The
History of al-Tabari
Biographies of the Prophet s
Companions and Their Successors
Volume XXXIX
Translated by Ella Landau-Tasseron
The present volume is the collection of excerpts from al-Tabari’s
biographical work entided The Supplement to the Supplemented (Dhayl
al-mudhayyal).
In the introduction to his History, al-Tabari declared his intention to
append to it a biographical work for the readers convenience. Only a col¬
lection of excerpts has survived, however. It was first published as pan of
the Leiden edition of the History and is now presented as a volume in the
Tabari Translation Project. It brings together biographies of Companions,
Successors, and scholars of subsequept generations; many chapters are
devoted to women related to the Prophet who played a role in the trans¬
mission of knowledge. The biographies vary in length and style, ranging
from mere identification of a person to long accounts and anecdotes.
This volume represents a long tradition characteristic of Muslim
culture. Muslim scholars developed biographical literature into a rich and
complex genre. It was intended to be an auxiliary branch of religious
study, aimed at determining the reliability of chains of transmission
through which traditions were handed down. More often than not, how¬
ever, works in this genre contain valuable historical information of the
kind often ignored by the authors of mainstream history books. Even
though not a complete work, this volume is thus not merely a supplement
to al-Tabaris History but also a source in its own right, often supplying
new and rare insights into events and social conditions.
SUNY Series in Near Eastern Studies
Said Amir Arjomand, Editor
The State University of New York Press
ISBN 0-7914-3820-6
780791
428207
9 0 0 0 0 >
THE HISTORY OF AL-TABARI
AN ANNOTATED TRANSLATION
VOLUME XXXIX
Biographies of the Prophet’s Companions
and Their Successors
Al-Tabari's Supplement to His History
The History of al-Tabari
Editorial Board
Ihsan Abbas, University of Jordan, Amman
C. E. Bosworth, The University of Manchester
Franz Rosenthal, Yale University
Everett K. Rowson, The University of Pennsylvania
Ehsan Yar-Shater, Columbia University (General Editor)
Estelle Whelan, Editorial Coordinator
Center for Iranian Studies
Columbia University
SUNY
SERIES IN NEAR EASTERN STUDIES
Said Amir Arjomand, Editor
We note with profound regret the death on October 13,
1997, of Dr. Estelle Whelan, who capably coordinated and
saw through the press the publication of most of the
volumes in this series, including the present one.
The preparation of this volume was made possible in part by
a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities,
Bibliotheca Persica
Edited by Ehsan Yar-Shater
The History of al-Tabari
(Ta’rlkh al-rusul wa’l-mnluk)
Volume xxxix
Biographies of the Prophet's
Companions and Their Successors
translated and annotated
by
Ella Landau-Tasseron
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
State University of New York Press
Published by
State University of New York Press, Albany
© 1998 State University of New York
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
No part of this book may be used or reproduced
in any manner whatsoever without written permission
except in the case of brief quotations embodied in
critical articles and reviews. No part of this book may be stored in a
retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means including
electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying,
recording, or otherwise without written permission in writing of the
publisher.
For information, address State University of New York
Press, State University Plaza, Albany, N.Y., 12,246
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Tabari, 838?-923-
[Tarikh al-rusul wa-al-muluk. English. Selections]
Biographies of the Prophet's companions and their successors /
translated and annotated by Ella Landau-Tasseron
p. cm.—(SUNY series in Near Eastern studies) (The history
of al-Tabari = Ta’rikh al-rusul wall muluk ; v. 39)
(Bibliotheca Persica)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-7914-2819-2 (alk. paper).—ISBN 0-7914-2820-6
(pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Muhammad, Prophet, d. 632—Companions—Biography—Early
works to 1800. 2. Muslims—Saudi Arabia—Biography—Early
works to 1800. 3. Muslim women—Saudi Arabia—Biography—
Early works to 1800. I. Landau-Tasseron, Ella. II. Title. III. Title:
Tabari's supplement to his History. IV. Series. V. Series: Tabari,
8381-923. Tarikh al-rusul wa-al-muluk. English ; v. 39. VI. Series:
Bibliotheca Persica (Albany, N.Y.)
DS38.2.T313 1988 vol. 39
[BP 75 . 5 ]
297.6'48—dc2i
[B]
97-45138
CIP
Preface
9
The History of Prophets and Kings ( Ta’rikh al-rusul wa’l-
muluk) by Abu Ja'far Muhammad b. Jarir al-Tabari (839-923), here
rendered as The History of al-Tabari, is by common consent the
most important universal history produced in the world of Islam.
It has been translated here in its entirety for the first time for the
benefit of non-Arabists, with historical and philological notes for
those interested in the particulars of the text.
In his monumental work al-Tabari explores the history of the
ancient nations, with special emphasis on biblical peoples and
prophets, the legendary and factual history of ancient Iran, and, in
great detail, the rise of Islam, the life of the Prophet Muhammad,
and the history of the Islamic world down to the year 915. The
first volume of this translation contains a biography of al-Tabari
and a discussion of the method, scope, and value of his work. It
also provides information on some of the technical considerations
that have guided the work of the translators. The thirty-ninth
volume is a compendium of biographies of early members of the
Muslim community, compiled by al-Tabari; although not strictly
a part of his History, it complements it.
The History has been divided here into thirty-nine volumes,
each of which covers about 200 pages of the original Arabic text in
the Leiden edition. An attempt has been made to draw the divid¬
ing lines between the individual volumes in such a way that each
is to some degree independent and can be read as such. The page
numbers of the Leiden edition appear in the margins of the trans¬
lated volumes.
