Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Aisha bint Abi Bakr [a] (c. 614 CE – July 678) was a seventh century Arab commander, [8] politician, [9] muhadditha [10] and the third and youngest wife of prophet Muhammad. [11] [12] Aisha had an important role in early Islamic history, both during Muhammad's life and after his death.
Close to Aisha's age, the two younger wives Hafsa and Zaynab were welcomed into the household. Sawda, who was much older, extended her motherly benevolence to the younger women. Aisha and Hafsa had a lasting relationship. As for Zaynab, however, she became ill and died about three months after her marriage. [48] [49] [50]
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 bint Khuzayma fifth wife: Hafsa fourth wife: Zaynab bint Jahsh seventh wife: Umm Habiba ninth wife: Maria al-Qibtiyya twelfth wife-Disputed ...
Asmāʾ bint Abī Bakr (Arabic: أسماء بنت أبي بكر; c. 594/595 – 694-695CE) nicknamed Dhat an-Nitaqayn (meaning she with the two belts) was one of the companions of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and half-sister of his third wife Aisha. Her nickname Dhat an-Nitaqayn was given to her by Muhammad during the migration to Medina.
The children of Muhammad are said to have been born to his first wife Khadija bint Khuwaylid, except his son Ibrahim, who was born to Maria al-Qibtiyya. None of Muhammad's sons reached adulthood, but he had an adult foster son, Zayd ibn Harithah. Daughters of Muhammad all reached adulthood but only Fatima outlived her father.
Khawlah bint Hakim (Arabic: خولة بنت حكيم) was a woman in Arabia and a disciple of Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam.. She was married to Uthman bin Maz'oon, both being among the earliest converts to Islam. [1]
June 2000 - Sheikha Shamsa, daughter of Mohammed and his Algerian wife Huriah Ahmed al M'aash, flees from her family while on holiday in England. Two months later she is abducted from the streets ...
Māriyya bint Shamʿūn (Arabic: ماریة بنت شمعون), better known as Māriyyah al-Qibṭiyyah or al-Qubṭiyya (Arabic: مارية القبطية), or Maria the Copt, died 637, was an Egyptian woman who, along with her sister Sirin bint Shamun, was given as a slave to the Islamic prophet Muhammad in 628 by Al-Muqawqis, a Christian governor of Alexandria, during the territory's ...