Khalëfa bin KhayyÃÂá¹ bin Khalifa bin KhayyÃÂá¹ al-ÿUá¹£fà «rë al-ShaybÃÂnë al-Dhuhlë al-Tamëmë al-Laythë Abà « ÿAmr ShabÃÂb (; 777âÂÂ855) commonly known by his nickname Shabab or simply Khalifa Ibn Khayyat was a Basran Arab Islamic scholar, traditionist, historian, chronicler and genealogist.
A member of a scholarly Basran family of hadith transmitters, he became known primarily for his contributions to history and biographical literature. His Taþrëkh is the earliest extant Islamic chronicle, covering events from the ProphetâÂÂs life to 232/847, while his ṬabaqÃÂt is one of the earliest surviving Islamic biographical dictionaries, cataloguing more than three thousand transmitters of hadith.
He main nisba in later biographical dictionaries is al-ÿUá¹£furë. Al-Sam'ani, Ibn al-Athir and Ibn Khallikan maintain that this nisba derives from the Arabic word for safflower (ÿuá¹£fur), a plant which was used to dye cloth red, and thus refers to some involvement in the safflower trade, although his family connection to this is unknown. Al-Mizzi cites Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi, who says that ÿuá¹£fur refers to a certain subtribe of the Arabs, but this might refer to ÿuá¹£fà «r and the nisba al-ÿUá¹£fà «rë, which is different from al-ÿUá¹£furë. Khalifa was given the nickname al-ShabÃÂb ('the youth'), to distinguish him from his grandfather who also held the same name.
Ibn al-Athir mentions the alleged tribal affiliation of Khalifa as "ar-Raqashi" i.e from the Banà « RÃÂqash, a brach of Banu Tamim. Ibn al-Athir also mentions Khalifa as a descendant of Shayban bin Dhuhl bin ThaâÂÂlaba bin âÂÂUkaba bin SaâÂÂb bin âÂÂAli bin Bakr bin WaâÂÂil. The genealogy of Bakr bin WaâÂÂil is eventually traced back to Asad bin RabiâÂÂa bin Nizar bin MaâÂÂdd bin âÂÂAdnan.
Khalifa Ibn Khayyat was born around 160 AH / 776âÂÂ7 CE in Basra, Iraq. In his ṬabaqÃÂt, he does not mention his own full lineage, despite listing his own grandfather, Abà « Hubayra Khalëfa bin KhayyÃÂá¹ (), who was also a prominent hadith transmitter. His father, KhayyÃÂá¹ bin Khalëfa bin KhayyÃÂá¹Â, is not mentioned in the ṬabaqÃÂt, but he was also a hadith transmitter, although less prominent than his father and son.The exact social position of KhalëfaâÂÂs father and grandfather is unclear, but the biographicies about them show that Khalifa came from a Basran family involved in hadith scholarship.
Little is known about Khalifa's life. His express juridical-theological position is also unknown. Ibn al-Nadim lists Ibn Khayyat among the traditionist-jurisprudents. He is reported to have been among the Basran notables who accompanied the city's judge, Aḥmad ibn RiyÃÂḥ, to defend Ahmad against the charges of Mutazila opponents during the Mihna under the caliph Al-Wathiq (), around 229/843âÂÂ4, likely in Samarra or Baghdad. The charges against Ahmad that he had been persecuting Mutazilites, was not proven and the case was dismissed. This suggests that Khalifa was suspected of rejecting caliphal doctrine, particularly that the Quran was created. This is also the only recorded instance where he left Basra.
Besides Khalifa's expertise in ḥadëth and akhbÃÂr, Ibn al-Jazari mentions him as a transmitter of qira'at. Ibn al-Jazari mentions that Aḥmad bin IbrÃÂhëm bin ÿUthmÃÂn al-WarrÃÂq and al-Mughëra bin á¹¢adaqa studied qira'ats under him, but he seems to have confused Shabab (Khalifa) with Shababa bin Sawwar al-Fazari.
Khalifa died in 240 AH / 854âÂÂ5 CE in Basra. Al-Dhahabi wrote in Siyar A'lam al-Nubala' that he died in his eighties without naming the source for his information.
Al-Mizzi counted ninety teachers whom Khalifa transmitted hadith from and thirty-six students who narrated hadith from him. His reputation as a traditionist was mixed. His reputation as a traditionist was mixed. Early hadith critics expressed differing views on his reliability: some leading third/ninth-century scholars were critical of his transmissions, while Al-Bukhari regarded his narrations as acceptable and occasionally cited them in Sahih al-Bukhari in corroboration of other reports. By the fourth/tenth century, later authorities such as Ibn Hibban and Ibn ÿAdë came to describe him as thiqa (reliable) or á¹£adà «q (sincere). Both, however, emphasized that KhalifaâÂÂs principal scholarly contributions lay not in hadith transmission but in his two major compilations in history and ÿilm al-rijÃÂl.
