ISSN
1465 – 3591
Journal of
Qur’anic Studies
VOLUME X ISSUE II
2008
CENTRE OF ISLAMIC STUDIES
School of Oriental and African Studies
University of London
The Qur’an Made Linear: A
Study of the Geschichte des Qorâns’
Chronological Reordering
Emmanuelle Stefanidis
UNIVERSITY OF PARIS 8
Introduction
How is the Qur’an to be read and studied? What organising principle and reading code
should be used? Through which (legitimate) ways is its indeterminate dimension to be
limited? Though questions relating to the referentiality of texts, to the degree of
textual autonomy, or the issue of the ultimate location of meaning are central in all
literary and hermeneutical endeavours, they seem particularly crucial to the study of
the Islamic scripture. The Qur’an can be appropriately described as an ‘open’ text: a
text whose loose structure and multifaceted content strongly invite the reader to
participate in the creation of meaning.1 Its often allusive character combined with the
absence of a constraining narrative framework allows the reader to suggest unlimited
meaning combinations, and experiment with different reading itineraries. This article
is concerned with one particular way of reading and exploiting the Qur’an’s textual
richness which has affected and shaped the field of Qur’anic studies for over a
century. Orientalist efforts to uncover the original chronological reordering of the
Muslim sacred text started in the middle of the nineteenth century, with the
publication of Gustav Weil’s Historisch-kritische Einleitung in den Koran in 1844.2
Of the four other Orientalist chronological arrangements of the Qur’an which
followed,3 that of Theodor Nöldeke in his Geschichte des Qorâns (1860)4 was soon to
become authoritative. As such, it was deemed to deserve a full revision, begun in 1909
by Nöldeke’s student Friedrich Schwally, which resulted in a three volume edition and
secured its seminal status. In the first half of the twentieth century, the chronological
reading of the Qur’an, mostly based on the Geschichte des Qorâns’ reordering,
appeared to acquire a heuristic monopoly in Western research on the Qur’an,
particularly among French Arabists such as Regis Blachère and Maurice GaudefroyDemombynes.5 The strong and undeniable sense of coherence and, particularly to
Western eyes, reassuring linearity which it grants to the Muslim sacred text was
greatly appreciated, while its historical and methodological assumptions were little, if
at all, brought into question.6
With the emergence, however, in the second half of the twentieth century of, first, new
literary trends favouring synchronicity and textual plurality and, second, of increased
2
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
historical scepticism in Qur’anic studies, the value of a chronological reordering of
the Qur’an became hotly contested. In particular, advocates of a more cautious use of
Muslim traditional sources hastened to point to the (excessive) dependence of any
chronological enterprise on traditional material, to the circularity of its argumentation
and to its inability to account for – and appreciate – the present state of the Qur’anic
text.7
Rather than tackling the direct, and perhaps insoluble, question of its historical
validity, this article aims at uncovering the workings of the Geschichte des Qorâns’
approach: What aspects of the Geschichte’s chronological study encouraged its
exemplary status, as compared to other contemporary reorderings? How did
Schwally’s revision affect the original text and its status? To what extent does the
Geschichte offer a chronological order, as opposed to a mere, and looser,
periodisation? How does it position itself in relation to traditional data and
chronological lists? How does its argumentation function? What is its internal
coherence and what textual impact and modifications does it induce on the Qur’anic
text? More, generally, what are the inherent difficulties encountered in any
chronological classification of the Muslim scripture?
1. The Emergence of Western Chronological Reorderings of the Qur’an
The search for the original order of the Qur’anic revelation seems initially to
have been intimately linked with a deep-seated curiosity regarding the life of the
Prophet of Islam. The Qur’an was enthusiastically regarded, in Muir’s terms, as a
‘storehouse of Mohammad’s own words recorded during his life’,8 through which
his actions as well as his inner struggles could be accessed. From this perspective,
its chronological reordering was considered a prerequisite to its historical use.
Gustav Weil (1808–89) first addressed the question of the chronological order of the
Qur’an in his Mohammed der Prophet, where he quoted in extenso a chronological list
drawn from the Taʾrīkh al-khamīs of al-Diyārbakrī9 as general ‘guidance’ (Leitung),
with due warning to the reader, however, that he ‘[does] not agree with it
throughout’.10 One year later, in his Historisch-kritische Einleitung, he developed his
own thoughts and critique on the subject. Weil’s contribution, however, was still
explicitly based on the Taʾrīkh al-khamīs’ sura listing. It appears that, in 1844,
al-Diyārbakrī’s work was the only source known to enumerate a chronological order
of the suras.11 One has to remember that it is only in the second half of the nineteenth
century that many of the most important Islamic manuscripts are made available to
Orientalist use. Aloys Sprenger (1813–93), in particular, had a major role in these
‘discoveries’, returning from India in 1856 with a collection of 1,972 rare volumes.12
Theodor Nöldeke’s (1836–1930) work on the Qur’an, at first a university
dissertation,13 was largely inspired by Weil’s approach, and in particular his triple
The Qur’an Made Linear
3
Meccan periodisation. However, as a strong proponent of philology, he contributed to
the emancipation of the study of the Qur’an from inquiries into the life of the Prophet
and chose to look into the Islamic scripture for its own sake. His approach can be
contrasted to that of his Scottish contemporary William Muir (1819–1905) who
proposed his own reordering of suras while writing his Life of Mahomet.14 One
generation later, Hubert Grimme (1864–1942) addressed the same issue in the two
volumes of his Muhammed.15 While the second of these is a theological study of the
Qur’an, the first, a socialist account of Muḥammad’s actions, asserts – again – the
necessity of a chronological reordering of the suras to any study of the life and
doctrine of Muḥammad.16 The philological content, and restraint, of the Geschichte
des Qorâns has been seen as one of its strengths and a sign of its reliability. It does
preserve it, at least to some extent, from recurrent moral judgements on the Prophet of
Islam. These are, for example, very present in a work such as that of William Muir,
who expressed a clear missionary zeal and was fixated on identifying the true nature
of Muḥammad’s intentions and the moment of his ‘Fall’.17 Muir was evidently
intrigued by Muḥammad’s character. His complex and ambiguous assessment of the
Prophet’s life is discernible in the last chapter of his fourth volume, entitled ‘The
Person and Character of Mahomet’, where Muḥammad’s ‘simplicity of life’, his
‘kindness of disposition’ and his ‘moderation and magnanimity’, is juxtaposed with,
in Muir’s terms, his ‘cruelty towards enemies’, his ‘craftiness and perfidy’.18 It seems
that Muir’s ambivalence and dogmatic views also had a direct impact on his
chronological reordering. Nöldeke convincingly suggests that Muir’s notorious but
peculiar identification of eighteen short suras, which he calls ‘rhapsodies’ and
suggests pre-date Muḥammad’s call to prophethood, is an attempt by the author to
exculpate, at least temporarily, Muḥammad – for whom he seems to have developed a
certain ‘affection’ (Zuneigung) – from the ‘sin’ of speaking in God’s name.19
Digressions and hypotheses on Muḥammad’s inner states are also pervasive in
Hartwig Hirschfeld’s (1854–1934) monograph, New Researches into the Compostion
and Exegesis of the Qoran, which despite his title, seems to be more concerned with
the Prophet’s psychology than with philological or literary remarks on the Qur’anic
text.20
The scientific quality of the Geschichte des Qorâns, grounded in its philological
focus, is further reinforced by the negotiated character of its chronological reordering.
Whereas some lists seem to be gratuitous, an affixed afterthought to the author’s main
study, Nöldeke does spend some time explaining and justifying his views, in
particular regarding the Meccan periods. Muir and Grimme, for example, provide very
little information as to their methodologies. Their lists are simply presented to the
reader. Hirschfeld’s approach, on the other hand, is deeply reflexive, founded on an
elaborate identification of (Meccan) Qur’anic modes of communication and a –
highly hypothetical – reconstruction of their plausible evolution.21 However, his
4
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
study seems to hesitate between a literary study of Qur’anic themes and a
chronological one:22
As we must give up the idea of ever reconstructing the chronological
order of the sermons, we may hope, by means of a division according
to subjects, to obtain something like a survey over the material of
which the Qorân is composed.
Hirschfeld then adds:
If we succeed in carrying out this task, we can dispense with an
accurate knowledge of the date of each revelation. Of a good many of
them it is indeed quite irrelevant to know when they were revealed.
