This article needs additional citations for
verification. (July 2019) |
Author | Al-Darimi |
---|---|
Original title | سنن الدارمي |
Country | Abbasid Caliphate |
Language | Arabic |
Genre | Hadith collection |
Part of a series on |
Hadith |
---|
Islam portal • Category |
Sunan al-Darimi ( Arabic: سنن الدارمي) or Musnad al-Darimi ( Arabic: مسند الدارمي) by al-Darimi is a hadith collection considered by Sunni Muslims to be among the prominent nine collections: the Al-Kutub al-Sittah, Muwatta Malik, and Musnad Ahmad. [1]
Despite its title as a Musnad, it is not arranged by narrator in the manner of other Musnads, such as that of Tayalisi or Ibn Hanbal. It is arranged by subject matter in the manner of a book of Sunan, like the Sunan Ibn Majah.
It contains approximately 3,833 hadith according to Maktaba Shamila, [2] which are arranged by subject matter. Most of them are considered authentic, with some being weak. [3] [4]
Darimi transmitted these hadiths to `Isa ibn `Umar al-Samarqandi; date of death unknown, but presumably after 293 AH. Thereafter it passed to:
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (July 2019) |
Author | Al-Darimi |
---|---|
Original title | سنن الدارمي |
Country | Abbasid Caliphate |
Language | Arabic |
Genre | Hadith collection |
Part of a series on |
Hadith |
---|
Islam portal • Category |
Sunan al-Darimi ( Arabic: سنن الدارمي) or Musnad al-Darimi ( Arabic: مسند الدارمي) by al-Darimi is a hadith collection considered by Sunni Muslims to be among the prominent nine collections: the Al-Kutub al-Sittah, Muwatta Malik, and Musnad Ahmad. [1]
Despite its title as a Musnad, it is not arranged by narrator in the manner of other Musnads, such as that of Tayalisi or Ibn Hanbal. It is arranged by subject matter in the manner of a book of Sunan, like the Sunan Ibn Majah.
It contains approximately 3,833 hadith according to Maktaba Shamila, [2] which are arranged by subject matter. Most of them are considered authentic, with some being weak. [3] [4]
Darimi transmitted these hadiths to `Isa ibn `Umar al-Samarqandi; date of death unknown, but presumably after 293 AH. Thereafter it passed to: