Ulum al Qur'an
The Seven Readings
The 'seven readings' were standardised in the second/eighth century. Ibn Mujahid, a ninth-century Muslim scholar, wrote a book entitled The Seven Readings, in which he selected seven of the prevailing modes of recitation as the best transmitted and most reliable. Others were subsequently disfavoured and even opposed, among them the readings of Ibn Mas'ud and 'Ubay bin Ka'b. However, this is not to say that one must restrict oneself to one of these seven readings, or to all of them. Below are listed the local origin of the seven readings and the names of readers [For their short biographies see Fihrist ,I, p. 63ff.] and some transmitters (rawis) connected with them:
| Place | Reader | Transmitter |
|
Nafi' (169/785) | Warsh (197/812) |
|
Ibn Kathir (120/737) | |
|
Ibn 'Amir (118/736) | |
|
Abu 'Amr (148/770) | |
|
'Asim (127/744) | Hafs (180/796) |
|
Hamza (156/772) | |
|
Al-Kisa'i (189/804) | Duri (246/860) |
Readings No. 1 and 5 are of particular importance: the reading transmitted by Warsh is widespread in Africa, except Egypt, where, as now in almost all other parts of the Muslim world, the reading transmitted by Hafs is observed.