In light of this, how should we understand his surprising choice to add, as an annex,23
a chronological reordering of suras and groups of ayas? Hirschfeld’s decision seems to
attest to the pervasiveness of the Muslim traditional list format, which, despite its
actual content being contested by Orientalist scholars, remains the model to be
emulated. The Western attempts at Qur’anic classification display the same linearity,
one-dimensionality and exhaustive treatment of suras as the traditional enumerations.
The continuity between traditional Muslim enumerations and the Orientalist projects
is clearly discernible in Weil’s pioneering work, which shaped the subsequent studies
of Muir, Nöldeke, Grimme and Hirschfeld. Weil presents his contribution merely as a
more cautious and improved version of the list mentioned by the Taʾrīkh al-khamīs.
This sometimes overlooked fact explains why, in Welch’s words, ‘in Weil’s First
Period the first 34 suras, with just a few exceptions, are in almost exactly the same
order as in the traditional Muslim dating’.24 Contrary to what Welch implies,
however, convergence with the traditional listing is not, in this case, the sign of an
uncritical approach. Rather, it is an explicit recognition of the limits of the
chronological exercise.25
2. The Geschichte des Qorâns’ Main Strength: The Triple Meccan Periodisation
Beyond the scholarly soberness of the Geschichte des Qorâns’ chronological study, it
is the simplicity and clarity of Nöldeke’s argument which constitutes its strength. His
main achievement is his theorisation of the three Meccan periods, which were first
conceptualised by Gustav Weil. This theorisation is based on the identification of two
categories of suras which Nöldeke poses as the two poles of a continuum. Short suras
with a rhythmic and allusive style form the first pole and period. The other pole is
formed by long, narrative suras similar in style, according to Nöldeke, to Medinan
suras; they constitute the third Meccan period. As for the second period, Nöldeke
organises the remaining Meccan suras, fitting neither of the previous categories, into
a ‘progressive transition’ (allmählige Abstufung).26 At the same time he maintains
the idea – now also turned evidence – of an irreversible weakening of Qur’anic
The Qur’an Made Linear
5
(or rather, in his view, Muḥammad’s) style: ‘the force of enthusiasm must have
gradually decreased; the constant repetitions of the same ideas, which yet repeatedly
fell on sterile ground, must have negatively affected the form in which they were
declaimed’.27 While, as Marco Schöller remarks, the method is simple and practical,
steering ‘the middle course between being too indiscriminate on the one hand and too
sophisticated on the other’,28 the result is also powerfully consistent. The Geschichte
des Qorâns’ chronology aims at, or at least results in, making the Qur’an a gradually
stylistically evolving text, while at the same time firmly posing the corresponding
theoretical principle of stylistic ‘decline’. As the textual analysis and the theoretical
principle of stylistic evolution mutually reinforce each other, Nöldeke’s
demonstration, despite its circularity, emerges as particularly solid and, because it
is based on stylistic considerations rather than psychological hypotheses, as objective
and dispassionate. It also produces a satisfactory reading experience of the Qur’anic
text, in particular to bewildered Western eyes, as Blachère asserts:29
[The chronological reordering] projects on the Vulgate a reassuring
clarity; it replaces the texts in an intelligible perspective linked to the
plausible unfolding of History; it brings back significance to the
Western approach and satisfies the desire to understand without which
one could not go forward …
It is not entirely evident, however, why the stylistic evolution should have been so
clearly irreversible and, from very early on, scholars, such as Aloys Sprenger in 1861,
have raised this issue.30 Yet, this point is so fundamental to Nöldeke’s periodic
classification that fifty years later, when Schwally completed his revision of the
Geschichte des Qorâns, he felt the need to establish it more firmly by declaring it no
less than a law of nature (Naturgesetz). ‘One does not have to wonder about this
evolution’, he added in the 1909 edition, ‘as it corresponds to a law of nature, and
neither should we regret it, considering the ultimate success’.31 Schwally’s clumsy
attempt to end the debate and definitely secure the Geschichte’s stylistic argument,
ironically, ends up emphasising its fragility. The stylistic argument emerges as what
it truly is: an ‘interpretative principle’, improvable but crucial to the text’s
demonstration, as the author endeavours to lead us ‘to the version of the facts he
espouses by persuading us to the interpretative principles in the light of which those
facts will seem indisputable’.32
Nöldeke’s main demonstration, that of the triple Meccan periodisation, is constructed
almost entirely so as to support his stylistic argument. Thus, the first period is
organised and presented in a way which aims at highlighting its ardent form and
apocalyptic content. With the exception of the first (Q. 96, Q. 74, Q. 111, Q. 106) and
the last suras (Q. 112, Q. 109, Q. 113, Q. 114, Q. 1) which are treated separately,
Nöldeke classifies suras attributed to this period in three categories: respectively, those
6
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
that contain an attack against an opponent (Q. 108, Q. 104, Q. 107, Q. 102, Q. 105,
Q. 92, Q. 90); those, defined negatively, which neither criticise enemies nor describe
apocalyptic events (Q. 94, Q. 93, Q. 97, Q. 86, Q. 91, Q. 80, Q. 68, Q. 87, Q. 95,
Q. 103, Q. 85, Q. 73); and finally those, by far the most numerous, which evoke the
end of times.33 This is an awkward classification, with the shared theme of greed in
Suras 104, 107, 102 and 92 being totally ignored, Q. 105 (Sūrat al-Fīl) being reduced
to an attack against an opponent – here, from the past – and twelve suras being
characterised negatively, but it does allow Nöldeke to emphasise the last category,
which most appropriately embodies the stylistic characteristics which he attributes to
the first Meccan period. The solemnity with which he introduces this third category of
suras brings to light its importance in the author’s demonstration:34
These suras are the most magnificent of the whole Qur’an and in them
the passionate excitement of the Prophet is most strongly conveyed. It
is as if we were seeing with our own eyes how the earth opens, the
mountains collapse and the stars are jumbled together.
The ‘dull’ dimension of the third Meccan period, on the other hand, is
correspondingly and just as emphatically underlined:35
The language is stretched, dull and prosaic; the eternal repetitions, in
which the Prophet does not shy away from using almost the same
words, the argumentation lacking all acuity and clarity, which
convinces no one except those who already believe, the narrations
displaying little change often render the revelations downright
boring …
Moreover, the logic of this triple Meccan periodisation, highlighting the first and
the third period, results in stripping the second Meccan period of any proper
characteristics, and presenting it solely as a ‘gradual transition’ from period one to
period three. ‘We have already remarked above’, writes Nöldeke, ‘that these suras do
not share any definite characteristics, rather some are more similar to those of the first
period and others to those of the third period’.36 This is, of course, rather surprising, as
suras from the second period could be, and have been, said to form a deeply
homogeneous group, characterised in particular by the use of the divine epithet
al-raḥmān.37 Nöldeke is undoubtedly aware of the cohesive features of these suras
but, in order to remain faithful to the logic of his demonstration, he chooses to
downplay them.38
Nöldeke’s periodisation of the Meccan suras according to his hypothesis of stylistic
decline is not without impact on the Muslim sacred text; through it, the structure of the
Qur’an appears smoother, linear and one-dimensional. It is, for example, a result quite
different than that ensuing from Angelika Neuwirth’s understanding of Qur’anic
The Qur’an Made Linear
7
composition as textual growth and additions around an original nucleus. While
Neuwirth explicitly claims Nöldeke’s legacy, her call for a dynamic reading of the
Qur’an, ‘revealing through subtexts and super-texts the ongoing historical
communication process which distinguishes the Qur’an from other Scriptures’,
signals a marked shift in perspective. In this framework, the evolution of the Qur’an
ceases to be a linear succession of monological discourses, but becomes instead ‘an
ongoing dialogue raising questions and giving answers, only to be questioned again
and responded to again’.39
3. A Chronological Order of Suras?
If the rationalisation of the three Meccan periods is justified, the reasons for the actual
order of Meccan suras within each period, however, remain obscure.40 It is difficult to
assert how far Nöldeke intended a strict chronological reordering, as the reader of the
Geschichte is faced with conflicting evidence. On the one hand, Nöldeke
unequivocally declares the impossibility of ever recovering the exact succession of
suras, as he doubts that Muḥammad himself must have remembered it.41 Moreover, he
distances himself from Muir’s work precisely on this point: Muir’s biggest mistake,
according to Nöldeke, is to have thought that a chronological reordering is
achievable.42 It seems clear therefore, that, within the Meccan periods, suras are
not presented according to a chronological order, as Nöldeke himself hints.43 On the
other hand, how should we understand the logic of the order of presentation of suras,
if it is devoid of any chronological pretension? As Nöldeke does not explain the
reasons why, within one period, he chooses to mention, for example, Suras 37, 71, 76
and 44 after Sura 54, the reader wonders whether he might have some chronological
insight. Moreover, in the 1856 and 1860 editions, some suras are mentioned only by
their number, without any other information, which also seems to indicate a strictly
chronological aim.44
The spreading of Nöldeke’s work over five decades, from his university dissertation in
1856 up to his participation in the 1909 revision conducted by his pupil Friedrich
Schwally, could be the reason for this ambiguity. It seems, indeed, that the 1860
edition does not repeat the totality of the chronological arguments presented in 1856.
