Ahmed Bin Hanbal Zuhd PDF
Ahmed Bin Hanbal Zuhd PDF
Ahmed Bin Hanbal Zuhd PDF
by C h r i s t o p h e r M e l c h e r t
University of Oxford
Abstract
Ahmad ibn Hanbal’s book al-Zuhd (‘renunciation’) is one of the largest extant
collections of renunciant sayings from the first two Islamic centuries. It was
assembled by his son Abd Allah, who contributed about half the sayings in it inde-
pendently of his father. The extant text is only half or a third of the version available
to Ibn Hajar in the Mamluk period. Some of what is missing can be recovered from
quotations in Abu Nuaym, Hilyat al-awliya#. It is notably dominated by data from
Basra. Its contents are highly miscellaneous, but rejection of worldly goods appears
to be the theme that comes up most often.
cal Language of Islamic Mysticism, trans. Benjamin Clark (Notre Dame 1997). Re-
cent historical overviews are Alexander Knysh, Islamic Mysticism: A Short History,
Themes in Islamic Studies 1 (Leiden 1999), and Ahmet Karamustafa, Sufism: The
Formative Period, The New Edinburgh Islamic Surveys (Edinburgh 2007). For the
ons of stories and sayings from the ninth to eleventh centuries, among
which the second largest is the Kitab al-Zuhd (“book of renunciation”) at-
tributed to Ahmad ibn Hanbal (d. 241/855). The intention of this study is
to sketch its extent and character.
As for Ahmad ibn Hanbal, modern biographies in Arabic have stressed
his involvement in the Inquisition and the formation of Islamic law.3 Nimrod
Hurvitz’s more recent biography in English rightly stresses Ahmad’s piety
as one basis of the regard in which he was held and of the Hanbali school
of law that formed after his death; however, it cites al-Zuhd very seldom, in
line with its general neglect of Ahmads activity as a collector of hadith.4
Two versions of al-Zuhd are in print, based on different manuscripts,
both without a critical apparatus. The first appeared in Mecca in the
mid-1930s with an introduction by one Abd al-Rahman ibn Qasim, who
presumably also edited it on the basis of one Moroccan manuscript.5 Dar
al-Kutub al-Ilmiya of Beirut published a photomechanical reprint in the
1970s, then a resetting of it with new pagination in the 1980s.6 The second
(Cairo n.d.), Mustafa al-Sˇ aka, al-A#imma al-arbaa (Cairo and Beirut 1399/1979),
687–973, idem, al-Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal (Beirut 1404/1984), and Fahmi Jadan,
al-Mihna (Amman 1989).
4) Nimrod Hurvitz, The Formation of Hanbalism: Piety into Power, Culture
and Civilisation in the Middle East (London 2002). Other recent treatments of
Ahmad’s piety, both excellent, are Michael Cook, Commanding Right and Forbid-
ding Wrong in Islamic Thought (Cambridge 2000), chap. 5, and Michael Cooper-
son, Classical Arabic Biography: The Heirs of the Prophets in the Age of al-Ma#mun,
Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization (Cambridge 2000), chap. 4. V. also Chris-
topher Melchert, Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Makers of the Muslim World (Oxford: One-
world, 2006), chap. 5.
5) Ahmad ibn Hanbal, K. al-Zuhd (Mecca 1357), 400 pp. Sezgin identifies the
MS as Rabat, Kattani 292 (GAS 1:506, no. 3), 236 ff., confirmed by Roger Delad-
rière, Introduction to Bayhaqi, L’anthologie du renoncement, Collection “Islam
spiritual” (Lagrasse: Verdier, 1995), 9. According to Sezgin, the manuscript is
from the 12th century H. (i.e. approximately the 18th century CE). A facsimile of
the title page shows the year 1243 under the name of an owner, mostly crossed out,
but this seems to be the year someone acquired it, not when it was copied: Ahmad
ibn Hanbal, al-Zuhd, ed. Yahya ibn Muhammad Sus (n.p. n.d.), 29.
