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The '''Sāʿ''' (]: صاع‎) is an ancient measurement of volume from the ] world. The exact volume is uncertain. '''Sāʿ''' has both cultural and religious significance. The Arabic word Sa translates to "small container," related to the Quranic word ''ṣuwāʿ'' ("cup, goblet"). Together with the Mudd and the Makkūk, the Sa is part of the system of units of volume used in the Arabic peninsula. The '''Sāʿ''' (]: صاع‎) is an ancient measurement of volume from the ] world. The exact volume is uncertain. '''Sāʿ''' has both cultural and religious significance. The Arabic word Sa translates to "small container," related to the Quranic word ''ṣuwāʿ'' ("cup, goblet"). Together with the Mudd and the Makkūk, the Sa is part of the system of units of volume used in the Arabic peninsula.<ref>Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm''. 1906, S. 98.</ref>


== Proportion to other Arabic measures ==
== Contents ==
There is general agreement between medieval Arabic authors that 1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd. The 9th-century scholar ] indicates that this was the opinion of the people of ] {{citation needed|date=July 2018}}. Likewise, ], who lived in the 10th century, stated that in ] 1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd = 1/3 Makkūk.<ref>Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm''. 1906, S. 98.</ref> ] related the Sāʿ with Xestes, declaring that at the ] 1 Sāʿ = 10 Xestes.<ref>Henri Sauvaire: "Arab Metrology.</ref>

* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]

== Proportion to other Arabic measures ==
There is general agreement between medieval Arabic authors that 1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd. The 9th-century scholar ] indicates that this was the opinion of the people of ]<sup>]'']</sup>. Likewise, ], who lived in the 10th century, stated that in ] 1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd = 1/3 Makkūk. ] related the Sāʿ with Xestes, declaring that at the ] 1 Sāʿ = 10 Xestes.


Because the Sāʿ was related to different measures of mass, many standardization problems occurred. Its relation to the Ratl was especially controversial. For this there were two prevailing opinions: Because the Sāʿ was related to different measures of mass, many standardization problems occurred. Its relation to the Ratl was especially controversial. For this there were two prevailing opinions:
* 1 Sāʿ = 8 Ratl. This was how the people of ] defined 1 Sāʿ.<ref>Al-Ḫwārizmī: ''Kitāb Mafātīḥ al-ʿulūm''. 1895, S. 14.</ref> It was also the measure used by ] (reg. 634–644) when he atoned oaths.<ref>Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm''. 1906, S. 98.</ref>
* 1 Sāʿ = 5 1/3 Ratl. This how the people of people of ] defined 1 Sāʿ. It was reduced to this relation by Saʿīd ibn al-ʿĀs, who was Governor of Medina under ](reigned 661–680).<ref>Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm''. 1906, S. 98.</ref>


] reported that ] and also the hanafi scholar ] quarreled about the measurement of the Sāʿ in front of the Kalif ](reigned 786–809) at Medina. The Kalif invited the progeny of ] with their Sāʿ- Vessels, which they inherited from their ancestors. When it turned out that the measurement given by asch-Schāfiʿī (1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd = 5 1/3 irakische Ratl) was right, Abū Yūsuf ultimately agreed with the opinion.<ref>Al-Ǧuwainī: ''Muġīṯ al-ḫalq fī tarǧīḥ al-qaul al-ḥaqq''. Kairo 1934. S. 19f. </ref> Taking into account the fact that in Baghdad 1 Ratl = 130 dirhams, the Muslim scholars have also established the equation: 1 Sā' = 693 1/3 dirhams.<ref>Sauvaire: "Matériaux". 1886, S. 400f.</ref>
* 1 Sāʿ = 8 Ratl. This was how the people of ] defined 1 Sāʿ. It was also the measure used by ] (reg. 634–644) when he atoned oaths.
* 1 Sāʿ = 5 1/3 Ratl. This how the people of people of ] defined 1 Sāʿ. It was reduced to this relation by Saʿīd ibn al-ʿĀs, who was Governor of Medina under ](reigned 661–680).

] reported that ] and also the hanafi scholar ] quarreled about the measurement of the Sāʿ in front of the Kalif ](reigned 786–809) at Medina. The Kalif invited the progeny of ] with their Sāʿ- Vessels, which they inherited from their ancestors. When it turned out that the measurement given by asch-Schāfiʿī (1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd = 5 1/3 irakische Ratl) was right, Abū Yūsuf ultimately agreed with the opinion. Taking into account the fact that in Baghdad 1 Ratl = 130 dirhams, the Muslim scholars have also established the equation: 1 Sā' = 693 1/3 dirhams.


