Muhammad al-Shaybani


Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan ibn Farqad al-Shaybānī, commonly known as Imam Muḥammad al-Shaybānī, was an Arab Muslim jurist, legal theorist, and a leading authority of the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence. He was one of the foremost students of Abu Hanifa and played a decisive role in preserving, systematizing, and transmitting Hanafi legal doctrine.
Al-Shaybānī later studied under Malik ibn Anas in Medina, which allowed him to engage directly with differing legal methodologies and contributed to the early development of comparative jurisprudence within Sunni Islam. His legal writings represent some of the earliest surviving systematic works of Islamic law and form a cornerstone of the classical Hanafi tradition.
He is particularly noted for his contributions to Siyar, the branch of Islamic law dealing with relations between Muslim and non-Muslim polities, warfare, treaties, and diplomacy, and is therefore regarded by modern scholars as a foundational figure in the development of Islamic international law.

Early years

Muḥammad b. al-Ḥasan was born in Wāsiṭ, Iraq, in 750; soon, however, he moved to Kufa, the home town of Abū Ḥanīfa, and grew there. Though he was born to a soldier, he was much more interested in pursuing an intellectual career than a military one. Shaybani began studying in Kufa as a pupil of Abu Hanifa. When al-Shaybani was 18, however, Abu Hanifa died after having taught him for only two years.
Shaybani then began training with Abū Yūsuf, his senior, and the leading disciple of Abu Hanifa. He also had other prominent teachers as well: Sufyan al-Thawrī and al-Awzāʿī. he also later visited Medina, and studied for two to three years with Malik b. Anas, founder of the Maliki school of fiqh. He taught in Kufa at age twenty

In Baghdad

Al-Shaybānī moved to Baghdad, where he continued his learning. He was so respected that Caliph Harun al-Rashid appointed him qadi of his capital city Raqqa. Al-Shaybānī was relieved of this position in 803. He returned to Baghdad and resumed his educational activities. It was during this period he exerted his widest influence. He taught Muhammad ibn Idris ash-Shafi`i, the most prestigious of his pupils. Even later, when ash-Shafi'ī disagreed with his teacher and wrote the Kitāb al-Radd ʿalā Muḥammad b. al-Ḥasan, he still maintained immense admiration for his teacher.
Al-Rashid re-instated al-Shaybānī in a judicial position. The latter accompanied the caliph to Khorasan, where he served as qadi until his death in 805 at Rey. He died the same day and the same place as the eminent Kufan philologist and grammarian al-Kisāʾī. Thus, al-Rashid remarked that he "buried law and grammar side by side."

Works

Al-Shaybani wrote Introduction to the Law of Nations, at the end of the 8th century, a book which provided detailed guidelines for the conduct of jihad against unbelievers, as well as guidelines on the treatment of non-Muslim subjects under Muslim rule. Al-Shaybani wrote a second more advanced treatise on the subject, and other jurists soon followed with a number of other multi-volume treatises. They dealt with both public international law as well as private international law.
These early Islamic legal treatises covered the application of Islamic ethics, Islamic economic jurisprudence and Islamic military jurisprudence to international law, and were concerned with a number of modern international law topics, including the law of treaties; the treatment of diplomats, hostages, refugees and prisoners of war; the right of asylum; conduct on the battlefield; protection of women, children and non-combatant civilians; contracts across the lines of battle; the use of poisonous weapons; and devastation of enemy territory. The Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphs were also in continuous diplomatic negotiations with the Byzantine Empire on matters such as peace treaties, the exchange of prisoners of war, and payment of ransoms and tributes.
Al-Shaybani's siyar aims to answers questions like, "when is fighting justified", "who is the target of fighting" and "how is fighting conducted". For Al-Shaybani, a just cause of war was to spread the Islamic empire, either through increasing the territory of the Muslim states, or taking other states as clients. Other just causes included putting down rebellions, punishing brigandry, and ensuring safety of lives and property from violence. Only those who presented a direct military threat were legitimate targets for deadly force. Thus the killing of women, children, old men, disabled, insane was prohibited. Captives in war are distinguished based on combatant status: male captives may be spared or killed, depending on what the commander deems is the best option. Al-Shaybani also explored the use of weapons which may inadvertently kill noncombatants. He opined it was permissible to use them so long as care was taken to aim at the combatants and effort was made to avoid killing noncombatants. Al-Shaybani's opinions in siyar were influential in the Hanafi school of thought, but diverged from Shafi'i opinions in several matters.

Creed

Al-Shaybani explicitly negated the notion of confining Allah to a specific place. As As Abu al-Abbas al-Tathifi al-Tabari al-Hanafi, a prominent Hanafi jurist reports, Muhammad ibn al-Hasan stated in his book The Proofs Against the People of Medina: "Indeed, God Almighty is in every place, in the sense of management and creation." This indicates that Allah's presence is understood in terms of His authority, knowledge, and creative power, rather than spatial location. Since Al-Shaybani employed ta'wil when addressing divine attributes, he does not fit within the Athari framework, which avoids interpretive explanations. In this regard, his approach shows similarities to the Maturidi and Ash'ari positions, which also emphasize divine transcendence while interpreting attributes in a non-literal manner.
Similarly, in another narration, Muhammad ibn al-Hasan said: "Allah has not created any being independent of Him, but His Exaltedness is in authority and power. Our Lord has not established Himself in a manner imagined by the believer, neither by moving upward nor by ascending." This reinforces the view that Allah's attributes and presence are to be understood in terms of His authority and power, not physical location or motion.

Early Islam scholars