6) Ahmad ibn Hanbal, K. al-Zuhd (Beirut 1396/1976), 400 pp.; idem, al-Zuhd
(Beirut 1403/1983), 480 pp. Henceforth, citations of page numbers in the former will
appear in roman, in the latter in italic. From the same publisher is now available
Ahmad, al-Zuhd, ed. Muhammad Abd al-Salam Sˇ ahin (Beirut 1420/1999), 327 pp.,
with items numbered but again without indices or cross-references. Another reprint
of the Meccan edition with items numbered and some cross-references is Ahmad,
al-Zuhd, ed. Muhammad al-Said Basyuni Zaglul (Beirut 1423/2002), 568 pp. The
Meccan edition has also been reprinted by Dar Rayan and Dar Umar ibn al-Äattab,
according to Sus, “Introduction”, Zuhd, 21. I have not myself seen Ahmad, al-Zuhd,
ed. Isam Faris al-Harastani and Muhammad Ibrahim al-Zughli (Beirut 1994).
7) Ahmad ibn Hanbal, al-Zuhd, ed. Muhammad Ğalal S ˇ araf, 2 vols. (Alexan-
dria 1980, then Beirut 1981). Citations of page numbers that include a volume
number will be to this edition. MS identified as al-Ğamia al-Libiya 3856, 358 ff., by
Sˇ araf, Zuhd, I, 6.
8) Yusuf Abd al-Rahman al-Marašli, Fihris ahadith K. al-Zuhd lil-imam
Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Hanbal, Silsilat faharis kutub al-sunna 6 (Beirut
1408/1988).
9) Deladrière, Anthologie, 9.
10) V. supra, n. 5. This edition, of 752 pages, includes marginal cross-references
to the Meccan edition and the Moroccan manuscript, also notes commenting on the
asanid. My guess is that it was published in Cairo in 2003.
11) Ahmad, al-Zuhd, 3 8 = ed. S ˇ araf, I, 23; cf. ed. Sus, 37.
Abu l-Qasim Muhammad ibn Yusuf ibn Yahya ibn Yunus al-Tağir <
Abu Talib Abd al-Qadir ibn Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Yusufi <
Abu Ali al-Hasan ibn Ali ibn Muhammad ibn Ali ibn al-Muühib, by qira#a in
Rabi I 443/July-August 1051, <
Abu Bakr Ahmad ibn Ğafar ibn Hamdan ibn Malik al-Qatii.
The earliest three names are known.12 Ibn Hağar once says of the ear-
liest two that they alone transmitted the Musnad of Ahmad ibn Hanbal
and al-Zuhd al-kabir.13 However, other sources concerning Ibn al-Muühib
(including other references by Ibn Hağar) call the latter book only al-
Zuhd, so we probably need not infer that there was ever a lost Kitab al-
Zuhd al-sagir. Al-Äatib al-Bagdadi disparages Ibn al-Muühib: “He also re-
lated from Ibn Malik K. al-Zuhd of Ahmad ibn Hanbal. He had no old copy
of it. His copy was in his own hand. He wrote it in his old age and it is not to
be argued by.”14 Fortunately, Ibn Hağar was wrong inasmuch as Abu
Nuaym al-Isbahani also transmitted great parts, at least, of al-Zuhd.
Comparison with his transmission suggests that Ibn al-Muühib’s transmis-
sion was reasonably exact, on which more below. The Libyan manuscript
begins with almost the same list of transmitters, so the text traditions re-
presented by it and the Moroccan manuscript must have diverged subse-
quently to 708/1309–10. It seems fairly certain that neither manuscript
depends on the other, but they may go back to a common ancestor subse-
quent to 708/1309–10.
Saud Al-Sarhan, whose doctoral dissertation on the works of Ahmad
ibn Hanbal we eagerly await, has shown me photocopies from two other
manuscripts of al-Zuhd. Except for section headings, one seems to be
practically identical to the Moroccan text published by Abd al-Rahman
ibn Qasim. The other includes the first nineteen folios from a recension at-
tributed to Salih ibn Ahmad (d. Isfahan, 266/880?) rather than Abd Allah
(d. Baghdad, 290/903). It begins very similarly to the familiar Moroccan
12) On Abu Bakr al-Qatii (d. 368/979), v. al-Üahabi, Siyar alam al-nubala#,
ed. Šuayb al-Arna#ut, &al., 25 vols. (Beirut 1981–8), XVI, 210–13, with further
references; on Ibn al-Muühib (d. 444/1052), v. ibid., XVII, 640–3; on Abu Talib al-
Yusufi (d. 516/1123), v. ibid., XIX, 386–7.