== Meaning for Islamic teachings == == Meaning for Islamic teachings==
Like the Mudd, the Sāʿ has an additional symbolic and religious meaning in Islam than simply a measurement. According to a ] referred to by ] in different versions and is also found in ], ] asked Allah on the return from the ] to bless the Sāʿ and the Mudd of the Muslims. Like the Mudd, the Sāʿ has an additional symbolic and religious meaning in Islam than simply a measurement. According to a ] referred to by ] in different versions and is also found in ], ] asked Allah on the return from the ] to bless the Sāʿ and the Mudd of the Muslims.<ref>Ṣaḥīḥ al-Buḫārī, Kitāb al-Ǧihād wa-s-Siyar, Nr. 2732. </ref>


The Sā' is especially important for the measurement of the ], a dutiful alms-giving that must be done on ]. This alms has the value of one Sā' of grain per family member. According to Islamic tradition, this value was established by Muhammad in the year 2 of the ] (623/624 AD). In the absence of a Mudd or Sā measure, the amount of grain for the Zakāt al-fitr can also be measured with the two hands held together; four of these double handfuls are considered equal to one Sā'. In ], the rule was that in the occasion that needy people received a larger amount of grain in the distribution of zakāt al-fitr by their neighbors, they would have to pass on the surplus to other needy people. You should only keep one Sā' per family member. The Sā' is especially important for the measurement of the ], a dutiful alms-giving that must be done on ]. This alms has the value of one Sā' of grain per family member. According to Islamic tradition, this value was established by Muhammad in the year 2 of the ] (623/624 AD). In the absence of a Mudd or Sā measure, the amount of grain for the Zakāt al-fitr can also be measured with the two hands held together;<ref>Bel: "Ṣā'" in '' Encyclopaedia of Islam ''. Vol. IV, p. 1.</ref> four of these double handfuls are considered equal to one Sā'. In ], the rule was that in the occasion that needy people received a larger amount of grain in the distribution of zakāt al-fitr by their neighbors, they would have to pass on the surplus to other needy people. You should only keep one Sā' per family member.<ref>Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 363.</ref>


Special Sā'-measuring vessels were produced for the metering of the Zakāt al-fitr. For example, for the ] sultan ] (reigned 1331-1351), a vessel was made from ], which should represent the "sa of the prophet." An inscription attached to the vessel contains a long ], over which the ] of the measuring vessel could be retraced to the ] Zaid ibn Thabit. Special Sā'-measuring vessels were produced for the metering of the Zakāt al-fitr.<ref>Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 370.</ref> For example, for the ] sultan ] (reigned 1331-1351), a vessel was made from ], which should represent the "sa of the prophet." <ref>Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, pp. 364, 366.</ref> An inscription attached to the vessel contains a long ], over which the ] of the measuring vessel could be retraced to the ] Zaid ibn Thabit.<ref>Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 370.</ref>


Based on hadith, the Sā 'is also considered to be the minimum amount of water that must be available to perform a valid ]. Based on hadith, the Sā 'is also considered to be the minimum amount of water that must be available to perform a valid ].<ref>Bel: "Ṣā'" in' 'Encyclopaedia of Islam' '. Vol. IV, p. 1.</ref>


Use of the Sā 'for non-ritual purposes is recorded only in the Arabian Peninsula. Al-Maqdisī reports that the Arabs had two different Sā' units on the ships, a small one for compensating sailors, and a large one used for commercial transactions. Use of the Sā 'for non-ritual purposes is recorded only in the Arabian Peninsula. Al-Maqdisī reports that the Arabs had two different Sā' units on the ships, a small one for compensating sailors, and a large one used for commercial transactions.<ref>Šams ad-Dīn al -Maqdisī: '' Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm ''. 1906, p. 99.</ref>