Several critical assessments of KhalifaâÂÂs reliability as a ḥadëth transmitter are recorded from his contemporaries in the third/ninth century. Yahya ibn Ma'in is reported to have said that Khalifa "was not specialists in hadith." Abu Hatim al-Razi said about Khalëfa "I do not transmit from him; he is not strong." Abu Zurýa al-Razi is said to have refrained from reading out hadith that he had received from Khalifa and even struck it out in his notes. Al-ÿUqaylë likewise included Khalifa in his work on weak transmitters.
Some early critics were more positive about KhalifaâÂÂs capacity as a hadith transmitter. The earliest is Muhammad al-Bukhari, who cites Khalifa twenty-one times in Sahih al-Bukhari. However, Ibn Hajar points out that al-BukhariâÂÂs reports from Khalifa generally serve to corroborate parallel isnÃÂds, and that when he transmits uniquely from Khalifa, he introduces the report with the formula "Khalëfa said to me" rather than the standard "He narrated to me." This suggests that Bukhari regarded Khalifa's transmissions as acceptable for purposes of corroboration, but not of the same rank as those of the most reliable authorities (thiqÃÂt) on whom he relied without supporting isnÃÂds.
A defence of KhalifaâÂÂs status as a reliable transmitter was written by Ibn 'Adë. Ibn 'Adë concludes that Khalifa was upright in hadith transmission and sincere. Khalifa is likewise counted among the reliable narrators by Ibn Hibban, who adds that he was accurate and particularly knowledgeable about history and genealogy. Moreover, Ibn Hibban narrates three reports with isnÃÂds going through Khalifa in Sahih Ibn Hibban. Maslama ibn al-QÃÂsim al-Andalusë said about Khalifa "There is no problem with him". Abà « l-Walëd recognised Khalifa as a great authority in his own hadith.
The Taþrëkh is extant in only one manuscript (Rabat, Maktabat al-Awqaf, ms. 199, in National library of Syria). It is a recension by the Cordoban scholar Baqi ibn Makhlad (), who had travelled to Iraq. It was written in Al-Andalus in 477 / 1084. The copy was found in Morocco, in a single volume of 168 folios.
Khalifa's TÃÂrëkh is the oldest Islamic chronicle still extant. Khalifa commences his book by defining the word Tarikh in Islam and among pre-Islamic peoples. Then he covers the years 1âÂÂ232 AH (622-847 CE) annalistically according to the lunar Hijri calendar. The Prophet's birth follows, before the main annalistic entries on the Medinan period of Prophet's life and the caliphs. These combine reports attributed to earlier authorities with laconic notes on holders of governorships, leadership of the Hajj, campaigns against Byzantium, and the deaths of officials and traditionists. After the caliphate of Harun al-Rashid (), the chronicle consists only of very terse notes that reflect the official historiography of Al-Ma'mun () and subsequent caliphs. Ibn Khayyat's many sources include Ibn Ishaq and Al-Mada'ini. He gives special attention to the Umayyad Caliphate and to Muslim foreign affairs, in particular to the extension of the Islamic Empire. He usually narrates each event from two points of view, local and official. He pays little attention to Islamic internal affairs, but he does deal with such decisive events as the Assassination of Uthman, Battle of Siffin, Battle of al-Harra, the Kharijites movements.
The ṬabaḳÃÂt al-ḲurrÃÂþ is also extant in a single manuscript only. The unique copy was made by one of the Khalifa's disciples, probably during the Khalifa's life-time, consisting of 97 folios. It is currently located in Zahiriyya Library. It is one of the earliest Islamic biographical dictionaries to have survived. It contains the biographies of 3375 individuals, 3246 men and 129 women, who were cited as authorities for Islamic traditions during the first 236 years of Islam.
Khalifa composed his book in a different way from his contemporary Ibn Sa'd. He begins by enumerating the men who were authorities in tradition and lived in Medina, commencing with the Prophet, then the members of Quraysh, group by group according to their pedigree and their relation to the Prophet; then the members of the other Arab tribes. He then takes the Muslim cities and centres and deals with them in a similar manner. The authorâÂÂs biographical accounts are generally brief, but the significance of the book lies in the fact of its completeness and the close attention which Khalifa pays to genealogy.
Lost Work. The only citations of this work in later works appear to be a few narrations in Ibn Asakir's TÃÂrëkh madënat Dimashq and al-MizziâÂÂs and Ibn HajarâÂÂs biographical entries on Sa'ëd bin Abi l-Hasan al-Basri.
Lost Work.
Lost Work.