VI
Preface
Al-Tabari very often quotes his sources verbatim and traces the
chain of transmission ( isnad ) to an original source. The chains of
transmitters are, for the sake of brevity, rendered by only a dash
(—) between the individual links in the chain. Thus, "According
to Ibn Humayd—Salamah—Ibn Ishaq" means that al-Tabari re¬
ceived the report from Ibn Humayd, who said that he was told by
Salamah, who said that he was told by Ibn Ishaq, and so on. The
numerous subtle and important differences in the original Arabic
wording have been disregarded.
The table of contents at the beginning of each volume gives a
brief survey of the topics dealt with in that particular volume. It
also includes the headings and subheadings as they appear in al-
Tabari's text, as well as those occasionally introduced by the
translator.
Well-known place names, such as, for instance, Mecca, Bagh¬
dad, Jerusalem, Damascus, and the Yemen, are given in their En¬
glish spellings. Less common place names, which are the vast
majority, are transliterated. Biblical figures appear in the accepted
English spelling. Iranian names are usually transcribed according
to their Arabic forms, and the presumed Iranian forms are often
discussed in the footnotes.
Technical terms have been translated wherever possible, but
some, such as "dirham," and "imam," have been retained in Ara¬
bic forms. Others that cannot be translated with sufficient preci¬
sion have been retained and italicized, as well as footnoted.
The annotation is aimed chiefly at clarifying difficult passages,
identifying individuals and place names, and discussing textual
difficulties. Much leeway has been left to the translators to include
in the footnotes whatever they consider necessary and helpful.
The bibliographies list all the sources mentioned in the anno¬
tation.
The index in each volume contains all the names of persons and
places referred to in the text, as well as those mentioned in the
notes as far as they refer to the medieval period. It does not include
the names of modem scholars. A general index, it is hoped, will
appear after all the volumes have been published.
For further details concerning the series and acknowledgments,
see Preface to Volume I.
Ehsan Yar-Shater
Contents
9
Preface / v
Abbreviations / xiii
Translator's Foreword / xv
Tables i. Genealogy of Quraysh / xxviii
2. Genealogy of the Hashimites / xxix
Excerpts from the Book Entitled the
Supplement to the Supplemented:
Biographies of Companions and
Their Successors
[Women Who Died before the Emigration ( Hijrah ) / 3
[Those Who Died in the Year 8 (629/630)] / 4
[The Year 9 (630/631)] / 11
[The Year n (632/633)] / 12
[Those Who Died in the Year 14 (635/636)] / 19
Contents
viii
[Those Who Were Killed in the Year 16 (637/638)] / 22
[Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 23 (643/644)] / 22
[Those Who Died in the Year 32 (652/653)] / 23
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 33 (653/654) / 25
[Those Who Were Killed in the Year 36 (656/657)] / 27
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 37 (657/658) / 28
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 40 (660/661) / 36
Those Who Died in the Year 50 (670/671) / 37
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 52 (672) / 40
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 54 (673/674) / 40
[Those Who Died in the Year 64 (683/684)] / 51
Those Who Died in the Year 65 (684/685)] / 52
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 68 (687/688) / 54
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 74 (693/694)] / 57
Those Who Died in the Year 78 (697/698) / 58
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 80 (699/700) / 59
The Names of Those Companions Who Outlived the Prophet
and Transmitted Traditions and Knowledge / 95
The Clients ( Mawali ) of the Banu Hashim / 98
The Allies ( Hulafa ’) of the Banu Hashim / 100
Those of the Banu al-Muttalib b. 'Abd Manaf b. Qusayy Who
Transmitted [Traditions] from the Prophet / 102
Contents
IX
The Allies of the Banu Nawfal b. 'Abd Manaf b. Qusayy / 104
The Names of the Campanions Who Outlived the Prophet and
from Whom Knowledge Was Transmitted, of the Banu Asad
b. ‘Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy b. Kilab / 105
The Names of Those Who Transmitted [Traditions] from the
Prophet, of the Banu 'Abd al-Dar b. Qusayy b. Kilab / 106
The Names of Those Who Transmitted [Traditions] from the
Prophet, of the Banu Zuhrah b. Kilab, Brother of Qusayy b.
Kilab / 107
Those Who Transmitted [Traditions] from the Prophet, of the
Allies of the Banu Zuhrah / no
The Names of Those Who Transmitted [Traditions] from the
Prophet, of the Banu Taym b. Murrah / m
[Those Who Transmitted Traditions], of the Banu Makhzum b.
Yaqazah b. Murrah b. Ka'b / m
The Allies of the Banu Makhzum Who Outlived the Prophet
and Transmitted [Traditions] from Him / 116
Those of the Banu 'Adi b. Ka'b b. Lu’ayy b. Ghalib Who
Outlived the Prophet and Transmitted [Traditions] from
Him / 117
[Those of the Banu Jumah Who Outlived the Prophet and
Transmitted Traditions from Him] / 118
[The Companions] of the Banu 'Amir b. Lu’ayy b. Ghalib [Who
Outlived the Prophet and Transmitted Traditions from
Him] / 118
[Those of the Kinanah Who Outlived the Prophet and
Transmitted Traditions from Him] / ir9
[Those of the Tamim Who Outlived the Prophet and
Transmitted Traditions from Him] / 123
X
Contents
Those of the Banu Dabbah b. Udd b. Tabikhah b. al-Yas b.
