The six major Hadith collections (Arabic: Al-Sihah al-Sittah) are the works of some individuals from Islamic scholars who by their own initiative started collecting sayings that people attributed to Muhammad approximately 200 years after his death.
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The name "Al-Sihah al-Sittah" translates literally to "The Authentic Six", even though they are not all considered authentic (sahih), except for the first two collections.
According to the Cambridge History of Iran[1]:
| “ | After this period commences the age of the authors of the six canonical collections of Sunni hadith (al-sihah al-sitta), all of whom were Persian. The authors of the six collections are as follows:
1. Muhammad b. Isma'il al-Bukhari, the author of the best known of the Sahih, which he composed over a period of sixteen years. Traditional sources quote Bukhari as saying that he did not record any hadith before performing his ablutions and praying. Bukhari died near Samarqand in 256/869-70. 2. Muslim b. Hajjaj al-Naishapuri, who died in Nishapur in 261/ 874-5 and whose Sahih is second in fame only to that of Bukhari. 3. Abu Da'ud Sulaiman b. Ash'ath al-Sijistani, a Persian but of Arab descent, who died in 275/888-9. 4. Muhammad b. 'Isa al-Tirmidhi, author of the well-known Jdmi’ al-Tirmidhi, who was a student of Bukhari and died in 279/892-3. 5. Abu 'Abd al-Rahman al-Nisa'i, who was from Khurasan and died in 303/915-16. 6. Ibn Maja al-Qazwini, who died in 273/886-7. |
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Sunni Muslims view the Six major Hadith collections as their most important. They are, in order of importance [2]:
The two first are referred to as the Two Sahihs which indicates that they are authentic.
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