Mutawatir

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on the
Science of hadith

Terminology
Terminology
technical terms
Regarding authenticity
  • Mutawatir — agreed upon



Other


This box: view  talk  edit

Mutawatir (Arabic: متواتر) is an Arabic word meaning "consecutive." It is often used as an Islamic term within the science of hadith. A hadith is said to be mutawatir if it was reported by a significant, though unspecified, number of narrators at each level in the chain of narration, thus reaching the succeeding generation through multiple chains of narration leading back to its source. This provides confirmation that the hadith is authentically attributed to its source at a level above reasonable doubt. This is due to its being beyond historical possibility that narrators could have conspired to forge a narration. Hadiths can be mutawatir in both actual text and meaning.

In contrast, an ahaad hadith is a narration the chain of which has not reached a number sufficient to qualfiy as mutawatir.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links