13) Ibn Hağar, Lisan al-Mizan, 7 vols. (Hyderabad 1329–31, repr. Beirut
VII, 391 = Ta#riä madinat al-salam, ed. Baššar Awwad Maruf, 17 vols. (Beirut
1422/2001), VIII, 394. A similar charge from al-Silafi apud Ibn Hağar, Lisan, II,
237, s.n. al-Hasan ibn Ali ibn Muhammad.
text but with occasional slight differences in the order of reports, addi-
tions, and omissions. It seems to regularly omit items in the Moroccan text
that come through Abd Allah from someone else than Ahmad (more on
these below). Unfortunately, it comes with no account of its transmission
from Salih, nor does Salih’s name reappear after the first line. Having come
across no literary source that attributes any recension to Salih, I suspect
that it was originally someone’s selection from an earlier version of the
Moroccan text, omitting Abd Allah’s name and items through him from
someone else than Ahmad. Someone else, then, noticing the omissions, as-
cribed the whole at the beginning to Salih.
The largest extant collection of renunciant sayings is Abu Nuaym al-
Isbahani (d. 430/1038), Hilyat al-awliya#, which comprises about 15,600
items altogether.15 Even if we exclude its approximately 4,000 prophetic
hadith reports and 1,000 items from ninth- and tenth-century Sufis, this
remains our most abundant source by far. To my knowledge, the next-lar-
gest extant collection, after al-Zuhd of Ahmad ibn Hanbal, is K. al-Zuhd
wa-l-raqa#iq attributed to Ibn al-Mubarak (d. 181/797), which comprises
altogether about 2,050 items. After this come the kitab al-zuhd included
in Ibn Abi Šayba (d. 235/849), al-Musannaf, which comprises about 1,500
items, and the Kitab al-Zuhd of Hannad ibn al-Sari (d. 243/857), which
comprises almost as many.16
However, al-Zuhd of Ahmad ibn Hanbal was originally much longer
than the extant text. Ibn Hağar al-Asqalani (d. 852/1449) states that Ah-
mads Musnad is three times as long as al-Zuhd.17 Ibn Hağar worked from a
Az. ami (Malegaon 1386). Indices by Yusuf Abd al-Rahman al-Marašli, Fihris
ahadi© Kitab al-Zuhd, Silsilat faharis kutub al-sunna 5 (Beirut 1408/1987). The
standard edition of Ibn Abi Šayba, al-Musannaf, is now that edited by Hamd ibn
Abd Allah al-G ˘ uma and Muhammad ibn Ibrahim al-Luhaydan, 16 vols. (Riyadh
1425/2004). K. al-zuhd appears at XII, 133–468. To be sure, other renunciant say-
ings appear elsewhere in the larger work; e.g. k. al-dua#, about 800 items at X,
5–204. Hannad ibn al-Sari, K. al-Zuhd, ed. Abd al-Rahman ibn Abd al-Ğabbar al-
Faryawa#i, 2 vols. (Kuweit 1406/1985).
17) Ibn Hağar, Tağil al-manfaa bi-zawa#id riğal al-a#imma al-arbaa (Hydera-
bad 1324), 8 = ed. Ikram Allah Imdad al-Haqq, 2 vols. (Beirut 1416/1996), I, 243.
Musnad of about 28,000 items, very like the one in print today.18 This im-
plies that he knew a Zuhd of more than 9,000 items, over three times as
long as either version of al-Zuhd in print today. It is impossible to say how
long after Ibn Hağar’s day the full version was lost.
Ibn Hağar’s estimate is confirmed by quotations in Abu Nuaym, Hi-
lyat al-awliya#. Abu Nuaym seldom mentions books by name; rather, like
al-Äatib al-Bagdadi and other traditionists, he prefers to cite everything
by isnad going up to the speaker of the item at hand. Yet many of Abu
Nuaym’s reports can be identified as coming from particular books, just
as many of al-Äatib al-Bagdadi’s can.19 I have counted 480 certain quota-
tions of al-Zuhd in the Hilyah; for example, from the entry for the Yemeni
Successor Tawus (d. 106/724–5?),20
< Abu Bakr ibn Malik < Abd Allah ibn Ahmad ibn Hanbal < my father < Abd
al-Razzaq < Mamar that Tawus occupied himself with an ill comrade of his
until he had missed the pilgrimage.
