{{Short description|School of Islamic jurisprudence}} {{redirect|Hanafi}} {{Use dmy dates|date=July 2025}} {{Sunni Islam|expanded=Schools of Law}}
The '''Hanafi school'''{{efn|{{langx|ar|ٱلْمَذْهَب ٱلْحَنَفِيّ|translit=al-madhhab al-ḥanafī}}|group=lower-alpha}} or '''Hanafism''' is the largest [[Madhhab|school]] of [[Islamic jurisprudence]] out of the four principal schools within [[Sunni Islam]]. It developed from the teachings of the [[Faqīh|jurist]] and theologian [[Abu Hanifa]] ({{circa|699–767 CE}}), who systemised the use of reasoning ({{Transliteration|ar|[[Ahl al-Ra'y#Terminology|ra'y]]}}). Hanafi legal theory primarily derives law from the [[Quran]], the sayings and practices of [[Muhammad]] ({{Transliteration|ar|[[sunnah|sunna]]}}), scholarly consensus ({{Transliteration|ar|[[ijma]]}}) and analogical reasoning ({{Transliteration|ar|[[qiyas]]}}), but also considers juristic discretion ({{Transliteration|ar|[[istihsan]]}}) and local customs ({{Transliteration|ar|[[urf]]}}). It is distinctive in its greater usage of ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' than other schools.
The school spread throughout the Muslim world under the patronage of various Islamic empires, including the [[Abbasids]] and [[Seljuk Empire|Seljuks]]. The region of [[Transoxiana]] emerged as a centre of classical Hanafi scholarship between the 10th and 12th centuries, which gave rise to the [[Maturidi]] school of theology. The [[Ottoman Empire]] adopted Hanafism as its official school of law and influenced the legal thought of the school, eventually [[Codification (law)|codifying]] it as the {{Transliteration|ota|[[Mecelle]]}} in the 1870s.
Followers of the Hanafi school are called Hanafis, who are estimated to number around 800 million worldwide. As such, it accounts for approximately 45% of all Muslims and remains the largest Islamic school, being predominant in the [[Balkans]], [[Central Asia]], the [[Caucasus]], [[Turkey]], the [[Levant]], and [[South Asia]].
== History == The Hanafi school emerged from the legal tradition of [[Kufa]] in [[Iraq]], in which its eponym [[Abu Hanifa]] ({{Died in|150/767}}) resided.{{Sfn|Younas|2018|p=18}} Iraqi jurists were known for their use of independent reasoning (''{{Transliteration|ar|[[Ahl al-Ra'y#Terminology|ra'y]]}}'') in deriving law.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}} Kufa, alongside [[Medina]] and [[Basra]], was a centre of legal activity at the beginning of the second Hijri century. Its prominent jurists included [[Amir al-Sha'bi]], [[Ibrahim al-Nakha'i]] and [[Hammad ibn Abi Sulayman]].{{Sfn|Hallaq|2005|pp=64-65}} The opinions of Abu Hanifa and the earlier Kufan jurists closely correspond,{{Sfn|Hanif|2018|p=90}} particularly those of al-Nakha'i.{{Sfn|Sadeghi|2013|p=128}} Abu Hanifa's legal doctrine, as conveyed to his students, was predominantly derived from his own instructors, chiefly Hammad.{{Sfn|Hallaq|2005|p=154}} Abu Hanifa attended Hammad's [[Halaqa|study circle]] for approximately 20 years and inherited it upon Hammad's death.{{Sfn|Yanagihashi|2007}}
=== Formative period === [[File:جامع الإمام الأعظم.jpg|thumb|The [[Abu Hanifa Mosque]] in Baghdad, which houses the tomb of Abu Hanifa]] Abu Hanifa and his students were responsible for systemising the use of ''{{Transliteration|ar|ra'y}}'',{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}} of which Abu Hanifa was its "unrivalled master".{{Sfn|El Shamsy|2013|p=45}} According to his contemporary [[Shu'bah|Shu'ba ibn Ayyash]], Abu Hanifa was the "most systematic jurist of his time".{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|p=21}} His legal thought was distinct for its treatment of hypothetical scenarios, which he held would help prepare for disastrous circumstances. It was also distinct for its method of analogical reasoning (''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}''). Abu Hanifa would identify the normative, underlying principles of the law from the Quran, [[hadith]] and practices of [[Muhammad's companions]], and applied these to solve unprecedented legal cases.{{Sfn|ʿAbd-Allāh|1983}} ''{{Transliteration|ar|Qiyas}}'' and adherence to analogical consistency were defining characteristics of early Hanafis,{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|p=21-23}} who employed juristic discretion ({{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}) to depart from the results of ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' when deemed appropriate.{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|p=97}} As ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' enabled the treatment of multiple legal cases from a single case, it facilitated the systematic compilation of legal literature.{{Sfn|ʿAbd-Allāh|1983}}