Mudar [Who Outlived the Prophet and Transmitted
Traditions from Him] / 125
Those of the Banu Ja'dah b. Ka'b b. Rabi'ah b. 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah
[Who Outlived the Prophet and Transmitted Traditions from
Him] / 126
Those of the Banu Numayr b. 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah [Who Outlived
the Prophet and Transmitted Traditions from Him] / 127
[Those of the Banu Taghlib Who Outlived the Prophet and
Transmitted Traditions from Him] / 129
The Names of Those Who Believed in the Prophet and Followed
Him during His Lifetime, Then Outlived Him and
Transmitted [Traditions] from Him, of Yemeni Tribes / 130
The Names of Some of Those Belonging to Other Yemeni
Tribes Who Believed in the Prophet and Followed Him during
His Lifetime, Outlived Him, and Transmitted Traditions from
Him / 137
The Names of the Ash'aris Who Transmitted [Traditions] from
the Prophet / 147
The Names of [the People of] Hadramawt Who Transmitted
[Traditions] from the Prophet / 148
Of the Kindah / 149
Those Who Transmitted [Traditions] from the Prophet, of the
Rest of the Azd / 150
Of the Hamdan / 151
The Biographies of the Women Who Embraced Islam during the
Prophet's Lifetime: Those of Them Who Passed away before
the Emigration / 161
Those of Them Who Died during the Prophet's Lifetime after
the Emigration / 161
Contents
The Prophet's Wives Who Died during His Lifetime / 163
The [Death] Dates of the Prophet's Daughters, Paternal Aunts,
and Wives Who Died after Him / 166
The Death Dates of the Prophet's Wives Who Died after
Him / 169
Biographies of the Women Whose Death Dates Are Known, of
the Emigrants, Ansar, and Others Who Were the Prophet's
Contemporaries, Believed in Him, and Followed Him / 191
Names of the HashimI Women Believers Who Outlived the
Prophet, Transmitted Traditions from Him, and Had [Their]
Knowledge Transmitted from Them / 195
Clients [of the Banu Hashim] / 199
Arab Women [Married into the Quraysh] Who Outlived the
Prophet and Transmitted [Traditions] from Him, Having
Given Him the Oath of Allegiance and Embraced Islam
during His Lifetime / 201
The Death Dates of Successors and People of the Following
Generations, of [Our] Deceased Forefathers Who Had Been
Scholars and Transmitters of Traditions / 206
Successors Who Died in the Year 32 (652/653) / 206
Those Who Died in the Year 81 (700/701) / 208
Those Who Died in the Year 83 (702/703) / 209
Those Who Died in the Year 105 (723/724) / 215
Those Who Died in the Year hi (729/730) / 228
Those Who Died in the Year 112 (730/731) / 229
Those Who Died in the Year 150 (767/768) / 250
Contents
xii
Those Who Died in the Year 161 (777/778) / 257
QurashI [Women], [Younger] Contemporaries of Companions of
the Prophet, from Whom Knowledge Was Transmitted / 278
The Following are Names and Kunyahs Mentioned in the
History / 281
The Women Contemporary with the Prophet Who Gave Him
the Oath of Allegiance and Are Known by Their
Kunyahs / 286
The Kunyahs of People Who Outlived the Prophet and Were
Known by Their Names, Not by Their Kunyahs / 287
Those of the Prophet's Companions Who Were Known by [the
Names of] Their Patrons or Brothers or by Their [Own]
Nicknames or by Their Grandfathers, Instead of Their Actual
Fathers / 300
The Names of the Successors Who Were Known by Their
Kunyahs / 303
The Kunyahs of the Successors Who Were Known by Their
Names, Rather than by Their Kunyahs / 314
The Kunyahs of People of Subsequent Generations Who Were
Known by Their Names, Rather than by Their
Kunyahs / 332
Bibliography of Cited Works / 339
Index / 357
Abbreviations
AO: Acta Orientalia
AOH: Acta Orientalia Hungarica
BSOAS: Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies
El 1 : The Encyclopaedia of Islam, ist edition. Leiden, 1913-42.
El 2 : The Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2nd edition. Leiden, i960-.
1 C: Islamic Culture
IOS: Israel Oriental Studies
IQ: Islamic Quarterly
JAOS: Journal of the American Oriental Society
JASB: Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal
JESHO: Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient
JNES: Journal of Near Eastern Studies
JPHS: Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society
JRAS: Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society
JSAI: Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam
JSS: Journal of Semitic Studies
MIDEO: Melanges de l’Institut Dominicain d’Etudes Orientales du
Caire
MW: Muslim World
WZKM: Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde Morgenlandes
ZDMG: Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft
Translator's Foreword
9
In the introduction to his History al-Tabari declares his intention
to append to the work biographical notes on the Prophet's Compa¬
nions, their Successors, and transmitters of traditions from subse¬
quent generations. This, no doubt, is the work entitled The Sup¬
plement to the Supplemented: Biographies of Companions and
Their Sucessors (Dhayl al-mudhayyal min ta’rikh al-sahabah wa-
al-tabiTn), contained in an incomplete form in this volume. 1
In spite of its title, the book does not belong to the literary genre
of "supplement" [dhayl, literally, "a tail"), which consists of his¬
tories or biographical dictionaries written by later authors as con¬
tinuations of earlier works. The author of a "supplement" would
usually start the book where the earlier author had left off and
would tend to follow the style and patterns used by his pre¬
decessor. The result, however, was most often an independent
work. For al-Tabari's History such "supplements" were written
by Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Malik al-Hamadhanl, Abu Ahmad al-
Farghanl, and 'Arib b. Sa'd al-Qurtubl. 2
I wish to thank those who helped me in my efforts to understand de Goeje's
introduction, written in Latin: Prof. Benjamin Z. Kedar, Dr. Milka Levi-Rubin, and
Mr. Nils Grede. The difficulties that de Goeje's text presented even after all their
assistance do not reflect upon their efforts. Thanks are also due to Prof. Yohannan
Friedmann for some valuable comments and to Dr. Estelle Whelan for her kindness
and patience throughout the years that it took to complete this work,
r. Intioductio, p. xni; Rosenthal, "Introduction," 89-90.