They nearly all came to Abu Nuaym by the links < Abu Bakr ibn Malik
< Abd Allah ibn Ahmad ibn Hanbal or < Ahmad ibn Ğafar ibn Hamdan <
Abd Allah ibn Ahmad.21 Abu Bakr ibn Malik and Ahmad ibn Ğafar ibn
Hamdan are the same person, more usually known as Abu Bakr al-Qatii,
from whom Abu Nuaym collected hadith in Basra in about 360/970–1. Be-
sides these, however, I have also counted 737 apparent quotations not
found in the published texts of al-Zuhd; for example, the next after the one
just quoted22:
< Ahmad ibn Ğafar ibn Hamdan < Abd Allah ibn Ahmad < his father < Mahdi
ibn Ğafar < Damra < Bilal ibn Kab: Tawus, when he went out of Yemen,
would drink only from ancient, Ğahili waters.
18) V. Christopher Melchert, “The Musnad of Ahmad ibn Hanbal”, Der Islam
fiya in his introduction to Sulami, Kitab Tabaqat al-sufiyya, ed. Johannes Peder-
sen (Leiden 1960), 51–3, 57–9. On al-Äatib al-Bagdadi, v. Akram Diya# al-Umari,
Mawarid al-Äatib al-Bagdadi fi Ta#riä Bagdad (n.p. 1395/1975).
20) Abu Nuaym, Hilya, IV, 10 = Ahmad, Zuhd, 376 450.
21) For one exception among a handful noticed by me, v. Abu Nuaym, Hilya, I,
70–1, which quotes a story on the authority of Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn al-Hasan
that appears in Ahmad, Zuhd, II, 71.
22) Abu Nuaym, Hilya, IV, 10.
23) For recent treatments of the difficulty, v. inter alia Lawrence I. Conrad,
“Recovering Lost Texts: Some Methodological Issues”, Journal of the American
Oriental Society 113 (1993), 258–63, Stefan Leder, “Grenzen der Rekonstruktion
alten Schrifttums nach den Angaben im Fihrist”, Ibn al-Nadim und die mittelalter-
liche arabische Literatur (Wiesbaden 1996), 21–31, and Ella Landau-Tasseron,
“The Reconstruction of Lost Sources”, al-Qantara 25 (2004), 45–91. The difficul-
ties appear to be greatest for works from before around the middle of the ninth cen-
tury CE, which is related to the very fluidity of texts before then, on which v. the
works of Gregor Schoeler, esp. “Die Frage der schriftlichen oder mündlichen
Überlieferung der Wissenschaften im frühen Islam”, Der Islam 62 (1985), 201–30.
24) Abu Nuaym, Hilya, III, 19; Ahmad, Zuhd, 266, 326.
25) V. Amir Hasan Sabri, Muğam shuyuä al-imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal fi l-Mus-
nad (Beirut 1413/1993), 268–70; Ibn al-Ğawzi, Manaqib al-imam Ahmad ibn Han-
bal, ed. Muhammad Amin al-Äan ği al-Kutubi (Cairo 1349), 45, chap. 5, fi tasmiyat
man laqiya.
26) Ahmad, Zuhd, 385 461; Abu Nuaym, Hilya, V, 228.
chapter on ®abit al-Bunani (d. 720s/738–48) is found also in the Ilal but
not in al-Zuhd27:
< Abu Bakr ibn Malik < Abd Allah ibn Ahmad ibn Hanbal < his father: I have
heard that Anas said to ®abit, “How your eyes resemble those of the Messenger
of God …”, whereupon he ceased not to weep until he had damaged his eyes.
This item from the chapter on the Basran Maymun ibn Siyah (fl. earlier
2nd/8th cent.) is found also in the Musnad but not in either printed version
of al-Zuhd28:
< Abu Bakr ibn Malik < Abd Allah ibn Ahmad < his father < Muhammad ibn
Bakr < Maymun al-Muradi < Maymun ibn Siyah < Anas < Prophet: There is
no people who meet to recollect God, wanting by that only his face, without
there calling to them a caller in Heaven, saying “Go forgiven: your faults have
been replaced by virtues.”
A few prophetic hadith reports are found in both the Musnad and the
extant text of al-Zuhd; for example,29
< Abu Bakr ibn Malik < Abd Allah ibn Ahmad ibn Hanbal < his father < Abd
al-Rahman ibn Mahdi < Hammam < Qatada < Äulayd al-Asari < Abu
l-Darda# < the Messenger of God …: The sun does not rise without there being
sent next to it two angels who cry out, “A little that suffices is better than
much that distracts.”
