BurhÃÂn ad-Dën IbrÃÂhëm ibn Muḥammad ibn IbrÃÂhëm al-Ḥalabë (èñÃÂçàçÃÂïÃÂàóèñçÃÂÃÂàèààÃÂàï èàóèñçÃÂÃÂàçÃÂÃÂÃÂèÃÂ) was an Islamic jurist (faqëh) who was born around 1460 in Aleppo, and who died in 1549 in Istanbul. His reputation as one of the most brilliant legists of his time chiefly rests on his work entitled Multaqàal-Abḥur, which became the standard handbook of the Ḥanafë school of Islamic law in the Ottoman Empire.
Not many details are known about the life of IbrÃÂhëm al-Ḥalabë, with the available contemporary sources offering only an outline of his career. All known facts are presented by Has (1981), virtually all of them found in a single source, the biographical dictionary al-ShaqÃÂâÂÂiq al-NuâÂÂmÃÂniyya compiled by ṬÃÂshköpri-ZÃÂda (d. 1561).
Al-Ḥalabë's nisba refers to his origin from Aleppo (in Arabic, Ḥalab), then part of the Mamluk Sultanate, where he was born around 1460. He received his initial education in the Islamic sciences in his hometown, and he also attended lectures in Damascus. This qualified him to work for some time as a prayer leader (imÃÂm) and orator (khaá¹Âëb) in Aleppo.
In order to pursue his studies, late in the fifteenth century he moved to Cairo, the capital of the Mamluk Sultanate. In Cairo he probably attended lectures at the al-Azhar University, which offered a curriculum in Ḥanafë jurisprudence. He also studied with the famous scholar and prolific author JalÃÂl al-Dën al-Suyà «á¹Âë (d. 1505), renowned for his studies on tafsër and ḥadëth.
Around the year 1500, al-Ḥalabë moved to Istanbul, capital of the Ottoman Empire. His scholarly qualifications were apparently soon recognized, and he held the posts of imÃÂm and khaá¹Âëb in various mosques, until he was finally appointed to the same posts in the prestigious FÃÂtiḥ Mosque. He was also appointed as teacher in the new DÃÂr al-QurrÃÂâ "House of Reciters" established by Shaykh al-IslÃÂm SaâÂÂdë Chelebë (d. 1539). It is in Istanbul that al-Ḥalabë wrote and published his most famous work, Multaqàal-Abḥur (àÃÂêÃÂàçÃÂãèÃÂñ).
Having lived the greater part of his life in Istanbul, and having attained a reputation among his contemporaries as one of the greatest jurists of the age, al-Ḥalabë died at the reported age of ninety in the year 1549. He is buried in the Edirnekapñ neighbourhood of Istanbul.
The Austrian diplomat and historian Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall (1774âÂÂ1856) includes al-Ḥalabë in his top ten of "profound legists" of the sixteenth century, the Ottoman golden age.
An extensively annotated list of al-Ḥalabë's writings is presented by Has. This list contains important additions and corrections to earlier lists, in particular the one provided by Brockelmann. Apart from Multaqàal-Abḥur (on which see the next sections), the other books and treatises known to have been written by al-Ḥalabë are listed below.
Two works of al-Ḥalabë gained wide currency as school primers, because of the simple Arabic in which they are written:
Three other book-length works probably originated as working notes made by al-Ḥalabë during his studies of Ḥanafë jurisprudence:
Other, lesser known works are:
A notable aspect of al-Ḥalabë's conservative views is his opposition against the philosophy and works of Ibn âÂÂArabë (d. 1240), the sufi mystic. This took the form of two of lengthy treatises containing hard criticisms of Ibn âÂÂArabë's famous work Fuá¹£à «á¹£ al-Ḥikam, and another treatise against extreme sufi practices such as dancing (raqá¹£) and whirling (dawarÃÂn):
More conventional treatises on arcane legal matters are:
The following works are among those which have been wrongly attributed to IbrÃÂhëm al-Ḥalabë:
Al-Ḥalabë's most famous work is entitled Multaqàal-Abḥur "Confluence of the Seas", completed by the author on 23 Rajab 923 (11 September 1517). The work is a condensation of a number of earlier standard compilations of Ḥanafë jurisprudence (the "seas" of the title). The author neatly points out where these sources agree, and where they disagree, and provides guidance by indicating which legal opinions in his estimation are most correct (aá¹£aḥḥ), strongest (aqwÃÂ), or preferable (arjaḥ), and indicating which opinion is preferred in formal legal opinion (al-mukhtÃÂr li-l-fatwÃÂ).
Usually referred to as the Multaqà(in Turkish, Mülteka), the work is comprehensive yet concise, and written in a simple style. These qualities earned it a reputation as a convenient reference-book among judges, and made it a standard textbook in the Ottoman madrasas from the reign of sultan Süleyman I "the Magnificent" (r. 1520-1566), replacing al-Nasafë's Kanz al-DaqÃÂâÂÂiq. The book would retain its pre-eminence for three centuries.
