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Khadija bint Khuwaylid [a] (c. 554 – November 619) was the first wife of Muhammad.Born into an aristocratic clan of the Quraysh, she was an affluent merchant in her own right and was known to have a noble personality within her tribe.
English translations of the novel by Neelam Hussain titled The Inner Courtyard and by Daisy Rockwell as The Women's Courtyard were published in 2001 and 2018, respectively. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] A Pakistani TV series adaptation of the novel starring Mawra Hocane , Ahad Raza Mir , Ahsan Khan and Sajal Aly was aired on Hum TV from 2018 to 2019. [ 7 ]
She was his only wife until her death in 619 (the Year of Sorrow) ended their 24-year-long marriage. [3] After Khadija, Muhammad went on to marry ten women: Sawdah bint Zam'ah in 619; Aisha bint Abi Bakr in 623; Hafsah bint Umar, Zaynab bint Khuzayma, and Hind bint Abi Umayya in 625; Zaynab bint Jahsh in 627; Juwayriya bint al-Harith and Ramla ...
Khadija, Muhammad's first and only wife for the 25 years up to her death, died in 619 CE when she was about 65 years old. [1] Muhammad was almost 50 at this time, and the death happened not long after the end of the boycott against Muhammad's clan. [1] The boycott prohibited, among other things, trade with Muhammad's family. [3]
Khadija Mastoor (Urdu: خدیجہ مستور, romanized: K͟hadījah Mastūr; 11 December 1927 – 25 July 1982) was a Pakistani Urdu-language short story writer and novelist. [1] Her novel Aangan is widely considered a literary masterpiece in Urdu literature, which has also been adapted as a television drama series .
Haveli now mainly consists of six people: Khameera, her elder son, Azhar (Mustafa Afridi), who is usually busy in Congress work and the independence movement, his wife (Uzma Beg); and sons-Jameel, who he loathes because he is a jobless poet and Shakeel, Chammi , the abandoned daughter of Jafar and Azhar's niece, the old house help, Kareeman and ...
Khloé Kardashian’s close friend Khadijah Haqq and her husband, Bobby McCray, have called it quits after 13 years of marriage. “Now more than ever I have been relying on prayer. Family is so ...
Zameen (Urdu: زمین, romanized: Zamīn, lit. 'land'), alternatively spelled Zamin, is an Urdu novel by Pakistani novelist and short story writer Khadija Mastoor.The novel was published posthumously by Idara-e-Farogh-e-Urdu in 1983. [2]