There is no record of legal treatises authored by Abu Hanifa.{{Sfn|ʿAbd-Allāh|1983}}{{Sfn|Swartz|2003}} His teachings were transmitted by his disciples [[Abu Yusuf]] ({{Died in|182/798}}) and [[Muhammad al-Shaybani]] ({{Died in|189/804}}), the last of whom was the most prolific.{{Sfn|Swartz|2003}} Later Hanafis termed the corpus of al-Shaybani as the "{{Transliteration|ar|zahir al-riwaya}}" and ascribed it an authoritative status.{{Sfn|Younas|2022|p=59}} The students of Abu Hanifa established [[Halaqa|study circles]] in [[Baghdad]], an emerging hub of cultural activity and the seat of the [[Abbasid Caliphate]].{{Sfn|Younas|2018|pp=26–28}} The school won the support of the centralising Abbasid state, which sought to unify the legal system.{{Sfn|Tsafrir|2004|p=17}} The Abbasids' preference for appointing Hanafi judges assisted in spreading the school. Abu Yusuf served as a [[qadi|judge]] in Baghdad; the Abbasid caliph [[Harun al-Rashid]] ({{Reign|786|809}}) later appointed him as the [[Great Qadi|chief judge]]. By the time of al-Shaybani's death, the school had spread to [[Egypt]] and [[Balkh]] in [[Tokharistan]].{{Sfn|Younas|2018|pp=26–28}} [[File:Chester Beatty T 414 fol 130r Abū Ḥanīfa.jpg|left|thumb|16th-century [[Ottoman miniature]] depicting Abu Hanifa]] ''{{Transliteration|ar|Ra'y}}'' dialectics involved the interlocutors exploring a series of hypothetical legal cases to delineate the limits of legal assumptions.{{Sfn|El Shamsy|2013|pp=24-25}} In practice, it led Hanafis to favour widely accepted hadith, particularly those which enshrined general principles that were applicable to other cases.{{Sfn|El Shamsy|2013|p=27}} When the widespread collection of hadith led to the circulation of reports that contradicted Hanafi positions, the Hanafis prioritised those that were acted upon by the Iraqi legal tradition.{{Sfn|El Shamsy|2013|pp=52-53}} Reports supported by Iraqi juristic practice were deemed more authoritative than those which were not.{{Sfn|Hanif|2018|p=107}} Abu Yusuf and al-Shaybani separately authored works named ''Kitab al-Athar'' ({{Literal translation|Book of Traditions}})'','' which sought to ground Hanafi teachings in the precedent of the early Kufan jurists and the Kufan companions of [[Muhammad]], notably [[Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud]] and [[Ali]].{{Sfn|El Shamsy|2013|pp=47–48}} Abu Hanifa himself is known to have used hadith; in Abu Yusuf's ''[[Ikhtilaf Abi Hanifa wa Ibn Abi Layla|Ikhtilaf Abi Ḥanifa wa-Ibn Abi Layla]]'', which lists cases where Abu Hanifa differed with his contemporary [[Ibn Abi Layla]], Abu Hanifa is quoted as citing a hadith in around 10% of the cases presented, but cites narrations attributed to Muhammad's companions more often.{{Sfn|Yanagihashi|2007}}
In contemporary external sources, members of the nascent school were described as the ''{{Transliteration|ar|ashab Abi Hanifa}}'' ("companions of Abu Hanifa") and the ''{{Transliteration|ar|ashab al-ra'y}}'' ("companions of ''{{Transliteration|ar|ra'y}}''").{{Sfn|Younas|2018|pp=48–51}} Early Hanafi doctrine was attacked by the [[Ahl al-hadith|traditionists]],{{Efn|Also referred to as the ''aṣḥāb al-ḥadīth'' or ''ahl al-hadith''.|group=lower-alpha}} who accused Hanafis of preferring their ''{{Transliteration|ar|ra'y}}'' to hadith.{{Sfn|Sadeghi|2013|pp=130–131}} The traditionists primarily found objectionable the Hanafi practice of sometimes favouring ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' over hadith that were not widely transmitted (''{{Transliteration|ar|ahad}}'').{{Sfn|ʿAbd-Allāh|1983}} The identification of Hanafis with the {{Transliteration|ar|ashab al-ra'y}} in contradistinction to the traditionist ''{{Transliteration|ar|ashab al-hadith}}'' strengthened during the resurgence of the latter following the [[Mihna]].{{Sfn|Younas|2018|p=64}} [[Al-Shafi'i]] ({{born in|150/767}}), too, critiqued the Hanafis' treatment of hadith and their claim that their positions reflected those of the Kufan companions of Muhammad.{{Sfn|El Shamsy|2013|p=47-49}} He further argued that ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'' was subjective, which later led to classical Hanafi legal theorists articulating it as being completely dependent on the primary sources of law.{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|p=250}}
=== Classical period === During the 9th century, the Hanafi school transitioned from a "personal school" centered around individual jurists and their study circles to a distinct legal community with a collectively recognised doctrine and authoritative figures.{{Sfn|Younas|2018|p=31}} By the end of the century, the school resembled a professional body with a doctrine that was systematically transmitted from teachers to students, maturing into its classical form.{{Sfn|Younas|2018|pp=131–133}} Hanafis began to write commentaries on earlier works; until the 12th century, these were mostly on the works of al-Shaybani.{{Sfn|Melchert|1997|p=60}} [[Al-Quduri]] ({{Died in|428/1036–37}})'s legal primer {{Transliteration|ar|[[Mukhtasar al-Quduri]]}} was the classical school's first work of the {{Transliteration|ar|[[mukhtasar]]}} genre and the most authoritative after that of al-Shaybani.{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=144}}