The popularity of the MultaqÃÂ can be gauged from the large number of commentaries written over the following centuries, and from the fact that the text was translated into Turkish. The canonical status of the MultaqÃÂ was also noted by several European observers, with Farley remarking that "The Sultan rules over the Turks, but the Koran and the Multeka rule over Sultan."
The MultaqÃÂ retained its importance right up to the very last years of the Ottoman Empire. The Mecelle, the Ottoman civil code promulgated in 1877, incorporates more passages translated directly from the MultaqÃÂ than from any other single source. Also, twelve printed editions of the text were produced in Istanbul between 1836 and 1898.
The German-British scholar Joseph Schacht used the Multaqàas the primary source for the systematic section in his seminal Introduction to Islamic law (1964). He describes the Multaqàas "one of the latest and most highly esteemed statements of the doctrine of the [Ḥanafë] school, which presents Islamic law in its final, fully developed form".
The contents of the Multaqàare arranged according to the conventional divisions of a Ḥanafë lawbook, with the main subjects treated in 57 books (kitÃÂb, listed below), and with further subdivisions into chapters (bÃÂb) and sections (faá¹£l).
In his brief introduction to the MultaqÃÂ, the author mentions the four central texts on which his work is mainly based. He refers to these texts as al-kutub al-arbaâÂÂa "the four books"; in Ḥanafë tradition they are also known as al-mutà «n al-arbaâÂÂa "the four texts". They are:
To the materials taken from these sources al-Ḥalabë added (in his words) "whatever is needed" and "a small portion" respectively from two other well-known Ḥanafë works:
These six sources are part of the vast and complex network of texts on Ḥanafë jurisprudence already existent at the time. The nature of the many intertextual relationships can be illustrated with al-Ḥalabë's sources: al-Qudà «rë's Mukhtaá¹£ar, as its title indicates, is a "synopsis" of earlier works; al-Mawá¹£ilë's MukhtÃÂr is an anthology of fatwÃÂs, mainly those of Abà « Ḥanëfa (d. 767CE), the founder of the Ḥanafë school; al-Nasafë's Kanz is an abridgement of his own KitÃÂb al-WÃÂfë, which in turn is modelled on al-MarghinÃÂnë's HidÃÂya; al-Maḥbà «bë's WiqÃÂya is excerpted from al-MarghënÃÂnë's HidÃÂya, which in turn is a commentary on its author's own popular textbook BidÃÂyat al-MubtadiâÂÂ, which used Qudà «rë's Mukhtaá¹£ar as one of its two main sources; finally, the Majmaâ of Ibn al-SÃÂâÂÂÃÂtë is based on two sources, al-Qudà «rë's Mukhtaá¹£ar and the ManáºÂà «ma by Najm al-Dën Abà « Ḥafá¹£ âÂÂUmar al-Nasafë (d. 1068).
The prime characteristic of the MultaqÃÂ which gave the book its central place is its comprehensiveness. This made the book into a sort of "one stop shop" for judges, obviating the need for them to enter the thicket of existing, usually much more voluminous works, and thus saving them a lot of time and effort. It has to be borne in mind here that medieval books are generally not furnished with tables of contents, indexes or numbered chapters and sections.
Inevitably, having become the most popular handbook of Ḥanafë jurisprudence, al-Ḥalabë's work spawned its own plethora of commentaries, supercommentaries and glosses. More than fifty such works have been identified. The earliest commentary, by SulaymÃÂn ibn âÂÂAlë al-QaramÃÂnë (d. 1518) was completed within a year of the MultaqÃÂ's completion, but no copies of it seem to have survived. The earliest still extant commentary was composed in 1587, while the most recent commentary dates from 1862. The most widely consulted commentaries are:
During the reign of Sultan IbrÃÂhëm (r. 1640-1648), a Turkish translation was made of al-Ḥalabë's text with Shaykh-ZÃÂda's commentary, and with added annotations. It is entitled Mevkufat, and was prepared by Muḥammad Mawqà «fÃÂtë (Mevkufati Mehmed Efendi), by order of Grand Vizier Muá¹£á¹ÂafàPasha. The first printed editions of this work appeared in Bà «lÃÂq (1838) and Istanbul (1852), and modern printed editions of the Mevkufat, in Latin script, are still being published in Turkey. Several modern Turkish translations of the MultaqÃÂ, with fresh commentaries, are available as well.
In view of the central place which the MultaqÃÂ acquired in the Ottoman legal system, as noted at the time by European observers, it is a curious fact that no complete translation of it into a western European language was ever made. D'Ohsson (1788-1824, vol. 5-6) and Sauvaire (1882) offer a translation into French of only a few selected chapters. As Hammer-Purgstall remarked,<blockquote>"a complete translation of [the MultaqÃÂ] will be perfectly adequate for a more thorough knowledge of Islamic civil legislation and Ottoman private law."</blockquote>
https://archive.org/details/lewis_o_030/page/n284/mode/2up Manuscript of Multaqàal-abḥur, dated 1102 AH (1691 AD). Free Library of Philadelphia, Rare Book Department, Lewis O 30.