CHAPTER FIVE : USUL AL FIQH
- AFTER AL IMAM AL SHAFI'I
Al Imam al Shafi'i's Risalah dominated studies in Islamic
jurisprudence from the moment it appeared. Indeed, as a result of it,
the scholars divided into two groups. One group, the majority of Ahl
al Hadith, accepted it, and used it in support of al Shafi'i's school of
legal thought. The other group, however, rejected most of what it
contained, and attempted to refute whatever of al Imam al Shafi'i's work
contradicted their own methods and practice before it had the chance
to influence people. The members of this group were taken almost
exclusively from the Ahl al Ra'i, all of whom were in complete
disagreement with nearly all that al Imam al Shafi'i had written.
Ibn al Nadim mentioned books which were written in the field of
Usul al Fiqh after the Risalah, including al
Nasikh wa al Mansukh and al Sunnah by al Imam Ahmad ibn
Hanbal (d 233 AH). Al Sunnah, however, is more a book on
Tawhid and basic Islamic beliefs "Aqa'id" than of
jurisprudence. There are two versions of this work in print; the
longer version is the one printed in Makkah in 1349 AH, of which there
are manuscript copies in the Dar al Kutub and Zahiriyyah libraries in
Egypt and Damascus respectively. A smaller version, printed in Cairo
without a date, deals with the fundamental beliefs of the Sunni
Orthodoxy, or "Ahl al Sunnah".
Al Imam Ahmad also wrote Ta'at al Rasul "Obedience to the
Messenger". Ibn Qayyim quotes from it often in his book, I'lam al
Muwaqqi'in, and it seems that he possessed a copy of it. Nonetheless,
I have looked for this book in many places, but have always been unable
to find it. From the quoted passages in Ibn Qayyim's book, it is apparent
that the book was indeed an important one on the subject of jurisprudence,
and the methodology of dealing with the Sunnah. It may have been
lost after Ibn Qayyim's time, or bound into another book, or the title
page lost so that it may only be found after much searching.
The sources also mention that Dawud al Zahiri (d 270 AH) wrote
al Ijma' "Consensus", Ibtal al Taqlid "On the
Abolition of Imitation", Khabar al Wahid "On the
Single-Individual Narration", al Khabar al Mujib "On the
Obligating Narration", al Khusus wa al 'Umum "On the
Particular and the General", al Mufassar wa al Mujmal "The
Succinct and the Detailed", al Kafi fi Muqabalat al Muttalibi,
i.e. al Imam al Shafi'i, "0n the Encounter with al Shafi'i",
Mas'alatan Khalafa Fihima al Shafi'i "Two Issues on which He
Differed with al Imam al Shafi'i".
During this period, the 'Ulama' who accepted the
school of thought of al Imam Abu Hanifah devoted their attention to
the study of Shafi'i's Risalah, both in order to refute what
they disagreed with, and to derive their own source-methodology and
principles of jurisprudence from the case law Fatawa of al Imam
Abu Hanifah.
In this vein, the Hanafi scholars produced several works. 'Isa ibn
Abban (d 220 Ah) wrote Khabar al Wahid, Ithbat al Qiyas, "Validating
Analogical Deduction", and Ijtihad al Ra'i, "The Exercise of legal
Reasoning".
Al Barza'i (d 317) wrote Masa'il al Khilaf "Issues of
Disagreement", of which there is a 236-page copy in the Zaytunah
Library in Tunis, number 1619.
Abu Ja'far al Tahawi (d 321) wrote Ikhtilaf al
Fuqaha' "Disagreement of the Jurists", which was summarized by Abu
Bakr al Jassas (d 37O). There is a copy of this hook in Cairo. For
more details, refer to the Index of Ma'had al Makhtutat
(1/329).55
Al Karabisi al Najafi (d 322) wrote al Furuq
"Differences", of which there are manuscripts in the Ahmad III and
Fayd Allah libraries in Istanbul.
Several untitled works on jurisprudence were also attributed to Ibn
Sama'ah (d 233).56
Al Kannani (d 289) wrote al Hujjah fi al Radd 'Ala al
Shafi'i, "The Evidence in Refutation of Imam Shafi'i".