2. Dhayls were sometimes called silah or takmilah, "continuation" or "com¬
pletion." The works of al-Hamadhani and al-Qurtubi were published in combina-
XVI
Translator's Foreword
Describing al-Tabari's work, al-Sakhawi says the following:
The great History includes the sources of the [various]
reports, [as well as] the accounts of the world history, but
it is limited by the author's purpose, namely, to supply
information about history, wars, and conquests. Only
rarely does [al-Tabari] deal with disparaging transmitters
or declaring them trustworthy ( al-jarh wa-al-ta’dil), be¬
cause his work on biographies suffices in this respect ( ikti-
fa’an bi-ta’nkhihi fi al-rijal). Thus the information he
gives [in the History ] about the great religious teachers ( al -
a’immah ) is not exhaustive, for his interest lay in convey¬
ing clear detailed accounts of wars and conquests, stories
of ancient prophets and kings, past nations, and bygone
generations. He adduced [all this information], together
with its sources and many chains of transmission,- he was
erudite in all these and other matters.
Al-Tabari wrote a supplement to the above-mentioned
History-, moreover, he supplemented the supplement as
well. 3
The supplements mentioned by al-Sakhawi have nothing to do
with our Supplement to the Supplemented (Dhayl al-mudhay-
yal ). De Goeje was probably right in concluding, although hesi¬
tantly, that al-Sakhawi is alluding here to what is better known as
"the two sections." 4 The original History apparently reached the
end of the first civil war; the first section covered the Umayyad
period, the second the 'Abbasid period, up to the year 302/914-
i 5- 5
Al-Sakhawi, however, also mentions al-Tabari's Dhayl al-
mudhayyal in this paragraph, referring to it as "his (al-Tabari's)
work on biographies of traditionists" ( ta’rikhihi fi al-rijal). He
tion with al-Tabari's Dhayl al-mudhayyal by Dar al-Ma'arif in Cairo (1977) and
Dar al-Fikr in Beirut (1987). See also Ibn al-Nadim, I, 565; al-Sakhawi, 302; Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, I, 3; al-Kattani, 98-99. On the genre see Farah.
3. Wa-lahu 'ala ta’ilkhihi al-madhkui dhayl, bal dhayyala 'ala al-dhayl aydan.
See al-Sakhawi, 301-2. See also Rosenthal, History, 488, for a different translation
of the passage.
4. Introductio," p. xv.
5. Rosenthal, "Introduction," 133; Yaqut, Irshad, 2456-57; Ibn al-Nadim, I, 565.
Translator's Foreword xvii
considers it to be of another genre than, and independent from, the
History.
There are thus two unusual aspects of al-Tabari's historical and
biographical work. First, he supplemented his own History-, his
supplements did not remain independent but were integrated into
the main work. Second, he entitled his biographical work "A Sup¬
plement," even though it did not belong to the dhayl genre. It
should, of course, be noted that in al-Tabari's time this genre had
not yet been developed, so that he was not deviating from any
convention. 6 However, it is no accident that most of the later
biobibliographical sources, al-Sakhawi included, avoid the gen¬
uine title of the book, referring to it simply as Ta’rlkh al-rijdl
(Biographies of Traditionists). 7 On the other hand, quotations
from the work appear either under the original title, sometimes in
shortened form, or under al-Tabari's name alone. 8
The biographical literature, to which Dhayl al-mudhayyal
properly belongs, is unique to Muslim culture. It has deep roots in
pre-Islamic Arab interest in genealogy, but at the same time it is
an outgrowth of the characteristic Muslim way of preserving
knowledge. Prophetic traditions ( hadlths ) and other accounts
were discussed and passed on among members of the Muslim
community, and in the process much was falsified and invented.
Becoming aware of this fact, Muslim scholars developed a source
critique, the "science of traditionists" (' ilm al-rijal), to help them
evaluate transmitted material. Personal merits of the transmit¬
ters, as well as facts about their lives (like death dates and dwell¬
ing places), were checked. If, for example, it was found that a
6. Cf. a later author, Abu Shamah of the thirteenth century, who wrote a supple¬
ment to his own work; al-Sakhawi, 305.
7. In the context of the genre of biographies the word rijal, literally, "men,"
serves as a technical term for "traditionists" or "transmitters." For references to al-
Tabari's Ta’rikh al-rijal, see Introductio, p. xui; Rosenthal, "Introduction," 89-90;
Gilliot, "Oeuvres," 71; al-Sakhawi, 301, al-Dhahabi, Siyar, XIV, 273; idem, Ta’r-
ikh, XXTV, 283; Isma'il al-Baghdadl, n, 26; Ibn Khayr, I, 227; Ibn 'Asakir, XV, 165.
See also Goldziher, "Literarische Thatigkeit." Of all the sources only Yaqut
(.Irshad 2444, 2457) and Ibn Khayr call the work Dhayl al-mudhayyal.
8. Citing hy the author's name alone was the common practice in the literature.
For quotations from the Dhayl, see, e.g., Ibn Qudamah, 237; al-Quhpa’i, IV, 109;
Ibn Hajar, Isdbah, 1 , 5 59, n, 376; Ibn 'Abd al-Barr, 1 , 12. In al-Daraqutni, V, 2564, the
editor gives a list of dozens of references; some of them are not correct, and some
are lacking in the extant version of the Dhayl.
xviii Translator's Foreword
certain person claimed to have transmitted from someone whom
he could not have met, the material he transmitted was to be
rejected. In the case of Companions, their Islamic records, or ser¬
vices to the cause of Islam ( sabiqah ), were mentioned, as well as
any detail or anecdote connecting them with the Prophet. In the
case of subsequent generations, the degree of the person's piety
and sometimes his political or sectarian biases would be recorded.
Many variations developed in the genre, however, in both the
content and the arrangement of the collected biographical details.
Often, the biographies contain material totally irrelevant to the
purpose of the genre mentioned above, for example, physical de¬
scriptions, personal traits (e.g., generosity), and historical events
in which the subjects were involved. Such is the case with Dhayl
al-mudhayyal. On the other hand, there are works that contain
only an evaluation of the person's trustworthiness. This subgenre
is more properly called "the disparaging and declaring as trustwor¬
thy" [al-jarh wa-al-ta r dll).