27) Abu Nuaym, Hilya, II, 323; Ahmad ibn Hanbal, al-Ilal wa-marifat al-
riğal, ed. Wasi Allah ibn Muhammad Abbas, 4 vols. (Beirut 1988), II, 373 = idem,
al-Ğami fi l-ilal wa-marifat al-riğal, ed. Muhammad Husam Baydun, 2 vols. (Bei-
rut 1410/1990), I, 332.
28) Abu Nuaym, Hilya, III, 107–8; Ahmad, Musnad imam al-muhaddithin,
6 vols. (Cairo 1313), III, 142 = Musnad al-imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal, ed. Šuayb al-
Arna#ut et al., 50 vols. (Beirut 1413–21/1993–2001), XIX, 437.
29) Abu Nuaym, Hilya, IX, 60; Ahmad, Musnad, V, 197 = ed. Arna#ut,
figure were certainly correct, if Abu Nuaym’s selection were certainly ran-
dom, and if my undercounting of prophetic hadith quoted by Abu Nuaym
from the lost part of al-Zuhd were certainly negligible. If we assume that
Abu Nuaym’s selection from the original was random, then the original,
long Zuhd should have comprised about 6,800 items, not 9,000. It is also
possible that Abu Nuaym was guided by some of the same principles of se-
lection as the anonymous abridgers, and I have somewhat undercounted
Abu Nuaym’s quotations of prophetic hadith from al-Zuhd; therefore, an
original size of around 9,000 remains at least credible.
Just as Ahmad’s Musnad includes a significant number of additions
from his son Abd Allah, meaning items he heard from other persons than his
father, so does al-Zuhd include many additions from him: a little more than
one-third of the printed versions, almost exactly one-half of the quotations
from Abu Nuaym. Here, the parallel with the Musnad is weak evidence that
the proportions of material from Ahmad and Abd Allah in the original, long
version of al-Zuhd were more like those in Abu Nuaym’s sample; that is,
equal. Abu Nuaym also quotes a substantial number of prophetic hadith
from Abd Allah that he did not hear from his father. It is possible that these
were once transmitted with the Musnad, then excised with other hadith
from Abd Allah. Such excision must have happened on a considerable scale
if we are to harmonize medieval reports that Abd Allah’s additions compri-
sed about a quarter of the Musnad with the extant text, of which Abd Allah’s
additions make up less than 5 percent.30 If there was a tendency over time to
drop material from the Musnad that did not come through Ahmad, the same
tendency might account for the diminished proportion of items from Abd
Allah in al-Zuhd. (I have supposed the same tendency accounts for the ma-
nuscript of al-Zuhd attributed to Salih ibn Ahmad.)
The table of contents to al-Zuhd suggests stories of twelve qur’anic pro-
phets, not in chronological order (nor with all reports of particular ones
gathered together; e.g. sermons, wisdom, and the renunciation of Isa are
distributed among three). Then come Companions, Successors, and others
of the eighth century CE. A comment from Ibn Taymiya confirms that the
original, long version of al-Zuhd was likewise arranged biographically, for
he reports preferring this arrangement to the topical one of Ibn al-Muba-
rak, al-Zuhd.31 The Musnad, likewise assembled by Abd Allah from his fat-
her’s dictation and notes, occasionally groups together hadith that Ahmad
heard from some particular shaykh. So does al-Zuhd; for example, a se-
quence of 53 items from, ultimately, a very miscellaneous collection of pro-
phets, Companions, and Successors, of which 45 came to Abd Allah from
Abu Bakr ibn Abi Šayba.32
An oddity of al-Zuhd by comparison with other collections of renunci-
ant sayings is the high proportion of items from pre-Muhammadan pro-
phets. A little over a third of Ibn al-Mubarak’s K. al-Zuhd comes from the
Prophet, a tenth of Ibn Abi Šayba’s, fully 45 percent of Hannad ibn al-Sa-
ri’s. About one-fifth of the published versions of Ahmad, al-Zuhd are made
up of hadith from the Prophet, an unsurprising proportion. The surprising
portion is another fifth of al-Zuhd comprising items from prophets before
Muhammad: in descending order, Isa, Luqman, Ayyub, Dawud, and ot-
hers. This is far more than in any other such collection of renunciant say-
ings. The proportion of sayings from pre-Muhammadan prophets in Abu
Nuaym’s selection is a mere one in twenty, suggesting that the extant, ab-
ridged versions of al-Zuhd include most of the original, long version’s ma-
terial from pre-Muhammadan prophets and that the long original was less
anomalous in this regard. About one-eighth of Abu Nuaym’s quotations go
back to Companions, who were probably also, then, less well-represented in
the original, long version than in the extant abridgements. By the way, al-
Zuhd includes 35 items transmitted by the Yemeni Wahb ibn Munabbih (d.