This is, at least, the case with Suras 56 and 52. In his short university dissertation,
Nöldeke remarks on the proximity between Q. 52:17 (fī jannātin wa-naʿīm) and
Q. 56:12 (fī jannātin al-naʿīm), the latter probably appearing to him as marking,
through its greater precision, a progression in Qur’anic eschatological
representation.45 In 1860, the succession of these two suras remains but the
argumentation is abandoned, replaced instead by a remark on the diversity of opinions
of Muslim commentators concerning the origin of certain ayas in Sura 56.46
Moreover, Nöldeke’s chronological aim seems to have evolved through these three
editions. As he himself suggests, he seems to have originally thought, while
8
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
composing his dissertation, that a chronological reordering of suras was a legitimate
and achievable scientific enterprise, and gradually, during his studies, became aware
of its limits.47 The 1860 edition, therefore, maintains some elements of the author’s
initial confidence, while incorporating at the same time much more cautious passages.
This prudence is further reinforced in the 1909 revision of the Geschichte des
Qorâns, as Schwally systematically downplays both the occasional rigidity of his
predecessor’s work and the value accorded to traditional accounts (of the asbāb
al-nuzūl type). Given that Schwally voluntarily, and somewhat painfully, restricted
himself to ‘minor modifications’ (geringe Eingriffe),48 the result is often confusing
textual grafts with divergent positions regarding the chronological enterprise.
An eloquent example of this multiple authorship is the treatment of the first five ayas
of Sura 96 of the first Meccan period. Nöldeke begins by affirming that he sees no
reason, at least in Muir’s argumentation, to depart from the classical Muslim view
which considers these five ayas the oldest of the whole Qur’an, marking Muḥammad’s
prophetical call. He even proposes his own reconstruction of this milestone ‘through
precise observation of the vocabulary of the sura itself and taking into account the
Tradition’.49 The account of the prophetical beginnings continues unsurprisingly until
the presentation of Sura 74 which, according to certain Muslim traditions, put an end
to the suspension of divine communication (fatra) which followed the first revelation.
In the 1909 edition, however, Schwally hints at doubts at the foundational character of
Q. 96:1–5:50
It remains to be proven whether Sura 96, 1–5 is really the oldest
Qur’anic passage … The content of its wording would rather indicate
a time when the Prophet would have received a new passage of the
celestial Book.
Nonetheless, he retains the order of presentation chosen by Nöldeke in 1856 and 1860
(Q. 96, Q. 74, Q. 111, Q. 106), as well as his predecessor’s succession of ideas and
transitions. Thus, after having contested the initial character of Q. 96:1–5, he returns
to the traditional narrative account that implies that this group of ayas is indeed the
very first revelation: ‘after Muḥammad felt the call to prophethood, he was not, it
seems, very sure of his vocation’.51 The reader who ignores the multiple layers of
writing of the Geschichte can but remain perplexed when faced with these recurrent
oscillations of the (multiple) author(s) of the 1909 edition.52
Schwally’s main contribution to the Geschichte’s revision is a methodical distrust
of traditional accounts of the asbāb al-nuzūl type. Nöldeke, although wary of the
‘doubtful’ (zweifelhaft)53 character of these accounts, evaluated them one by one,
validating some and dismissing others. He particularly resorted to them, like his
colleagues Weil, Muir, Grimme and Hirschfeld, while dating Medinan suras or
The Qur’an Made Linear
9
passages. In Schwally’s eyes, however, traditional data of this kind are only
exceptionally of any historical value; this being mostly the case when their contents
injure in some way the Prophet’s image, such as the accounts relating to Muḥammad’s
‘temptation’ to strike a deal with his pagan opponents (the so-called Satanic Verses,
Q. 53), God’s rebuking of his attitude towards a poor blind man (Q. 80), or ʿĀʾisha’s
absence and the resultant attacks on her reputation (Q. 24:11–20). He regards most
other reports as ‘exegetes’ combinations’ (Kombinationen der Exegeten), an
expression he particularly favours.54 In many cases, Schwally prefers to insist on
the general nature of the majority of Qur’anic passages, where it would therefore be
pointless to look for a particular character or incident. He maintains this line of
argument even regarding expressions which are most commonly assumed to have
specific referents, such as the term ‘your hater’ (shāniʾaka) in Sūrat al-Kawthar
(Q. 108), or the short passage mentioning a Byzantine defeat at the beginning of Sūrat
al-Rūm (Q. 30).55 At some other point, he acknowledges the historicity of a certain
event, for it is attested in a satirical poem of Ḥassān ibn Thābit, but discards any link
with Qur’anic ayas (here Q. 4:105–15)56 as the Qur’anic vocabulary does not seem to
support it; it must be seen, he concludes, as another example of ‘exegetical invention’
(exegetische Erfindung).57
Drawing on Fred Donner’s classification of modern critical research on the beginnings
of Islam,58 Nöldeke can be said to have espoused a ‘source-critical approach’, as he
maintained that traditional accounts can be harmonised or the strongest version
identified.59 Schwally, on the other hand, appears to have advocated a ‘traditioncritical approach’, where the emphasis on the long oral transmission of these data
consequently lessens the possibility of extracting any precise information.
Schwally’s critical revision undermines, in some way, Nöldeke’s previous work. As a
direct consequence, for example, the argumentation for the chronological position of a
few Medinan suras (Q. 63, Q. 66 and Q. 60), which Nöldeke dated merely on the basis
of a sabab al-nuzūl, is suddenly void, although Schwally retained his predecessor’s
order of mention. Furthermore, however, Schwally’s approach hints at a general
questioning of the conceptual framework inherited from certain Muslim texts,
including the chronological list format and its linear and exhaustive dimensions. The
1909 edition, therefore, while constituting the seminal work on the subject, also
contains the seeds of subversion of the Orientalist chronological enterprise. The search
for a chronological reordering of the Qur’an, where suras are arranged one after the
other in a linear, one-dimensional and irreversible way, is fashioned and determined
by some classical Muslim sources, which all adhered to a list format. If Nöldeke
affirms many times that he does not hold that an exact order is achievable, his ‘sourcecritical’ treatment of traditional data encourages him to believe that he can get near the
original sequence of Qur’anic revelations.60 As Richard Bell’s experience, whatever
one may think of it, has shown, a chronological classification of the Qur’an becomes
10
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
all the more complex and, indeed, impractical as one suggests a narrative remote from
the major Muslim account.
