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Abu Bakr al-Bazzar

Abu Bakr al-Bazzar

?905 CE · Ramla

Abu Bakr Ahmad ibn Amr ibn Abd al-Khaliq al-Bazzar was a Sunni traditionist (muhaddith, a transmitter and critic of hadith — the reported words and deeds of the Prophet Muhammad) from Basra in southern Iraq, who died in 292 AH (904-905 CE). His birth year is not securely recorded; biographers place it loosely in the early third Islamic century, so it is best left open. He is remembered chiefly for his Musnad, formally titled al-Bahr al-Zakhkhar ("The Surging Sea") and widely called Musnad al-Bazzar — a large collection arranged by the Companion who first transmitted each report. What set it apart, in the tradition's own account, is that al-Bazzar appended critical notes, often pointing out weaknesses (ilal, hidden defects) in the chains of narration. Later scholars such as al-Haythami mined it for traditions found nowhere else. In his old age al-Bazzar traveled to teach, dictating his Musnad in cities including Baghdad, Isfahan, Egypt (Fustat), and Mecca. Reports preserved by al-Daraqutni and al-Hakim hold that he dictated from memory, without his books, and so fell into mistakes in both chains and wordings; al-Daraqutni's summary verdict was "trustworthy, but he errs and leans on his memory." This mixed appraisal is itself part of how the discipline graded him — reliable in standing, yet to be used with care. He died at Ramla in Palestine.

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Stop 1 of 6Born / From

BasraבצרהSouthern Iraq — Persian Gulf port

What they did here

Al-Bazzar's nisba al-Basri and the biographical tradition place his origins and early hadith study in Basra in southern Iraq. Al-Dhahabi's Siyar gives his birth only as a loose estimate ('born sometime in the 210s AH', c. 825-834 CE), so no precise date is fixed here. His Basran teachers named in the sources include Hudba ibn Khalid, Abd al-A'la ibn Hammad, and Amr ibn Ali al-Fallas.

About Basra

Basra hosted one of the oldest Babylonian-Jewish communities, with continuous residence from the Talmudic era until the mid-20th century. R. Yosef Hayyim of Baghdad (Ben Ish Hai) maintained extensive correspondence with the Basra rabbinic court.

See other sages who lived in Basra

Works

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