According to Sprenger, tradition was developed into a regular science by the
civil wars which broke out upon the murder of Othmân. These, at any rate,
imparted to it the powerful impulse of faction; and the force of that impulse
will be understood if we remember that the prize in contest was no less than
the Caliphate itself. Each party anathematised the other, and based its
denunciations upon the authority of the Prophet. The faction that followed Aly
held him and his successors in the Imâmship to be as infallible as the
Prophet. Their opponents, on the other hand, acknowledged but two sources of
infallible authority—the Coran, and the precept or practice of Mahomet. To
place the certified precedents of their Prophet upon an authoritative basis,
and to preserve them from the possibility of unauthorised additions, the
Sunnies, or vast body of orthodox Moslems, reduced tradition to a fixed form,
namely, the Sunna; by it and by the Coran alone they have ever been
guided, and hence their name.