Sayyiduna Ibn Umar (may Allah be pleased with them both) narrates: The Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings be upon him) dispatched a detachment towards Najd, which obtained many camels as spoils of war. So the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) gave each of them one camel as a voluntary gift, even though they had not set out with any specific promise of such a gift, and their shares amounted to twelve camels each.
Hadith Referenceسنن سعید بن منصور / كتاب الجهاد / 3881
Hadith Gradingمحدثین:إسناده صحيح
Hadith Takhrij«إسناده صحيح، وأخرجه البخاري فى «صحيحه» برقم: 3134، 4338، ومسلم فى «صحيحه» برقم: 1749، ومالك فى «الموطأ» برقم: 1637، وابن حبان فى «صحيحه» برقم: 4833، 4834، وأبو داود فى «سننه» برقم: 2741، وسعيد بن منصور فى «سننه» ترقيم الدرالسلفية برقم:، 2704، وأحمد فى «مسنده» برقم: 4669، والحميدي فى «مسنده» برقم: 711، وابن أبى شيبة فى «مصنفه» برقم: 38020»
Brief Explanation
Isma'il ibn 'Ayyash: Although the established rule regarding him is that when he narrates from non-Shami narrators, his narration is weak, here he has narrated from 'Ubaydullah ibn 'Umar al-'Umari, who is a Madinan. However, some scholars have considered the narration of Isma'il from 'Ubaydullah ibn 'Umar to be acceptable. Khatib al-Baghdadi, Ibn 'Abd al-Barr, and others have regarded the chains of Isma'il from 'Ubaydullah as well-known narrations (riwayah bil-ma'ruf), and have not declared them weak.
'Ubaydullah ibn 'Umar al-'Umari: Trustworthy (thiqah), jurist (faqih), and a classmate of Imam Malik.