Nöldeke’s initial approach combined with Schwally’s critical position generates an
undeniable tension in the 1909 revised edition. Paradoxically, however, far from
undermining its authority, this tension could be said to further establish the special
status conferred to the Geschichte des Qorâns. The double authorship satisfies, at the
same time and somehow contradictorily, both the increasing demand in the field to
treat traditional data with caution and scholars looking for a useful and concrete way
to arrange suras – they can then (mis)use the Geschichte’s table of contents as a strict
chronological list.61
Indeed, reducing the Geschichte des Qorâns’ table of contents to a chronological list,
although it does certainly resemble one, overlooks important indeterminacies, besides
disregarding the author’s warnings. Firstly, the recurrent lack of argumentation as
regarding the order of mention of suras suggests arbitrariness. This is particularly
striking in the second Meccan period, where, although Nöldeke states that suras which
he attributes to this period can be ‘somehow more easily’ (etwas leichter)
chronologically arranged, no justification is provided to the reader.62 The patent
absence of any chronological argument underlines the fact that Nöldeke’s statement,
previously quoted, is in reality purely theoretical and has to be ascribed to his
rationalisation of the three Meccan periods. Since, in the author’s view, the second
period provides, or rather should provide, a ‘progressive transition’ (allmählige
Abstufung) from the first period to the third period, therefore suras can be ‘somehow
more easily’ arranged so as to roughly reflect this evolution. Secondly, on the few
occasions where Nöldeke discloses why he follows one particular sura with another,
the chronological order suggested is only a relative one between two suras which
share a similar expression or theme; it means that, in the author’s view, the first sura is
older than the second one, but not that they immediately follow each other – other
suras could have emerged in between. For example, in the first Meccan period,
Sura 78 is mentioned after Sura 77 because, as Nöldeke explains, the former’s aya 17
mentioning the ‘yawm al faṣl’ would appear to ‘suppose’ (voraussetzen) the prior
existence of Q. 77:12–3.63
Thirdly, the linearity and exhaustivity which Nöldeke, like his Orientalist colleagues,
aims to achieve imply other weaknesses. Some suras, such as Q. 112, Q. 109, Q. 113
and Q. 114, which are recognised as being difficult to date, end up congealed in, and
by, any chronological ordering. These short suras are presented, because of their size,
at the end of the first Meccan period, but, writes Nöldeke, Suras 113 and 114 could
just as well be Medinan, and Sura 1 could belong to the second Meccan period.64
This indetermination is obviously suppressed in the Geschichte’s table of contents,
just as is the composite nature of many suras. Nöldeke has been criticised for treating
The Qur’an Made Linear
11
suras as unities.65 He does, in fact, analyse extensively the different parts that a
sura may amalgamate, and the issue of sura ‘coherence’ (Zusammenhang) or the lack
thereof, is a recurrent theme from the third Meccan period onwards. A reflection on
the notion of ‘sura’ is, in any case, necessary to any chronological study. To what
extent are suras, or at least most of them, to be seen as literary and/or temporal
units?66 What Nöldeke could be reproached for is that he does not clearly answer this
question. Rather, his decision to respect the sura division as much as possible is,
above all, practical: it aims at avoiding ‘tearing to pieces’ (zerreissen) the Qur’anic
text and ending up with an impractical ‘heap of materials’.67 Correspondingly, his
positioning of a composite sura responds to no systematic criteria. Sura 51 is placed
in the first Meccan period because of its beginning, the 43 remaining ayas having
been ‘probably added subsequently’, while Sura 29 is attributed to the third Meccan
period despite its first ten ayas being identified by Nöldeke as Medinan. How
then should Sura 22 be ordered, whose majority of ayas would be Meccan but whose
title and ‘main signification’ (Hauptbedeutung) apparently date from Medinan
times?68
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, using the Geschichte’s table of contents as
a chronological list confuses the order of presentation of suras with an actual
chronological order, and overlooks what could be qualified as the author’s ‘writing’ or
‘rhetorical’ strategy: transitions, thematic associations, personal interests, aesthetical
considerations, etc. Thematic associations between suras, with unclear chronological
bearing, are common in Nöldeke’s study. Sura 53, for example, is examined after Sura
81 because both mention a supernatural vision:69
We would like to relate the last sura [Q.81] with Sura 53, although,
despite the fact that Sura 53 does belong to the later suras of the first
period, it does not belong to this third category [of apocalyptic suras];
these two suras can, nonetheless, be associated through their content,
as both mention a manifestation of the angel.
Furthermore, Nöldeke’s decision to examine apocalyptic suras at the end of the
section dedicated to the first Meccan period seems to respond just as much to his
profound aesthetical appreciation of them as to the ‘stylistic decline’ argument.
Distinguishing the order of presentation of suras from an alleged chronological
arrangement is, in actual fact, essential when reading and pondering on all Orientalist
classifications, even when the authors themselves do not seem to make the distinction.
Hence, Hirschfeld’s regrouping of Suras 33, 65, 24, 66, 63 and 58, which occurs in
the body of his text and then, again, in his ‘chronological arrangement of the
revelations’ appendix, results not from chronological considerations, but from a
particular personal interest; he wants to illustrate, in this manner, a short chapter
entitled ‘Revelations on Muhammad’s Domestic Affairs’ and dedicated to showing
12
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
his discomfort with Muḥammad’s private life.70 Furthermore, this arrangement
contradicts his own dating of suras, as Sūrat al-Taḥrīm (Q. 66), which is said to refer
to tensions in Muḥammad’s household following his frequent visits to his concubine
Maria the Copt, is dated by Hirschfeld – on the basis of a sabab al-nuzūl – to year 7
but is grouped with other earlier suras which Hirschfeld believes refer to
Muḥammad’s private life (Q. 33, Q. 65 and Q. 24) and positioned before Sūrat alFatḥ (Q. 48), which is traditionally linked to the Ḥudaybiyya event and thus dated to
year 6. The positioning, in the chronological appendix, of Sura 66 in between Sura 24
and 58 is therefore a mistake, or at least an oversight on the side of the author,
although the reasons for presenting Sura 66 with Suras 33, 65, 24, 63 and 58 are
evident in the body the Hirschfeld’s study. In this case, Hirschfeld’s interest in the
original Qur’anic sequence was not only overtaken by other concerns, but also merged
with these up to a point where only the most attentive reader of New Researches can
disentangle them.
Likewise, a cursory reader of Weil’s Historisch-kritische Einleitung might conclude,
as Welch does, that Sura 109 follows Sura 107, as Weil mentions the former just after
the latter. Ironically, however, Weil refers to Sura 109 to precisely deny, in contrast to
the listing given by the Taʾrīkh al-khamīs, that it emerged at around the same time as
Sura 107: ‘[Sura] 109 … belongs surely not to the first period, but rather to the
second, where Mohammed’s teaching had become widespread enough for the pagans
to agree to some concessions’.71 As Weil does not discuss Sura 109 anywhere else in
his study, a reader confusing the author’s order of presentation with a chronological
one will be misguided.
Besides a writing strategy which is concerned with the way data are arranged and
displayed to the reader in a convincing and pleasant manner, one can identify what
could be called a narrative strategy, which aims at presenting the historical
reconstruction accompanying the chronological reordering in a plausible and
coherent way.72 Not only do the two have to be clearly distinguished, in order to
avoid misreadings similar to that of Welch, but also their specific objectives have to be
scrutinised: both aim at coherence and persuasion, which is why they are defined here
as strategies. The venture of a chronological reordering of the Qur’an, insofar as it
aspires at (re)inserting linearity into the Muslim sacred text and making it tell a story,
goes hand in hand with a narrative construction of the evolution of the earliest Muslim
community. This narrative strategy is particularly visible in the Geschichte des
Qorâns, which time and again seeks to provide a consistent, unified and, one could
say, ‘economical’ view of the development of events. The three Meccan periods and
the corresponding scenario of the weakening style and passion of Muḥammad work
towards that end, as do Nöldeke’s assessment of Medinan events and his ordering of
the matching suras.
The Qur’an Made Linear
13
Apart from a few suras and groups of ayas which are dated on the basis of a single
traditional report, of the sabab al-nuzūl type – mostly dubious in Schwally’s eyes, the
bulk of Medinan suras are sorted following two stages. Firstly, suras understood to be
referring to crucial events, well reported in the sīra literature and constitutive of it, are
classified and dated. They concern the changing of the prayer orientation (qibla)
(Q. 2), the Battles of Badr (Q. 8) and of Uḥud (Q. 3), the attack against the Banū Naḍīr
(Q. 59), the so-called Battle of the Trench and the ensuing execution of the Banū
Qurayẓa (Q. 33), the Pact of Ḥudaybiyya (Q. 48) and the ‘Farewell’ Pilgrimage (Q. 9).
These suras form the historical skeleton which allows, in a second step, the dating of
other suras and groups of ayas according to content similarity or psychological
contextualisation. Thus, Sūrat al-Bayyina (Q. 98) is placed after Sūrat al-Baqara
(Q. 2) for, like the latter, it contains a stern critique of the ‘people of the scripture’ (ahl
al-kitāb).73 More revealing of the unified narrative strategy of Nöldeke is the fact that
all Qur’anic mentions of sadness and difficulties are reported back to the time between
the ‘failure’ of the Battle of Uḥud (Q. 3) and the ‘success’ of the Battle of the Trench
(Q. 33). Nöldeke dates in this manner Sūrat al-Ḥadīd (Q. 57), for ‘verses 22–4 convey
the idea that Muḥammad at the time of composition was in misfortune’;74 Q. 3:111
which mentions an ‘annoyance’ (adhā) on the part of the ‘the people of the scripture’
and must have emerged in a context where Muslims, disheartened by their defeat, find
themselves exposed again to their enemies’ ‘wickedness’ (Bosheit);75 Q. 24:46–57
condemning the disobedience of insincere members of the Muslim community, etc.76
The ‘economy’ of Nöldeke’s argument could, obviously, be criticised for its
standardising effect and, indeed, over-simplification. Was it really the case that,
throughout the ten years of Muḥammad’s Medinan adventure, the only period of
difficulties and struggle surfaced after the Muslim defeat at Uḥud? Although the
two levels of composition, rhetorical and narrative, seem inevitable in historical
reconstructions, they should be noted and their mechanism studied.
