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The
growth and development of the Muslim Ummah is marked by two great phases:
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The period in Makkah, before the Hijrah (622 CE)
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The period in Madinah, after the Hijrah.
Naturally
the revelation from Allah to guide the Muslims also responded, to some extent,
to these particular situations.
The
Makkan Phase
The
Makkan phase of the revelation lasted about 13 years, from the first revelation
up to the Hijrah.
This
phase is determined by the prime task of the Prophet to call people to Islam.
The main themes of this call, based on the Qur’anic revelation are
The
role of the Prophet in this phase is in particular that of an announcer and
warner.
The
Madinan Phase
The
Madinan phase lasted about 10 years, from the Hijrah to the death of the Prophet
(peace and blessings be upon him). While the basic themes of the Makkan phase
remain, the factor of the Muslims’ growing together into a community and the
formation of the Ummah, now makes its presence clearly felt.
In
Madinah, there are four groups of people to be met:
The
Muhajirun (immigrants), who migrated from Makkah to Madinah
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The
Ansar (helpers), who originated from Madinah and helped the Muhajirun
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The
munafiqun (hypocrites), who are from Madinah and pretended to support
the Muslims
The
Ahl Al-Kitab (People of the Book), that is, Jews and Christians, with their
respective scriptures
In
addition to these the Qur’an also continued to address an-nas
(mankind), that is, all people, and referred to the disbelievers and ignorant
ones.
Makkan
and Madinan Surahs
Surahs
of the Qur’an have also been classified, according to their origin, into
Makkan and Madinan surahs.
A
surah is said to be of Makkan origin when its beginning was revealed in the
Makkan phase, even if it contains verses from Madinah.
A
surah is said to be of Madinan origin when its beginning was revealed in the
Madinan phase, even if it has verses from the Makkan period in its text.
The
following 85 surahs are, according to Az-Zarkashi, of Makkan origin:
96,
68, 73, 74, 111, 81, 87, 92, 89, 93, 94, 103, 100, 108, 102, 107, 109, 105,
113, 114, 112, 53, 80, 97, 91, 85, 95, 106, 101, 75, 104, 77, 50, 90, 86,
54, 38, 7, 72, 36, 25, 35, 19, 20, 56, 26, 27, 28, 17, 10, 11, 12, 15, 6,
37, 31, 34, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 51, 88, 18, 16, 71, 14, 21, 23,
32, 52, 67, 69, 70, 78, 79, 82, 84. (Az-Zarkashi 1:193)
There
is a difference of opinion as to what was last revealed in Makkah. Some say,
following Ibn `Abbas, that it was Surah 29 (Al-`Ankabut); others say Surah 23
(Al-Mu’minun); still others say Surah 83 (Al-Mutaffifun). Some believe that
Surah 83 is actually Madinan.
The
following 29 Surahs are, according to Az-Zarkashi, of Madinan origin:
2,
8, 3, 33, 60, 4, 99, 57, 47, 13, 55, 76, 65, 98, 59, 110, 24, 22, 63, 58,
49, 66, 61, 62, 64, 48, 9, 5. (Az-Zarkashi 1:194)
Some
hold that Surah 1 (Al-Fatihah) is of Makkan, others that it is of Madinan,
origin.
The
Makkan surahs constitute about 11, and the Madinan about 19 juz’
(parts) of the text.
From
the above division it is obvious that the Madinan surahs are the longer
ones and comprise a much larger part of the Qur’an.
Chronology
According
to a list based upon Nu`man ibn Bashir and given in Ibn An-Nadim’s Fihrist,
the chronological order of the revelation of the surahs is as follows:
96,
68, 73, 74, 111, 81, 94, 103, 89, 93, 92, 100, 108, 102, 107, 109, 105, 112,
113, 114, 53, 80, 97, 91, 85, 95, 106, 101, 75, 104, 77, 50, 90, 55, 72, 36,
7, 25, 35, 19, 20, 56, 26, 27, 28, 17, 11, 12, 10, 15, 37, 31, 23, 34, 21,
37, 40, 41, 47, 43, 44, 45, 46, 51, 88, 18, 6, 16, 71, 14, 32, 52, 67, 69,
70, 78, 79, 82, 84, 30, 29, 83, 54, 86. (Ibn An-Nadim 1:49-52)
Importance
of Knowing the Chronology
Knowing
the origin and order of some of the revelation is important for understanding
its meaning, which can often be more easily grasped if one knows the time and
circumstances that relate to it. For instance, many verses from the Makkan
period may be especially meaningful to Muslims living in a strongly un-Islamic
environment, while some of the Madinan period would appeal much to Muslims who
are in the process of formation of the Ummah. In some cases, unless one knows
which of two or more related verses was revealed first, one cannot decide which
legal ruling is now binding upon the Muslims. Here knowledge of the chronology
is directly linked with the issue of naskh (abrogation).
