the Life of Imām 'ali Bin Mūsā Al-ridā

Chapter Xiii

THE TIME OF THE IMĀM

The time of Imām al-Ridā, peace be on him, was called the Golden Time. It was the most brilliant and wonderful of all the times in Islamic history. That is because building prospered; agriculture developed; the Islamic state dominated most regions of the world as well as Baghdad became the capital of Islamic world; rather the capital of the world, for it was the greatest city to which scholars and diplomats from everywhere in the world came in order to obtain an office in the state or to present the needs of their countries in the fields of  administration, economy, and science.

We must mention the affairs of that time, for there is a close relationship between them and the research on the life of Imām al-Ridā, peace be on him.

The Scientific Life

The scientific life in the time of Imām al-Ridā bloomed, and its activities in all kinds of science grew. That was the most developed kind of civilization progress which the Abbāsid state reached in all periods of its reign. We will briefly present some aspects of this scientific progress as follows:

The Satellite of Ibn al-Muqanna

Among the most marvelous inventions of that time was the satellite which was made by Atā al-Khurasāni, better known as Ibn al-Muqanna. That satellite appeared and the people saw it from a two-month distance, and then it disappeared from them, and concerning it Abū al-Alā al-Maarri has said:

Be watchful! The satellite whose head is masked

is error and enticement just as the satellite of al-Muqanna.[1]

The poet Abū al-Qāsim Hibat Allah b. Sanā al-Mulk has referred to it in a poem, saying:

To you, the satellite of al-Muqanna when rising is not

more charming than that of the turbaned one.[2]

However our references have not mentioned how that satellite was made and its apparatuses as well as they have not referred to the country where the satellite was made. More likely, it was made in Baghdad, the Capital of the Abbāsid government in that time, any how, the making of that satellite is regarded as the greatest scientific achievement in those times.

Yet another example of the scientific achievements in those times was the usage of crystal in making ships. This has been mentioned by some historians.

The Institutes and Libraries

The Abbāsid government established institutes and libraries in Baghdad, that Islamic and non-Islamic sciences might be studied therein. The Government founded wherein thirty marvelous schools; the most famous of them was al-Nizāmiya.[3] Moreover it established therein public libraries the most important of which is:

The Depository of Wisdom

Hārūn al-Rashid brought to it his personal library and added to it the books which were collected by his father al-Mahdi and his grandfather al-Mansūr. Then al-Mamūn asked the Emir of Siqliya for some philosophical and scientific books. He added these books to the Depository of Wisdom (Bayt al-Hikma) after he had received them as well as he brought to it may books form Khurasān. Wherever he heard of a book, he brought the book to it.[4]


[1] Al-A'lām, vol. 5, p. 29.
[2] Ibn Khullakān, Wafayāt al-A'yān, vol. 2, p. 426.
[3] Rihlat Ibn Jubayr, p. 208.
[4] Hayāt al-Imām Mohammed al-Jawād, p. 197.

Sahl b. Hārūn b. Rāhbūn was a scribe in the Depository of Wisdom, and then he was appointed by al-Mamūn as a keeper of the philosophical books which were brought from the Island of Cyprus. When al-Mamūn made peace with the leader of the Island, he asked him to send him the books which were collected by the Greeks in a house and which none came to know except them. So the leader of the Island gathered his retinues and men of opinion and counseled with them about carrying the books to al-Mamūn, and they advised him not to carry them to him except one archbishop who said to him: I think that you should be quick in sending the books to him, for if these sciences enter a state, they will corrupt it and sow division among its scholars; therefore, send them to al-Mamūn. Al-Mamūn became delighted at them and appointed Sahl as a keeper over them.[1] It is worth mentioning that Ghaylān al-Fārisi was the general keeper of the library and was scribe of al-Rashid and al-Mamūn.

This library continued supplying researchers and scholars with various kinds of science. When Hulagu, the Mongol shedder of blood, occupied Baghdad, he destroyed the library, and hence Islam world lost its most important heritage.   