Conclusion
This article has attempted to explore the principles, assumptions, merits and
shortcomings of the Geschichte des Qorâns’ chronological reordering, as well as its
specificities in relation to other nineteenth-century Orientalist classifications of the
Qur’an. While Orientalist chronological reorderings of the Qur’an, emerging in
the second half of the nineteenth century, undoubtedly mark a progress in Western
understanding of the sacred Islamic text, as they directly arose from a better
knowledge of Islamic manuscripts, the extent of the Islamic exegetical legacy on
Orientalist classifications should not be ignored. Nöldeke and his contemporaries
undoubtedly aim, through their self-acclaimed ‘critical’ methods,77 to escape from the
grip of ‘tradition’; but in providing lists of suras, which, while not pretending to be
exact chronological orders, exhibit all of the latter’s characteristics, these authors
14
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
effectively compete with traditional Islamic sources. Islamic chronological lists and
Orientalist reorderings, including that of Nöldeke, share the same exhaustive, linear
and one-dimensional perspective – ignoring complex issues of potential reuse,
reformulation, and reallocation of meaning during the time of Muḥammad himself
and after him. It could, therefore, be said that Nöldeke’s study, by smoothing out
peculiarities and by aiming at coherence and rationalisation, strengthens the traditional
Muslim framework of lists of suras more than it overturns it.
Schwally’s revision of the Geschichte des Qorâns, in 1909, fifty years after Nöldeke’s
first university dissertation, introduces a more distanced and discriminating stance
towards both Islamic traditional data and, more importantly, the wider chronological
enterprise. A tension, or heterogeneity, between two methodological stances is thus
constitutive of the second edition. It holds a delicate, and sometimes untenable,
equilibrium between two differing aims, which are inherent to any modern
chronological reordering: a critical stance to traditional sources, on the one hand,
and a commitment to determine a workable chronological order, on the other. The
degree of this tension, on occasions bordering confusion, was made possible by the
revision process and the multiple authorship of the second edition. This characteristic
might explain why no other work on the subject has acquired the same status, and
why, as has been noticed, most scholars nowadays ‘no longer try to establish a fixed
chronological order or rearrangement of suras, on whatever basis’.78
To what extent, then, is the Geschichte des Qorâns chronological study useful?
Nöldeke’s work is undoubtedly very well documented, demonstrates a remarkable
acquaintance with Arabic sources, and is packed with interesting comments notably of
a philological nature. The clarity of his approach and argumentation, in particular
regarding the three Meccan periods, cannot be denied brilliance. However, as has been
shown, the Geschichte des Qorâns cannot be said to provide a strict chronological
reordering, whilst its Meccan periodisation, though deeply coherent and persuasive,
rests on unprovable premises. Numerous authors have suggested that Nöldeke’s
classification, just like that of Bell or Blachère, should be refined and completed by
detailed thematic studies. Neal Robinson offers, with this aim, a vivid comparison
with a crossword puzzle:79
For further progress to be made [on the issue of Qur’anic chronology],
there is a need for thematic studies … Such studies would have to take
into account all the Qur’anic references to a specific subject, but
without being rigidly tied to any one chronological classification of the
sūrahs. On the basis of each study, one would draw conclusions about
the probable chronological order in which the references to the subject
occurred. The conclusions would, however, be provisional and might
have to be modified or even abandoned in the light of the findings of
The Qur’an Made Linear
15
other researches working on different themes. The whole enterprise
would be rather like trying to solve a difficult crossword puzzle.
A solution to clue 5-down may appear outstandingly brilliant, but it
is nonetheless only provisional until matching solutions have been
found to 11-across, 13-across and 16-across (or whatever clues
intersect with it).
Yet, the question remains whether a more reliable chronological reordering of the
Qur’an is achievable, or whether a multiplication of thematic studies would both
increase the availability of useful data and problematic issues of methodology, as each
researcher would undertake such studies with their own set of assumptions and
strategies. Robinson’s image of a giant crossword, however evocative, reinforces an
approach that is already deeply linear and one-dimensional, and gives the illusion that
a final solution is there, hidden in the text, waiting to be found. A diachronic approach
to the Qur’an, where important developments of thought and style do seem to have
taken place, does, nonetheless, appear indispensable. Thematic chronological studies
should be pursued, just as the Geschichte des Qorâns contribution to the field should
be valued. The challenge lies, rather, in working with imperfect tools and on the basis
of approximate premises, and keeping in mind their limitation.
NOTES
1 On ‘open’ texts, see Umberto Eco, The Open Work, tr. A. Cancogni (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1989); and Umberto Eco, The Role of the Reader: Explorations in the
Semiotics of Texts (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1984). On the Qur’an as an open
text, see Khaled Abou El Fadl, Speaking in God’s Name: Islamic Law, Authority and Women
(Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 2001), esp. ch. 4.
2 Gustav Weil, Historisch-kritische Einleitung in den Koran (Bielefeld: Velhagen & Klasing,
1844).
3 William Muir, The Life of Mahomet: With Introductory Chapters on the Original Sources
for the Biography of Mahomet, and on the Pre-Islamite History of Arabia (4 vols. London:
Society For Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1858–61); Theodor Nöldeke, Geschichte des
Qorâns (Göttingen: Dieterich, 1860); Hubert Grimme, Mohammed (2 vols. Münster: Druck und
Verlag der Aschendorffschen Buchhandlung, 1892–5), vol. 1 = Das Leben, nach den Quellen,
vol. 2 = Einleitung in den Koran: System der koranischen Theologie; Hartwig Hirschfeld,
New Researches into the Composition and Exegesis of the Qoran, Asiatic Monographs, 3
(London: Royal Asiatic Society, 1902).
4 In 1909, Schwally adapted Nöldeke’s title, and work, to contemporaneous transliteration
conventions, writing it Geschichte des Qorāns. Hereafter, citations are to Geschichte (1860) for
the first edition, and Geschichte (1909) for Schwally’s revised edition (first volume of the
second revised edition). Unless otherwise stated, quotations are made primarily on the basis of
the first edition (1860). Corresponding page references for the 1909 edition are also given,
although in some cases the initial sentence underwent a slight reformulation.
5 Régis Blachère, Introduction au Coran, 2nd rev. edn (Paris: Maisonneuve et Larose, 1959);
Régis Blachère, Le Coran, series Que sais-je (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1966);
16
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
and of course, his translation of the Qur’an presented in a chronological order, by and large
similar to Nöldeke’s, Le Coran: Traduction selon un essai de reclassement des sourates (2 vols.
Paris: Maisonneuve et Larose, 1949–50); M. Gaudefroy-Demombynes, ‘Noms d’Allah: Sur
quelques noms d’Allah dans le Coran’, Annuaire de l’Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (1929),
pp. 1–21, esp. p. 21, where he bluntly states ‘nulle étude coranique n’est possible, m^eme sur un
infime détail … si l’on ne s’inquiète point sans cesse de la chronologie coranique’. Richard
Bell’s contribution to the search for Qur’anic chronology, The Qur’an: Translated, with a
Critical Re-arrangement of the Surahs (2 vols. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,
1937–9), although important and innovative, will not be studied in this article.
6 On the importance of linearity in Western literature, contrasted to other literary practices such
as ‘sequentiality’ frequent in Japanese literature, see I.S. Brodey, ‘Natsume S^
oseki and
Laurence Sterne: Cross-Cultural Discourse on Literary Linearity’, Comparative Literature 50:3
(1998), pp. 193–219, esp. pp. 196–7.
7 Andrew Rippin, in particular, has explicitly formulated these three criticisms, see his
‘Introduction’ in Andrew Rippin (ed.), The Qur’an: Style and Content (Aldershot: Ashgate,
2001), p. xxii. See also, regarding his emphasis on the appreciation of the present literary
state of the Qur’an, his ‘Reading the Qur’ân with Richard Bell’, Journal of the American
Oriental Society 112 (1992), pp. 639–47, pp. 646–7. Lately, a detailed reappraisal and
defense of Nöldeke’s methodology has been made by Nicolai Sinai, ‘The Qur’an as Process’ in
A. Neuwirth, N. Sinai and M. Marx (eds), The Qur’an in Context: Historical and Literary
Investigations in the Qur’anic Milieu (Leiden: Brill, 2009 forthcoming). See also, in the same
volume, Nora K. Schimd’s analysis of Nöldeke’s chronological criteria of verse length,
‘Quantitative Text Analysis and Its Application to the Qur’an: Some Preliminary
Considerations’.