== Conversion to the metric system == == Conversion to the metric system ==
According to Walther Hinz, who relies on the news of a Mudd calibration vessel from Ayyubiden time, the "Sā' of the Prophet" ( ''ṣā' an-nabī'' ) is exactly 4.2125 liters. Converting this measure to the weight of wheat it is a value of 3.24 kg. The Sā'-vessel for the Merinid Sultan Abū l-Hasan, which was also to represent the "Sā 'of the Prophet", has a volume of 2.75 liters. According to Walther Hinz, who relies on the news of a Mudd calibration vessel from Ayyubiden time, the "Sā' of the Prophet" ('' ṣā' an-nabī '') is exactly 4.2125 liters. Converting this measure to the weight of wheat it is a value of 3.24&nbsp;kg.<ref>Hinz: '' Islamic Mass and Weights. '' 1970. p. 51.</ref> The Sā'-vessel for the Merinid Sultan Abū l-Hasan, which was also to represent the "Sā 'of the Prophet", has a volume of 2.75 liters.<ref>Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 364, 366.</ref>


== Literature == == Literature ==


; Arabic sources ; Arabic sources


* Abū-ʿUbaid al-Qāsim Ibn-Sallām: ''al- Amwāl''. Ed. Muḥammad al-ʿAmmāra. Dār aš-Šurūq, Beirut, 1989. S. 615–627. Digitalisat * Abū-ʿUbaid al-Qāsim Ibn-Sallām: ''al- Amwāl''. Ed. Muḥammad al-ʿAmmāra. Dār aš-Šurūq, Beirut, 1989. S. 615–627.
* Abū-ʿAbdallāh Muḥammad Ibn-Aḥmad al-Ḫwārizmī: ''Kitāb Mafātīḥ al-ʿulūm''. Ed. Gerlof van Vloten. Brill, Leiden, 1895. S. 14. Digitalisat * Abū-ʿAbdallāh Muḥammad Ibn-Aḥmad al-Ḫwārizmī: ''Kitāb Mafātīḥ al-ʿulūm''. Ed. Gerlof van Vloten. Brill, Leiden, 1895. S. 14.
* ]: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm fī maʿrifat al-aqālīm.'' Ed. M. J. de Goeje. 2. Aufl. Brill, Leiden 1906. s. 98f. Digitalisat * ]: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm fī maʿrifat al-aqālīm.'' Ed. M. J. de Goeje. 2. Aufl. Brill, Leiden 1906. s. 98f.


; Literature ; Literature


* Alfred Bel: "Ṣāʿ" in ] Brill, Leiden, 1913–1936. Bd. IV, S. 1. Digitalisat * Alfred Bel: "Ṣāʿ" in ] Brill, Leiden, 1913–1936. Bd. IV, S. 1.
* Alfred Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases de cuivre gravé trouvés à Fès et servant à mesurer l'aumône légale du fitr." in ''Bulletin archéologique'' 1917. S. 359–387. Digitalisat * Alfred Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases de cuivre gravé trouvés à Fès et servant à mesurer l'aumône légale du fitr." in ''Bulletin archéologique'' 1917. S. 359–387.
* Walther Hinz: ''Islamische Masse und Gewichte. Umgerechnet ins metrische System.'' E. J. Brill, Leiden/Köln 1970, S. 51. * Walther Hinz: ''Islamische Masse und Gewichte. Umgerechnet ins metrische System.'' E. J. Brill, Leiden/Köln 1970, S. 51.
* Cengiz Kellek: "Sâʿ" in ] Bd. XXXV, S. 317c-319c. Digitalisat * Cengiz Kellek: "Sâʿ" in ] Bd. XXXV, S. 317c-319c.
* Paul Pascon: "Description des mudd et ṣāʿ Maghribins" in ''Hespéris Tamuda'' 16 (1975) S. 25–88 Digitalisat * Paul Pascon: "Description des mudd et ṣāʿ Maghribins" in ''Hespéris Tamuda'' 16 (1975) S. 25–88
* M. H. Sauvaire: "Matériaux pour servir à l'histoire de la numismatique et de la métrologie musulmanes" in ''Journal Asiatique'' VIII/7 (1886) 394–417 Digitalisat. * M. H. Sauvaire: "Matériaux pour servir à l'histoire de la numismatique et de la métrologie musulmanes" in ''Journal Asiatique'' VIII/7 (1886) 394–417 .