Criticism from the traditionists led to the Hanafis grounding their positions in hadith over the 9th century.{{Sfn|Melchert|1997|p=48}} Some Hanafis moved towards using the traditionists' method of [[Hadith sciences|hadith criticism]] to justify the school's positions, such as the Egyptian jurist [[al-Tahawi]] ({{Died in|321/933}}).{{Sfn|Melchert|2001|pp=397–398}} Nonetheless, the classical legal theorists focused on formulating a Hanafi approach to hadith criticism that emphasised a hadith's acceptance by early jurists, with [[Biographical evaluation|transmitter analysis]] taking a secondary role.{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=49–52}}[[File:Kanz al-daḳāʼik = Treasury of intricacies - DPLA - da273d1d1ba56cc98f89f5a8af6f9f80 (page 355).jpg|thumb|Manuscript of ''{{Transliteration|ar|Kanz al-Daqa'iq}}'', a legal work by Transoxianan jurist [[Abu al-Barakat al-Nasafi]] ({{Died in|710/1310}})]]During the 9th century, the Hanafi school also emerged as the prevailing school in [[Transoxiana]] and Tokharistan.{{Sfn|Younas|2018|p=28}} The school was introduced to Transoxiana by the students of Abu Hanifa and al-Shaybani, but became prevalent under the [[Samanids]], during whose rule Hanafi scholars received official favour.{{Sfn|Madelung|1982|p=39}} The Transoxianan Hanafi tradition was highly influential in defining the doctrine of the later school.{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=8}} Works authored by Transoxianan jurists and accorded a high status in later Hanafi tradition include: * The jurisprudential work of [[al-Sarakhsi]] ({{Died in|483/1090}}), known as {{Transliteration|ar|Usul al-Sarakhsi}},{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=231}} as well as his legal commentary {{Transliteration|ar|al-Mabsut}}.{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=235}} * The {{Transliteration|ar|[[Al-Hidaya|Hidaya]]}} of [[Burhan al-Din al-Marghinani]] ({{Died in|593/1197}}), which is considered the most authoritative representation of the early classical school.{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|pp=1–2}} * {{Transliteration|ar|[[Bada'i' al-Sana'i']]}}, a large legal commentary by [[Al-Kasani|Ala al-Din al-Kasani]] ({{Died in|587/1191}}).{{Sfn|Hanif|2021}} The intellectual descendants of al-Sarakhsi and his teacher, Abd al-Aziz ibn Ahmad al-Halwani ({{Died in|448/1056-57}}), eventually became the primary branch of the Transoxianan tradition. For 300 years after al-Sarakhsi, the Halwani-Sarakhsi branch constituted almost all of the major jurists engaged in rule-formulation{{Efn|Younas cites Talal al-Azem's definition of rule-formulation: the "granting of preponderance to some opinions [within the school] over others."{{Sfn|Younas|2022|p=59}}|group=lower-alpha}} (''{{Transliteration|ar|tarjih}}'') within the school, and dominated the process. The process contributed to the stabilisation of the school's laws.{{Sfn|Younas|2022|p=88}} The branch also popularised the doctrine of the ''{{Transliteration|ar|zahir al-riwaya}}'': that the opinions transmitted from the school's founders command the highest level of authority within the school.{{Sfn|Younas|2022|p=121}}
In the 10th century, the Hanafi theologian [[Abu Mansur al-Maturidi]] ({{Died in|333/944}}) developed a ''{{Transliteration|ar|[[kalam]]}}'' tradition that crystallised into the [[Maturidi]] school of theology,{{Sfn|Harvey|2021|pp=4–5}} which had descended directly from the theological views of the earliest Hanafis.{{Sfn|Harvey|2021|pp=30–31}} Due to philosophical differences, the Transoxianan Maturidis disagreed with the [[Mu'tazilite]] strain of Iraqi Hanafis on several technical points of legal theory, but saw limited success in expunging the Mu'tazilite influence.{{Sfn|Zysow|2002|p=264}}
The [[Oghuz Turks]] who founded the [[Seljuk Empire]] became attached to the Transoxianan Hanafi tradition. The Seljuks favoured these eastern Hanafis and appointed them to various official positions in their new territories, encouraging their migration out of Central Asia.{{Sfn|Madelung|2002|p=43}} During the Seljuk expansion of the 11th and 12th centuries, the Hanafi and Maturidi schools spread westward into Syria, [[Anatolia]] and western Persia.{{Sfn|Swartz|2003}} In Syria and Iraq, the Central Asian scholars brought with them an increased emphasis on the ''{{Transliteration|ar|zahir al-riwaya}}''.{{Sfn|Younas|2022|p=97}} Hanafi migration out of Central Asia accelerated during the [[Mongol invasion of the Khwarazmian Empire|Mongol invasions]], which ravaged the region.{{Sfn|Madelung|2002|p=43}}
