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Shuab ul Iman, (Arabic: شعب الايمان), is a multi-volume Hadith book compiled by Imam al-Bayhaqi (384 AH – 458 AH). [1] The author provides an exhaustive textual commentary relating to foundations of faith and its branches.
It is one of the largest compilations of Hadiths, including more than thirty seven thousand (37,000) Hadiths. [2] The goal of these authors was to collect whatever they found, not to extract the best, nor to refine them, nor to make them more accessible for use.
It is the largest Sunan Book available in history of Hadith collection, containing almost twenty two thousand (22,000) Hadiths according to Al-Maktaba Al-Shamela. [2] A book with similar name (Sunan al-Kubra) is also written by Imam al-Nasa'i having almost twelve thousand (12,000) hadiths.
Tafhim-ul-Quran by Syed Abul A'la Maududi; Anwar Ul Bayan by Mufti Muhammad Ashiq Ilahi Bulandshahri; A Thematic Commentary on the Qur'an by Muhammad al-Ghazali [27] Zubdat al-itqān fī ‘ulūm al-Qur’ān by Muhammad 'Alawi al-Maliki; The Meanings of the Noble Qur’an (with Explanatory Notes) by Mufti Muhammad Taqi Usmani
Ahl al-Hadith (Arabic: أَهْل الحَدِيث, romanized: Ahl al-Ḥadīth, lit. 'people of hadith') is an Islamic school of Sunni Islam that emerged during the 2nd and 3rd Islamic centuries of the Islamic era (late 8th and 9th century CE) as a movement of hadith scholars who considered the Quran and authentic hadith to be the only authority in matters of law and creed. [1]
The science of hadith has been described by one hadith specialist, Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti (d. 911 A.H/ 1505 C.E), as the science of the principles by which the conditions of both the sanad (the chain of narration), and the matn (the text of the hadith), are known.
Usd al-ghābah fi maʿrifat al-Saḥabah (Arabic: أسد الغابة في معرفة الصحابة, lit. 'Lions of the Wild: On Knowing the Companions'), commonly known as Usd al-Gabah, is a book by Ali ibn al-Athir.
The author collected in this book the names and biographies of all, or most, of the hadith narrators mentioned in the six canonical hadith collections.These six books are Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim and the four Sunan books by Al-Nasa'i, al-Tirmidhi, Abu Dawood and Ibn Majah.