== References == == References ==
<references />


]
# ''']''' Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm''. 1906, S. 98.
# ''']''' Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm''. 1906, S. 98.
# ''']''' Henri Sauvaire: "Arab Metrology.
# ''']''' Al-Ḫwārizmī: ''Kitāb Mafātīḥ al-ʿulūm''. 1895, S. 14.
# ''']''' Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm''. 1906, S. 98.
# ''']''' Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm''. 1906, S. 98.
# ''']''' Al-Ǧuwainī: ''Muġīṯ al-ḫalq fī tarǧīḥ al-qaul al-ḥaqq''. Kairo 1934. S. 19f. Digitalisat
# ''']''' Sauvaire: "Matériaux". 1886, S. 400f.
# ''']''' Ṣaḥīḥ al-Buḫārī, Kitāb al-Ǧihād wa-s-Siyar, Nr. 2732. OnlineVersion on Wikisource
# ''']''' Bel: "Ṣā'" in ''Encyclopaedia of Islam'' . Vol. IV, p. 1.
# ''']''' Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 363.
# ''']''' Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 370.
# ''']''' Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, pp. 364, 366.
# ''']''' Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 370.
# ''']''' Bel: "Ṣā'" in' 'Encyclopaedia of Islam' '. Vol. IV, p. 1.
# ''']''' Šams ad-Dīn al -Maqdisī: ''Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm'' . 1906, p. 99.
# ''']''' Hinz: ''Islamic Mass and Weights.'' 1970. p. 51.
# ''']''' Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 364, 366
#

Revision as of 06:15, 12 November 2018

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The Sāʿ (Arabic: صاع‎) is an ancient measurement of volume from the Islamic world. The exact volume is uncertain. Sāʿ has both cultural and religious significance. The Arabic word Sa translates to "small container," related to the Quranic word ṣuwāʿ ("cup, goblet"). Together with the Mudd and the Makkūk, the Sa is part of the system of units of volume used in the Arabic peninsula.

Proportion to other Arabic measures

There is general agreement between medieval Arabic authors that 1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd. The 9th-century scholar al-Chwārizmī indicates that this was the opinion of the people of Medina . Likewise, Schams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī, who lived in the 10th century, stated that in Hedschas 1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd = 1/3 Makkūk. Az-Zahrāwī related the Sāʿ with Xestes, declaring that at the Rûm 1 Sāʿ = 10 Xestes.

Because the Sāʿ was related to different measures of mass, many standardization problems occurred. Its relation to the Ratl was especially controversial. For this there were two prevailing opinions:

  • 1 Sāʿ = 8 Ratl. This was how the people of Kufa defined 1 Sāʿ. It was also the measure used by Umar (reg. 634–644) when he atoned oaths.
  • 1 Sāʿ = 5 1/3 Ratl. This how the people of people of Medina defined 1 Sāʿ. It was reduced to this relation by Saʿīd ibn al-ʿĀs, who was Governor of Medina under Muawiyah I(reigned 661–680).

Al-Juwayni reported that Al-Shafi‘i and also the hanafi scholar Abu Yusuf quarreled about the measurement of the Sāʿ in front of the Kalif Harun al-Rashid(reigned 786–809) at Medina. The Kalif invited the progeny of Muhajirun with their Sāʿ- Vessels, which they inherited from their ancestors. When it turned out that the measurement given by asch-Schāfiʿī (1 Sāʿ = 4 Mudd = 5 1/3 irakische Ratl) was right, Abū Yūsuf ultimately agreed with the opinion. Taking into account the fact that in Baghdad 1 Ratl = 130 dirhams, the Muslim scholars have also established the equation: 1 Sā' = 693 1/3 dirhams.

Meaning for Islamic teachings

Like the Mudd, the Sāʿ has an additional symbolic and religious meaning in Islam than simply a measurement. According to a hadith referred to by Anas ibn Malik in different versions and is also found in Sahih al-Bukhari, Muhammad asked Allah on the return from the Battle of Khaybar to bless the Sāʿ and the Mudd of the Muslims.

The Sā' is especially important for the measurement of the Zakat al-fitr, a dutiful alms-giving that must be done on Eid al-Fitr. This alms has the value of one Sā' of grain per family member. According to Islamic tradition, this value was established by Muhammad in the year 2 of the Hijra (623/624 AD). In the absence of a Mudd or Sā measure, the amount of grain for the Zakāt al-fitr can also be measured with the two hands held together; four of these double handfuls are considered equal to one Sā'. In Fès, the rule was that in the occasion that needy people received a larger amount of grain in the distribution of zakāt al-fitr by their neighbors, they would have to pass on the surplus to other needy people. You should only keep one Sā' per family member.