=== Mamluk period === During the 13th and 14th centuries, the [[Mamluk Sultanate]] saw an influx of Hanafi scholars from Anatolia and Central Asia. Discussions of [[Islamic logic]] and ''{{Transliteration|ar|kalam}}'' in the Mamluk jurisprudential literature reflect the influence of Central Asian scholars.{{Sfn|Başoğlu|2023|pp=72–73}}
Criticism of the Hanafi approach to hadith prompted Mamluk Hanafi scholars to treat the subject in more detail.{{Sfn|Başoğlu|2023|pp=72–73}} In his legal commentary ''{{Transliteration|ar|Fath al-Qadir}}'', the Mamluk jurist [[Al-Kamal ibn al-Humam|Ibn al-Humam]] ({{Died in|861/1457}}) engages with the traditionists' approach to hadith criticism,{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=232}} and attempts to navigate the associated legal consequences.{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=281}} His approach to hadith influenced later Egyptian and Syrian Hanafi scholars.{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=235}} This "Egyptian school" of Hanafi hadith criticism referenced hadith from the [[hadith collections]] instead of Hanafi legal works, and employed the traditionists' terminology to assess their authenticity.{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=278}}
Mamluk jurists faced difficulties in interpreting the plurality of legal opinions that had accrued in the school. In his work ''{{Transliteration|ar|al-Tashih wa al-Tarjih}}'', the Mamluk jurist {{Interlanguage link|Ibn Qutlubugha|ar|ابن قطلوبغا|WD=}} ({{Died in|879/1474}}) developed and detailed the process of rule-determination,{{Efn|The combined process of ''tarjih'' (rule formulation; i.e. given multiple legal opinions in the school, "deciding which one he believes should be deemed the doctrinal rule of the school") and ''tashih'' (the review and confirmation of said rules; "confirmation or emendation by post-formulation scholars").{{Sfn|Al-Azem|2017|pp=8–9}}}} clarifying the role of precedent and enabling other jurists to engage in the process themselves, and thus determine the applicable legal ruling for a given case. It marked a shift in the material consulted by muftis from the primary literature of the school to its secondary literature, comprising legal commentaries and compendia which contained rulings.{{Sfn|Al-Azem|2017|pp=220–222}}
=== Ottoman era === [[File:Multaqa al abhur.jpg|thumb|17th-century manuscript of Ibrahim al-Halabi's {{Transliteration|ar|Multaqa al-Abhur}}]] The [[Ottoman Empire]] adopted the Hanafi school as their official legal school.{{Sfn|Hallaq|2009|p=80}} The Ottomans established an extensive network of [[madrasas]] to train jurists, with the most prestigious located in the capital [[Constantinople]].{{Sfn|Hallaq|2009|p=55}} By the 16th century, the [[Seyhülislam|''Şeyḫülislâm'']] emerged as the chief imperial religious and judicial authority.{{Sfn|Burak|2015|p=39}} The ''Şeyḫülislâm'' was appointed by the sultan and presided over the imperial canon,{{Sfn|Burak|2015|p=133}} a collection of legal texts that the [[Ilmiye|imperial religious hierarchy]] was required to consult.{{Sfn|Burak|2015|p=134}} Many jurists from Arab provinces of the empire were critical of the imperial canon, partly because of its inclusion of later works which they judged as contradicting the preferred opinions ({{Transliteration|ar|tarjih}}) of the school.{{Sfn|Burak|2015|pp=157–158}} The sultans influenced the formation of the imperial religious hierarchy by appointing [[muftis]] directly and through the ''Şeyḫülislâm'', delineating the range of legal opinions in the Ottoman Hanafi tradition.{{Sfn|Burak|2015|pp=62–63}} Members of the imperial religious hierarchy were described as "{{Transliteration|ar|[[Al-Rumi|Rumis]]}}".{{Sfn|Burak|2015|p=134}}{{Sfn|Burak|2015|p=65}} Intellectual genealogies ({{Transliteration|ar|[[tabaqat]]}}) authored by the imperial religious hierarchy aimed to demarcate the institution, situate themselves and their endorsed works in the broader Hanafi tradition and construct an unbroken intellectual chain to Abu Hanifa.{{Sfn|Burak|2015|pp=66–67; 12}}
Hanafi law co-existed with the {{Transliteration|ar|[[Qanun (law)|qanun]]}} (dynastic law), decrees and edicts promulgated by the [[List of sultans of the Ottoman Empire|sultans]]. The {{Transliteration|ar|qanun}} often reaffirmed religious laws; in other cases, it authorised actions that the jurists opposed, such as torture.{{Sfn|Hallaq|2009|p=78}} The ''Şeyḫülislâm'' would sometimes request sultanic edicts to require the imperial religious hierarchy to enforce particular rulings of the school.{{Sfn|Burak|2015|p=12}} The ''Maʿrūḍāt'' of the ''Şeyḫülislâm'' [[Ebussuud Efendi]] ({{Died in|982/1574}}), a collection of ''fatwas'' endorsed by [[Suleiman the Magnificent|Suleiman I]], contained sultanic edicts and was frequently referenced in later Hanafi works which considered its opinions binding.{{Sfn|Ayoub|2019|p=66}} Late Hanafis believed that judges could act as deputies of the sultan who could thus regulate, ''inter alia'', the legal opinions judges could reference, such as in the case of inter-school disputes.{{Sfn|Ayoub|2019|pp=92–93}} In the 17th and 18th centuries, Hanafi jurists began to incorporate sultanic edicts into authoritative legal works.{{Sfn|Ayoub|2019|pp=92–93}}[[File:Mecelle-yi ahkâm-i adliye - 1305.pdf|thumb|page=171|A page from the [[Ottoman Turkish]] edition of the {{Transliteration|ota|Mecelle}}]]