'Ali ibn Musa al Qummi, the Hanafi (d 305) wrote Ma Khalafa
Fihi al Shafi'i al 'Iraqiyin Fi Ahkam al Qur'an "Instances in which al
Shafi'i Opposed the Iraqis in the Legal Interpretation of the Qur'an",
Ithbat al Qiyas, al Ijtihad and Khabar al Wahid.
Abu al Hasan al Karkhi (d 340) wrote his well-known hook
al Usul "The Sources", which was printed with a collection of
other books in Cairo (no date).
Abu Sahl al Nawbakhti (d. circa 93 AH), who belonged to the
Imamiyah, wrote Naqd Risalat al Shafi'i "A Critique
of al Shafi'i's Risalah", Ibtal al Qiyas
"Invalidating al Qiyas", and al Radd 'Ala Ibn al Rawandi
Fi Ba'd Ara'ihi al Usuliyah ("Refutation of Certain of Ibn al
Rawandi's Legal Opinions"). Ibn Junayd (d 347), who belonged to the
Zaydiyyah group, wrote al Faskh 'Ala Man Ajaza al Naskh lima Tamma
Shar'uhu wa Jalla Naf'uhu "The Nullification of those who
Permitted Abrogation on Laws already Promulgated and Proved
Beneficial", and al Ifham li Usul al Ahkam "Understanding Juristic
Principles".
The adherents of al Imam al Shafi'i's school of legal
thought produced the following works:-
Abu Thawr (d 240) wrote Ikhtilaf al Fuqaha' "Disagreement of the
Jurists".
Abu 'Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Nasr al Marwazi (d 294) also wrote
a book on the same subject.
Abu Abbas ibn Surayj (d 305) wrote a hook refuting both 'Isa ibn
Abban and Muhammad ibn Dawud al Zahiri on matters in which they
differed with al Imam al Shafi'i.
Ibrahim ibn Ahmad al Marwazi (d 340) wrote Al Umum wa al
Khusus "The General and the Particular" and Al Fusul fi Ma'rifat al
Usul57 "Chapters About Knowledge of Legal Source-Methodology".
Some of these scholars devoted their attention to producing
commentaries on al Shafi'i's al Risalah; like Abu Bakr al Sayrafi (d
330), Abu al Walid al Nisaburi (d 365 or 363), Abu Bakr al Jawzaqi
(d 388) and Abu Muhammad al Juwayni, the father of the famed Imam
al Haramayn, teacher to al Imam al Ghazzali.
Commentaries on the Risalah are also attributed to five other
scholars, namely: Abu Zayd al Jazuli, Yusuf ibn 'Umar, Jamal al Din
al Afqahsi, Ibn Fakihani, and Abu al Qasim 'Isa ibn Naji. None of
these commentaries, from which the scholars used to quote until after
the seventh century, have come to light in modern times.
Shaykh Mustafa 'Abd al Razzaq58 mentioned that the public library
in Paris held a copy of al Juwayni's commentary on the Risalah, and
quoted some parts of it. I, myself, have tried to locate this manuscript
in Paris; but failed. Perhaps it had been placed with other books under
a different heading or title. Probably, the only way to find it is to sift
through all the manuscripts. That, however, is a daunting task, as the
researcher would need to spend a great deal of time on the undertaking.
DEVELOPMENTS IN USUL AL FIQH
AFTER AL IMAM AL SHAFI'I
What we have mentioned so far can hardly be regarded as
development, as it mainly revolves around criticizing, supporting or
commenting on the Risalah, and really goes no further than that. Once
the discipline had been established, this state of affairs obtained until
about the beginning of the fifth century AH, when what could be
considered as significant development in the field began to take place.
During this period, al Qadi al Baqillani (d 402) and al Qadi 'Abd
al Jabbar al Hamadani (d 415) undertook to re-write the whole subject
of the practice and principles of Shari'ah Source Methodology, or
al Usul.
In his book al Bahr, al Zarkashi wrote: "... the two
judges, the Qadi of Ahl al Sunnah, Abu Bakr Tayyib al
Baqillani, and the Qadi of the Mu'tazilah, 'Abd al Jabbar,
came and expanded upon what had been written, clarified what had
previously been little more than indications, provided detail to what
had been mentioned in a general way, and removed ambiguities."