The earliest works in the genre date from the late second/eighth
to the beginning of the third/ninth century. They were often ar¬
ranged in categories of time and place, or tribes, called "layers"
[tabaqat , meaning also "generations"). Variations of this method
were also followed, in part, in Dhayl al-mudhayyal . 9
The present volume is merely a collection of excerpts from
Dhayl al-mudhayyal, as indicated by the title found on the second
part of the Cairo manuscript: The Second Part of Excerpts (mun-
takhab) from the Book [Called] The Supplement to the Supple¬
mented: Biographies of Companions and Their Successors, Com¬
piled by Abu Ja’far Muhammad b. Jarir b. Yazld al-Tabari,
Transmitted from Him by Abu ’All Makhlad b. Ja'far b. Makhlad
b. Sahl b. Humran al-Baqarhl . 10 It is not possible to infer from
this title the identity of the compiler of the excerpts. It may have
9. Among the earliest authors in this genre were Yahya b. Ma'In (d. 203/818),
Muhammad b. 'Umar al-Waqidi (d. 204/819), his pupil and scribe Muhammad b.
Sa'd (d. 230/845), Khalifahb. Khayyat (d. 240/854), Muslim b. al-Hajjaj (d. 261/875),
and Muhammad b. Isma'il al-Bukhari (d. 2.5 6/870). See al-Sakhawi, 315, 336—57; al-
Kattani, 96-105, 108-10. The genre is much more complex than is possible to
describe in the present context. See further Hafsi; Gibb, "Islamic Biographical
Literature"; Juynboll, Muslim Tradition, 134-90; Auchterlonie, 2-3.
10. Loth, 581.
Translator's Foreword
xix
been the transmitter Abu 'All Makhlad b. Ja'far, as Loth and Rieu
thought, or any other transmitter of subsequent generations, a
view preferred by de Goeje and Rosenthal. 11 It is perhaps worthy
of note that Maldilad b. Ja'far (d. 369/979-80) was accused of buy¬
ing books, among them al-Tabari's History, and transmitting
them in a nonnormative way, that is, without having studied
them with a teacher and without having acquired an authoriza¬
tion for transmission ( ijazah ). 12 Such a character was perhaps
more likely than others to have taken a free hand with al-Tabari's
work, making a rather confused and deficient abridgment from it.
According to Yaqut, 13 the original Dhayl followed a genealogi¬
cal order ['ala tartlb al-aqrab fa-al-aqrab), partly reflected in the
extant collection of excerpts. Presumably some chronological or¬
der was maintained as well, reflected in the text in rudimentary
fashion. However, no ordering principle governs the present text
as a whole. The semichronological order followed in the begin¬
ning is abandoned at some point to make way for various discon¬
nected rubrics. Occasionally the material bears no relation to the
rubric under which it occurs, and chapters end and begin without
any indication. Some entries are recorded twice, without the use
of cross-refereces. When a cross-reference does appear, the refer¬
ence is to a chapter omitted from the collection. 14
Dhayl al-mudhayyal also included an introduction lacking in
the present collection. Of its content we know only one state¬
ment, of an extreme nature: Al-Tabari, who founded his own
school of law, declares everyone who contradicts his views to be
an infidel. He states that he would not accept the testimony of, or
trust traditions transmitted by, people who held Qadari, Shi'i, or
KharijI doctrines, nor would he accept (legal) arguments based on
reasoning. 15 In spite of this statement, he held Abu Hanlfah in
great esteem 16 and included in Dhayl al-mudhayyal many Shi'is
11. Loth, 582; Introductio, pp. xiii, xiv ; Rosenthal, "Introduction," 89.
12. Al-Khatlb al-Baghdadl, Ta’iikh, XDI, 176-77; Ibn Hajar, Lisan, VI, 9.
13. Yaqut, Iishad, 2457.
14. Al-Tabari, IE, 2478; see also Introductio, p. xiv. For a detailed analysis of the
structure of the Dhayl, see Landau-Tasseron, "Biographical Work."
15. Yaqut, Iishad, 2463, but see a different interpretation of the passage in
Rosenthal, "Introduction," 90.
16. Yaqut, Iishad, 2463; see al-Tabari, IE, 2510 (the biography of Abu Hanlfah).
XX
Translator's Foreword
and also others of different persuasions, his statement, however,
may signify that his pursuit of the "science of traditionists" ['ilm
al-rijal) arose from a broader interest than usual. Not only the
transmission of the prophetic tradition but also the application of
religious law was to profit from his biographical work.
While recording the biographies of eminent members of the
Muslim community al-Tabari mentions the great historical
events in which they were involved. Wishing to be concise, he
refers the reader to another place for further details, saying: "The
accounts about him were already recorded in our book entitled
The Supplemented ( al-Mudhayyal)." 17 There is a mystery here. It
appears that a book by someone as well known as al-Tabari is
virtually unknown. De Goeje found only two references to al-
Mudhayyal in the literature, one in an anonymous work on astrol¬
ogy and chronology, the other in Hamzah al-Isfahani's book. 18
The latter refers to al-Mudhayyal as a very famous work, 19 but no
biobibliography, whether ancient or modem, records a book by al-
Tabari under this title. What was this Mudhayyal, then, and how
did it relate to the History and to the present volume, Dhayl al-
mudhayyal 7 .
