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Zaynab bint Ali (Arabic: زَيْنَب بِنْت عَلِيّ, c. 626–682), was the eldest daughter of Fatima and Ali ibn Abi Talib.The former was a daughter of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, and the latter was his cousin.
Sermon of Zaynab bint Ali in the court of Yazid are the statements made by Zaynab bint Ali in the presence of Yazid I in the aftermath of the Battle of Karbala when the captive family members of Muhammad, prophet of Islam, and the heads of those murdered were moved to the Levant (equivalent to the historical region of Syria) by the forces of Yazid I. Zaynab delivered a defiant sermon in the ...
Zainab bint Muhammad (Arabic: زَيْنَب بِنْت مُحَمَّد) (598/599–629 CE) was the eldest daughter of the Islamic prophet Muhammad by his first wife Khadijah. Marriage [ edit ]
The name of the town is derived from the shrine that contains the grave of Zaynab, daughter of ‘Alī and Fātimah and granddaughter of Muhammad.It is believed by Twelver Shī‘a Muslims that the Sayyidah Zaynab Mosque is the authentic burial place of Lady Zaynab, whereas the Sayyidah Zainab Mosque in Cairo by the same name belongs to Zaynab bint Yahya bint Zayd bint ‘Alī Zayn al ...
The tomb became a centre of Twelver religious studies in Syria and a destination of mass pilgrimage by Twelver Shia Muslims from across the Muslim world, beginning in the 1980s. The zenith of visitation normally occurs in the summer. The present-day mosque that hosts the tomb was built in 1990. [1]
Umm Kulthum was the fourth child of Fatima and Ali ibn Abi Talib, and their youngest daughter. [1] The former was the daughter of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and the latter was his cousin.
Zaynab's father was Jahsh ibn Riyab, an immigrant from the Asad ibn Khuzaymah tribe who had settled in Mecca under the protection of the Umayya clan. Her mother was Umayma bint Abd al-Muttalib, a member of the Hashim clan of the Quraysh tribe and a sister of Muhammad's father.
Zaynab was the first of Muhammad’s wives who was not from the Quraysh tribe. [2] [3] Her father, Khuzayma ibn al-Harith, was from the Hilal tribe in Mecca. [4]Her mother is sometimes said to have been Hind bint Awf, but this tradition is weak.