the Mursal Hadith
outright; he says that the Mursal is
unacceptable, whether it comes through Sa'id b.
al-Musayyib or al-Hasan al-Basri. To him, even
the Mursal which comes through someone who was
not well-known to be amongst the Companions
would be unacceptable.
- Abu Dawud (d . 275) accepts the Mursal under
two conditions:
that no musnad hadith is found regarding that
issue; or
that if a musnad hadith is found, it is not
contradicted by the mursal hadith.
- Ibn Abi Hatim (d. 327) does not give a
specific opinion about the Mursal Hadith.
However, he did collect an anthology of 469
reporters of hadith, including four female
reporters, whose narratives were subjected to
criticism due to Irsal. This collection is
known as Kitab al-Marasil.
- Al-Hakim (d. 405) is extremely reluctant to
accept the Mursal Hadith except in the case of
elder Successors. He holds, on the basis of the
Qur'an, that knowledge is based on what is heard
(directly), not on what is reported
(indirectly). In this regard, he quotes Yazid
b. Harun who asked Hammad b. Laith:
"O Abu Isma'il! Did Allah mention the Ahl
al-Hadith (scholars of Hadith) in the
Qur'an?" He replied, "Yes! Did you not
hear the saying of Allah,
If a party from every expedition remained
behind, they could devote themselves to
studies in religion and admonish the people
when they return to them, that thus they
may guard themselves (against evil)'
(Qur'an, 9:l22).
This concerns those who set off to seek
knowledge, and then return to those who
remained behind in order to teach them."
Al-Hakim then remarks, "This verse shows that
the acceptable knowledge is the one which is
being heard, not just received by way of Irsal."
- Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi (d. 462) strongly
supports the view of those who reject the Mursal
except if it comes through an elder Successor.
He concludes, after giving a perusal of
different opinions about this issue,
"What we select out of these sayings is
that the Mursal is not to be practised, nor
is it acceptable as proof. We say that
Irsal leads to one reporter being
ambiguous; if he is ambiguous, to ascertain
his reliability is impossible. We have
already explained that a narration is only
acceptable if it comes through a reporter
known for reliability. Hence, the Mursal
should not be accepted at all."
Al-Khatib gives the following example, showing
that a narrative which has been reported through
both musnad and mursal isnads is acceptable, not
because of the reliability of those who narrated
it by way of Irsal but because of an
uninterrupted isnad, even though it contains
less reliable reporters:
The text of the hadith is: "No marriage is valid
except by the consent of the guardian"; al-
Khatib gives two isnads going back to Shu'bah
and Sufyan al-Thauri; the remainder of each
isnad is:
Sufyan al-Thauri and Shu'bah --- Abu Ishaq ---
Abu Burdah --- the Prophet.
This isnad is mursal because Abu Burdah, a
Successor, narrates directly from the Prophet
(may Allah bless him and grant him peace).
However, al-Khatib further gives three isnads
going back to Yunus b. Abi Ishaq, Isra'il b.
Yunus and Qais b. al-Rabi'; the remainder of the
first isnad is:
Yunus b. Abi Ishaq --- Abu Ishaq --- Abu Burdah
--- Abu Musa --- the Prophet.
The other two reporters narrate similarly, both
of them including the name of Abu Musa, the
Companion from whom Abu Burdah has reported. Al-
Khatib goes on to prove that both al-Thauri and
Shu'bah heard this hadith from Abu Ishaq in one
sitting while the other three reporters heard it
in different sittings. Hence, this addition of
Abu Musa in the isnad is quite acceptable.
- Ibn al-Salah (d. 643) agrees with al-Shafi'i
in rejecting the Mursal Hadith unless it is
proved to have come through a musnad route.
- Ibn Taimiyyah (d. 728) classifies Mursal
into three categories. He says, "There are some
acceptable, others unacceptable, and some which
require further investigation:
if it is known that the reporter does so (i.e.
narrates by Irsal) from reliable authorities,
then his report will be accepted;
if he does so from both classes of
authorities, i.e. reliable and unreliable, we
shall not accept his narration (on its own,
without further investigation), for he is
narrating from someone whose reliability is
unknown;
all such mursal ahadith which go against the
reports made by reliable authorities will be
rejected completely."
- Al-Dhahabi (d. 748) regards the Mursal of
younger Successors such as al-Hasan al-Basri, al-
Zuhri, Qatadah and Humaid al-Tawil as the
weakest type of Mursal.
Later scholars such as Ibn Kathir (d. 744), al-
'Iraqi (d. 806), Ibn Hajar (d. 852), al-Suyuti
(d. 911), Muhammad b. Ibrahim al-Wazir (d. 840),
Jamal al-Din al-Qasimi (d. 1332) and Tahir al-
Jaza'iri (d. 1338) have given exhaustive
discussions about this issue, but none of them
holds an opinion different to those mentioned
above.
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