113/731–2?), almost all of them concerning biblical prophets but almost
half of them concerning Isa, which seems to tell against the surmise that
he was a convert from Judaism.33
Conversely, it was probably sayings from Successors that predominated
in the original, long version of al-Zuhd, as among Abu Nuaym’s quotations
and as in most other ninth-century collections of renunciant sayings. The
latest persons to be quoted in al-Zuhd at the other end (not just relating
earlier sayings but speaking in their own right) are apparently Muhammad
ibn al-Farağ (d. 236/850–1), Bišr al-Hafi (d. 227/841), and Fath al-Mawsili
(d. 220/835), all quoted by Abd Allah,34 and Sufyan ibn Uyayna (d.
198/814?) and Ibrahim ibn Adham (d. 163/779–80?), quoted by Ahmad.35
add Sufyan’s direct quotations of the prophets Luqman and Isa at Zuhd, I, 154 and
Abu Nuaym, Hilya, VII, 273–4, 288, 300, VIII, 101; Muhammad ibn Nadr at
Ahmad, Zuhd, 86, 368 108 441.
36) Üahabi, Siyar, XI, 306.
37) Ahmad ibn Hanbal, K. al-Wara, ed. Muhammad Sayyid Basyuni Zaghlul
Basra 76 (38 %), Kufa 37 (18 %), Baghdad 27 (13 %), Syria 16 (8 %), Wasit 13
(6 %), Yemen 9 and Khurasan 8 (4 %), Mecca 7 (3 %), Mesopotamia 5 (2 %),
Medina 2 (1 %).
Successors:
Basra 80 (51 %), Kufa 35 (22 %), Medina 13 (8 %), Yemen 11 (7 %), Syria 8
(5 %), Mecca and Egypt 3 each (2 %), Wasit 2 (1 %).
Ibn Abi Šayba’s source in early 9th cent. (first name in isnad), sample
of 138:
Baghdad 6 (4 %), Basra 23 (17 %), Khurasan 3 (2 %), Kufa 93 (67 %), Mecca 1
(1 %), Wasit 12 (9 %).
Ibn Abi Šayba’s sources in mid- to late 8th cent. (second name), sample
of 145, of whom 137 identified:
Baghdad 1 (1 %), Basra 44 (32 %), Egypt 1 (1 %), Khurasan 1 (1 %), Kufa 73
(53 %), Mecca 3 (2 %), Medina 4 (3 %), Mesopotamia 1 (1 %), Syria 6 (4 %),
unknown 8 (6 %), Wasit 3 (2 %).
have assembled a book concerning 6,000 persons from the time of Adam until his
own, all of whom espoused the doctrine of the Sufis: al-Äatib al-Bagdadi, Ta#riä,
VII, 228 = ed. Maruf, VIII, 147–8. An apparent extract (short) has been pub-
lished: al-Äuldi, al-Fawa#id wa-l-zuhd wa-l-raqa#iq wa-l-mara©i, ed. Muhammad
Fathi al-Sayyid (Tanta 1413/1993).
With its ubiquitous asanid and few lines of poetry, al-Zuhd is plainly part
of the hadith tradition.
