Early Sunnī historiography: a study of the Tārīkh of Khalīfa b. Khayyāṭ
Item Status
Restricted Access
Embargo End Date
2100-12-31
Date
Authors
Andersson, Tobias
Abstract
This thesis is a study of the oldest Islamic chronological history still extant: the
Tārīkh (‘Chronicle’) of the Basran ḥadīth scholar and historian Khalīfa b. Khayyāṭ
al-ʿUṣfurī (d. 240/854), which covers the political and administrative history of the
Muslim polity between year 1/622 and 232/847. Despite its early date, Khalīfa’s
Tārīkh has received little attention in modern scholarship and its value for
understanding the development of early Islamic historiography has generally been
disregarded. The purpose of this study is, therefore, to reassess the Tārīkh by
analysing both the text and its context of compilation. After outlining Khalīfa’s
biography (Ch. 1) and his social and intellectual context (Ch. 2), the thesis examines
different aspects of Khalīfa’s Tārīkh in comparison to the wider Islamic historical
tradition: his sources (Ch. 3), methods (Ch. 4), arrangement of material (Ch. 5) and
narrative treatment of key themes in the early tradition (Chs. 6–7). The thesis thereby
provides an in-depth study of one of the earliest Muslim historians and his methods
of compilation, which is important for both the study of Islamic historiography and
the usage of such sources in historical scholarship on early Islam.
It is argued that Khalīfa’s role as a ḥadīth scholar and his early Sunnī outlook
is reflected throughout the content of the Tārīkh. This is particularly evident in
Khalīfa’s selection of sources, which consist of mainly Basran transmitters including
numerous major ḥadīth scholars, and in his narration of controversial events such as
the early civil wars, which displays an early Sunnī perspective. It is also suggested
that Khalīfa’s particular selection and arrangement of material was largely
determined by his aim to compile a critical and concise chronology of the political
and administrative history of the Muslim community. Moreover, the thesis shows
that, while the Tārīkh differs from many other early histories, it bears some
resemblance to other chronographies compiled by early ḥadīth scholars—such as the
works of al-Fasawī (d. 277/890), Ibn Abī Khaythama (d. 279/892) and Abū Zurʿa al-
Dimashqī (d. 282/895) as well as the sections on post-Prophetic history in some
ḥadīth collections such as Ibn Abī Shayba’s (d. 235/849) Muṣannaf. By comparing
Khalīfa’s Tārīkh with these works, the thesis draws attention to this type of historical
writing among some early ḥadīth scholars, which has so far been neglected in
modern studies on early Islamic historiography.
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