We incline to this view and accept that Abu Hanifa met some Companions, but did not relate from them.
So was he a
Tabi‘i
or not? Scholars disagree about the definition of a
Tabi‘i.
Some
say that it applies to
anyone who met a Companion, even if he did not keep his company; simply having seen him is enough to
make a man a
Tabi‘i
according to that view. By that criterion Abu Hanifa is a
Tabi‘i
. Some scholars, however,
say that it is not enough to simply have seen the Companion but it is also necessary to have kept his company
and learnt from him and so by that reckoning Abu Hanifa could not be said to be one of the
Tabi‘un
.
Whatever the case, scholars are unanimous about the fact that he met a number of the
Tabi‘un
and sat with
them,
studied with them, related from them and learned their
fiqh
at an age which allowed learning and
transmission. Some of them
were known for transmission, like ash-Sha‘bi, and many were famous for
opinion. He took from ‘Ikrima, the transmitter of the knowledge of Ibn ‘Abbas, Nafi‘, the bearer of the
knowledge of Ibn ‘Umar, and ‘Ata’
ibn Abi Rabah, the
faqih
of Makka, with whom he had a lengthy
relationship. He used to debate with him about
tafsir
and learn from him.
We read in
al-Intiqa’
: “Abu Hanifa said, ‘I asked ‘Ata’ ibn Rabah, “What do you say about the words of
Allah Almighty,
‘We restored his family to him, and the same again with them’
(21:84)?” He said, “He gave
him his family and the like of his family.” I answered, “Is it permitted to attribute to a man what is not from
him?” He asked, “What is your position?” I replied, “Abu Muhammad, it means the reward of his family and
the like of their reward.” He said, “It is like that, but Allah knows best.”’”
If this is true, it indicates two
things. One is that Abu Hanifa sat with ‘Ata’ ibn Abi Rabah, studied with him and took from him. ‘Ata’ died
in 114 AH and so he must have gone on
hajj
and studied with the Makkan scholars while he was Hammad’s
student. The second is that ‘Ata’ used to teach
tafsir
of the Qur’an in Makka and that the school of Makka had
inherited the Qur’anic knowledge of ‘Abdullah ibn ‘Abbas.
The shaykhs to whom he was connected, each of whom had a
specific intellectual quality, deserve
consideration, in order to ascertain the sum of the sources from which he took.
The most prominent of his shaykhs was Hammad ibn Sulayman. He was an Ash‘ari by clientage since he
was a client of Ibrahim ibn Abi Musa al-Ash‘ari. He grew up in Kufa and learned his
fiqh
from Ibrahim an-
Nakha‘i, the most knowledgeable of the proponents of opinion. He died in 120 AH. He not only studied with
an-Nakha‘i but also studied
fiqh
with ash-Sha‘bi. Both of them took from Shurayh, ‘Alqama
ibn Qays and
Masruq ibn al-Adja‘. They, in turn, had learned the
fiqh
of the two Companions, ‘Abdullah ibn Mas‘ud and
‘Ali ibn Abi Talib.
The fact that these two Companions lived in Kufa meant that they left the people of Kufa much
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