Mursal Hadith & Its Authenticity
Mursal Hadith & Its Authenticity
Mursal Hadith & Its Authenticity
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ﺣﻨﻴﻒ أو ﻋﺒﺪ اﷲ ﺑﻦ ﻋﺎﻣﺮ ﺑﻦ رﺑﻴﻌﺔ وﻣﻦ ﻛﺎن ﻣﺜﻠﻬﻢ ﻗﺎل رﺳﻮل اﷲ ﺻﻠﻰ اﷲ ﻋﻠﻴﻪ
وﺳﻠﻢ وﻛﺬﻟﻚ ﻣﻦ دون ﻫﺆﻻء ﻣﺜﻞ ﺳﻌﻴﺪ ﺑﻦ اﳌﺴﻴﺐ وﺳﺎﱂ ﺑﻦ ﻋﺒﺪ اﷲ وأﰊ ﺳﻠﻤﺔ
ﺑﻦ ﻋﺒﺪ اﻟﺮﲪﻦ واﻟﻘﺎﺳﻢ ﺑﻦ ﳏﻤﺪ وﻣﻦ ﻛﺎن ﻣﺜﻠﻬﻢ وﻛﺬﻟﻚ ﻋﻠﻘﻤﺔ ﺑﻦ ﻗﻴﺲ وﻣﺴﺮوق
ﺑﻦ اﻷﺟﺪع واﳊﺴﻦ واﺑﻦ ﺳﲑﻳﻦ واﻟﺸﻌﱯ وﺳﻌﻴﺪ ﺑﻦ ﺟﺒﲑ وﻣﻦ ﻛﺎن ﻣﺜﻠﻬﻢ ﻣﻦ ﺳﺎﺋﺮ
اﻟﺘﺎﺑﻌﲔ اﻟﺬﻳﻦ ﺻﺢ ﳍﻢ ﻟﻘﺎء ﲨﺎﻋﺔ ﻣﻦ اﻟﺼﺤﺎﺑﺔ وﳎﺎﻟﺴﺘﻬﻢ ﻓﻬﺬا ﻫﻮ اﳌﺮﺳﻞ ﻋﻨﺪ
أﻫﻞ اﻟﻌﻠﻢ وﻣﺜﻠﻪ أﻳﻀﺎ ﳑﺎ ﳚﺮي ﳎﺮاﻩ ﻋﻨﺪ ﺑﻌﺾ أﻫﻞ اﻟﻌﻠﻢ ﻣﺮﺳﻞ ﻣﻦ دون ﻫﺆﻻء ﻣﺜﻞ
ﺣﺪﻳﺚ اﺑﻦ ﺷﻬﺎب وﻗﺘﺎدة وأﰊ ﺣﺎزم وﳛﲕ اﺑﻦ ﺳﻌﻴﺪ ﻋﻦ اﻟﻨﱯ ﺻﻠﻰ اﷲ ﻋﻠﻴﻪ وﺳﻠﻢ
ﻳﺴﻤﻮﻧﻪ ﻣﺮﺳﻼ ﻛﻤﺮﺳﻞ ﻛﺒﺎر اﻟﺘﺎﺑﻌﲔ
"This name is given by consensus to the hadith of a senior
Taabi’i from the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of
Allah be upon him), such as when ‘Ubayd-Allah ibn ‘Adiyy ibn
al-Khayyaar, or Abu Umaamah ibn Sahl ibn Haneef, or ‘Abd-
Allaah ibn ‘Aamir ibn Rabee’ah, and the like, say: The
Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)
said…
The same applies to those who are lower in status than these,
such as Sa’eed ibn al-Musayyab, Saalim ibn ‘Abd-Allaah, Abu
Salamah ibn ‘Abd al-Rahmaan, al-Qaasim ibn Muhammad,
and others like them.
The same applies to ‘Ilqimah ibn Qays, Masrooq ibn al-
Ajda’, al-Hasan, Ibn Sireen, al-Sha’bi, Sa’eed ibn Jubayr, and
others like them among the rest of the Taabi’een who it has
been proven met a number of the Sahaabah and spent time with
them. This is what is meant by mursal according to the
scholars.
It also applies to reports narrated from Taabi’een of lower
status than those mentioned above, such as hadeeth narrated by
Ibn Shihaab, Qataadah, Abu Haazim and Yahya ibn Sa’eed
from the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him),
which they call mursal, like the mursal reports of the senior
Taabi’een.."