The Translation of Books

Among the aspects of the development of the cultural and scientific life in that time was translating books from foreign languages into Arabic including medical, mathematical, astronomical books as well as philosophical and political sciences. In his book al-Fihrast, Ibn al-Nadim has mentioned many names of these books. Hanin b. Ishāq was the head of the Translation Department. Ibn al-Nadim narrated: Al-Mamūn exchanged letters with the Romanian King. He turned to him for help, wrote to him, and asked permission to send him what he chose of the old books stored in Rome. He (the Romanian King) responded to him after a refusal. Accordingly, al-Mamūn delegated for that a group of persons including al-Hajjājj b. Matar, Ibn al-Batriq, Salam (the keeper of the House of Wisdom), and


[1] Tamhid Li Tārikh al-Falsafa, p. 47.

others. They chose books from what they found. When they brought them to al-Mamūn, he ordered them to carry the books to the Depository of Wisdom.[1]

Of course, the books translated into Arabic developed Arab and Islamic thought and, in addition, they contributed in improving sciences in Islamic world, for may students worked in studying and understanding them.

The Maps and Observatories

Among the aspects of the scientific progress of that time is that al-Mamūn ordered a world map to be drawn and it was called al-Mamūns Map (al-Sura al-Mamūniya), and it was the first world map to be drawn during the Abbāsid time, as well as he ordered an observatory to be established, and it was established at al-Shammāsiya, a district in Baghdad.[2]

The Dominating Sciences

As for the sciences which dominated that time, they were the sciences of the Qurān, which are as follows:

1. The Interpretation of the Qurān

This science means interpreting the verses of the Holy Qurān, clarifying their meanings, distinguishing the abrogating verses from the abrogated, the unlimited verses from the limited, the general from the specific, and so on. The interpreters followed two ways in their interpretations:

A. Interpreting the Qurān according to transmitted traditions, by this we mean interpreting the Holy Qurān according to the traditions transmitted from the Prophet, may Allah bless him and his family, and the good Imāms; this method was followed by most Shiite interpreters such as the Interpretation of al-Qummi, al-Burhān, al-Askari, and others. The argument of Shiites concerning this method


[1] Ibn al-Nadim, al-Fihrast, p. 339.
[2] 'Asr al-Ma'mūn, vol. 1, p. 375.

of interpreting is that it is the Imāms who were singled out for the knowledge of the Qurān, and that it is they who were knowledgeable in interpreting it. Imām Abū Jafar al-Bāqir, peace be on him, said: None can claim that he has knowledge of the surface and deep meaning of the Qurān except the testamentary trustees (i.e. the Imāms).[1]

Shaykh al-Tūsi, Shaykh of the Shiite Sect, said: It is not permissible to interpret the Qurān except with the authentic traditions transmitted from the Prophet, may Allah bless him and his family, and the Imāms whose statement is an argument like that of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and his family.[2]

B. Interpreting the Qurān according to opinion, by this we mean interpreting the Qurān according to the approved, rational considerations. This method was followed by the interpreters from among the Mutazilities and the Bātiniya who did not take care of the traditions reported from the Imāms of guidance, peace be on him, concerning the interpretation of the Holy Qurān, who interpreted the Qurān according to their approved, rational considerations only.[3] As for interpreting the Qurān according to the surface meanings, it is not regarded as a method of interpretation, but it is not objected.

It is worth mentioning that the first school to be established in Islam for interpreting the Qurān according to the transmitted traditions was at the time of Imām Ali, the Commander of the faithful, peace be on him, for he was the first interpreter of the Qurān, and under him studied Abd Allah b. Abbās, the scholar of the community, and other prominent companions (of the Prophet). Then, after him, the pure Imāms began, through their lectures,  interpreting the Qurān, the causes of the revelation of the Qurān, and the excellence of reciting its verses.


[1] Al-Tibyān, vol. 1, p. 4.
[2] Hayāt al-Imām al-Bāqir, vol. 1, p. 181.
[3] Ibid.

2. The Hadith (Tradition)

Among the sciences which dominated that time is the science of the hadith, by this we mean the traditions transmitted from the Prophet, may Allah bless him and his family, or from one of his testamentary trustees, the pure Imāms, namely their words, their actions, their justifications, for they are part of the Sunna, and in the Sunna just as in the Holy Qurān there is the general, the specific, the unlimited, the limited, and the like.