Al Qadi al Baqillani earned the title Shaykh al
Usuliyyin59 "Master of the Scholars of al Usul", after
he wrote al Taqrib wa al Irshad "Clarification and
Guidance". This hook has been lost for centuries; though it may yet
turn up in one collection of manuscripts or another. In any case, the
scholars of al Usul continued quoting from it until the ninth
century AH.
For his part, al Qadi 'Abd al Jabbar wrote a book entitled either
al 'Ahd "The Covenant" or al 'Amad "The Pillars" and
wrote his own commentary on it.
Imam al Haramayn (d 478 AH) summarized al Baqillani's al Taqrib
wa al Irshad, in a book entitled al Talkhis "The
Summarizing" or al Mulakhkhas "The Summary", of which some
pages are preserved in some manuscript collections. Later scholars of
jurisprudence transmitted many of al Baqillani's ideas from this work.
Imam al Haramayn patterned his own book on al Usul,
al Burhan "The Proof", on al Baqillani's al Taqrib,
in that it included all fields of jurisprudence, was free in its
method, and followed whatever evidence was available.60 He disagreed
with his teachers, al Imam al Ash'ari and al Imam al Shafi'i, on so
many issues that many of his fellow scholars from the al Shafi'i
school of legal thought rejected his commentary and
did not give it the attention it deserved, even though they transmitted
a great deal from it in their own books.
Two Maliki scholars, al Imam Abu 'Abd Allah al Maziri (d 536
AH) and Abu al Hasan al Abyari (d 616), wrote commentaries on al
Burhan; and a third Maliki scholar, Abu Yahya, combined the two
commentaries. Still, all three of these scholars dealt harshly, if not
somewhat unfairly, with Imam al Haramayn because of what they
considered to be his audacity in refuting al Imam al Ash'ari on matters
where he disagreed with him, and in refuting al Imam Malik on the
question of al Masalih al Mursalah. Imam al Haramayn added
introductions to al Imam al Shafi'i's book which dealt with matters not
found in the Risalah. He began by discussing the knowledge of those
sources and concepts which anyone who wishes to study any science
in depth must have. He explained that the sources of Usul al Fiqh were
'Ilm al Kalam "Scholastic Theology", Arabic language and
Fiqh. Then he dealt with legal judgements, duties, and
competence, discussing in detail issues pertaining to various
sciences, and explaining those which could be understood by reason, and
which by religion. All the above matters formed an introduction to a
discussion of the term al Bayan, "perspicuous declaration",
the subject with which al Imam al Shafi'i began the Risalah.
It is quite apparent, however, when we see how Imam al Haramayn
dealt with the subject of al Bayan, and with other of the subjects
mentioned in the Risalah, that Imam al Haramayn defined the terms,
including al Bayan, more precisely than al Imam al Shafi'i had done.
He defined it, explained its essence, mentioned disagreements concerning
it, and set forth its different categories. He also dealt with another matter
which al Imam al Shafi'i had not dealt with, Ta'khir al Bayan ila Waqt
al Hajah "Deferment of al Bayan until the time when it
is Needed", and disagreements concerning it. Then, in discussing the different
categories of al Bayan, he reiterated the five categories
which al Imam al Shafi'i had mentioned, advocated Abu Bakr Dawud al Zahiri's
comments on the subject, and then mentioned the other categories of
al Bayan which some jurists had suggested.
Imam al Haramayn held the opinion that al Bayan meant
"evidence", of which there are two types: 'Aqli "rational"
and Sam'i "received". The basis for "received" evidence is
the miraculous Qur'an; so that the closer the evidence is to the
Qur'an, the more precedence it has. Hence the order of priority in
"received" evidence is: the Qur'an, the Sunnah, al Ijma' Khabar al
Wahid, al Qiyas.
Then he dealt with languages, and explained that the scholars of
jurisprudence have dealt with linguistic matters which the scholars of
Arabic had omitted, such as Awamir "commands";
Nawahi "prohibitions", and al 'Umum wa al Khusus
"the General and the Specific" which Imam al Shafi'i had dealt with.
In the course of this linguistic discussion, he mentioned some of
al Baqillani's ideas, which clearly indicates that al Baqillani had already
made these additions to al Imam al Shafi'i's methods.
