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This entry refers to hadiths attributed jointly or in parallel to two of the greatest companion scholars: Aisha bint Abi Bakr, may Allah be pleased with her, and Abdullah ibn Abbas, may Allah be pleased with him. Aisha was the Prophet's wife and the most prolific female narrator of hadith, with approximately 2,210 narrations attributed to her. She was an authority on the Prophet's private life, household conduct, prayer, and virtually every domain of Islamic law. Ibn Abbas was the Prophet's cousin, born three years before the Hijra and raised near him, who became the foremost Quranic exegete among the companions — earning the titles Hibr al-Ummah (Scholar of the Nation) and Turjuman al-Quran (Interpreter of the Quran). When a narration is transmitted on the authority of both, it indicates parallel transmission of the same prophetic statement through two independent chains, which strengthens the report's authenticity. The combined scholarly authority of Aisha and Ibn Abbas represents two of the highest levels of narrator credibility in the hadith sciences, and hadiths attributed to both are among the most firmly established in the literature.
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