musnad
Appearance
See also: Musnad
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Arabic مُسْنَد (musnad), passive participle of أَسْنَدَ (ʔasnada, “support, evidence”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /mus.nɑd/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Hyphenation: mus‧nad
Noun
[edit]musnad (plural musnads)
- (science of hadith) A collection of hadith arranged according to the Companion who transmitted them from Muhammad.
- 1996 July-September, Eerik Dickinson, “Ahmad B. al-Salt and his biography of Abu Hanifa”, in Journal of the American Oriental Society, volume 116, number 2:
- Mahmud al-Khwarazmi (593/ 1197-655/1257), a well-travelled Hanafite scholar who ended his career as a teacher in Baghdad, composed a kind of super-musnad of Abu Hanifa.
- 2001, Eerik Dickinson, The Development of Early Sunnite Ḥadīth Criticism, →ISBN:
- In these cases, the musnad was a scholarly exercise undertaken by some later admirer who would cull all of the hadīth a particular figure quotes in his works and elsewhere and place them in a single book.
- 2002 July, R. Marston Speight, “Some Formal Characteristics of the Musnad Type of Ḥadīṯ Collection”, in Arabica:
- The type of hadīṯ collection called musnad is one in which compilers brought together reports whose chains of transmission go back to a particular Companion of the Prophet.
- 2013, Gerhard Böwering, Patricia Crone, Mahan Mirza, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought, →ISBN, page 211:
- Such works were called musnads, the most famous of which is the Musnad of Ibn Hanbal (d. 855).
- Alternative form of musnud (ceremonial seat or throne)