[[Ibrahim al-Halabi]] ({{Died in|1549}})'s legal manual {{Transliteration|ar|Multaqa al-Abhur}} was among the most popular in the empire and was the subject of over 70 commentaries.{{Sfn|Burak|2015|p=122}} By the 19th century, it had become the standard legal textbook.{{Sfn|Has|1988|p=397}} Other popular Ottoman manuals were the {{Transliteration|ar|Durar al-Hukkam}} of [[Molla Hüsrev]] ({{Died in|885/1479–80}}) and ''[[al-Durr al-Mukhtar]]'' of Haskafi.{{Sfn|Özel|1997}} The {{Transliteration|ar|[[Radd al-Muhtar]]}} of the late Arab Ottoman jurist [[Ibn Abidin]] ({{Died in|1252/1836}}) is considered an authoritative and representative work of the late Hanafi tradition.{{Sfn|Ayoub|2019|pp=95–96}} It lists most opinions within the school and their level of authoritativeness, incorporating most primary Hanafi sources produced until its writing.{{Sfn|Özel|1997}} It employs legal devices such as necessity (''{{Transliteration|ar|darura}}'') to depart from the canonical {{Transliteration|ar|zahir al-riwaya}} where necessary to ensure the continued relevancy of the school, and references sultanic edicts to revise the school's opinions.{{Sfn|Ayoub|2019|p=96}}
Between 1869 and 1877, the Ottomans promulgated the {{Transliteration|ota|[[Mecelle]]}}, a [[Codification (law)|codification]] of Hanafi jurisprudence.{{Sfn|Ayoub|2019|p=131}} The {{Transliteration|ota|Mecelle}} was drafted by a committee led by the jurist [[Ahmed Cevdet Pasha]],{{Sfn|Ayoub|2019|p=131}} who had successfully argued against the implementation of the [[Napoleonic Code]].{{Sfn|Hallaq|2009b|p=411}} It drew from the Hanafi literature on legal maxims ({{Transliteration|ota|qawa'id fiqhiyya}}) and to a great degree favoured the opinions of the late Hanafi tradition.{{Sfn|Ayoub|2019|p=150}} Many of its articles were fully or partially derived from al-Halabi's {{Transliteration|ar|Multaqa al-Abhur}}.{{Sfn|Has|1988|p=410}} However, the {{Transliteration|ota|Mecelle}} also marked the state's assumption of control over jurisprudence, which had previously been the purview of the decentralized juristic community.{{Sfn|Hallaq|2009b|p=412}}
=== Indian subcontinent === [[File:Manuscript copy of al-Fatawa al-'Alamgiriyyah.jpg|thumb|[[William Jones (philologist)|William Jones]]' manuscript of the ''{{Transliteration|ar|al-Fatawa l-ʿAlamgiriyya}}'']] The Hanafi school spread to India from Transoxiana and eastern Persia.{{Sfn|Swartz|2003}} To consolidate control over his realm, the [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] emperor [[Awrangzib]] ({{Reign|1658|1707}}) ordered the compilation of Hanafi {{Transliteration|ar|[[fatwa]]s}}. Completed between 1664 and 1672, the resulting {{Transliteration|ar|[[Fatawa 'Alamgiri|al-Fatawa l-ʿAlamgiriyya]]}} selected legal opinions from earlier Hanafi legal works and is modelled after the {{Transliteration|ar|Hidaya}} of al-Marghinani.{{Sfn|Khalfaoui|2012}}
During the [[colonization of India]], the [[East India Company]] sought to create a "complete digest of Hindu and Mussulman law" to eliminate legal pluralism. The resulting [[Anglo-Muhammadan law]] was based in part on a translation of al-Marghinani's {{Transliteration|ar|Hidaya}}, which was chosen for its brevity and its belonging to the Hanafi school, which most Indian Muslims followed. Consequently, the {{Transliteration|ar|Hidaya}} was effectively codified and severed from the Hanafi commentarial tradition under which it was traditionally interpreted.{{Sfn|Hallaq|2009b|pp=373–375}}
In the 19th century, the [[Barelvi movement|Barelvi]] and [[Deobandi movement|Deobandi]] movements emerged in India.{{Sfn|Dudgeon|2022|p=78}} Their [[Deobandi fiqh|legal views]] included strict adherence ({{Transliteration|ar|[[taqlid]]}}) to a legal school in contradistinction to the [[Ahl-i Hadith]] movement,{{Sfn|Usha|2011}} and emphasised the importance of hadith.{{Sfn|Zaman|2015}} The Deobandi acceptance of Ibn al-Humam's approach to hadith criticism culminated in the {{Transliteration|ar|[[I'la al-Sunan]]}} of Deobandi scholar [[Zafar Ahmad Usmani]] ({{Died in|1974}}),{{Sfn|Dudgeon|2022|p=78}} a work that attempts to justify Hanafi positions using hadith.{{Sfn|Zaman|2015}}
