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Fatima bint Umar: Umm Kulthum bint Ali [4] [8] (married Umar in the year 17 AH) Zayd ibn Umar: Ruqayya bint Umar: Luhya (a woman from Yemen whose marital status with Umar is disputed; al-Waqidi said she was Umm Walad, meaning a slave woman) [3] Abd al-Rahman ibn Umar (the middle or youngest) Fukayha (as Umm Walad) [9] Zaynab bint Umar (youngest ...
Farooqui (Arabic: الفاروقي); also transliterated as Farooqi, Faruki or Al Farooqui), is a given name or surname of Arabic origin. Notable people with the surname include: Umar, second Caliph of Islam, associate of Muhammad; Hafsa bint Umar, wife of Muhammad; Abdullah ibn Umar, brother-in-law of Muhammad; Farooque (1948–2023 ...
Umm Kulthum bint Ali granddaughter: Zaynab bint Ali granddaughter: Safiyya tenth / eleventh wife* Abu Bakr father-in-law family tree: Sawda second / third wife* Umar father-in-law family tree: Umm Salama sixth wife: Juwayriya eighth wife: Maymuna eleventh / twelfth wife* Aisha second / third wife* Family tree: Zaynab fifth wife: Hafsa fourth ...
Husayn ibn Ali grandson family tree: Umm Kulthum bint Ali granddaughter: Zaynab bint Ali granddaughter: Safiyya tenth wife: Abu Bakr father-in-law family tree: Sawda second wife: Umar father-in-law family tree: Umm Salama sixth wife: Juwayriya eighth wife: Maymuna eleventh wife: Aisha third wife Family tree: Zaynab fifth wife: Hafsa fourth wife ...
Laylā bint Abī Murrah ibn ʿUrwah ibn Masʿūd al-Thaqafī (Arabic: لَيْلَىٰ بِنْت أَبِي مُرَّة ٱبْن عُرْوَة ٱبْن مَسْعُود ٱلثَّقَفِيّ), also known as Umm Laylā (Arabic: أُمّ لَيْلَىٰ), was a wife of Husayn ibn Ali and the mother of Ali al-Akbar [1] and Fatima al-Sughra.
Thuwaini bin Said Al Bu Said: 4 October 1913 husband's death: 1946 [5] Faisal bin Turki: Fatima bint Ali Al Bu Said Ali bin Salim Al Bu Said: 4 May 1891 [5] 1902 5 October 1913 husband's accession: 10 February 1932 husband's abdication: April 1967 Taimur bin Faisal: a Yemeni woman c. 1919 [5] 10 February 1932 husband's abdication: Kamile ...
While Ali reputedly advised Umar and his predecessor Abu Bakr (r. 632–634) in certain matters, [7] [8] their conflicts with Ali is also well-documented, [9] [10] [11] but largely downplayed or ignored in Sunni sources, [12] [13] where there is often a tendency to neutralize the conflicts among the companions after Muhammad.
Umar ibn ʿAlī (Arabic: عُمَر بن عَلیّ), was one of the children of Ali ibn Abi Talib who accompanied his brother, Husayn ibn Ali, to Karbala and was killed on the day of Ashura. It is said that except him (who was called Umar al-Asghar), Ali had another son called Umar al-Akbar, whose mother was Umm Habib Al-Sahba and was not ...