A comprehensive encyclopedia of all 46 Quranic stories — from Adam عليه السلام to the stories of the People of the Cave, Dhul-Qarnayn, and Maryam. Every narrative sourced from Quran, Ibn Kathir, al-Tabari, and al-Wahidi. Clear Arabic and English, suitable for all ages.
A curated collection of authenticated hadiths covering worship, character, daily life, and Islamic ethics. Every hadith graded Sahih or Hasan. Sources cited from Bukhari, Muslim, Tirmidhi, Abu Dawud, and Ibn Majah. No weak or fabricated narrations included.
A comprehensive collection of duas for every occasion — morning and evening adhkar, prayer duas, travel duas, and special supplications. Drawn from Hisn al-Muslim and authenticated sources. Every dua with Arabic text, English translation, and full hadith reference.
The Six Canonical Collections
Kutub al-Sittah · الكتب الستة
The six most authentic collections of hadith, accepted by Sunni scholars as the primary sources after the Quran. All available for free on sunnah.com.
Compiled by Imam Muhammad ibn Ismail al-Bukhari (194–256 AH). Considered the most authentic book after the Quran. Every hadith rigorously authenticated through isnad criticism.
Compiled by Imam Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj (206–261 AH). The second most authentic collection. Known for its superior arrangement by topic and consistent chain methodology.
Compiled by Imam Abu Dawud al-Sijistani (202–275 AH). Focused on hadiths related to Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh). Contains Sahih, Hasan, and some weak hadiths clearly marked.
Compiled by Imam al-Tirmidhi (209–279 AH). Known for grading every hadith (Sahih, Hasan, Da'if) and noting scholarly disagreements. A uniquely valuable source for hadith grading methodology.
Compiled by Imam al-Nasai (215–303 AH). Known for applying the strictest standards of narrator criticism among the Sunan collections. Many scholars rank it third in authenticity after Bukhari and Muslim.
Compiled by Imam Ibn Majah (209–273 AH). The sixth book of the canonical collections. Contains unique hadiths not found in the other five books, with a focus on practical rulings.
Other Authenticated Collections
The earliest written collection of hadith and fiqh. Compiled by Imam Malik ibn Anas (93–179 AH), the Imam of Madinah.
The largest classical hadith collection. Compiled by Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal (164–241 AH). Organised by narrator (Companion) rather than by topic.
By Imam al-Nawawi (631–676 AH). A curated selection of authenticated hadiths covering virtues, manners, and daily life. The most popular hadith book for general Muslims.
Every hadith collection above is available for free on sunnah.com — the world's premier hadith database with full Arabic text, English translation, and hadith grading.
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