Rival Qurans: The Regional Conflict That Led to the Great Burning Titelbild

Rival Qurans: The Regional Conflict That Led to the Great Burning

Rival Qurans: The Regional Conflict That Led to the Great Burning

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The Battle of the Codices: Rival Qurans in Early Islam

Episode Summary: If you ask a modern Muslim apologist, they will likely tell you there has only ever been one Quran. But the earliest Islamic records tell a story of fierce regional rivalries, competing master copies, and a community on the verge of a civil war over the text itself.

In this episode, we dive into the "Battle of the Codices." Drawing on the classic work Kitab al-Masahif by Ibn Abi Dawud and the research of John Gilchrist, we examine the regional "standard" Qurans that existed before Caliph Uthman’s intervention. We look at the codex of Abdullah ibn Masud in Kufa, the codex of Ubayy ibn Kab in Syria, and the codex of Abu Musa in Basra. We’ll recount the heated exchange between Hudhayfah ibn al-Yaman and Abdullah ibn Masud—an exchange so tense it involved threats of being "drowned" over textual differences. Join us as we uncover why the early Muslim community was so divided and how these rivalries challenge the modern claim of a single, perfectly preserved text.

Key Topics Covered:

  • The Regional Standards: How different cities in the early Muslim world—Kufa, Basra, and Syria—each followed their own distinct version of the Quran.
  • The "Drowning" Threat: Analyzing the alarming report from Ibn Abi Dawud where Hudhayfah ibn al-Yaman demands the destruction of rival codices.
  • Abdullah ibn Masud’s Defiance: Why one of Muhammad’s most trusted companions fiercely defended his version of the Quran against the Caliph’s standardization.
  • Idioms and Variants: Understanding Hudhayfah’s critique that different regions were submitting to the "rules and idioms" of specific teachers rather than a unified text.
  • The Stage for Uthman: How these deep-seated regional differences led to the radical decision to burn all competing manuscripts.
  • Testing the Slogan: If the companions themselves fought over whose codex was right, can we honestly claim the Quran has been identical in every letter since the beginning?

References in this Episode:

  • Islamic Sources: Ibn Abi Dawud, Kitab al-Masahif (pages 13–14).
  • Scholarly Works: John Gilchrist, Jam’ al-Quran: The Muslim View of the Quranic Text (Section 3.2).
  • Key Figures: Abdullah ibn Masud, Hudhayfah ibn al-Yaman, Abu Musa al-Ashari, Ubayy ibn Kab, Caliph Uthman.
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