Tafsir Ayyashi

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Quranic exegesis


Most famous

Sunni:
Tanwir al-Miqbas (~800)
Tafsir al-Tabari (~922)
Tafsir al-Kabir (1149-1209).
Tafsir al-Qurtubi (~1273)
Tafsir ibn Kathir (~1370)
Tafsir al-Jalalayn (1460–1505)
Maariful Quran (1897–1976)

Shi'a:
Tafsir Imam al-Sadiq (~750)
Tafsir Ayyashi (~920)
Tafsir Qomi (~920)
Al-Tibbyan Fi Tafsir al-Quran (<1067)
Majma al-Bayan (~1150)
Makhzan al-Irfan (1877–1983)
Tafsir al-Mizan (1892–1981)

Sunni tafsir

Tafsir al-Baghawi
Tafsir al-Kabir
Dur al-Manthur
Tadabbur-i-Quran
Tafhim-ul-Quran

Shi'a tafsir

Tafsir Furat Kufi (~900)
Tafsir Safi (<1680)
Al-Burhan Fi Tafsir al-Quran
Holy Quran (puya)
Al-Bayan Fi Tafsir al-Quran

Mu'tazili tafsir

Al-Kashshaf

Ahmadi tafsir

Tafseer-e-Kabeer
Haqā'iq al-Furqān

Terms

Asbab al-nuzul

Tafsir Ayyashi is an Imami Shi`a exegesis of the Quran, written by Muhammad ibn Mas'ud as-Sulami as-Samarqandi also known as al-`Ayyashi (الـعـيـّاشـي d. 320 AH / 932 CE).

The surviving text covers only up to the end of sura 18, 'The Cave'; it is also shorn of its isnads.[1] More material is quoted by later Imami scholars,[2] for instance Tabrisi.[3] As of the 18th century, al-Majlisi and Al-Hurr al-Aamili were not aware of the complete text of Ayyashi's work.

Similar to Tafsir Furat Kufi and Tafsir Qomi, this work is a collection of commentaries upon selected verses, not a unified commentary of the entire text. Many of its single-verse commentaries also exist, independently of `Ayyashi, in al-Kulayni's al-kafi and al-Hakim al-Hasakani's Shawahid al-tanzil.[1] Many of these hadiths were taken from al-Sayyari's Kitab al-Qiraat; others, from the lost tafasir of Jabir ibn Yazid al-Ju`fi and Abu'l-Jarud Ziyad ibn al-Mundhir (technically a Zaydi, founder of the Jarudiyya). Correlation with the Shawahid hints at Sunni material as well.[2]

`Ayyashi avoids inclusion of his own point of view explicitly, but instead quotes related hadiths from the Imams and the past Shia scholars.[4] This commentary can be considered as the representative of Shia literature in the pre-Buyids era, when Shiite commentators "did not feel entitled to emit opinions or judgement of their own without support from hadiths going back to the Imams or other recognized Shia scholars".[5]

`Ayyashi accepted hadiths that held that there had been alteration (tahrif) in the `Uthmanic mushaf of the Qur'an.[2] He also was interested in apocalyptic material, which he brought to Q. 2:148, 155 (but not 243); 3:83; 6:158 (not 65); 8:39; 9:33; 11:8; 16:1; 17:4-8.[6] The focus of his work however was in jurisprudence, the ayat al-ahkam.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 TABAHABAEI S.K.; RAZI T. (SPRING 2006). "TAFSIR AL-AYYASHI AND RECOVERY OF THE CHAIN TRANSMITTERS OF TRADITIONS OF ASANID AL-AHADITH IN THE SHAWAHID AL-TANZIL". MAQALAT WA BARRASIHA (QURANIC SCIENCES AND HADITH). 39(79): 129–148. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Muhammad Khazim Rahmati. "Tafsir al-Ayyashi". Encyclopaedia of the World of Islam. 
  3. Ethan Kohlberg; Amir-Moezzi (2009). Revelation and Falsification. Brill. , 190 #390 on Q. 26:224.
  4. A. F. L. Beeston. Arabic Literature to the End of the Umayyad Period.  p. 306.
  5. Clifford Edmund Bosworth, Moukhamed Saïfitdinovitch Asimov. History of Civilizations of Central Asia.  vol.4, part 2 p. 108
  6. David Cook (2002). Studies in Muslim Apocalyptic. Darwin Press. , 296.
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