Materials for the history of the text of the Qurʼān
dc.contributor.author
Jeffery, Arthur
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dc.date.accessioned
2019-02-15T14:31:08Z
dc.date.available
2019-02-15T14:31:08Z
dc.date.issued
1938
dc.description.abstract
Materials for the history of the text of the Qur'an: the old codices | edited by Arthur Jeffrey
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dc.description.abstract
Concluding essay on materials for the history of the text of the Qur'an
by
Arthur Jeffery.
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dc.description.abstract
To sum up, the significance of the new material is in its
illustration of Goldziher's contention that in the case of no
other canonical Scripture do we have such a picture of confusion
in the earliest stages of the text as we have in the case of the
Qur'an. Bergsträsser's great hope was to bring some order into
that confusion, and now at last, unless we are totally self-deceived
we begin to see some semblance of order emerging. By attacking
the problem of the Old Codices and assembling what has survived
to us of the textual variants from this earliest stage, we are
able to sketch an outline of the development of the text, and see -
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dc.description.abstract
1) that there was no official first Recension under Abü Bakr.
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dc.description.abstract
2) that the first official Recension was that made by 'Uthman and his commission.
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dc.description.abstract
3) that 'Uthman's Recension was made on a first hand collection
of material from the sources. It is not unlikely that the
material collected by Abü Bakr and left in Hafsa's possession
was one of these sources. If the new theory that the
TR is based on material assembled by the Prophet himself
is correct, this material may have been the basis of 'Uthman's
collection, and many of the odd pieces, awkward duplicates,
etc., which Dr. Bell finds difficult to fit in,
may on this theory have been pieces that came to 'Uthman's
commission from other sources, and had to be pieced in some.
where as they came in.
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dc.description.abstract
4) that there were several earlier collections of revelation
material made by members of the community, some of which cane
to have the authority of Metropolitan Codices in the various
centres of the expanding empire of Islam. Only in the case
of the Codices of Ubai and Ibn Mas'ud do we have a sufficient
number of variants to see clearly the independence of their
text tradition, but in the other cases the little evidence in
our hands in most cases points in that direction, so that we
can definitely speak of the stage of the Old Codices.
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dc.description.abstract
5) that even after the promulgation of the official 'Uthmanic
text there continued in use subsidiary Codices, some of which
carried on the tradition of the Metropolitan Codices, particularly
that of Ibn Mas'ud, and some of which were Codices
presenting a mixed text.
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dc.description.abstract
6) that al-Hajjaj b.Yusuf attempted to do away with these subsidiary
Codices, and to fix more definitely the Madinan text
tradition as canonized in the 'Uthmanic text.
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dc.description.abstract
7) that the variants from the Old Codices may in general be
confidently used for purposes of textual criticism of the
Qur'an, since they are on the whole very much the types of
variants we find associated with the text of the Scriptures
of other faiths, and it is by no means true that in a majority
of cases they must be explained as attempts to improve
on the canonical text.
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dc.description.abstract
8) that though our information as to the text of these Old
Codices is very meagre, each new accession of material
has progressively made clearer the independence and significance
of their text tradition. Our information is
still too slender to support a judgment as to the character
of the text in these Old Codices such as we give with
regard to the Neutral, or the Caesarean or the Western
text of the Gospels, but that in a goodly proportion of
the readings quoted from them, we find them setting down a
text which to them was still a living thing, seems established.
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dc.description.abstract
9) that the next step in our study of the text of the Qur'an
is still the same step to which Bergsträsser pointed when
he dropped his own work on the history of the Qur'ánic
text, namely, the systematic search for more material.
Orthodox Islam has been indifferent to the study of the
text, being largely content with accepting TR as the very
word of Allah. We know that a great many works on the Codices
and the early qira'at were once in existence. Bergsträsser's own efforts brought to light the works of Ibn
Khalawaih and Ibn Jinni. Since then we have luckily recovered
Ibn Abi Dawud, al-'Ukbari, al-Marandi and al-Kirmani.
These must be edited and published, and the plans
for this are already laid. There is no doubt that diligent
search would bring to light other lost works on the text.
The reason so much in this Critical Essay is indefinite
is that on the scraps of information available one hesitates
to give a judgement. We are able to see things now much
more clearly than Bergsträsser could in 1926, and with further
accessions of material there is no doubt but that we
could further clarify the picture, and perhaps reach the
place where we could give an accurate account of the earliest
stage in the development of the text of the Qur'an.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/34777
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2019 Block 22
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
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dc.title
Materials for the history of the text of the Qurʼān
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
DLitt Doctor of Literature
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