It
is also important to know the chronology of verses in order to understand the
gradual development of many Muslim practices, attitudes, and laws, such as those
toward the prohibition of alcohol and toward fighting, and to see how these
matters developed historically, that is, during the lifetime of the Prophet in
order to understand their full implications.
Knowledge
about the Makkan and Madinan surahs is derived from the Companions (Sahabah)
and Successors (Tabi`un), and nothing is said about this by the Prophet
himself. This is because at his time everyone was a witness and well aware of
the occasions of revelation.
Often
there is internal evidence as to which part of the revelation is Makkan or
Madinan. There are a number of guiding criteria that help to distinguish between
them:
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The
theme: Does it belong to the Makkan or Madinan period? Among the Makkan
themes are tawheed, shirk, Day of Resurrection, moral
corruption, stories of the prophets. These topics are also found in Madinan
surahs, but usually only touched upon briefly. Madinan themes that are not
found in Makkan revelations are of social and legal implications, concerning
marriage, divorce, inheritance, punishment, and so on.
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Direct
reference: Sometimes there is a direct reference, such as to Abu Lahab in
Surat Al-Masad 111, or to the Battle of Badr in Surat Aal `Imran 3:123.
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The
length: Although there are examples in both cases, Makkan verses are often
short, Madinan ones longer. For example
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Surat
Ash-Shu`ara’ (26) is Makkan. It has 227 verses. Surat Al-Anfal (8) is
Madinan. It has only 75 verses.
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Juz’
(part) 30 is overwhelmingly Makkan. It has 543 Makkan verses distributed
among 37 Surahs. Juz’ 18, on the other hand, is overwhelmingly
Madinan. It has only 117 Madinan verses distributed among three surahs.
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The
form of address. Often the addresses “O ye who believe” and “O people
of the Book” indicate a Madinan origin, while the addresses “O
mankind” and “O people” are usually of Makkan origin.
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There
are 19 surahs with so-called al-huruf al-muqatta`ah (unjoined
letters) such as alif, lam, mim. All these surahs are
Makkan, except Surat Al-Baqarah (2) and Aal `Imran (3).
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All
verses with the word kalla are Makkan.
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All
surahs containing sajdah (a verse to prostrate after its recitation)
are Makkan.
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Most
of the surahs of the group mufassal, beginning with Surat Qaf (50) in
the latter part of the Qur’an, are Makkan.
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All
references to the munafiqun (hypocrites) are from Madinah, except
Surat Al-`Ankabut (29). Its verse 11 is Makkan.
Summary
The
knowledge of Makkan and Madinan revelations is one of the important branches of `ulum
Al-Qur’an (sciences of the Qur’an). It is not merely of historical
interest, but particularly important for the understanding and interpretation of
the respective verses.
Many
surahs of the Qur’an do contain material from both periods of revelation, and
in some cases there exists difference of opinion among scholars concerning the
classification of a particular passage. However, on the whole, it is a
well-established distinction, fully employed in the science of tafseer
(exegesis) and best derived from the internal evidence of the text of the
Qur’an itself.
Sources
Az-Zarkashi,
Badr Ad-Din, Al-Burhan fi `Ulum Al-Qur’an.
Ibn
An-Nadim, Mohammad ibn Ishaq, Al-Fihrist.
*
This article is part of a chapter
entitled “Understanding the Text” in the author’s work Ulum
Al-Qur’an, here cited with some modifications
from: http://www.ymofmd.com/books/uaq/ch5s1.htm
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