ABSTRACT

For the western scholar of Islam, the great body of Arabic literature known as the Hadith has long been of outstanding interest and a subject of intensive study. Hadith, as a common noun, simply means talk, conversation but in the technical, religious sense it is used for the individual, reported sayings of the Prophet, his Companions, the first caliphs and others of the pious scholars of early Islam; and from this usage, it has become a generic term for the whole corpus of these sayings. The present book of Maulana Muhammad Ali contains 690 traditions, some three-quarters of them derived from al-Bukhart's Sahih and the rest from the other sunan and authoritative compilations.

chapter II|15 pages

Īmān and Islām

chapter III|9 pages

Knowledge

chapter IV|28 pages

Purification

chapter V|21 pages

The Mosque

chapter VI|13 pages

Adhān and Iqāmah

chapter VII|8 pages

J amā' ah (congregation)

chapter VIII|9 pages

The Imām

chapter IX|13 pages

Institution of Prayer

chapter X|26 pages

Prayer-Service

chapter XI|7 pages

Friday Service

chapter XII|12 pages

Īd Service

chapter XIII|7 pages

Supererogatory Prayers

chapter XIV|4 pages

Miscellaneous Prayers

chapter XV|20 pages

Burial Service

chapter XVI|14 pages

Charity and Zakāt

chapter XVII|10 pages

Fasting

chapter XVIII|20 pages

Pilgrimage

chapter XIX|14 pages

Jihād

chapter XX|16 pages

Marriage

chapter XXI|10 pages

Divorce

chapter XXII|10 pages

Buying and Selling

chapter XXIII|6 pages

Cultivation of Land

chapter XXIV|8 pages

Matters relating to Service

chapter XXV|9 pages

Debts and Mortgage

chapter XXVI|8 pages

Gifts

chapter XXVII|10 pages

Wills and Inheritance

chapter XXVIII|16 pages

Foods and Drinks

chapter XXIX|12 pages

Toilet

chapter XXX|22 pages

Ethics (Adab)

chapter XXXI|16 pages

The State