Virtues of the Imam Ahmad ibn Ḥanbal : Volume One / Volume one / Volume one /
Ahmad ibn Hanbal (d. 241 H/855 AD), renowned for his profound knowledge of hadith-the reports of the Prophet's sayings and deeds-is a major figure in the history of Islam. Ibn Hanbal was famous for living according to his own strict interpretation of the Prophetic model and for denying himself...
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés Arabic |
Publicado: |
New York :
New York University Press,
2013.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Letter from the General Editor; Table of Contents; Introduction; Note on the Text; Notes to the Frontmatter; VIRTUES OF THE IMAM AHMAD IBN HANBAL; Chapter 1: Ibn Hanbal's Birth and Family Background; Chapter 2: His Lineage; Chapter 3: His Childhood; Chapter 4: The Beginning of His Search for Knowledge and the Journey He Undertook for That Purpose; Chapter 5: The Major Men of Learning Whom He Met and on Whose Authority He Recited Hadith; Chapter 6: His Deference to His Teachers and His Respect for Learning; Chapter 7: His Eagerness to Learn and His Single-Minded Pursuit of Knowledge.
- Chapter 8: His Powers of Retention and the Number of Reports He Knew by HeartChapter 9: His Learning, His Intelligence, and His Religious Understanding; Chapter 10: Praise of Him by His Teachers; Chapter 11: Teachers and Senior Men of Learning Who Cite Him; Chapter 12: All the Men of Learning Who Cite Him; Chapter 13: Praise of Him by His Peers, His Contemporaries, and Those Close to Him in Age; Chapter 14: Praise of Him by Prominent Successors Who Knew Him Well; Chapter 15: A Report That the Prophet Elijah Sent Him Greetings; Chapter 16: Reports That al-Khadir Spoke in His Praise.
- Chapter 17: Praise of Him by Pious Strangers and Allies of GodChapter 18: Allies of God Who Visited Him to Seek His Blessing; Chapter 19: His Fame; Chapter 20: His Creed; Chapter 21: His Insistence on Maintaining the Practices of the Early Muslims; Chapter 22: His Reverence for Hadith Transmitters and Adherents of the Sunnah; Chapter 23: His Shunning and Reviling of Innovators and His Forbidding Others to Listen to Them; Chapter 24: His Seeking of Blessings and Cures Using the Qur'an and Water from the Well of Zamzam, as Well as Some Hair and a Bowl That Belonged to the Prophet.
- Chapter 25: His Age When He Began Teaching Hadith and Giving Legal OpinionsChapter 26: His Devotion to Learning and the Attitudes That Informed His Teaching; Chapter 27: His Works; Chapter 28: His Aversion to Writing Books Containing Opinions Reached through the Exercise of Independent Judgment at the Expense of Transmitted Knowledge; Chapter 29: His Forbidding Others to Write Down or Transmit His Words; Chapter 30: His Remarks on Sincerity, on Acting for the Sake of Appearances, and on Concealing One's Pious Austerities; Chapter 31: His Statements about Renunciation and Spiritual Weakness.
- Chapter 32: His Remarks on Different SubjectsChapter 33: Poems He Recited or Had Attributed to Him; Chapter 34: His Correspondence; Chapter 35: His Appearance and Bearing; Chapter 36: His Imposing Presence; Chapter 37: His Cleanliness and Ritual Purity; Chapter 38: His Kindness and His Consideration for Others; Chapter 39: His Forbearance and His Readiness to Forgive; Chapter 40: His Property and Means of Subsistence; Chapter 41: His Refusal to Accept Help Even in Distress; Chapter 42: His Generosity; Chapter 43: His Accepting Gifts and Giving Gifts in Return; Chapter 44: His Renunciation.