When al Imam al Ghazzali was the student of Imam al Haramayn
it was only natural that he be influenced by him. In fact, al Imam al
Ghazzali wrote four books on the subject of al Usul. The
first of these works was al Mankhul "The Sifted", a
medium-sized volume written as though for beginners or intermediate
level students of al Usul. Of the second book nothing is
known except that it was referred to in al Mustasfa61, and
that its title was Tahdhib al Usul "On the Refinement of Usul". The third book is entitled Shifa' 'al Ghalil fi Bayan al Shibh
wa al Mukhayyal wa Masalik al Ta'lil, and was edited and published
in Baghdad in 1390/1971. Al Imam al Ghazzali's Encyclopedia of Shariah
Source Methodology, his fourth book on the subject, and his last word,
was al Mustasfa, which has been printed several times in Egypt and
elsewhere. Indeed, this is the work he wrote after coming out of his
period of meditation and seclusion62.
Al Imam al Ghazzali began his book with an introduction in which
he covered nearly all of Aristotelian logic, a subject in which he had
always been deeply interested. Then he wrote about the Hadd
"Prescribed Punishment", about the conditions that must be satisfied
before it can be applied, and about the different types of
Hudud. He then discussed the Dalil "Evidence" and
its various types.
At this point in the book, al Imam al Ghazzali proceeds to discuss
the four poles of his work, headings under which everything in the field
of al Usul is covered, and which his teacher, Imam al Haramayn, and
predecessors, such as al Baqilani, were most concerned with. As his
teacher had his own opinions that differed from those of al Imams al
Shafi'i and al Ash'ari, so also did al Imam al Ghazzali hold opinions
which differed from those of his predecessors. Likewise, among al Imam
al Ghazzali's contemporaries there were those who accepted his views
and those who did not.
These were the most important developments made by the followers
of al Imam al Shafi'i in the field of Usul.
The second group to contribute to the development of the discipline
were the Mu'tazilah. After al Qadi Abd al Jabbar had written his book,
al Amad or al 'Ahd, and written a full commentary on it, he recorded
some of his opinions on al Usul in his encyclopedia, some parts of
which have been found and printed under the title al Mughni. The
seventeenth volume of this encyclopedia was devoted to studies in
al Usul.
As Imam al Haramayn concerned himself with the book of al
Baqillani, so Abu al Husayn al Basri al Mu'taziuli (d 435 AH) concerned
himself with the books of al Qadi 'Abd al Jabbar, and wrote a commentary
on al Amad/al 'Ahd. When he felt that this commentary was too long,
he summarized it in his well-known book al Mu'tamad "The Reliable",
which is in print and widely available.
During this period, al Shaykh Abu Ishaq al Shirazi (d 476 AH)
wrote his two books. al Lam' "The Bright Light" and al
Tabsirah "Enlightenment", both of which are in print.
Al Qadi Abu Yahya al Farra' al Hanbali wrote a book on Usul entitled
al 'Uddah fi Usul al Fiqh "The Tools of Usul al
Fiqh", which was edited and published in Saudi Arabia in 1400/1980.
Ibn 'Aqil al Baghdadi, another Hanbali scholar, wrote al Wadih
Fi al Usul "What is Clear in Usul".
Abu al Khattab wrote his well-known book, al Tamhid
"The Preface", which was recently edited and published in Makkah.
Among the books written by scholars of the Maliki school of legal
thought at that time was 'Uyun al Adillah Fi Masa'il al Khilaf Bayna
Fuqaha' al Amsar "Profusion of Evidence or Controversial Issues Among
the Jurists of the New Muslim Settlements", by Ibn al Qassar al Baghdadi
(d 398 AH), of which there is a copy at Qarawiyin University in Fez.63
Al Shirazi considered this to be the best book by any Maliki
scholar on the subject of juristic differences. Ibn al Qassar also
wrote Muqaddimah fi Usul al Fiqh "Introduction to Usul al
Fiqh", of which there is a copy at the Azhar University library.
The books of the Shafi'iyah, Hanabilah, Malikiyah and
Mu'tazilah all followed a similar pattern in the order of their
chapters and the treatment of their subject matter. Eventually, this
pattern became known as "the method of the Mutakallimun."
THE ROLE OF THE FOLLOWERS OF ABU HANIFAH
IN THE WRITING OF AL USUL
Some historians of Usul al Fiqh have suggested that al Qadi
Abu Yusuf and Muhammad ibn al Hasan wrote about jurisprudence,64 but
this claim has not been proven.