Loth defines Dhayl al-mudhayyal as an " 'Appendix zum Sup¬
plement' seines (al-Tabari's) grossen Geschichtswerks." The
Mudhayyal was, in his opinion, the work announced by al-Tabari
in the introduction to the History } it was a preparatory work ( Vo-
rarbeit ) in which al-Tabari collected material for the History. The
Dhayl was extracted from a more comprehensive work ( al-
Mudhayyal 7 .). 20 Loth thus conceives of the three titles, Ta’rikh,
al-Mudhayyal, and Dhayl al-mudhayyal, as applying to three
different works. He seems to be confusing the Dhayl, announced
in the introduction to the History, with al-Mudhayyal. There is
no evidence that al-Mudhayyal was a Vorarbeit. His rendering of
the title Dhayl al-mudhayyal as "Appendix zum Supplement" is
17. Al-Tabari, III, 2321, 2335, 2476, 2498. For the reference occurring on page
2358, see p. xxii, below.
18. Introductio, p. xiv. The anonymous work is Dustur al-munajjimln } see
Blochet, 12.
19. Hamzah al-Isfahani, 121.
20. Loth, 582.
Translator's Foreword
xxi
not accurate either. Mudhayyal, the passive form of “to append/'
"to supplement," means “the supplemented," as mentioned by de
Goeje 21
From de Goeje's careful phrasing it is difficult to infer whether
he conceived of al-Mudhayyal as an abridgment of the History or
as a different title for it, so that the two would in fact be one work.
The difficulty lies perhaps in the History itself. By this title de
Goeje sometimes means the extant text of the History, that is, the
published version of Ta’rlkh al-rusul wa-al-muluk, at other times
a much longer version said by some sources to have existed. 22 I
hope to clarify this matter in what follows.
If de Goeje meant to say that al-Mudhayyal was identical with
the History as we have it today, he was probably right. There is no
real evidence that a longer version actually existed. The descrip¬
tion of al-Mudhayyal by Hamzah al-Isfahani fits the History very
well and cannot be applied to any other work by al-Tabari. Unfor¬
tunately, the quotation given by al-Isfahani from al-Mudhayyal
cannot be located in the History, but this in itself does not prove
the existence of a longer version. De Goeje adduces many other
instances of quotations lacking in the Leiden edition. This phe¬
nomenon is common and is often encountered, in relation not
only to the History but to many other texts as well. To give but
one example, al-Tabari quotes from Ibn Sa'd passages lacking in
the Sachau edition. 23 This does not necessarily mean that the
extant text, edited by Sachau, is an abridgment of Ibn Sa'd's "origi¬
nal" Tabaqdt.
The very title al-Mudhayyal proves that this work is identical
with the History. It will be recalled that al-Tabari planned to, and
did, supplement the History with biographical notes, which
makes the History a supplemented work, a work to which some¬
thing was appended, in other words, a mudhayyal.
An additional proof of this identification can be found in analy¬
sis of the preposition min. One of al-Tabari's own references to al-
Mudhayyal runs as follows: "His story is already recorded in our
book entitled al-Mudhayyal min mukhtasar ta’rlkh al-rusul wa-
21. Introduction, xm.
22. Introductio, especially pp. xiv, xv-xvi. On the longer version, see below.
23. See al-Tabari, in, 2359, 2378, 2387, 2505, 2516, 2517, 2519, 2520.
xxu
Translator's Foreword
al-muluk (The Supplemented Work: The Abridged History of the
Prophets and Kings ). 24 This title is constructed precisely as is the
title of the present volume, Dhayl al-mudhayyal min ta’rikh al-
sahabah wa-al-tabi’in. The first two words are a nicely put, but
too general, title,- min, literally "namely," specifies the real sub¬
ject matter of the work [min mubayyinah). In other words, Dhayl
al-mudhayyal is identical with Ta’rikh al-sahabah wa-al-tabiTn.
In precisely the same way al-Mudhayyal is identical with Mukh-
tasar ta’rikh al-rusul wa-al-muluk. The latter, however, is by no
means an abridgment of the History as we know it but the History
itself. This is proved by the fact that one of the History manu¬
scripts bears the title The Abridged History of the Prophets and
Kings . 25 This title perhaps reflects al-Tabari's modesty, as Rosen¬
thal suggests. It may, however, also be explained by the following
story: Al-Tabari asked his pupils (or scribes): "Do you have enough
energy for [writing down] the Qur’an exegesis?" They asked how
long it was, and he said "Thirty thousand pages," whereupon the
people retorted: "We shall have died before finishing such a task."
So al-Tabari abridged the work in 3,000 pages. Then he asked the
people: "Do you have enough energy for [writing down] the world
history from Adam to our own time?" They asked how long it
was, and his answer was as before, whereupon they responded as
before. Al-Tabari then said, "We are in God's hands! People have
no ambition any more." He sat down and abridged the History in
3,000 pages. 26
As noted previously, it is not certain that there ever existed a
version of the History ten times longer than the extant text. This
story may be a mere anecdote expressing wonder at al-Tabari's
achievement. The fact remains that the History as we know it is
also called The Abridged History. We are thus left with three
titles for the same work, the famous History edited by de Goeje
and others: The Abridged History of Prophets and Kings, The
Supplemented Work ( al-Mudhayyal ), and History of the Prophets
24. Al-Tabari, EH, 2358.
25. Rosenthal, "Introduction," 130-31.
26. Intioductio, p. lxxxiii (the Arabic text); al-Khatib al-Baghdadl, II, 163; al-
Dhahabi, Siyar, XIV, 274-75; Yaqut, Iishad, 2442; Ibn al-Jawzi, Muntazam, XIII,
Translator's Foreword xxiii
and Kings. It is doubtful that the last refers to an original ten times
(or otherwise) longer than the extant text.