8 William Muir, Life of Mohammad, rev. edn (Edinburgh: J. Grant, 1912), p. xxviii.
9 Ḥusayn ibn Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥassān al-Diyārbakrī, tenth/sixteenth-century author of
Taʾrīkh al-khamīs fī aḥwāl anfās nafīs, mainly a ‘life of the Prophet’ to which is added a
historical sketch up to the first Ottoman rulers.
10 The whole quote is the following: ‘obgleich wir ihr nicht durchgängig beistimmen, mag
sie doch dem Leser des Korans im Allgemeinen als Leitung dienen; nur vergesse er nicht,
daß, besonders bei den größeren Suren, eine chronologische Bestimmung überhaupt nur
von einem Theile ihres Inhalts gelten kann, während andere, wie mir schon gesehen, und noch
in der Folge zeigen werden, einer frühern oder spätern Zeit angehören’ (Gustav Weil,
Mohammed der Prophet, sein Leben und seine Lehre, aus handschriftlichen Quellen und dem
Koran geschöpft und dargestellt (Stuttgart: Metzler, 1843), pp. 363–4). All translations are my
own.
11 Weil is only aware of a slightly divergent list mentioned in a second manuscript variant of
the Taʾrīkh al-khamīs and presented by the Austro-Hungarian Orientalist von HammerPurgstall; see Weil, Mohammed der Prophet, pp. 363–4. A few years later, in 1860, Nöldeke is
familiar with a substantial number of these lists, found in al-Yaʿqūbī’s Tārīkh, Ibn al-Nadīm’s
Fihrist, al-Bayḍāwī’s Anwār al-tanzīl, al-Suyūṭī’s Itqān, and in the fifteenth-century manuscript
by ʿOmar ibn Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Kāfī; see Geschichte (1860), pp. 46–9; Geschichte
(1909), pp. 59–63.
12 Among which were Ibn Hishām’s Sīra, parts of Ibn Saʿd’s Ṭabaqāt, al-Wāqidī’s Kitāb
al-maghāzī, some volumes of al-Ṭabarī’s Taʾrīkh al-rusul wa’l-mulūk, Mālik ibn Anas’
Muwaṭṭaʾ, and the six canonical Ḥadīth collections. See a note celebrating this major event in
the Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenländischen Gesellschaft 11 (1857), p. 569.
13 Theodor Nöldeke, De origine et compositione surarum qoranicarum ipsiusque Qorani
(Göttingen: G.F. Kaestner, 1856).
The Qur’an Made Linear
17
14 Each chapter of the biography is followed by a presentation of the suras, organised
in chronological order, which Muir attributes to this period. See for example, Muir, Life of
Mahomet, vol. 2, p. 135. His chronological reordering is also reproduced in his The Corân, its
Composition and Teaching and the Testimony it Bears to the Holy Scriptures (London: Society
For Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1878), pp. 43–7.
15 See note 3 for publication details.
16 Grimme, Mohammed, vol. 1, p. viii.
17 Muir, Life of Mahomet, vol. 2, p. 73.
18 Muir, Life of Mahomet, vol. 4, pp. 302–24.
19 Geschichte (1860), p. 61; Geschichte (1909), pp. 76–7.
20 See for example the following: ‘there is scarcely a single revelation of narrative character in
which the “sign” is not mentioned. This proves how keenly Muḥammad felt the disappointment
of being still unable to perform a miracle’ (Hirschfeld, New Researches, p. 60).
21 Hirschfeld poses, a priori, a necessary succession of Qur’anic modes (confirmatory,
declamatory, narrative, descriptive and legislative), before sorting out suras and groups of ayas
according to these predefined categories. On his methodology, see his New Researches, p. 36.
22 Hirschfeld, New Researches, p. 36. My italics.
23 Annex entitled ‘[Approximately] Chronological Arrangement of the Revelations’
(Hirschfeld, New Researches, pp. 143–5).
24 A.T. Welch, art. ‘al-Ḳurʾān’ in Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2nd edn.
25 ‘It is not possible to give an exact chronological order of these suras … due to their
similarity in content and form; we therefore enumerate those which we assign to this period
following the order that these suras have in the tradition already mentioned’ (‘Ein genaue
Zeitfolge dieser Suren … läßt sich wegen der Gleichheit ihres Inhalts und ihrer Form nicht
angeben; wir zählen daher diejenigen, welche wir in diese Periode setzen, nach der Ordnung
her, wie sie in der schon erwähnten Tradition auf einander folgen’ (Weil, Historisch-kritische
Einleitung, p. 59)).
26 Geschichte (1860), pp. 57–8; Geschichte (1909), p. 72.
27 ‘Die Gewalt der Begeisterung mußte sich allmählig vermindern, die stete Wiederholung
derselben Gedanken, die dennoch immer wieder auf unfruchtbaren Boden fielen, mußte
nachtheilig auf die Form wirken, in der sie vorgetragen wurden’ (Geschichte (1860), p. 90;
Geschichte (1909), p. 118).
28 M. Schöller, art. ‘Post-Enlightenment Academic Study of the Qurʾān’ in Encyclopaedia of
the Qurʾān.
29 ‘[Le reclassement chronologique] projette sur la Vulgate une clarté rassurante; il replace les
textes en une perspective intelligible parce que liée au déroulement plausible de l’Histoire; il
rend à la démarche occidentale sa signification et répond au désir de comprendre sans lequel on
ne saurait aller plus en avant …’ (Blachère, Le Coran, p. 29).
30 Aloys Sprenger, Das Leben und die Lehre des Mohammad, nach bisher groesstentheils
unbenutzen Quellen (3 vols. Berlin: Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1861–5), vol. 1,
pp. xv–vi. The excessive dependence on the style argument is the main criticism levelled
against Nöldeke’s reconstruction, and justifiably so. See Welch, art. ‘al-Ḳurʾān’, p. 417;
Richard Bell, Introduction to the Qur’an (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1953);
p. 102; Neal Robinson, Discovering the Qur’an: A Contemporary Approach to a Veiled Text
(London: SCM Press, 1996), p. 93.
31 ‘Man braucht sich über diese Entwicklung nicht zu wundern, da sie einem Naturgesetz
entspricht, auch darf man sie angesichts des schließlichen Erfolges nicht bedauern’ (Geschichte
18
Journal of Qur’anic Studies
(1909), p. 118). Blachère, however, developed a new line of reasoning to support Nöldeke’s
claim by referring to a ‘mystical curb’, which he suggested Muḥammad shared with
well-known mystics such as Teresa of Avila (Blachère, Introduction au Coran, pp. 256–9).
32 As the American literary and hermeneutic theorist Stanley Fish analyses the act of
interpretation and persuasion in his Is There a Text in This Class? The Authority of Interpretive
Communities (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 1980), p. 339.
33 Geschichte (1860), p. 73; Geschichte (1909), p. 91 (slight reformulation).
34 ‘Jene Sûren sind die großartigsten des ganzen Qorâns und in ihnen tritt die leidenschaftliche
Erregung des Propheten am mächtigsten hervor. Es ist, als ob man mit Augen sähe, wie die
Erde sich aufthut, die Berge zerstieben und die Sterne durcheinander geworfen werden’
(Geschichte (1860), p. 78; Geschichte (1909), p. 98).
35 ‘Die Sprache is gedehnt, matt und prosaisch, die ewigen Wiederholungen, bei denen der
Prophet sich nicht scheut, fast dieselben Worte zu gebrauchen, die aller Schärfe und Klarheit
entbehrende Beweisführung, die Niemanden überzeugt, als den, welcher schon von vorn herein
an das Endresultat glaubt, die wenig Abwechselung bietenden Erzählungen machen die
Offenbarungen oft geradezu langweilig …’ (Geschichte (1860), p. 107; Geschichte (1909),
p. 143 (slight reformulation)).
36 ‘Schon oben bemerkten wir, daß diese Sûren keinen bestimmten gemeinschaftlichen
Charakter haben, sondern daß einige mehr denen der ersten, andere denen der dritten Periode
ähnlich sind’ (Geschichte (1860), p. 89; Geschichte (1909), pp. 117–8).
