Sitt al-Wuzara' al-Tanukhiyyah

Sitt al-Wuzara' al-Tanukhiyyah (died 716) is a Syrian hadith scholar of 8th century. She was the last student of Husayn ibn al-Mubarak al-Zabidi and Abu al- Munajja Ibn al-Latti. Alongside with her prominent predecessors -Umm al-Darda and Fatima bint 'Abd al- Malik ibn Marwan, wife of the pious caliph 'Umar ibn 'Abd al-'Aziz, she is represents what Mohammad Akram Nadwi terms as hadith scholarship from al-Sham (Greater Syria).[1]

Sitt al-Wuzara' al-Tanukhiyyah
Died716
NationalitySyrian
OccupationScholar

The honorable title 'sitt'

It must be noted that Arabic word sitt does not signify the personal name. It means a respectful greeting as lady usually attributed to the female rules or to women with some exceptional talents in the sciences. For example, queen of the Fatimid dynasty of Egypt in 980 bore the title Sitt al-Mulk. Sitt al-Qudat ( literally, chief of qadis, or judge) was a female expert in hadith and fiqh, and lived in Damascus in 14th century. Also, Sitt al-'Arab an Sitt al-'Ajam other eminent experts in hadiths lived in the same century.[2]

Apropos, in another source[3] she is called with a longer name Sitt al-Wuzara' bint 'Umar ibn al-Munajja that means she is a daughter of 'Umar who is son of al-Munajja.

Scholarship

Transmitions of the hadiths from Sahih Al-Bukhari

An exceptional devotion, steadfastness and stamina in the teaching has been exercised by Sitt al-Wuzara. She was widely known in Damascus for teaching Sahih Al-Bukhari, the authentic collection of the hadiths (included over 7000 hadiths unanimously accepted by Muslim scholars of his time).[4] Evidence of her high role in narrating hadiths is shown in the main title on the ornamented title page of Sahih al-Bukhari (dated 8th century), which stated that narration of al-Firabri, the isnad (the chain of the transmitters of the hadiths) of Sitt al-Wuzara'. In other words, the narrator heard the chain of the transmitters along with the hadiths from Sitt al-Wuzara'.[5]

Nadwi in Al-Muhaddithat: the Women Scholars in Islam underlined an interesting coincidence regarding Sitt al-Wuzara' that she was the last women in the world who had narrated the hadiths from Sahih Al-Bukhari from Al-Zadibi and died in 716 and Aishah bint Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Hadi al-Maqdisiyyah, who died one hundred years later, had even above this quality that even among men no one reached this level[6]

Long-lasting legacy

Throughout her life Sitt al-Wuzara' had a plenty of students, among whom the ordinary and noble men were found. She lived more than ninety years. And as it was reported by Ibn Kathir, she was teaching until the last breath, the last day of her long life.[7]

References

  1. Nadwi, M. A. (2007). al-Muhaddithat: the Women Scholars in Islam. Interface Publications:London, p.266
  2. Mernissi, F. (1993) The Forgotten Queens of Islam. Polity Press:UK, pp. 19-20.
  3. Ibn Hajar, al-Durar al-kaminah, ii.129
  4. Alkhateeb, F. (2014). Lost Islamic History. Reclaiming Muslim Civilization from the Past. Hurst & Company: London, p.67
  5. Ibn Azuz, Juhud al-mar'ah al-Dimashqiyyah fi riwayat hadith sharif, 275. MS, Maktabah al-Wazir Kubrili, no.362
  6. Nadwi, M. A. (2007). Al-Muhaddithat: the Women Scholars in IslamInterface Publications: London, p.105
  7. Ibn Kathir, al-Bidayah wa-l-nihayah, sub anno 79
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