In the matter of Dhayl al-mudhayyal de Goeje's opinion is en¬
tirely clear. He thinks that this title includes both al-Mudhayyal,
or abridgment (of the History), and the biographical notes. 27 In the
same vein Rosenthal holds that by the title al-Mudhayyal, men¬
tioned by al-Tabari in our volume, Dhayl al-mudhayyal was
meant and that the two are in fact identical. 28 The problem with
this view is that it cannot be harmonized with the technique of
citation used by al-Tabari. When he writes, "I already said this in
my book entitled al-Mudhayyal ," he must be referring to a work
separate from the one in which he makes the reference, that is,
Dhayl al-mudhayyal. Had the two titles referred to thfe same
book, al-Tabari ought to have used the terms set for cross-
references. 29
There are, however, other grounds for reconsidering de Goeje's
opinion. He bases himself on the descriptions of Dhayl al-
mudhayyal by al-Dhahabi and Ibn Khayr al-Ishbili, who mention
al-Tabari's "book on ta’rlkh known as Dhayl al-mudhayyal ,"
which contained "twenty parts." 30 From these descriptions de
Goeje drew his conception of Dhayl al-mudhayyal as a large work
containing historical material ( ta’rikh ) near in size and content to
the History itself. But a "part" (/uz’) is by no means identical with
a "volume." It is unspecified and may be of any size. For example,
each juz’ in the manuscript of excerpts from Dhayl al-mudhayyal
comprised no more than twelve to eighteen pages. 31 Twenty parts,
then, do not necessarily correspond to the length of the History.
As for the word ta’rlkh, it does not always mean "history." "The
oldest works called ta’rikh were collections of biographies," as
Rosenthal observed in his History of Muslim Historiography . 32 It
is also worthy of note that Ibn Khayr al-Ishbili acquired Dhayl al¬
ly. Introductio, pp. xiv-xv.
28. Rosenthal, "Introduction," 89.
29. For example, wa-qad dhakartu fima mada min hadha al-kitab or wa-qad
taqaddama.
30. Introductio, pp. xiv-xv ; Ibn Khayr, ny ; al-Dhahabi, Ta'rikh, XXTV, 283;
idem, Siyar, XIV, 273.
31. Loth, 581.
32. See Rosenthal, History, 13-14.
XXIV
Translator's Foreword
mudhayyal through a chain of transmitters, which included Ibn
'Abd al-Barr. 33 This author, himself a genealogist and biographer,
used Dhayl al-mudhayyal in his own biographical dictionary,
al-Istl'ab , 34 Therefore Dhayl al-mudhayyal, as described by al-
Dhahabi and Ibn Khary, was not a history combined with biogra¬
phies but a purely biographical work, a ta’rikh fi al-hjal. There is
no evidence that it was combined with al-Tabari's History, in an
"abridged" form or otherwise.
The sources used by al-Tabari cannot be properly analyzed, as
the present volume does not contain the original text of the
Dhayl. It may, however, be mentioned that al-Waqidi's Tabaqat
was one of the main sources 35 Al-Tabari quotes both al-Waqidl
and Ibn Sa'd, which means that he knew both al-Waqidi's original,
now lost, and its adaptation by al-Waqidi's pupil and scribe. Other
early historians, genealogists, and biographers cited in the extant
Dhayl are Abu Ma'shar Najih (d. 370/787), 36 Abu Mikhnaf (d.
I 57 / 774 )/ 37 Abu 'Ubaydah (d. 209/824), 38 al-Mada’ini (d. 225/
84 o), 39 Ibn Ishaq (d. 150/767), 40 Musa b. 'Uqbah (d. 141/758), 41
Abu Zur'ah (d. 283/895), 42 and Ibn al-Kalbl (d. 204/8r9). 43 Count¬
less other informants are mentioned, and research into this matter
is a project in itself.
The deficiencies of the present form of the Dhayl include a total
lack of uniformity and consistency. Some entries are made up of
long stories, others of mere names; still others contain traditions
transmitted by the persons discussed with hardly any biographical
details. The information is often rudimentary, so that one can
hardly distinguish among eminent Muslims, insignificant Com-
33. Ibn Khayr, I, 227.
34. Ibn 'Abd al-Barr, IstTab, I, 12.
35. On this work, see F. Segzin, I, 297 (no. 12); al-Sakhawi, 317; Mustafa, I, 164.
36. Al-Tabari, 2333, 2347, 2433, 2444, 2503, 2535.
37. Ibid., 2317, 2367.
38. Ibid., 2443, 2356, 2459.
39. Ibid., 2324, 2332, 2333, 2337, 2338.
40. Ibid., 2296-97, 2303, 2312.
41. Ibid., 2306, 2324, 2328.
42. Ibid., 2402, 2473.
43. Ibid., 2300, 2306, 2317. Note that the quotations from the early historians
may be at second hand, that is, copied by al-Tabari not from the originals but from
other sources. On this issue, see Landau-Tasseron, "Reconstruction.”
Translator's Foreword
xxv
panions, tribal chiefs, caliphs, and names invented for chains of
transmission ( isnads ). This situation is probably owing partly to
the fact that the present form is not the original one, partly to the
availability or otherwise of biographical details.
By the time Muslim scholars started to inquire about people
mentioned in chains of transmission many of these people had
been forgotten. Moreover, some of them never really existed, for
many traditions and isnads were fabricated, a fact that generated
the whole field of inquiry in the first place. Additional confusion
was caused by the fact that many people in Muslim society bore
similar or identical names. Yet Muslim scholars did their utmost
to obtain biographical information, with varying degrees of suc¬
cess. I therefore thought it useful to add references to other bio¬
graphical works, for both completeness and comparison. The
choice of sources for the purpose was difficult, given the enor¬
mous wealth of biographical works published to date and aug¬
mented daily with new publications. I finally chose Khalifah b.
Khayyat (d. 240/854), Ahmad b. Yahya al-Baladhuri (d. 279/892),
and Ibn Hibban al-Busti (d. 354/965), knowing that other choices
could be equally valid. My decision was not arbitrary, however.
Khalifah b. Khayyat wrote precisely in the same genres used by al-
Tabari some fifty years later: history arranged according to years
(annals) and biographies arranged according to categories [taba-
qat). Al-Baladhuri, preceding al-Tabari by a generation, wrote a
special kind of integrated combination of history and biography.
