The Qiá¹£aá¹£ al-anbiyÃÂþ () is any of various collections of stories about figures recognised as prophets and messengers in Islam, closely related to tafsër (exegesis of the Qur'an).
Since the Quran refers only parabolically to the stories of the prophets, assuming the audience is able to complete the rest from their own knowledge, it became necessary to store the version the original audience had in mind to keep the purpose of the message, when Islam met other cultures during its expansion.
Authors of these texts drew on many traditions available to medieval Islamic civilization, such as those of Asia, Africa, China, and Europe. Many of these scholars were also authors of commentaries on the QurþÃÂn; unlike QurþÃÂn commentaries, however, which follow the order and structure of the QurþÃÂn itself, the qiá¹£aá¹£ told its stories of the prophets in chronological order, which makes them similar to the Jewish and Christian versions of the Bible. The narrations within the Qiá¹£aá¹£ al-anbiyÃÂþ frequently emphasise wisdom and moral teachings rather than limiting themselves to historical-style narratives.
Islamic scholars and theologians have consistently regarded the writings in Qiá¹£aá¹£ al-AnbiyÃÂþ as unreliable for studying the lives of prophets and messengers in Islam or for historical research, and disapprove of them. Abdul Wahhab Najjar's (1862âÂÂ1941) qaá¹£aá¹£ () explained the stories of the prophets solely based on Quranic sources, and is diametrically opposed to earlier ones. However, they share the chronological structure of earlier Qiá¹£aá¹£ al-AnbiyÃÂþ and a summary of the prophetic moral lessons.
The Qiá¹£aá¹£ usually begin with the creation of the world and its various creatures, including angels, and culminate in Adam. Following the stories of Adam and his family come the tales of Idris; Nuh and Shem; Hud and Salih; Abraha,, Ishmail and his mother Hagar; Lot; Isaac, Jacob and Esau, and Joseph; Shuaib; Moses and his brother Aaron; Khidr; Joshua, Eleazar, and Elijah; the kings Samuel, Saul, David, and Solomon; Jonah; Dhu al-Kifl, and Dhu al-Qarnayn; all the way up to and including John the Baptist and Jesus, son of Mary. Sometimes the author incorporated related local folklore or oral traditions, and many of the Qiá¹£aá¹£ al-'AnbiyÃÂþs tales echo medieval Christian and Jewish stories.
The QurþÃÂn frequently mentions and uses stories of biblical figures, but only in the case of Joseph son of Jacob does it narrate a prophet's story in a linear, complete form. Implicitly the original audiences of the QurþÃÂn had enough knowledge of these biblical figures to understand the allusions, but subsequent early Muslims felt the need for more information about these figures, who came in Islam to be known as prophets (, anbiyÃÂþ). Particularly influential sources of biblical knowledge, whose information was transmitted by later Muslim scholars, were ÿAbdullÃÂh ibn SalÃÂm (d. 663), Kaÿb al-AḥbÃÂr (d. c. 652), and Wahb ibn Munabbih (d. c. 730); their information underpinned the first written expositions of the QurþÃÂn's allusions to biblical figures, tafsir (exegetical commentaries). These commentaries inspired a tradition of historical writing that began to present biblical figures in a more linear, narrative form; the principal work of this kind was the Tarikh al-rusul wa-l-muluk by al-Tabari (839âÂÂ923).
Alongside written commentaries in the early Islamic period, under the Umayyad Caliphate, people paid storytellers (quṣṣÃÂá¹£) to preach about religion; they communicated legends about biblical figures that circulated both orally and in writing among Jewish, Christian, and Muslim communities. Along with preachers during Friday prayers, they were the first paid functionaries of Islam. From the eighth century, they were increasingly disparaged as folkloric preachers, and were disregarded by institutional scholars (ÿulamÃÂþ).
By the early ninth century CE the tradition of both written commentaries and oral storytelling inspired collections of fully narrated biographies of the prophets, and these Qiá¹£aá¹£ al-anbiyÃÂþ became a distinct genre of Islamic literature: the earliest to survive are Mubtadaþ al-dunyàwa-qaá¹£aá¹£ al-anbiyÃÂþ by Abà « Ḥudhayfa IsḥÃÂq ibn Bishr Qurashë (d. 821) and the KitÃÂb badþ al-khalq wa-qaá¹£aá¹£ al-anbiyÃÂþ of ÿUmÃÂra ibn Wathëma (died 902). Perhaps the most important work, characterised by Roberto Tottoli as "probably the most comprehensive collection of stories of the prophets, and [...] the most widely known in the Arab world", was Abà « IsḥÃÂq al-Thaÿlabë ÿArÃÂþis al-majÃÂlis fë qaá¹£aá¹£ al-anbiyÃÂþ, from around the early eleventh century.
Like the QurþÃÂnic commentaries or Jewish haggadic texts, however, the Qaá¹£aá¹£ are often didactic rather than simply narrative. Unlike the QurþÃÂn, the Qiá¹£aá¹£ were never considered as binding or authoritative by theologians. Instead, the purpose of the Qiá¹£aá¹£ al-AnbiyÃÂþ was to offer Muslims complementary material based on the QurþÃÂn, to explain the signs of God, and the reasons for the advent of the prophets. Themselves derived from Jewish and Christian texts, Qiá¹£aá¹£ al-anbiyÃÂþ went on to influence Jewish writing within the majority-Muslim world: for example, the fourteenth-century Jewish scholar ShÃÂhin-i ShirÃÂzi drew on such sources.
During the mid-sixteenth century, several illuminated versions of the Qiá¹£aá¹£ â such as Zubdat al-Tawarikh and Siyer-i Nebi â were created by Ottoman authors and miniature painters. According to Milstein et al., "iconographical study [of the texts] reveals ideological programs and clichés typical of the Ottoman polemical discourse with its Shi'ite rival in Iran, and its Christian neighbours in the West."