Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/35884
Title: The Solomon legend in Muslim tradition
Authors: Teuma, Edmund
Keywords: Solomon, King of Israel -- In the Qurʼan
Solomon, King of Israel -- Influence
Jinn -- Qurʼanic teaching
Issue Date: 1987
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Theology
Citation: Teuma, E. (1987). The Solomon legend in Muslim tradition. Melita Theologica, 38(2), 81-87.
Abstract: The principal two components of Muslim Law are the Qur'an and Tradition. Originally both these sources were transmitted down from father to son orally. It is believed that it was only a century after Muhammad's death that Tradition was set to writing. Nowadays we have free access to Muslim Tradition through Hadith narrations. The actual account of a Prophet's example in deed or word is narrated in small and rather very short stories in which the morale of the "fable" comes up in the end. Every single account of these is called "Hadith" (= new, modern, recent; but also: news, tidings). Each account is preceded by a chain of authorities (isnad) going back to Muhammad himself or to some companion of his as the original narrator who set the ball rolling. Western scholars do not attach much attention to isnad, which for the Muslims it might turn out to be more important than the matn (= the body of the narration), since from it, through a most complicated process, they try to judge whether a given hadith narration is to be accepted as authentic or not.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/35884
Appears in Collections:MT - Volume 38, Issue 2 - 1987
MT - Volume 38, Issue 2 - 1987

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