The author of Kashf al Zunun65 quoted 'Ala' al Din's
saying from Mizan al Usul "Usul in the Balance":
"Know that Usul al Fiqh is a branch of Usul al Din; and
that the composition of any book must of necessity be
influenced by the author's beliefs. Therefore, as most of the
writers on Usul al Fiqh belong to the Mu'tazilah who
differ from us in basic principles, or to Ahl al Hadith who differ
from us in questions of detail, we cannot rely on their books.
Our (Hanafi) scholars' books, however, are of two types. The
first type is of books that were written in a very precise
fashion, because their authors knew both the principles and
their application. Examples of this type are: Ma'khadh al
Shar' "The Approach of the Shari'ah" and al Jadal
"Argument" by Abu Mansur al Maturidi (d 333 AH).
"The second type of book dealt very carefully with the
meanings of words and were well-arranged, owing to the
concern of their authors with deriving detailed solutions from
the explicit meanings of narrations. They were not, however,
skillful in dealing with the finer points of al Usul or
questions of pure reason. The result was that the writers of the second
type produced opinions in some cases agreeing with those
with whom we differed. Yet, books of the first type lost
currency either because they were difficult to understand or
because scholars lacked the resolution to undertake such
works."
There is much that could be said about how accurately this statement
depicts the development of Hanafi studies of al Usul, even if it was
made by a Hanafi. The statement does, nonetheless, come close to reality
in explaining the role of the Hanafi yah in the development of
Usul al Fiqh. In the first period, these scholars
concentrated, even before al Imam al Maturidi, on discussing the
issues brought up by al Imam al Shafi'i in his Risalah, as 'Isa
ibn Abban and others did.
During the following period, one of the most prominent writers
of al Usul was Abu al Hasan al Karkhi (d 340 AH). His book on al
Usul consists of a limited number of pages that were printed with Abu
Zayd al Dabusi's book, Ta'sis al Nazar "Establishing Opinion", which
has been published in several editions in Cairo.
Then, Abu Bakr al Jassas (d 370 AH) wrote his work, Al Fusul
Fi al Usul as an introduction to his Ahkam al Qur'an "Legal
Interpretations of the Qur'an"66. Al Fusul has been
researched and edited for a doctoral thesis, and was published
recently in Kuwait.
True development of the Hanafiyah writing on the
subject of al Usul. may be considered to have begun with al
Imam Abu Zayd al Dabusi (d 340) who wrote two important books on the
subject: Taqwim al Adillah "Appraising Evidence", all or some
of which has been researched and edited, but which has not yet been
printed, and Ta'sis al Nazar67. Abu Zayd made use of the
work on al Usul done by his predecessors, especially that of
Al Karkhi and Al Jassas, but with the difference that he expanded the
field and explained it in greater detail; he also made brief reference
to the points on which the Hanafiyah agreed and disagreed
with others on matters of Usul.
Abu Zayd was followed by Fakhr al Islam al Bazdawi (d 482), who
wrote the well-known Kanz al Wusul Ila Ma'rifat al Usul "A Treasury
On Attaining Knowledge of the Usul", in which he dealt with
Usul in general. Later Hanafiyah scholars took great
interest in the book and wrote many commentaries on it; the best and
most important of which was Kashf al Asrar "Secrets
Uncovered" by 'Abd al Aziz al Bukhari (d 830). This commentary has
been published in several editions in both Istanbul and Egypt.
Likewise, Shams al A'immah al Sarkhasi (d 423 AH) wrote Usul
al Sarkhasi, which has been printed in two volumes in Egypt. This
book is considered to be in many ways an alternate reading of al Dabusi's
Taqwim al Adillah. The Hanafiyah scholars of al Usul
took great interest in the books of al Bazdawi and al Sarkhasi, and
concerned themselves with teaching and commenting upon them for a long time.
From the above it should be clear that the development of Usul
al Fiqh, as a specialized discipline, had been completed, and that its
issues and academic parameters had been defined by the fifth century
AH. Indeed, by that century, the scholars of every school of legal thought
had recorded their own interpretations and understanding of Usul
al Fiqh.