== Demographics == [[File:Madhhab Map3.png|thumb|500x500px|Global distribution of the Islamic schools of law]] Today, the Hanafi school is the largest Islamic school of law, numbering more than 800 million and constituting around 45% of all Muslims.{{Sfn|Esposito|2017}} It is the predominant school in the former Ottoman territories, including [[Albania]], [[Azerbaijan]],{{Sfn|Nielsen|Akgönül|Alibašić|Goddard|2011|p=47}} [[Bosnia]], [[Turkey]], and much of the [[Levant]].{{Sfn|Ziadeh|2022}} It is also predominant amongst [[Pomaks]] in parts of [[Bulgaria]] and [[Crimea]] amongst [[Crimean Tatars]].{{Sfn|Er|Furat|2012}} The [[South Asia|South Asian]] Muslim populations in [[Afghanistan]], [[Pakistan]], [[Bangladesh]], [[Nepal]], [[India]] and, in [[Myanmar]] (amongst [[Rohingya Muslims]]), adheres to the Hanafi school.{{Sfn|Dudgeon|2022|p=78}} [[Egypt]] is a mix of the Hanafi, Maliki and Shafi’i schools.{{Sfn|Sonbol|2020}}
The [[Eurasia|Eurasian]] regions of [[Caucasus]] specifically Western: ([[Adygea]], [[Kabardino-Balkaria]], [[Karachay-Cherkessia]]) and also in Eastern ([[Dagestan]] amongst [[Nogais]]) are also mainly Hanafi.{{Sfn|Coene|2009}} The [[Russia]]<nowiki/>n Muslim minority in [[Tatarstan]] amongst [[Volga Tatars]], [[Bashkortostan]] amongst [[Bashkirs]] are Hanafis.{{Sfn|Pilkington|Yemelianova|2003}} [[Northern Cyprus|Northern Cypriot]] Muslims predominantly follow the Hanafi school.{{Sfn|Rüstem|Duffy|Connell|1987|p=115}} [[Central Asia|Central Asian]] countries such as [[Kazakhstan]], [[Kyrgyzstan]], [[Uzbekistan]], [[Turkmenistan]] and [[Tajikistan]], practice Hanafi jurisprudence; so do the Muslim [[Uyghurs|Uyghur]] minority in [[Xinjiang]], [[China]], and the Muslim Baloch minority in southeastern [[Iran]].{{Sfn|Gorder|2008|p=74}}{{Sfn|Roberts|2022|p=7}} Missionary activates of the [[Tablighi Jamaat]] have promoted the Hanafi school throughout Africa, especially in Somalia,{{Sfn|Abdurahman|2017|p=136}} and South Africa.{{Sfn|Khalili|2016|p=11}} It is one of two dominant schools of thought practiced among [[Islam in the United States|Muslims in the United States]], the other one being Shafi'i.{{Sfn|Hammond|2021}}
The Ottoman ''Mecelle'' was repealed by most post-Ottoman states over the first half of the 20th century. Parts remained in force in [[Jordan]] and [[Israel]] until the 1970s.{{Sfn|Aydın|2003}} Where it is dominant, the Hanafi school is followed in religious observance and, in some regions, continues to govern Muslim [[family law]].{{Sfn|Ziadeh|2022}}
== Legal theory == The legal theory ({{Transliteration|ar|[[usul al-fiqh]]}}) of the Hanafi school recognises the following sources of law, listed in order of epistemic authority: the Quran, the practices and sayings of [[Muhammad]] ({{Transliteration|ar|[[sunnah|sunna]]}}) as documented in the [[hadith]], consensus of opinion ({{Transliteration|ar|[[ijma]]}})'', {{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'', ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'' and local customs (''{{Transliteration|ar|[[urf]]}}'').{{Sfn|Dudgeon|2022|p=68}} Texts with equal epistemic authority may modify each other; if they are of differing levels, the text with the weaker epistemic authority is rejected in favour of the stronger one.{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=50}}
=== Quran === The Quran is the primary source of Hanafi law. In Hanafi legal theory, it is considered acceptable to adduce non-canonical [[Qira'at|Quranic readings]] related by the [[companions of Muhammad]] as legal evidence, but they are not treated as part of the Quranic text.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}} For example, classical Hanafi jurists are known to have cited the [[Uthmanic codex|non-Uthmanic]] reading of [[Ibn Mas'ud]] but treated it akin to an exegetical gloss.{{Sfn|Harvey|2017|p=89}}
=== Hadith === The Hanafis categorise hadith as mass-transmitted (''{{Transliteration|ar|mutawatir}}''), famous (''{{Transliteration|ar|mashhur}}'') or solitary (''{{Transliteration|ar|ahad}}'') depending on the nature of their chain of transmission (''{{Transliteration|ar|[[isnad]]}}''):{{Sfn|Hanif|2018|pp=90–91}} * A ''{{Transliteration|ar|mutawatir}}'' hadith is transmitted by such a large number of people on each level of its ''{{Transliteration|ar|isnad}}'' that it is impossible for it to have been forged.{{Sfn|Hanif|2018|pp=93-94}} It imparts epistemically certain knowledge about the ''{{Transliteration|ar|sunna}}''.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}} * A ''{{Transliteration|ar|mashhur}}'' hadith is transmitted by a limited number of people at the first level of its ''{{Transliteration|ar|isnad}}'' but was widely acted upon by jurists, beginning with their first generations.{{Sfn|Hanif|2018|pp=94–95}} It imparts epistemically near-certain knowledge about the ''{{Transliteration|ar|sunna}}''.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}} * An ''{{Transliteration|ar|ahad}}'' hadith, also known as a "singular report" (''{{Transliteration|ar|khabar al-wahid}}''), is one which is neither ''{{Transliteration|ar|mutawatir}}'' nor ''{{Transliteration|ar|mashhur}}''.{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=241}} Only ''{{Transliteration|ar|mutawatir}}'' and ''{{Transliteration|ar|mashhur}}'' hadith may [[Naskh (tafsir)|abrogate]] a Quranic verse, whether by replacing, qualifying or restricting its understanding.{{Sfn|Hanif|2018|p=93}} An ''{{Transliteration|ar|ahad}}'' hadith cannot be adduced in legal discussions of "great importance" as Hanafis assume that God would have ensured the reliable transmission of critical religious knowledge; nor can it be used if its early transmitters did not act upon it, as Hanafis assume that their inaction indicates that it is not part of the ''{{Transliteration|ar|sunna}}''.{{Sfn|Brown|2009|p=154}}