Special Sā'-measuring vessels were produced for the metering of the Zakāt al-fitr. For example, for the merinid sultan Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Othman (reigned 1331-1351), a vessel was made from Copper, which should represent the "sa of the prophet." An inscription attached to the vessel contains a long Isnad, over which the calibration of the measuring vessel could be retraced to the prophet's companion Zaid ibn Thabit.

Based on hadith, the Sā 'is also considered to be the minimum amount of water that must be available to perform a valid ghusl.

Use of the Sā 'for non-ritual purposes is recorded only in the Arabian Peninsula. Al-Maqdisī reports that the Arabs had two different Sā' units on the ships, a small one for compensating sailors, and a large one used for commercial transactions.

Conversion to the metric system

According to Walther Hinz, who relies on the news of a Mudd calibration vessel from Ayyubiden time, the "Sā' of the Prophet" ( ṣā' an-nabī ) is exactly 4.2125 liters. Converting this measure to the weight of wheat it is a value of 3.24 kg. The Sā'-vessel for the Merinid Sultan Abū l-Hasan, which was also to represent the "Sā 'of the Prophet", has a volume of 2.75 liters.

Literature

Arabic sources
  • Abū-ʿUbaid al-Qāsim Ibn-Sallām: al- Amwāl. Ed. Muḥammad al-ʿAmmāra. Dār aš-Šurūq, Beirut, 1989. S. 615–627. Digitalisat
  • Abū-ʿAbdallāh Muḥammad Ibn-Aḥmad al-Ḫwārizmī: Kitāb Mafātīḥ al-ʿulūm. Ed. Gerlof van Vloten. Brill, Leiden, 1895. S. 14. Digitalisat
  • Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm fī maʿrifat al-aqālīm. Ed. M. J. de Goeje. 2. Aufl. Brill, Leiden 1906. s. 98f. Digitalisat
Literature
  • Alfred Bel: "Ṣāʿ" in Enzyklopaedie des Islam Brill, Leiden, 1913–1936. Bd. IV, S. 1. Digitalisat
  • Alfred Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases de cuivre gravé trouvés à Fès et servant à mesurer l'aumône légale du fitr." in Bulletin archéologique 1917. S. 359–387. Digitalisat
  • Walther Hinz: Islamische Masse und Gewichte. Umgerechnet ins metrische System. E. J. Brill, Leiden/Köln 1970, S. 51.
  • Cengiz Kellek: "Sâʿ" in Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı İslâm Ansiklopedisi Bd. XXXV, S. 317c-319c. Digitalisat
  • Paul Pascon: "Description des mudd et ṣāʿ Maghribins" in Hespéris Tamuda 16 (1975) S. 25–88 Digitalisat
  • M. H. Sauvaire: "Matériaux pour servir à l'histoire de la numismatique et de la métrologie musulmanes" in Journal Asiatique VIII/7 (1886) 394–417 Digitalisat.

References

  1. Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm. 1906, S. 98.
  2. Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm. 1906, S. 98.
  3. Henri Sauvaire: "Arab Metrology.
  4. Al-Ḫwārizmī: Kitāb Mafātīḥ al-ʿulūm. 1895, S. 14.
  5. Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm. 1906, S. 98.
  6. Šams ad-Dīn al-Maqdisī: Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm. 1906, S. 98.
  7. Al-Ǧuwainī: Muġīṯ al-ḫalq fī tarǧīḥ al-qaul al-ḥaqq. Kairo 1934. S. 19f. Digitalisat
  8. Sauvaire: "Matériaux". 1886, S. 400f.
  9. Ṣaḥīḥ al-Buḫārī, Kitāb al-Ǧihād wa-s-Siyar, Nr. 2732. OnlineVersion on Wikisource
  10. Bel: "Ṣā'" in Encyclopaedia of Islam . Vol. IV, p. 1.
  11. Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 363.
  12. Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 370.
  13. Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, pp. 364, 366.
  14. Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 370.
  15. Bel: "Ṣā'" in' 'Encyclopaedia of Islam' '. Vol. IV, p. 1.
  16. Šams ad-Dīn al -Maqdisī: Kitāb Aḥsan at-taqāsīm . 1906, p. 99.
  17. Hinz: Islamic Mass and Weights. 1970. p. 51.
  18. Bel: "Note sur trois anciens vases". 1917, p. 364, 366.
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