The Shiites were the first to write down the traditions, for the Imāms of guidance urged their companions to do that. In this connection, Abū Basir narrated, saying: I went in to Imām Abū Abd Allah al-Sādiq, peace be on him, and he said: What has prevented you from writing down (our traditions)? You will not memorize (our traditions) unless you write (them). A group of the Basrans asked me about something, wrote them down, and departed.[1] A group of the companions of Imām al-Ridā, peace be on him, collected the authentic traditions in big, comprehensive books which are the first comprehensive books of the Imāmi Shiites and regarded as the foundation of writing down the four comprehensive books by the three Muslim Shaykhs.[2]

4. Science of Islamic Jurisprudence

Science of Islamic jurisprudence is the greatest of all Islamic sciences and most distinguished of the them, so it was widespread in that time and the rest of times. This honorable science is responsible for rendering knowledge of required, religious duties imposed on the bounded who are responsible before Allah for following and putting them into practice.

The Imāms of the members of the House (ahl al-Bayt), peace be on him, played an active role in establishing a jurisprudence school which included the eminent jurists and scholars such as Zarāra,


[1] Hayāt al-Imām al-Mohammed al-Jawād, p. 194.
[2] Muqaddamat al-Muqni' wa al-Hidāya, p. 10.

Mohammed b. Muslim, Jābir b. Yazid al-Jufi, Abū Hanifa, and the like. These jurists and scholars recorded what they had heard from the pure Imāms in their fundamentals which they are about four hundreds, and which were rectified and gathered in the four books to which the Imāmi jurists refer for concluding lawful precepts.

The Shiites are regarded as the first to record jurisprudence. In this regard Mustafā Abd al-Razzāq said: The Shiites were the quickest of the rest of the Muslims in inclining to writing down jurisprudence. It is rational that the Shiites were the quickest in clinging to recording the lawful rules because their belief in the infallibility or semi infallibility of their Imāms urged them to write down their legal decisions, their formal and legal opinions.[1]

4. Science of Fundamentals

Among the sciences which were studied in those times and the like was deriving religious decisions (ijtihād); this science was founded by the greatest Imām Abū Jafar Mohammed al-Bāqir, peace be on him.[2]

5. Grammar

Grammar was among the sciences which played an important role during the Abbāsid time, for some of its matters and researches were the object of heated argument at gatherings held in the palaces of the Caliphs; disputes and heated arguments concerning some of its matters took place among the leading grammarians in the presence of the Abbāsid Caliph. A group of great figures specialized in this science; at their head were al-Kisāi, al-Farrā, Sibawayh, and this science was established by Imām Ali, the Commander of the faithful, peace be on him, the pioneer of wisdom and knowledge in Islam.

6. Theology

As for theology, it was widespread in that time. The scholars and


[1] Tamhid Li Tārikh al-Falsafa al-Islāmiya, pp. 202-203.
[2] Hayāt al-Imām al-Mohammed al-Jawād, p. 195.

the theologians discussed important researches on this science in order to defend their beliefs. On the top of the theologians was Hishām b. al-Hakam, the student of Imām Jafar al-Sādiq, peace be on him, who disproved the beliefs of his opponents and established with his definite proofs the creed of the members of the House (ahl al-Bayt), peace be on him, which Allah has chosen for His servants.

Some Sunni famous theologians were Wāsil b. Atā, Abū al-Hudhayl al-Allāf, Abū al-Hasan al-Ashari, and Hujjat al-Islām al-Ghazāli.

7. Medicine

Medicine was widespread during that time. Imām al-Ridā,  peace be on him, was at the head of the scientists in this science, and his dissertation in medicine is regarded as the most marvelous medical research, hence it has been called the Golden Dissertation (al-Risāla al-Dhahabiya). The Abbāsid kings encouraged people to study this science and spent a lot of money on the specialists in it such as Gabriel b. Bakhtishū, the skillful doctor.

8. Chemistry

Chemistry was among the most important sciences which attained great care in that time. Jābir b. Hayyān, the pride of the Arab east, was specialist in it; he received his researches from the greatest figure of Islamic thought, Imām Jafar al-Sādiq, peace be on him, whom some western scholars called the thinking brain of humanity, for it was he who established this science.

9. Architecture and Civil Engineering

Architecture and civil engineering reached zenith in that time, for the architects were creative in their designing the palaces of the caliphs whether in Baghdad or in Sāmrā. Those palaces were the largest building throughout history. An example of the marvelous architectural designs is the ponds which were made in Sāmrā, which the poets adored, and which astonished the minds of the scholars, in addition to that there were wonderful paintings and the Hanging

Gardens the like of which has not been made even in this century when architecture and technology have reached top.