37 See Sprenger, Das Leben, vol. 2, p. 213; and, more recently, R. Blachère, Le Coran (Paris:
Maisonneuve-Larose, 2005), pp. 13–15; and Angelika Neuwirth, Studien zur Komposition der
mekkanischen Suren (Berlin: W.D. Gruyter, 1981).
38 He eventually notes some of the characteristics of suras of this period (Geschichte (1860),
pp. 91–2; Geschichte (1909), pp. 119–21).
39 Angelika Neuwirth, ‘Meccan Texts – Medinan Additions? Politics and the Re-Reading of
Liturgical Communications’ in R. Arnzen and J. Thielmann (eds), Words, Texts and Concepts
Cruising the Mediterranean Sea: Studies on the Sources, Contents and Influences of Islamic
Civilization and Arabic Philosophy and Science (Leuven: Peeters Publishers, 2004), pp. 73–93,
p. 75. Neuwirth has claimed Nöldeke’s legacy, in particular regarding his treatment of the
sura as a unity and his triple Meccan periodisation, in her Studien (p. 175) and her
Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān article ‘Form and Structure of the Qurʾān’. On her
groundbreaking ‘organic’ growth approach, see her study of Sūrat al-Ḥijr, ‘Referentiality
and Textuality in Sūrat al-Ḥijr: Some observations on the Qur’anic “Canonical Process” and the
Emergence of a Community’ in Issa J. Boullata (ed.), Literary Structures of Religious Meaning
in the Qur’ān (Richmond: Curzon, 2000), pp. 143–72, esp. pp. 158–60; and her analysis of
Qur’anic readings of the Calf of Gold episode in ‘Meccan Texts – Medinan Additions?’.
Nicolai Sinai, in ‘The Qur’an as Process’, develops a similar dynamic and intratextual approach,
while equally trying to justify Nöldeke’s previous work on chronology. This claim of continuity
should also be understood in the light of the alleged current polarisation in the field of Qur’anic
studies between a ‘historico-critical’ and a ‘hyper-skeptical’ approach. See, for example,
Neuwirth, art. ‘Form and Structure’.
40 Nöldeke’s approach can be contrasted with Grimme’s who, while not justifying the logic
behind his two Meccan periods (to which he adds a small intermediary period), does explain the
order of mention of suras within each period: out of prudence and lack of information, he is
merely resorting to following the order of suras of the ʿUthmānic Codex in reverse. See
Grimme, Mohammed, vol. 2, p. 24.
41 ‘Or should we believe that Muhammad was keeping an archive in which the suras were
being ordered according to their chronology?’ (‘Oder will man etwa annehmen, daß
The Qur’an Made Linear
19
Muhammad ein Archiv führte, in welches die Sûren nach ihrer Chronologie eingetragen
wären?’) (Geschichte (1860), p. 48; Geschichte (1909), p. 62).
42 ‘Ein Hauptfehler Muir’s ist bei dieser Eintheilung, daß er auch im Einzelnen die Sûren
genau chronologisch anzuordnen sucht; zwar ist er bescheiden genug zu gestehen, daß er seinen
Zweck noch nicht ganz erreicht habe, doch ist dieser Zweck selbst eben unerreichbar’
(Geschichte (1860), p. 59; Geschichte (1909), p. 73).
43 For the first Meccan period, Geschichte (1860), p. 73; Geschichte (1909), p. 91: for
the second period, Geschichte (1860), p. 93; Geschichte (1909), p. 121: for the third
Meccan period, Geschichte (1860), p. 108; Geschichte (1909), p. 144. Contrary to what Neal
Robinson writes, it is not the case, then, that Nöldeke meant the order of mention of suras as
an exact chronological order while Schwally ‘was more cautious and recognized that within
each of the four periods the order was only approximate’ (Robinson, Discovering the Qur’an,
p. 77).
44 In the 1856 university dissertation these suras are (Mecca 1) Q. 101, Q. 90, Q. 77, Q. 87,
Q. 95, Q. 103, Q. 69; (Mecca 2) Q. 50, Q. 67; (Mecca 3) Q. 45, Q. 34, Q. 35. In the 1860 first
edition of the Geschichte only Suras 45 and 35, to which is now added Sura 88, appear in
that simple and enigmatic form. In 1909, Schwally adds a short commentary to each one
of the suras. See for example for Sura 88, Geschichte (1860), p. 82 and Geschichte (1909),
p.104.
45 Nöldeke, De Origine et compositione, pp. 44–5. References to Qur’anic ayas in this article
are based on the Cairo edition. As Nöldeke and Schwally use Flügel’s verse numbering (Corani
textus arabicus (Leipzig: Typis et sumtibus Caroli Tauchnitii, 1834)), when the two differ, it is
indicated in an endnote.
46 Geschichte (1860), p. 83; Geschichte (1909), pp. 105–6. It should be noted that the
succession of these two suras do not represent a strict chronological order but only a relative
one. Nöldeke is not implying that Sura 56 immediately followed Sura 52 but that the latter
appears to be of an earlier date.
47 ‘Daß sich unter den mekkanischen Sûren zwar einzelne Gruppen ausschieden lassen, nicht
aber eine im Einzelnen irgend genaue chronologische Anordnung aufgestellt werden kann, ist
mir immer klarer geworden, je öfter und genauer ich den Qorân untersucht habe. Manches
Indicium, das ich mir zu diesem Zwecke gemerkt hatte, hat sich mir als unzuverlässig bewiesen,
und Manches, was ich früher las ziemlich gewiss behaupten zu dürfen glaubte, erwies sich bei
wiederholter und sorgfältigerer Prüfung als unsicher’ (Geschichte (1860) p. 59; Geschichte
(1909), p. 74).
48 As he writes in his preface, Geschichte (1909), p. vii.
49 Geschichte (1860), p. 64.
50 ‘Ob freilich Sūre 96, 1–5 das älteste aller Qorānstücke ist muss dahingestellt
bleiben … Ihrem Inhalt nach lassen sich die Worte vielmehr aus jeder Zeit verstehen, in der
dem Propheten ein neuer Abschnitt aus dem himmlischen Buche mitgeteilt wurde’ (Geschichte
(1909), p. 83).
51 ‘Nachdem Muhammed sich zum Propheten berufen fühlte, war er doch, wie es scheint,
seiner Sache noch keineswegs sicher’ (Geschichte (1909), p. 84). This sentence is, of course, a
reformulation of Nöldeke’s (Geschichte (1860), p. 66).
52 Another example of puzzling textual grafts can be found in the commentary on Q. 5:73,
where Schwally seems uncomfortable with Nöldeke’s argument although he does not reject it
completely: see Geschichte (1860), p. 130; and Geschichte (1909), p. 175.
53 Geschichte (1860), p. 45; Geschichte (1909), p. 58.
54 See, for example, Geschichte (1909), p. 91, p. 218, p. 212, p. 220, p. 225.
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Journal of Qur’anic Studies
55 See Geschichte (1909), p. 92 and p. 150. For a comparison with Nöldeke’s position in 1860
regarding these passages, see respectively Geschichte (1860), p. 73 and p. 111.
56 Q. 4:106–15 in Flügel’s edition of the Qur’an, and as quoted by Nöldeke and Schwally.
57 Geschichte (1909), p. 203. Nöldeke in 1860 supports this traditional account; see
Geschichte (1860), p. 151.
58 Fred Donner, Narratives of Islamic Origins: The Beginnings of Islamic Historical Writing
(Princeton: Darwin Press, 1998), pp. 5–25.
59 Although some of Nöldeke’s positions can be ascribed to the ‘boldness of youth’
(‘jugendliche Keckheit’, as he writes himself in the preface to the second edition of the
Geschichte, p. vii), he did sustain a source-critical approach all through his life. See his article
criticising Henri Lammens’ over-critical approach (Theodor Nöldeke, ‘Die Tradition über das
Leben Muhammeds’, Der Islam 5 (1914), pp. 160–70).
60 Compare for example Nöldeke’s and Schwally’s presentation of Sura 19: while Nöldeke
states that it is the earliest to mention the name of Jesus, Schwally minimises this assertion by
adding ‘or, at least, one of the earliest’ (‘oder wenigestens eine der ältesten’) (Geschichte
(1860), p. 99, Geschichte (1909), p. 130).
