Introduction to Translation of 
          Malik's Muwatta 
          Translators: `A'isha `Abdarahman at-Tarjumana and Ya`qub 
          Johnson 
        
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        Malik's 
          Muwatta ("the well-trodden path") is a collection of two items: 
          
        the 
          sayings and deeds of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) (also known as the sunnah). 
          The reports of the Prophet's sayings and deeds are called ahadith. 
          
          the legal opinions and decisions of the Prophet's Companions, their 
          successors, and some later authorities. 
          Malik (full name Malik bin Anas bin Malik bin Abu Amir Al-Asbahi) was 
          born in 93 A.H. and died in 179 A.H. He lived most of his life in Madinah, 
          the city in which the Prophet (pbuh) settled in. He was a preeminent 
          scholar of Islam, and is the originator of the Maliki judicial school 
          of thought. He is reputed to have had over one thousand students. During 
          Malik's lifetime, he steadily revised his Muwatta, so it reflects over 
          forty years of his learning and knowledge. It contains a few thousand 
          hadith. 
        
        It 
          is important to realize, however, that Malik's collection is not complete: 
          there are other scholars who worked as Malik did and collected other 
          reports. 
        
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