Author
Al-Jalal Al-Suyuti, Abdul Rahman bin Abi Bakr bin Muhammad
Author Original
الجلال السيوطي، عبد الرحمن بن أبي بكر بن محمد
Type
belge
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Pages Count
90
Library
King Abdul-Aziz Al Saoud Foundation for Islamic Studies and Human Sciences
Record ID
affichage_numerics2603
Notes
The beginning of the manuscript: Praise be to God, and prayers and peace be upon the Messenger of God, and after that, the Book of Subjects was compiled by the Imam Al-Hafiz Abu Al-Faraj Abd Al-Rahman bin Ali bin Al-Jawzi Al-Bakri, may God have mercy on him. He alerted the memorizers, ancient and modern, to the fact that it contains a lot of leniency and hadiths that are not fabricated, but are rather weak, and it contains good hadiths and others that are authentic (...) so I wanted to summarize the aforementioned book in a brief composition (...) I called it Al-Ta’abat on Al-Mawdoo’at.
End of the manuscript: The hadith of Ibn Masoud: If the black banners come from Khorasan, go to them, for there is the Caliph of God, the Mahdi, and there is Omar bin Qais who did not hear from Al-Hasan (...) This is what I wanted in this book from the traced hadiths that there is no way to include in the field of topics (...) and I said in them: Abu Al-Faraj Al-Jawzi wrote a compilation.
Font type: Moroccan
Notes: There is a truncation at the end of the manuscript, amounting to a few verses from a poem by Al-Suyuti that was the conclusion of his book. And on its margins there is a trace. The book “Al-Mawdoo’at” in which Al-Suyuti’s comments revolve is written by Abu Al-Faraj Abd al-Rahman bin Ali bin al-Jawzi (508-598 AH).
An edited publication for the book was issued by Abdullah Shaaban entitled “Al-Suyuti’s Commentaries on the Subjects of Ibn al-Jawzi or The Wonderful Jokes on the Subjects of Imam al-Suyuti,” in which he relied on Al-Suyuti’s manuscript. Regarding the attribution of the manuscript to the author, review what Ahmed Al-Sharqawi Iqbal wrote in (Al-Jalal Al-Suyuti Library).
At the beginning of this collection is an index of its contents, including the titles of the texts and their authors.