Major emphases of al-Zuhd are difficult to make out, stories and quo-
tations being so miscellaneous. Abu Nuaym’s selection apparently inclu-
des more hostile sayings about rulers and fewer qur’anic glosses than the
extant abridgements. Otherwise, I have noticed no recurring differences in
the content of what they preserve of the original, long version. In a content
analysis of a random sample of 117 quotations from Abu Nuaym, the ca-
tegory best represented is rejection of worldly goods; for example, that Mu-
jahid (Meccan, d. 104/722–3?) glossed Q. 102:8 (Jones translation: “Then,
on that day, you will be asked about bliss”), “About everything of the plea-
sures of the world.”40 This is followed by items praising particular indivi-
duals in fairly general terms; for example, that on the Day of Siffin (the
great battle between Muawiya and Ali), a Syrian related of the Prophet
that Uways al-Qarani (said to have died in this very battle) was the best of
the Successors at doing well.41 Of ritual activities, prayer (salah) is the sin-
gle one most often commended; of austerities, restricted eating and drin-
king. Naturally, however, there is some overlapping of categories; for exam-
ple, when al-Hasan al-Basri says that the believer is sad morning and
evening, so that just a little food and water suffice him – is this to be clas-
sified as commending sadness or restricting one’s food and drink?42 In fact,
I did classify it as commending sadness, along with three other items in the
sample. To classify it as a commendation of restricting one’s food and drink
would suggest that it is about techniques to produce moral states, whereas
the actual sayings stress rather that physical austerities are the natural
outcome of a desirable moral state. Like other renunciant literature, al-
Zuhd is much more concerned with moral states than with teachable tech-
nique.
The contents of al-Zuhd are evidence first of all for what items of the
early renunciant tradition Ahmad and especially Abd Allah ibn Ahmad
thought admirable. How far one takes them to be direct evidence of that
tradition depends first on how reliable one thinks hadith in general. Ah-
mad is quoted as calling for a lower standard of reliability concerning al-
targib wa-l-tarhib (“making to aspire and making to dread”): “When we re-
late (hadith) from the Messenger of God … concerning the licit and illicit,
40) Abu Nuaym, Hilya, III, 281, quoting a lost section of Ahmad, Zuhd. Al-Ta-
bari quotes Mujahid the same way apropos of Q. 102:8, also by a completely differ-
ent isnad as glossing it “security and health (amn, sihha)”.
41) Abu Nuaym, Hilya, II, 86, quoting from a lost section of Abd Allah, Zuhd.
42) Abu Nuaym, Hilya 2:132–3; Abd Allah, Zuhd, 258 316.
the precedents and ordinances, we are strict about asanid; but when we re-
late (hadith) from the Prophet concerning the virtues of works and what
neither lays down nor suspends any ordinance, then we are easygoing
about asanid.”43 However, it does not appear that hadith reports in the
Musnad pertaining to al-targib wa-l-tarhib are any more liable to be weak
than hadith pertaining to ordinances.44 Neither have we reason to suppose
he filled up al-Zuhd (or instructed Abd Allah to fill up al-Zuhd) with items
he considered weak. And, of course, the interest of al-Zuhd is primarily in
what it tells us of the piety of the eighth century, about which scholars no-
wadays tend to be markedly less sceptical than about the seventh. The ex-
tent to which its picture of eighth-century piety contradicts what is repor-
ted of Ahmad ibn Hanbal’s own – for example, the extremes of self-denial it
extols, as compared with the more moderate self-denial we are told that he
practised – raises our confidence that this material goes back well into the
century from which it purports to come.
The main findings of this study may be briefly summarized. The book
al-Zuhd attributed to Ahmad ibn Hanbal is the largest extant collection of
early renunciant sayings from its century, exceeded for all centuries only
by Abu Nuaym, Hilyat al-awliya#. It was assembled by Ahmad’s son Abd
Allah, who added to what he had heard from his father half or even as many
items again that he had heard from other sources. Abd Allah’s text was two
or three times as long as the extant version, to judge by quotations in Abu
Nuaym, Hilyat al-awliya# and a description by Ibn Hağar. The usefulness
of Hilyat al-awliya# is incidentally confirmed, both inasmuch as the Hilya
gives us a better idea of the original version of Ahmad’s al-Zuhd and inas-
much as we see that it accurately transmits the knowledge of the ninth
century. Ahmad’s al-Zuhd, finally, is an important source for the recon-
struction of his own piety, that of the early Sunni circles around him, and
more generally of Muslims in the eighth century, possibly also to some ex-
tent in the seventh. It is unusually rich in quotations of prophets before
Muhammad. Scholars are still at an early stage of figuring out how to in-
terpret it.
43) Al-Äatib al-Bagdadi, al-Kifaya fi ilm al-riwaya, ed. Ahmad Umar Hashim
(Beirut 1406/1986), 163 = ed. Muhammad al-Hafiz al-Ti ğani (Cairo 1972), 213.
44) Melchert, “Musnad”, 46–7.