THE METHODS OF THE FOLLOWERS OF AL IMAM
AL SHAFI'I OR, THE "MUTAKALLIMUN", AND
THOSE OF THE HANAFIYAH
Writings on the subject of al Usul generally followed
one of two methods. The first was al Shafi'i's method, or the method of the
Mutakallimun. This was the method followed by the Shafi'iyah, the
Malikiyah, Hanabilah and the Mu'tazilah68, and it
was known as the "method of the Mutakallimun" because the
authors of books written according to this method used to introduce
them with discussions of theological and philosophical issues, such as
al Hasan and al Qabih "The Good and the
Reprehensible', Hukm al Ashya' Qabl al Shar' "The Legal
Status of Matters Prior to the Revelation of Shari'ah", Shukr al
Mun'im "The Necessity of Gratitude to the Bestower", and al
Hakim "The Possessor of Sovereignty". A further reason for its being
labeled "the method of the Mutakallimun" was the use of the
deductive method in defining the principles of source methodology, in
ascertaining the validity of those principles, and in refuting those
whose opinions differed without paying much attention to the issues
and details which stem from the application of these principles.
THE METHOD OF THE HANAFI SCHOLARS OF AL USUL
The Hanafi method of writing on al Usul involved defining the
principles of Usul from the details of legal issues with which
their earliest predecessors had already dealt. Thus, the basis for
their studies of al Usul was derived from the details of
previously settled legal issues, and not the other way
round. Therefore, one who studies Usul al Fiqh according to
this method will gather the details of issues concerning which the
Hanafi Imams have already given Fatawa, and then analyze
them. Through his analysis he will decide the basis on which these
Fatawa were given.
Shah Wali Allah of Delhi commented:
"I found that some of them claimed the differences between
Abu Hanifah and al Shafi'i were founded on the Usul mentioned
in al Bazdawi's book and elsewhere. But the truth is that most of
these Usul were themselves derived from the differing legal
pronouncement of the Imams. My opinion of the matter is that such
principles of al Usul as the rules which say that the
specific "al Khass" is obvious "Mubayyan", and does
not need to be followed by a declaration "Bayan"; that the
addition of details to a text constitutes abrogation "Naskh";
that the comprehensive "al 'Amm" is definitive
"Qat'i" like the specific "al Khass"; that mere
numbers of narrations may not be taken as a factor in according
preference Tarjih to one opinion or another; that the Hadith
of one who is not a Faqih need not necessarily be adopted in
cases where there can be no resort to reason; that there is no legitimacy
to the notion of progressing from a precondition "Shart" or
description "Wasf" to a legal deduction; that the imperative
"al Amr" in a text always indicates legal obligation "Wujub";
and so on, all of these are examples of principles inferred
from the judgements of the Imams. Indeed, there are no sound
narrations to suggest that Abu Hanifah or his two companions, Muhammad
and Abu Yusuf, adhered to any of these principles of source
methodology. As such, then, these principles deserve no more to be
preserved and defended, as al Bazdawi and the others did, than the
opposing principles do."69
THE SCIENCE OF USUL AL FIQH DURING THE
SIXTH CENTURY AH AND THE FOLLOWING PERIOD
Following the consolidation of the subject matter of this
discipline, according to the method of the Mutakallimun, in
four major works: al 'Ahd, al Mu'tamad, al Burhan and al
Mustasfa, two great scholars from among the Mutakallimun
summarized these four books in works of their own.
The first was al Imam Fakhr al Din al Razi (d 606 AH), who
summarized them in his book al Mahsul "The Sum and
Substance", which I had the honour of researching and editing. This
work has been printed in six volumes by Imam Muhammad ibn Sa'ud
University, and is now being reprinted.
The second was al Imam Sayf al Din al Amidi (d 631 AH), who
summarized these four books in his al Ihkam Fi Usul al Ahkam
"Precision in the Source Methodology of Law", which has been published
in Riyadh, Cairo and elsewhere.
These two books are lengthier and certainly easier to read and
understand than others. Of the two, al Mahsul is written in
clearer language, and is more detailed in its explanations. Many
glosses and commentaries have been written on these two books. Taj al
Din al Armawi (d 656) summarized al Mahsul in his book al
Hasil "The Outcome", which was researched and edited for a
doctoral thesis at al Azhar University, but has not yet been
published.