=== {{Transliteration|ar|Ijma}} === {{Transliteration|ar|Ijma}} refers to the consensus of opinion. {{Transliteration|ar|Ijma}} may be explicit, with all ''[[mujtahid]]s'' agreeing verbally or through actions, or tacit, where some express an opinion while others remain silent. In the Hanafi view, tacit {{Transliteration|ar|ijma}} can only establish a concession ({{Transliteration|ar|rukhsah}}) rather than a strict rule ({{Transliteration|ar|azimah}}).{{Sfn|Kamali|2003|pp=248–249}} The Hanafis believe that the companions of Muhammad reached {{Transliteration|ar|ijma}} on some matters, and some Hanafis regard agreement between [[Abu Bakr]] and [[Umar]], the first two [[Rashidun caliphs]], as being ''{{Transliteration|ar|ijma}}''.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}}
=== ''{{Transliteration|ar|Qiyas}}'' === ''{{Transliteration|ar|Qiyas}}'', also referred to analogical reasoning, involves extending a ruling on an original case (''{{Transliteration|ar|asl}}'') to a subsidiary case (''{{`}}far'') where both cases share an effective cause (''{{`}}illah'')''.''{{Sfn|Kamali|2003|p=267}} For example, because of the prohibition of [[Riba|usury]], it is forbidden to exchange wheat and other commodities for each other unless the transaction is immediate and the amount of both goods are equal. Hanafis extend this prohibition to apples through ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'', as they identify the underlying ''{{`}}illah'' as the exchange of a measurable commodity, and apples are measurable.{{Sfn|Kamali|2003|p=284}}
Compared to the other Sunni and [[Shia]] schools of law, Hanafis use ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' more extensively and grant it greater authority.{{Sfn|ʿAbd-Allāh|1983}} However, it is deemed a last resort only to be used when no ruling can be derived from the Quran, ''{{Transliteration|ar|sunna}}'' and {{Transliteration|ar|ijma}}.{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=59}} Hanafis view ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' as a means of revealing pre-existing implicit rulings within the law rather than as a source of new rulings.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}} Because the law is viewed as coherent and internally consistent, a valid ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' must accord with the internal rationality of the law.{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=60}}
If a ruling derived from ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' conflicts with that from an ''ahad'' hadith, the Hanafis disagree on which takes precedence. One group argues that the ''{{Transliteration|ar|ahad}}'' hadith always takes precedence, while a second group, led by [[Isa ibn Aban]] ({{Died in|221/836}}), opine that it only takes precedence if transmitted by a companion of Muhammad known to be a jurist.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}} In general, the early classical school always followed hadith transmitted by jurist-companions regardless of its correspondence with ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'', but followed hadith transmitted by non-jurist companions only if it corresponded with a possible ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'', and thus accorded with the internal rationale of the law.{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=237}}{{Efn|Narrators in the first category include [[Ibn Mas'ud]], [[Ibn Abbas]], [[Aisha]] and [[Ibn Umar]]. Narrators in the second category include [[Abu Hurayra]] and [[Anas ibn Malik]].{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=237}}}} By the Ottoman period, however, the distinction had become less popular and non-jurist companions were largely treated the same as jurist companions.{{Sfn|Hanif|2020|p=242}}
The Hanafis require the original case to not directly state the ''{{`}}illah''. The ''{{`}}illah'' must be deduced by other means''.''{{Sfn|Kamali|2003|p=267}}{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=63}} If the ''{{`}}illah'' is stated, then the ruling is applied to other cases via the "indication of the text" (''dalalat al-nass''), not ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}''.{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=63}} {{Transliteration|ar|Dalalat al-nass}} is an exercise in linguistic interpretation rather than analogical reasoning.{{Sfn|Kamali|2003|p=285}}{{Sfn|Hanif|2017|p=48}}
