Compare isnād
5 chains merged
Common narrators appear once. Edge weights show how many input chains share that transmission step.
Hadiths in comparison
- Sahih al-Bukhari · 3067sahih
A horse of Ibn 'Umar fled and the enemy took it. Then the Muslims conquered the enemy and the horse was returned to him during the lifetime of Allah's Messenger (ﷺ). And also, once a slave of Ibn 'Umar (ra) fled and joined the Byzantines, a
- Sahih al-Bukhari · 3068sahih
Once a slave of Ibn `Umar fled and joined the Byzantine. Khalid bin Al-Walid got him back and returned him to `Abdullah (bin `Umar). Once a horse of Ibn `Umar also ran away and followed the Byzantines, and he (i.e. Khalid) got it back and r
- Sunan Abi Dawud · 2699sahih
Nafi said that a horse of Ibn ‘Umar went away and the enemy seized it. The Muslims overpowered them. Khalid bin Walid returned it to him after the Prophet (ﷺ).
- Sunan Ibn Majah · 2847sahih
“And a slave of his absconded and joined up with the Romans, then the Muslims defeated them, and Khalid bin Walid returned him to me, after the death of the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ).”
- Mishkat al-Masabih · 3992
He told that in the time of God's Messenger a horse of his went off and was taken by the enemy, but when the Muslims conquered them it was returned to him. A version says that after the death of the Prophet (ﷺ) a slave of his ran away and j
Merged isnād DAG
Top: Prophet ﷺ. Each row is one transmission generation. Cards show narrator metadata; the badge shows how many of the compared hadiths pass through that narrator.
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Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ)
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