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Bihar al-Anwar


Bihar al-Anwar


Bihar al-Anwar (Arabic: بِحَار ٱلْأَنْوَار, romanized: Biḥār al-Anwār, lit. 'Seas of Lights') is a comprehensive collection of hadith compiled by Shia scholar Muhammad Baqir Majlisi (d. 1110/1698). It is a hadith collection as the secondary source used beside the Four Books.

Title

The full name of the book, Biḥār al-ʾAnwār al-Jāmiʿah li-Durar ʾAkhbār al-ʾAʾimmah al-Aṭhār (Arabic: بِحَار ٱلْأَنْوَار ٱلْجَامِعَة لِدُرَر أَخْبَار ٱلَأَئِمَّة ٱلْأَطْهَار) (lit. Seas of Lights: The Collection for Pearls of Traditions of the Pure Imams) illustrates that Majlisi did not collect anything he had access to in the book.

Author

Mohammad-Baqer Majlesi was born in 1617 in Isfahan. He was a student of Mulla Sadra. He has been described as the most powerful and influential Shia Ulems. On 1687, he was appointed as Sheikh ul-Islam by Sultan Husayn in Isfahan, the capital city of the Persian Empire. He developed Twelver doctrine by investigating Shia and Sunni hadith. Over 100 books in Arabic and Persian were authored by him.

Prelude

Majlisi compiled it to gather all the ahadith he could access. His primary goal was to preserve the available knowledge for future generations. Majlisi has acknowledged this issue in the preface of Bihar al-Anwar, emphasizing that the traditions collected were not included without being subjected to scrutiny, a task in itself that was a major undertaking. Majlisi says, "Then I chose to examine the traditions of the infallible, righteous Imams, started exploring them and investigated them as was their right and I acquired its skill as was its due." Despite Majlisi acknowledgment, criticism has remained about his approach with some critics suggesting that he has gathered both "pearls" and "pebbles".This book includes all the narrations that receive to Shia. Writing Bihar lasted about 36 years. To write this book, Majlisi got help from other scholars and his students.

Context

Bihar al-Anwar as the most comprehensive hadith collections includes narrations of Shias (Twelver), based on Shia sources. The collection also contains his commentary on these narrations. He used about 400 sources which were written by Sunni and Shia scholars such as, Shaykh al-Saduq, Shaykh Tusi, Al-Shaykh Al-Mufid, Sharif al-Murtaza, Muhammad Jamaluddin al-Makki al-Amili, Sayyed Ibn Tawus, Al-Hilli, Zayn al-Din al-Juba'i al'Amili. The author wrote this book in 25 volumes, but, a new version is published in 110 volumes by some changes and contains more than 100,000 ahadith from Muslim sources.

Editions

  • Majlisī, Muḥammad Bāqir al-, Biḥār al-nwār al-Jāmiʿahli-Durar Akhbār al-Aʾimmat al-Aṭhār [The Oceans of Lights: A Compendium of the Pearls of the Narrations of the Pure Imāms], 110 vols (Beirut: Muʾassasat al-Wafāʾ, 1983).

Commentaries

  • Mashra'a bihar al-anwar by Muhammad Asif Mohseni

See also

  • List of Shi'a books
  • Nahj al-Balagha
  • Safavid conversion of Iran to Shia Islam
  • Du'a al-Kumayl
  • Sharif al-Murtaza
  • Al-Sharif al-Radi
  • Al-Shaykh Al-Mufid
  • Shaykh Tusi
  • ibn Babawayh
  • Muhammad ibn Ya'qub al-Kulayni
  • Amina Bint al-Majlisi
  • Al-Hurr al-Aamili

References

External links

  • Bihar al-Anwar Volumes 1 – 74 English Translation, compiled by Allamah Majlesi, translated by Hub-e-Ali organization, publicly available for free.
  • Bihar Al-Anwar, Kitab al-Ghaybah (Vols. 51, 52 & 53) – The Promised Mahdi, English Translation Part 1 and Part 2, compiled by Allamah Majlesi, translated by Athar Husayn S.H. Rizvi, publicly available for free.

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Bihar al-Anwar by Wikipedia (Historical)