Abstract
The works created by gathering forty of the hadiths, which are the words of the Prophet, are called Cihl Hadith / Forty Hadith. Forty Hadiths express the world and life view of Islam with its religious, moral, instructive, literary and social features. Such works were both written in verse and prose, and were arranged in a mixed style in verse-prose. Forty Hadiths, written by poets and writers in Turkish, Arabic and Persian literatures for centuries, are among the most important types of religious literature. Abdurrahman Jami, who lived in Iran in the ninth century, wrote a Cihl Hadith, which translated forty hadiths and eighty couplets. This work was especially imitated by many Turkish poets. Jami wrote this work in plain, fluent and simple language, and avoided fancy and ambiguous expressions. This article provided detailed information about Abdurrahman Jami, copies of works from the library described Cihl Hadith found in Turkey and the Persian text of a copy of Cihl Hadith dated 886 and translated into Turkish.