61 For an interesting and, indeed, puzzling example of how the Geschichte’s chronology can
be used in thematic study of the Qur’an, see Robinson’s rapid and experimental survey of the
changing identity of female companions to believers in the hereafter (Robinson, Discovering
the Qur’an, pp. 87–9). Others scholars reducing the Geschichte’s table of contents to a
chronological list, although they themselves do not use it in conducting thematic studies of
the Qur’an, are Bell (Introduction to the Qur’an, pp. 110–14) and Welch (art. ‘al-Ḳurʾān’,
pp. 416–7). See as well T. O’Shaughnessy’s numerous article on Qur’anic terms and notions
analysed chronologically, for example ‘The Seven Names for Hell in the Qur’ān’, Bulletin
of the School of Oriental and African Studies 24:3 (1961), pp. 444–69; ‘The Qur’ānic View
of Youth and Old Age’, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 141 (1991),
pp. 33–53. Although he ultimately uses Blachère’s chronological reordering – in his own
words, ‘the arrangement of the suras made by Nöldeke-Schwally and improved by Bell and
especially by Blachère’ (‘The Seven Names for Hell’, p. 447) – the same comments, developed
below, apply. More recently, in his study of the relationship between believers and unbelievers,
David Marshall also relies on Nöldeke’s chronology, though he takes into consideration
Blachère’s contribution (David Marshall, God, Muhammad and the Unbelievers: A Qur’anic
Study (Richmond: Curzon Press, 1999), in particular pp. 21–2).
62 Geschichte (1860) p. 93; Geschichte (1909), p. 121.
63 ‘V. 17 scheint schon Sûra 77, 12ff vorauszusetzzen, und daher die Sûra jünger, als jene’
(Geschichte (1860), p. 82; Geschichte (1909), p. 104).
64 Geschichte (1860), p. 85–6; Geschichte (1909), pp. 110–1, although Schwally does insist a
little bit more than his predecessor on a probable early date for Q. 113 and Q. 114.
65 See Montgomery Watt: ‘the chief weakness of Nöldeke’s scheme, however, is that he
mostly treats suras as unities’ (W. Montgomery Watt, Bell’s Introduction to the Qur’ân
(Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1970), p. 111).
66 Lately, the view that suras are literary units has been advanced by an array of different
but converging studies, see Neuwirth’s pioneering Studien and, more recently, ‘Vom
Rezitationstext über die Liturgie zum Kanon. Zu Entstehung und Wiederauflösung der
Surenkomposition im Verlauf der Entwicklung eines islamischen Kultus’ in S. Wild (ed.),
The Qurʾān as Text (Leiden: Brill, 1996), pp. 69–105; Neal Robinson, ‘Hands Outstretched:
Towards a Re-reading of Sūrat al-Māʾida’, Journal of Qur’anic Studies 2:1 (2001),
pp. 89–106; S.M.S. El-Awa, Textual Relations in the Qur’an: Relevance, Coherence and
The Qur’an Made Linear
21
Structure (London: Routledge, 2006); Michael Cuypers, Le Festin: Une lecture de la
sourate al-Mâ’ida (Paris: Lethielleux, 2007). Previously, the opposite view of the composite
nature of suras was particularly asserted by Bell (The Qur’an) and Welch (art. ‘al-Ḳurʾān’,
p. 418).
67 ‘Wir wollen so viel als möglich die chronologische Reihenfolge innehalten, jedoch
werden einzelne Stellen, die einer anderen Zeit angehören, besser bei ihren Sûren aufgeführt,
um diese nicht zu sehr zu zerreissen’ (Geschichte (1860), p. 51; Geschichte (1909), p. 65).
The expression ‘heap of material’ is taken from Angelika Neuwirth, ‘Qur’an and
History – A Disputed Relationship: Some Reflections on Qur’anic History and History in the
Qur’an’, Journal of Qur’anic Studies 5:1 (2003), pp. 1–18, p. 6. See also Blachère’s similar
view: ‘ce procédé conduirait tout droit à une dislocation des sourates qui, menée à son terme
logique, aboutirait à un émiettement total de la Vulgate’ (Blachere, Introduction au Coran,
p. 256).
68 See Geschichte (1860), p. 83, p. 115, p. 158; Geschichte (1909), p. 105, p. 154, p. 213.
Nöldeke places Sura 22 near the end of the Medinan period. See also Geschichte (1860), p. 46;
Geschichte (1909), p. 59, where he states that Muslim chronological lists only take into account
the beginning of the suras, and adds, in a note, that this is also ‘the only thinkable way to
chronologically order suras which are partly composite in nature’.
69 ‘Mit letzterer [sura 81] wollen wir Sûr. 53 … verbinden, obgleich sie einerseits zu den
spätern der ersten Periode, anderseits nicht zu dieser dritten Abtheilung gehört; beide hängen
aber durch ihren Inhalt zusammen, indem in beiden vom Erscheinen des Engels geredet wird’
(Geschichte (1860), p. 79; Geschichte (1909), p. 99 (slight reformulation)). Nöldeke’s awkward
formulation highlights once again his ambiguity regarding his chronological ordering: to what
extent does his presentation of suras of the first Meccan period, divided in three thematic
groups, follow chronological and/or thematic considerations? This citation is Nöldeke’s only
suggestion that the third group, consisting of apocalyptic suras, might also gather the last suras
of this period. Earlier, he clearly states that, as most suras of the first period are impossible to
arrange chronologically, he is ordering them according to their content: see Geschichte (1860),
p. 73; Geschichte (1909), p. 91.
70 Hirschfeld, New Researches, pp. 120–4.
71 ‘Die 109 … gehört gewiss nicht in der erste Periode, sondern in die zweite, wo
Mohammeds Lehre doch schon so um sich gegriffen hatte, daß die Götzendiener ihm einige
Koncessionen machen wollten’ (Weil, Historisch-kritische Einleitung, p. 60). See Welch’s
mistake in his art. ‘al-Ḳurʾān’, p. 416. Similarly, Welch also misreads Weil’s ordering of the
Suras 53 and 81; see Weil, Historisch-kritische Einleitung, p. 59.
72 The notions presented here of ‘writing’ and ‘narrative’ strategies could be related to the
well-known distinction in the literary sub-discipline of narratology between the ‘plot’ and
the ‘story’ (or ‘sjuzhet’ and ‘fabula’ as first conceptualised by the Russian formalists). The
American literary theorist Jonathan Culler suggests, in reverse order, the terms ‘story’ – ‘a
sequence of actions or events, conceived as independent of their manifestation in discourse’,
and ‘discourse’ – ‘the discursive presentation or narration of events’, which could be said to be
perfectly applicable here. See Johnathan D. Culler, The Pursuit of Signs, 2nd edn, (London:
Routledge, 2001), p. 189.
73 Geschichte (1860), p. 136; Geschichte (1909), p. 185, with some additions by Schwally.
74 ‘Aus 22 f. geht, daß Muhammad zur Zeit der Abfassung im Unglück war; wir setzen daher
die Sura am wahrscheinlichsten in die Zeit zwischen der Uḥudschlacht und dem Grabenkriege’
(Geschichte (1860), p. 145; Geschichte (1909), p. 195).
75 Geschichte (1860), p. 142; Geschichte (1909), p. 192. Q. 3:107 in Flügel’s edition and as
quoted in the Geschichte.
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Journal of Qur’anic Studies
76 ‘So much is at least sure, that they belong to a time when Muḥammad was encountering
difficulties, that is between the Battle of Uḥud and the end of the Battle of the Trench’ (‘So Viel
ist wenigstens gewiss, daß sie einer Zeit zuzuschreiben sind, in der es Muhammad schlecht
ging, d.h. der Periode zwischen der Schalcht am Uḥud und dem Ende des Grabenskampfes’)
(Geschichte (1860), p. 157; Geschichte (1909), p. 211–2). Q. 24:45–56 in Flügel’s edition and
as quoted in the Geschichte. Other passages dated in this way include Q. 2:155 (Flügel,
Q. 2:150; Geschichte (1860), p. 131; Geschichte (1909), p. 177) and Q. 4:71–83 (Flügel,
Q. 4:73–85; Geschichte (1860), p. 149; Geschichte (1909), p. 201).
77 For example, Geschichte (1860), p. 51; Geschichte (1909), p. 65.
78 Schöller, art. ‘Post-Enlightenment Academic Study’, p. 192.
79 Robinson, Discovering the Qur’an, pp. 95–6. See also Gerhard Böwering, art. ‘Chronology
and the Qurʾān’ in Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān; Welch, art. ‘al-Ḳurʾān’; Watt, Bell’s
Introduction, p. 114.
DOI: 10.3366/E1465359109000394
1465 – 3591
ISSN
ﺍﳌﺠﻠﺪ ﺍﻟﻌﺎﺷﺮ ،ﺍﻟﻌﺪﺩ ﺍﻟﺜﺎﻧﻲ
2008