Al Imam al Razi himself also summarized it in a book entitled
al Muntakhab "Selections", which one scholar has researched
and edited.
Al Qadi al Baydawi (d 685) summarized al Hasil in his
book Minhaj al Wusul Ila 'Ilm al Usul "The Way of Mastering
the Science of Source Methodology"; but his summary was so abbreviated
that the result is like a riddle, very difficult to understand. Thus,
many scholars undertook to produce commentaries on the book. Among
such commentaries, the best is that of al Isnawi (d 772), which is
entitled Nihayat al Su'l "An End to Questioning" This book
occupied the attention of the scholars in the field for a long time,
and the Shafi'iyah scholars al Al Azhar are still devoted to it.
Al Amidi's book, al Ihkam "Precision" was summarized by Ibn al
Hajib (d 646) of the Maliki legal school in his book Muntaha al Su'l
wa al Aml Fi 'Ilmay al Usul wa al Jadal "The Ultimate in the Sciences
of Jurisprudence and Argumentation", which is well-known among the
followers of al Imam Malik.
The best available commentary on this work is that of 'Udad al
Din (d 756), for which several glosses and commentaries have been
written.
All of these books were written following the method of the
Mutakallimun, defining the principles, basing evidence upon them, and
seeking to refute by means of these those who held opposing views,
until one of the two groups admitted defeat.
The Hanafiyah scholars of al Usul were likewise
occupied in studying the books of al Bazdawi and al Sarkhasi. This
situation remained the same until the end of the sixth century and the
beginning of the seventh century AH, when the scholars of at
Usul began using a new method. This method involved combining the
methods of the Mutakallimun and the Hanafiyah
scholars so as to produce books which combined the Usul of
the two groups.
Following this method, Muzaffar al Din al Sa'ati (d 694) wrote
Bad'i al Nizam al Jam'i Bayna Kitabay al Bazdawi wa al Ihkam. This
book is one which is readily available in print.
Sadr al Shari'ah (d 747) wrote Tanqih al Usul
"Refining al Usul", in which he summarized al Mahsul,
Usul al Bazdawi and Mukhtasar ibn al Hajib. He then
wrote a commentary on his own book entitled al Tawdih
"Clarification", to which al Taftazani (d 792) added a marginal
commentary entitled al Talwih. All three books, al
Tanqih, al Tawdih and al Talwih are available in print.
Among the Shafi'iyah scholars, Taj al Din al Subki
wrote his famous book, Jam' al Jawami' "The Compilation of the
Comprehensive". In the introduction, he mentioned that he had compiled
his work from one hundred different books on al Usul. Many scholars wrote commentaries and added footnotes to al Subki's book. Of these, perhaps
the most important and most widely-available commentary is Sharh al
Jalal al Muhalli, which remains even today the basis for studies in al
Usul, especially for the Shafi'iyah scholars.
Badr al Din al Zarkashi (d 794) also wrote a commentary, entitled
Tashnif al Masami' "To Please the Ears", part of which was printed in
Cairo with footnotes by al Shaykh al Muti'i (d 1354). One of the students
at Imam Muhammad ibn Sa'ud University has researched and edited
part of this book recently for his doctoral thesis.
Al Zarkashi also wrote al Bahr al Muhit "The Vast
Ocean", in which he collected the submissions of scholars of al Usul
from over one hundred books. A student has stared to research and edit
this book, under our supervision, for his doctoral thesis, and has
already completed one volume and made it ready for publication.
Among the Hanabilah, Ibn Qudamah (d 620) wrote
Rawdat al Nazir wa Jannat al Manazir, in which he summarized
al Ghazzali's al Mustasfa, and added to it other useful
material on matters in which the Hanabilah disagreed with
others. This book has been printed several times, and the
Hanabilah took great interest in it, to the extent that they
ignored nearly all other books.
Sulayman al Tufi (d 716) summarized this work, and then
commented upon his summary in two volumes.
Among the Malikiyah, al Qarrafi (d 684) wrote
Tanqih al Fusul fi Ikhtisar al Mahsul "Refining Chapters in
Summary of the Mahsul". Al Qarrafi also wrote a commentary on al
Mahsul in a large volume entitled Nafa'is al Usul
"Treasures of the Usul", part of which has been researched
and edited under our supervision in Riyadh.
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