It is essential to point out that the muhadditheen --
especially the earlier ones among them -- called every report
that had an interruption in its isnaad a mursal report.
Al-Khateeb al-Baghdadi (may Allah have mercy on him) said:
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، ﺑﺄن ﻳﻜﻮن ﰲ رواﺗﻪ ﻣﻦ ﱂ ﻳﺴﻤﻌﻪ ﳑﻦ ﻓﻮﻗﻪ، ﻣﺎ اﻧﻘﻄﻊ إﺳﻨﺎدﻩ: ﻓﻬﻮ، وأﻣﺎ اﳌﺮﺳﻞ
إﻻ أن أﻛﺜﺮ ﻣﺎ ﻳﻮﺻﻒ ﺑﺎﻹرﺳﺎل ﻣﻦ ﺣﻴﺚ اﻻﺳﺘﻌﻤﺎل ﻣﺎ رواﻩ اﻟﺘﺎﺑﻌﻲ ﻋﻦ اﻟﻨﱯ
ﺻﻠﻰ اﷲ ﻋﻠﻴﻪ وﺳﻠﻢ
"Mursal refers to a report whose isnaad (chain of
transmission) is interrupted, meaning that among its narrators
is one who did not hear it from the one whose name comes
before his. But in most cases, what is described as mursal is
that which was narrated by the Taabi’i from the Prophet
(blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)."
Types of Mursal Hadith
There are two type of Mursal Hadith:
1. Mursal'e Zahir
2. Mursal'e Khafi
1. Mursal'e Zahir
It is the Riwaayah where the Inqitaa’ (break) is Clear i.e.
The Narrator narrates from a Hadith Transmitter who is not a
contemporary.
2. Mursal'e Khafi
Is when the Inqitaa’ s not Clear in that the Narrator omits
his Hadith Transmitter yet the teacher Hadith Transmitter of
is also his contemporary but he has not met him.
Ruling of 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
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References
1 Ibn-e Manzoor Afriqi (Bearut, 1427 AhH), 281:11.
2 Abu Abd-Allah Muhammad ibn Abd-Allah al-Hakim al-Nishapuri (301 -
405 A.H), a great scholar and the leading traditionist of his age, frequently
referred to as the "Muhaddith of Khorasan." Al-Hakim, who hailed
from Nishapur, had vast numbers of teachers in Khurasan, Iraq,
Transoxiana and elsewhere. He had scores of notable students,
including Imam al-Bayhaqi who was a scholarly giant in his own right.
(Tareekh-e-Baghdad 473:5)
3 Muhammad b. `Abdullah al-Hakim, Ma'rifah `Ulum al-Hadith (ed.
Mu'azzam Husain, Cairo, 1937), p. 17.
4 Yusuf b Abdallah ibn Mohammed ibn Abd al-Barr, Abu Umar al-Namari
al-Qurtubi al-Maliki, commonly known as Ibn Abd-al-Barr, (368 - 468
A.H), a famous Maliki Islamic Scholar. While initially having been an
adherent of the Zahirite school of Muslim jurisprudence, Ibn Abd al-Barr
later switched to the Malikite rite, which was the officially recognized legal
code of the Umayyad dynasty, under which he lived. (Wafiyyat ul
A'ayaan:66:7).
5 Yusuf b. Abdullah Ibn Abdul Barr, Tajrid al-Tamhid lima fi l-Muwatta'
min al-Asanid (Cairo, 1350), 1:2.
6 Abu Bakr Ahmad ibn `Ali ibn Thabit ibn Ahmad ibn Mahdi al-Shafi`i,
commonly known as al-Khatib al-Baghdadi(393 - 463 A.H), Al-Khatib al-
Baghdadi was born on 24 Jumadi' al-Thani, 392 A.H, in Hanikiya, a village
south of Baghdad. He was the son of a preacher and he began studying at an
early age with his father and other shaykhs. He was one of the foremost
scholars whom we witnessed in his science, precision, memorization, and
accuracy in the hadith of the Messenger of Allah e . He was an expert in its
minute defects, its chains of transmission, its narrators and transmitters, the
sound and the rare, the unique and the denounced, the defective and the
discarded.(Siyar A'alam Al nubala: 270:18).
7 Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi, Al-Kifayah fi `Ilm al-Riwayah (Hyderabad, 1357),
p. 387.
