📖 Overview
Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq is a foundational hadith collection compiled by the 8th-century Yemeni scholar Abd al-Razzaq al-San'ani. The work contains approximately 21,000 narrations organized into chapters covering religious, legal and historical topics.
The compilation features reports about the Prophet Muhammad's sayings and actions, along with opinions and rulings from early Muslim scholars and companions. It spans subjects including prayer, fasting, marriage, business transactions, and governance, serving as a reference work for Islamic jurisprudence and practice.
The text preserves accounts from major early Islamic figures and provides a window into the development of legal thought in the first centuries of Islam. The chains of transmission (isnad) are documented for each narration, allowing scholars to evaluate their authenticity.
The Musannaf remains significant for its role in documenting the evolution of Islamic scholarship and hadith literature. Its systematic organization by topic established a model for later hadith collections that shaped classical Islamic studies.
👀 Reviews
This text has limited publicly available reader reviews online, as it is a classical Arabic hadith collection mainly studied by Islamic scholars rather than general readers.
Scholars note its value as one of the earliest major hadith compilations, containing rare narrations not found in other collections. Readers appreciate the comprehensive organization and detail of the legal and theological content.
Some readers mention challenges with:
- Complex classical Arabic language requiring expertise
- Need for supporting texts and commentary to understand context
- Limited availability of complete English translations
No ratings or reviews are currently available on Goodreads, Amazon or other major book review sites. The work is primarily discussed in academic papers and Islamic scholarly forums rather than consumer review platforms.
[Note: Given the specialized nature of this classical Islamic text, public reader reviews are quite limited. The above represents what could be found from scholarly discussions rather than general reader feedback.]
📚 Similar books
Musannaf Ibn Abi Shaybah by Abdullah ibn Muhammad ibn Abi Shaybah
A hadith collection organized by topic that contains many of the same narrations and similar chapter arrangements as Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq.
Al-Sunan Al-Kubra by Al-Bayhaqi This comprehensive hadith compilation includes detailed legal discussions and citations that overlap with material found in Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq.
Kitab al-Umm by Al-Shafi‘i The text presents early Islamic jurisprudence through hadith citations and legal reasoning that draws from many of the same source materials as Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq.
Al-Mudawwana by Sahnun This collection of Maliki legal rulings contains parallel discussions of many topics covered in Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq with citations from shared narrators.
Jami al-Bayan by Al-Tabari The exegetical work incorporates many of the same hadith chains and legal interpretations found throughout Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq.
Al-Sunan Al-Kubra by Al-Bayhaqi This comprehensive hadith compilation includes detailed legal discussions and citations that overlap with material found in Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq.
Kitab al-Umm by Al-Shafi‘i The text presents early Islamic jurisprudence through hadith citations and legal reasoning that draws from many of the same source materials as Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq.
Al-Mudawwana by Sahnun This collection of Maliki legal rulings contains parallel discussions of many topics covered in Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq with citations from shared narrators.
Jami al-Bayan by Al-Tabari The exegetical work incorporates many of the same hadith chains and legal interpretations found throughout Musannaf Abd al-Razzaq.
🤔 Interesting facts
📚 Abd al-Razzaq's Musannaf is one of the earliest surviving hadith collections, compiled in the 8th century CE, predating many other famous hadith works including Sahih al-Bukhari.
🕌 The work contains approximately 21,033 narrations and covers various aspects of Islamic law, daily life practices, and historical accounts from the early Muslim community.
📖 The manuscript remained largely unknown until its discovery in the 20th century in a Turkish library, after which it was published in 11 volumes and became a valuable source for studying early Islamic history.
👨🏫 The author, Abd al-Razzaq al-San'ani, studied under the renowned scholar Ma'mar ibn Rashid and became one of Yemen's most important religious scholars, with students traveling from as far as Baghdad to learn from him.
🗂️ Unlike later hadith collections that are typically organized by topic, this work follows the musannaf style, which arranges traditions by both subject matter and chain of transmission, making it particularly valuable for studying the development of Islamic legal thought.