10. Astronomy

Astronomy was among the dominating sciences in that time. Al-Mamūn, the Abbāsid, was one of those who were specialists in it. These are some sciences which dominated that time, and which represented intellectual freedom and technology in the time of the Imām, peace be on him.

The Scientific Centers

1. Baghdad

Baghdad was one of the cities of knowledge in Islamic world, for it was, as we have mentioned before, the capital of the supreme authority and of knowledge; various kinds of culture dominated it; in it spread institutes, schools, the Depository of Wisdom, public and private libraries.

2. Yathrib

As for Yathrib (Medina), it was the most important scientific center in Islamic world, for the school of the members of the House (ahl al-Bayt), peace be on them, was established wherein, and it included the leading jurists and religious scholars who took care of recording the traditions of the Imāms of guidance, peace be on them, especially as it concerns their traditions on jurisprudence, which is the most perfect system in Islam. The school of the next generation (tābiin) was also established therein; it was the school which took great care of the jurisprudence which was narrated on the authority of the companions (of the Prophet).

3. Kūfa

Kūfa was more important than Yathrib, for in it was the greatest mosque (al-jām al-Azam) which was a public center for Islamic studies and, in addition, there were seminars including hundreds of students who studied under professors specialist in Islamic sciences

such as jurisprudence, the interpretation of the Qurān, the hadith (tradition), and Arabic. The school of Kūfa objectively took care of the sciences of the members of the House (ahl al-Bayt), peace be on them. Al-Hasan b. Ali al-Washshā reported, saying: I met nine hundred shaykhs in this mosque (i.e. the mosque of Kūfa) and all of them said: Jafar b. Mohammed related to me (traditions).[1]

Important families of knowledge graduated from the mosque of Kūfa. They are as follows: the family of Hayyān al-Taghlubi, the family of Ayun, the children of Atiya, the house of the children of Darrājj, and others.[2]

A grammar school was established in Kūfa; one of its prominent teachers was al-Kisāi, whom (Hārūn) al-Rashid entrusted with teaching his two sons, al-Amin and al-Mamūn.[3]

4. Basrah

As for Basrah, it was an important center of grammar. Abū al-Aswad al-Duali, the student of Imām Ali, the Commander of the faithful, peace be on him, was the first to establish this school. This school competed with the school of Kūfa (for Arabic Grammar). The Basran grammarians were called the men of logic in order to distinguish them from the Kūfans grammarians. Among the leading grammarians of this school was Sibawayh, who compiled Kitāb Sibawayh (the Book of Sibawayh) in grammar, which is the ripest of Arabic books and the best of them in depth and originality. Daybūr said: If we look at the book of Sibawayh, we will find it a ripe work and  great effort to the extent that the later authors said: The book must be the fruit of cooperating efforts of many scholars just like the Law (qānūn) of Ibn Sinā.[4]

Basrah was not only an important center of grammar but also was a school of the science of interpreting the Holy Qurān. Among


[1] Hayāt al-Imām Mūsā b. Ja'far, vol. 1, p. 82.
[2] Tārikh al-Islām, vol. 2, p. 338.
[3] Hayāt al-Imām Mohammed al-Jawād, p. 191.
[4] Tārikh al-Falsafa fi al-Islām, p. 39.

the prominent scholars in this science was Abū Amrū b. al-Alā. Besides Basrah was the school of prosody and linguistics. Among the specialists in these two sciences was al-Khalil b. Ahmed, the author of the book al-Ayn, which is the first linguistic dictionary written in Arabic.[1]

These are some aspects of the cultural and scientific life of that time; generally speaking, Imām al-Ridā, peace be on him, was the first pioneer of the scientific movement, for the scholars and the jurists gathered around him in order to study his pure sciences, as well as sessions were held in the Abbāsid palace including the great scholars whom al-Mamūn summoned in order to test Imām al-Ridā, peace be on him, but they went out of the palace and announced the Imāms excellence and mentioned with admiration his many scientific abilities.


[1] Hayāt al-Imām Mohammed al-Jawād, p. 192.