8 Ibn'e hajr Al- Asqalani, Nukhbatul Fikr, p. 387.
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14 Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti, Tadrib al-Rawi (ed. A.A. Latif, 1st ed., Cairo,
1379/1959), 1:197.
15 Abū ʿAbdullāh Muḥammad ibn Idrīs al-Shāfīʿī A well known jurist, who
lived from (150 — 204 AH). Often referred to as 'Shaykh al-Islām' he was
one of the four great Imams of which a legacy on juridical matters and
teaching eventually led to the Shafi'i school of fiqh. He developed the science
of fiqh unifying 'revealed sources' - the Quran and hadith - with human
reasoning to provide a basis in law. With this systematization of shari'a he
provided a legacy of unity for all Muslims and forestalled the development of
independent, regionally based legal systems. (Tazkirat ul Huffaz: 361:1)
16 Al-Shafi`'i, Al-Risalah (ed. Ahmad Shakir, Cairo, 1358/1940, pp. 461-
470.
17 al-Suyuti, 1:199; Muhammad b. Mustafa al- Ghadamsi, Al-Mursal min
al-Hadith (Darif Ltd., London, N.D.), p.71.
18Aḥmad bin Muḥammad bin Ḥanbal Abū ʿAbd Allāh al-Shaybānī was an
important Muslim scholar and theologian. He is considered the founder of
the Hanbali school of Islamic jurisprudence. Ibn Hanbal is one of the most
celebrated Sunni theologians, often referred to as "Sheikh ul-
Islam," honorifics given to the most esteemed doctrinal authorities in the
Sunni tradition. Ibn Hanbal personified the theological views of the early
orthodox scholars, including the founders of the other extant schools of
Sunni fiqh. Hanbal was a strong spokesman for the usage of hadiths.
(Tareekh-e-Baghdad 413:4)
19 Ibn al-Qayyim, I'lam al-Muwaqqi'in (2nd ed., 4 vols. in 2, Dar al-Fikr,
Beirut, 1397/1977), 1:31.
20 Abū Muḥammad ʿAlī ibn Aḥmad ibn Saʿīd ibn Ḥazm also sometimes
known as al-Andalusī aẓ-Ẓāhirī; (456 AH) was an Andalusian polymath born
in Córdoba,. He was a leading proponent and codifier of the Zahiri school of
Islamic thought, and produced a reported 400 works of which only 40 still
survive, covering a range of topics such as Islamic
jurisprudence, history, ethics, comparative religion, and theology, as well
as The Ring of the Dove, on the art of love. (Siyar A'alam Al nubala: 184:4).
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province in Iraq, was raised in Mosul and then resided in Damascus, where
he died. (Wafiyyat ul A'ayaan:243:3)
31 Zain al-Din al-`Iraqi, Al-Taqyid wa 'l-Idah Sharh Muqaddimah Ibn al-
Salah (al-Maktabah al- Salafiyyahh, Madinah, 1389/1969), p. 72
32 Taqî ad-Dîn Aḥmad ibn Taymiyyah known as Ibn Taymiyyah (661-728)
was a Islamic scholar , theologian and logician. He lived during the troubled
times of the Mongol invasions. He was a member of the school founded
by Ahmad ibn Hanbal, and is considered by his followers, along with Ibn
Qudamah, as one of the two most significant proponents of Hanbalism. In
the modern era, his adherents often refer to the two as "the two sheikhs" and
Ibn Taymiyyah in particular as "Sheikh ul-Islam".(Al Bidayah Wa Al
Nihaya: 141:14).
33 Ibn Taymiyyah, Minhaj al-Sunnah an-Nabawiyyah fi Naqd Kalam al-
Shi'ah wa 'l-Qadariyyah (al- Maktabah al-Amiriyyah, Bulaq, 1322), 4:117.
34 Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn `Uthman ibn Qaymaz ibn `Abd Allah, Shams
al-Din Abu `Abd Allah al-Turkmani al-Diyarbakri al-Fariqi al-Dimashqi al-
Dhahabi al-Shafi`i,known as Al-Dhahabi (673-748AH), aShafi'i
Muhaddith and historian of Islam. He taught and authored many works and
achieved wide renown as a perspicuous critic and expert examiner of the
hadith, encyclopedic historian and biographer, and foremost authority in the
canonical readings of the Qur'an. (Al Durar Al-Kaminah: 366:3)
35 Al-Dhahabi, Al-Muqizah (Maktab al-Matbu'at al- Islamiyyah, Halab,
1405), p. 40.
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