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  their death. Still the superior check and authority of a record must in
  practice have gradually superseded reliance on unassisted memory. Collections
  of the earlier traditionists fell sometimes into the hands of later authors,
  and we find Wâckidi and others making use of these treasures in a manner
  inconsistent with the canons of the Sunna. 
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  Sprenger states the following as the successive stages of record: (1) Notes or
  memoranda; (2) School or college collections; (3) Regular books. Our previous
  remarks refer exclusively to the first, that is, notes professing to be used
  simply for the refreshment of the memory. Towards the end of the first
  century, the second class, or School collections, began to be in vogue. Orwa
  and Zohri, for example, used such records in their prelections. The pupils
  were at liberty either to trust solely to their memory, or to make copies of
  their Master's collection ; but so rigidly was the oral canon still followed,
  that the copies thus taken had no authority until they were first rehearsed by
  the scholar in the hearing of his Master; and the date of each rehearsal (árz)
  was usually noted upon his manuscript by the copyist.1 
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  The third class of documents, answering to our published Books, was of
  much later rise. A Mahometan authority tells us that Ibn Jureij and Ibn Abi
  Rabia, who both died about the middle of the second century, were the first
  who wrote books. Mussulman writers themselves understand this passage as
  meaning that these persons were the first to make use of manuscript tradition
  in any shape. But this appears a mistake: the simple purport being that these
  were the first to put forth "Books," or collections of tradition, which
  carried their own authority with them, the condition of oral repetition
  being no longer required. It had become a question of accuracy of manuscript
  and edition; no longer pure accuracy of recollection. 
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   The use of books gradually displaced the old and cumbrous 
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