=== ''{{Transliteration|ar|Istihsan}}'' === ''{{Transliteration|ar|Istihsan}}'' refers to juristic discretion. The Hanafi jurist [[al-Sarakhsi]] ({{Died in|483/1090}}) describes it as a means through which a jurist can depart from a ruling derived through ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' to ameliorate hardship, where the new ruling is typically supported by a superior proof, such as the Quran, ''{{Transliteration|ar|sunna}}'', necessity (''{{Transliteration|ar|darurah}}'') or an alternative ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}''.{{Sfn|Kamali|2003|pp=325–327}} For example, by way of necessity, the Hanafi jurists allow a son to buy food or medicine for his ill father from the father's property without his prior permission.{{Sfn|Kamali|2003|p=338}} Hanafi ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'' based on necessity is, however, less broad than [[Maliki school|Maliki]] ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'' based on public welfare (''{{Transliteration|ar|[[maslaha]]}}'').{{Sfn|ʿAbd-Allāh|1983}}
''{{Transliteration|ar|Istihsan}}'' emerged out of concerns among Hanafis that unrestrained ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' could lead to results that were absurd or contradicted the ''{{Transliteration|ar|sunna}}''.{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|pp=56–57}} The earliest Hanafis, including Abu Hanifa and al-Shaybani, more frequently used ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'' justified by subjective and pragmatic reasoning rather than on evidential grounds.{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|p=97}} Their use of ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'' sought to change the scope or outcome of a ruling due to its potential effects. More often than not, they deployed ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'' in a way that cannot be considered as ameliorating hardship, such as establishing the liability of a group of thieves involved in theft even if only one of them carried the stolen goods.{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|pp=99–104}} Subjective ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'' declined due to attacks from [[al-Shafi'i]], and Hanafi legal theorists would systemise it into the form eventually espoused by al-Sarakhsi,{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|p=250}} attempting to incorporate elements of subjectivity into the definition of necessity.{{Sfn|Shahawy|2019|p=299}}
=== ''{{Transliteration|ar|Urf}}'' === ''{{Transliteration|ar|Urf}}'' refers to customary practices. The Hanafis consider it as an ancillary source of law that is subordinate to the primary sources of law.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}} ''{{Transliteration|ar|Urf}}'' is divided into two types: general ({{Transliteration|ar|al-urf al-amm}}) and special ({{Transliteration|ar|al-urf al-khass}}). A general ''{{Transliteration|ar|urf}}'' refers to a customary practice that is widely accepted among a people regardless of the time period. As part of ''{{Transliteration|ar|istihsan}}'', the Hanafis permit favouring general ''{{Transliteration|ar|urf}}'' over a ruling derived through ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}''. A special ''{{Transliteration|ar|urf}}'' is more local and is upheld by a particular location or profession. Most Hanafis agree that special ''{{Transliteration|ar|urf}}'' cannot qualify the general meaning of a textual evidence (''{{Transliteration|ar|nass}}''), and that a ruling derived from ''{{Transliteration|ar|qiyas}}'' takes precedence over special ''{{Transliteration|ar|urf}}'', although there is some disagreement on this.{{Sfn|Kamali|2003|p=377}} Turkish academic [[Ali Bardakoğlu]] suggests that the emphasis given to ''{{Transliteration|ar|urf}}'' in Hanafi legal theory can partly explain the spread of the school among disparate non-Arab groups.{{Sfn|Bardakoğlu|1997}}
== List of Hanafite scholars == {{further|List of Hanafis}}
== References ==
=== Notes === <references group="lower-alpha" />
=== Citations === {{reflist|20em}}
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== External links == * [https://irshad.org.uk/library/ A list of Hanafi texts available in the public domain] * [https://dlme-prod-lb.stanford.edu/library/catalog?f%5Bsubject%5D%5B%5D=Hanafites+Early+works+to+1800. Pre-1800 Hanafi manuscripts on the Digital Library of the Middle East]
{{Hanafi scholars}} {{Authority control}}
[[Category:Hanafi school]] [[Category:Sunni Islam]] [[Category:Schools of Sunni jurisprudence]] [[Category:Sunni Islamic branches]]