Abū Sufyān Wakīʿ ibn al-Jarrāḥ ibn Malīḥ al-Ruʾāsī al-Kilābī al-Kufī (745/47–812) was a prominent hadith scholar based in Kufa. He was one of the principal teachers of the major Sunni Muslim jurist Ahmad ibn Hanbal.
Origins
Waki was born in Kufa,[3] or in the village of Ustuwa near Nishapur,[4] in 128/129 AH (745–747 CE).[5] His father al-Jarrah ibn Malih belonged to the Ubayd ibn Ru'as clan of the Banu Kilab tribe and was born in Soghdia, while his mother, a daughter of Amra ibn Shaddad ibn Thawr of the same clan, was born in Bukhara;[4][6] the Ubayd ibn Ru'as had been settled in Kufa following the Muslim conquest of Iraq in the 630s.[7] The family was well off and al-Jarrah was the supervisor of the bayt al-darb (mint) at Rayy,[4] before being appointed head of the bayt al-mal (treasury) in Baghdad under the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid (r. 786–809).[3][4]
Career
Schooled in the Islamic religious sciences, especially the hadith (traditions attributed to the Islamic prophet Muhammad), Waki became a leading traditionist (muhaddith) in his hometown, known for transmitting numerous hadiths based on his memorizations.[8][9] Despite the errors of transmission attributed to him, Waki was generally regarded as the best muhaddith of his time.[3] His refusal of an appointment as qadi (head judge) by Harun al-Rashid out of concern of dependence on the state further contributed to his reputation for piety and ascetism.[3]
Waki built a mosque in Kufa, installing as its imam a tribesman of his, Humayd ibn Abd al-Rahman ibn Humayd al-Ru'asi.[4]
Death and descendants
On his return from the Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca), Waki died in the Fayd oasis in 197 AH (812).[5] His son Sufyan was also a Kufan traditionist, though of poor reputation. Sufyan died at an old age in 861.[13][14]
Literary works
Although Waki was popularly held to have never possessed a book, he authored a number of works:[3]
Tafsir al-Quran
al-Sunan
al-Marifa Wa al-Tarikh
al-Musannaf (cited by Ahmad ibn Hanbal and Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani)[3]