| Wives of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad | | Aisha Muhammad is a common male name for Muslims. ...
Ayesha is sometimes used as a womans name. ...
Hafsa bint Umar Hafsa bint Umar was the daughter of Umar ibn al-Khattab and wife of Muhammad. ...
Juwayriya bint al-Harith Juwayriyya bint Harith was married to prophet Muhammad when he was fifty-eight years old and she was twenty. ...
Khadija Maria al-Qibtiyya Maria al-Qibtiyya (alternatively, especially in non-Arabic traditions, Maria Qupthiya), or Maria the Copt, was a Coptic slave girl sent to the Prophet Muhammad by the king of Egypt. ...
Maymuna bint al-Harith Maymuna bint al-Harith married the Prophet Muhammad when Muhammad was sixty years old and she was thirty six. ...
Safiyya bint Huyayy Safiyya bint Huyayy was married to the Prophet Muhammad when Muhammad was sixty years old and she was seventeen. ...
Sawada bint Zama Sawda bint Zama was the wife of prophet Muhammad. ...
Umm Habibah Ramla Umm Habiba Ramla was married to prophet Muhammad one year after the Hijra. ...
Umm Salama Hind bint Abi Umayya Umm Salama Hind bint Abi Umayya was a wife of prophet Muhammad. ...
Zaynab bint Jahsh Zaynab bint Jahsh (Arabic: زينب بنت جحش ) was a wife of prophet Muhammad. ...
Zaynab bint Khuzayma Zaynab bint Khuzayma (Arabic: زينب ) was married to prophet Muhammad soon after she had been made a widow when her husband was killed at the battle of Badr. ...
| Khadija (Arabic: خديجه ) was the first wife of the Prophet Muhammad.A Jewess, according to traditions she became the first female convert to Islam, the new religion Muhammad had begun to preach. She was approximately 15 years his senior when she proposed the idea of marriage. She married him in 595. She supported him throughout his mission and such was his love for her that he took no other wife until after her death. The year of her death has been named the "Year of Grief", because of the devastation it caused the Prophet. She was his only wife for about 25 years until her death. Arabic (العربية) is a Semitic language, closely related to Hebrew and Aramaic. ...
Marriage is a relationship that plays a key role in the definition of many families. ...
In numerous religions, including Abrahamic religions, Jah religions, Sikhism, and many forms of Paganism, a prophet is an intermediary with a deity, particularly someone who speaks for the deity or interprets the deitys will or mind. ...
Muhammad is a common male name for Muslims. ...
Islam (Arabic al-islām الإسلام, listen) the submission to God is a monotheistic faith and the worlds second-largest religion. ...
Khadija's age has been usually thought of as 40 at the time of her second marriage. However it must be pointed out that the union produced five children, something which would have been unlikely at the time for a women over 40 (and indeed is difficult even with modern medicine). This points to a either a much more younger Khadija, or supports the asseration that her older daughters were from a previous marriage. Khadija had five children, one son and four daughters. All five children were born before Muhammad started preaching about Islam. The son, named Qasim, died when he was two. Muhammad was nicknamed Abu Qasim, meaning the father of Qasim. Some Muslim historians argue that some of her daughters were from her previous marriage, while others insist that all her children were by Muhammad. Her oldest daughter Zainab accepted Islam before her husband and migrated from Mecca to Medina. She died around 8 A.H (A.H means After Hijra). Her other two daughters, Ruqayya and Umm Khulthum, were married to two sons of Muhammad's uncle and a bitter enemy, Abu Lahab who is condemned in chapter 111 of the Qur'an. Both daughters were divorced in retaliation after Muhammad started preaching about Islam. Ruqayya married Uthman ibn Affan, who later became the third caliph, and migrated with him to the city of Axum in Ethiopia when Muslims were being persecuted in Mecca. She later returned to Medina and died around 2 A.H. Uthman then married her sister Umm Khulthum, who died around 9 A.H, without children. Her fourth daughter Fatima was married to Ali ibn Abi Talib, later the fourth Caliph. For other uses see Hijra. ...
Uthman ibn Affan (Arabic: عثمان بن عفان) (c. ...
Axum, also Aksum, is a city in northern Ethiopia, located at the base of the Adoua mountains. ...
This article needs cleanup. ...
Imaginary portrait of Ali ibn Abi Talib, by Iranian artist. ...
Khadija's distant cousin, Waraqah ibn Nawfal, was a monk and a convert to the Nestorian Christian sect. When Muhammad reportedly started receiving revelation, Waraqah identified him as the Prophet. Most ideas brought to Muhammad concerning christian beliefs were obtained through contact with Nestorians. The term Nestorianism is eponymous, even though the person who lent his name to it always denied the associated belief. ...
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