Ibn Hibban, a generation later than al-Tabari, divided the bio¬
graphical material he collected into three different works: one
dealing with famous scholars, another with trustworthy scholars,
and a third with dubious transmitters. The first is arranged accord¬
ing to categories (time and place), the last two alphabetically. 44
Additional light may thus be shed on what material was circulat¬
ing in al-Tabari's lifetime and on the differences and similarities
between near-contemporaneous authors in dealing with this
material.
The obvious source to compare with Dhayl al-mudhayyal is Ibn
Sa'd's Tabaqat, but it does not serve the purpose just defined pre-
44. Only the first, Mashahii, was systematically combed for parallels; the other
two works were used occasionally.
XXVI
Translator's Foreword
cisely because it is a reflection of al-Tabari's main source, al-
Waqidi's Tabaqat. I therefore did not comb Ibn Sa'd's work for
parallels but traced back to it only al-Tabari's explicit quotations
and some of de Goeje's references. There is much more of Ibn Sa'd
(and al-Waqidl) in the Dhayl that I did not point out, and the
expert reader is invited to check Ibn Sa'd with the help of its
excellent indexes.
The task of systematically combing the works of Khalifah, al-
Baladhurl, and Ibn Hibban, as well as tracing parallels in Ibn Sa'd,
was carried out by Tariq Abu Rajab. As a true book lover, he
sometimes exceeded his brief and, ignoring my strict warnings
about lack of space, occasionally came up with additional inter¬
esting references. I hereby express my gratitude to him for his
invaluable assistance.
In addition to the aforementioned works, other sources were
occasionally consulted, when the person discussed seemed impor¬
tant in some way. I have no space to explain all my decisions, and I
admit that they were somewhat arbitrary. A person who seems
important to me may be utterly insignificant in someone else's
opinion. A great many sources I left untouched for lack of space.
For further research one may want to obtain information about
additional biographical works from Auchterlonie's guide. 45 Some
recent works not included in this guide are the following: al-Taba-
qat, by Muslim b. al-Hajjaj; al-Ta’rikh, by Yahya b. Ma'in ; Mu'jam
rijal al-hadith, by al-Khu’I; Mawsu’at rijal al-kutub al-tis'ah, by
al-Bandarl and Hasan. Prophetic traditions quoted by al-Tabari
may be traced in Tuhfat al-ashraf, by al-MizzI, and Mawsu at
atraf al-hadith, by Muhammad Zaghlul. Last but by no means
least, the recent monumental work by Josef van Ess should be
mentioned, with its rich information about early sects, scholars,
and religious figures of the second and third centuries of the Mus¬
lim era. 46
The references described are meant for experts. As this volume
is aimed primarily at the nonexpert, many notes are given to make
the text and context comprehensible. Lack of space compelled me
to have as little recourse as possible to cross-references. Both
45. Auchterlonie.
46. For all these works, see "Bibliography of Cited Works."
Translator's Foreword
xxvn
names and concepts were annotated only once each, usually when
first occurring in the text. The index should therefore be used
when an unexplained item occurs, in order to locate the explana¬
tion in a previous (or sometimes later) note.
Another matter omitted for lack of time and space was checking
the chains of transmission [isndds), which include hundreds of
names. I did, however, try to identify persons mentioned only by
their first names or nicknames by collating isndds from both the
History and the Dhayl. The identification, when there is one, is
recorded between brackets. The latter device also served for inser¬
ting additions into the text, for the sake of comprehensibility.
Surely the present volume leaves much to be desired. Thinking
of the improvements I would like to introduce in it, I can only cite
al-Tabari's pupils' response to his suggestions: hadha mimmd
tafna al-a'mar qabla tamdmihi.
I nevertheless hope that this volume will be of some use to
nonexperts and experts alike.
Ella Landau-Tasseron
Table 1. Genealogy of Quraysh
'Abd Manaf 'Abd Qusayy Abd al-Dar 'Abd al-'Uzza
Table 2. Genealogy of the Hashimites
Excerpts from the Book Entitled
The Supplement to the
Supplemented: Biographies of
Companions and Their Successors
In the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate:
Abu Ja'far Muhammad b. Jarir b. Yazid al-Tabari wrote in his
book The Supplement to the Supplemented: Biographies of Com¬
panions and Their Successors :
[Women Who Died Before the Emigration (HijrahJ/
Among the women who died in Mecca before the Prophet's Emi¬
gration [to Medina] was his wife, Khadljah, daughter of Khuwaylid
b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy. 1
Khadljah's kunyah 2 was Umm Hind. Hind, after whom she was
named, was her son from Abu Halah b. al-Nabbash b. Zurarah, her
husband before [she married] the Prophet. 3
1. A member of the QurashI clan Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza; see Ibn Hazm, famhaiat,
117-2.5. On the Quraysh, the Prophet's tribe, see "Kuraysh," EP, V, 434-35 (W. M.
Watt); Kister, "Mecca and Tamlm"; idem, "Some Reports Concerning Mecca."
Khadijah was the Prophet's first wife and the first to believe in him when he was
inspired. She also bore most of the Prophet's children. See Guillaume, 82-83,107-
13, 191; Lings, 34-36, 44-45, 96; Kister, "The Sons of Khadlja"; "Khadidja," EP,
IV, 898-99 (W. M. Watt); Muir, 24-25; Ibn Hisham, I, 198-203, 253-57; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 396-405; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il, 847-56; al-Salihl, 35-76.
2. The Arabs' polite way of addressing people is by referring to their parenthood,
so that one is addressed as "father/mother of so-and-so." This specific kind of by¬
name is called a kunyah, sometimes rendered as agnomen.
3. On Abu Halah and his clan, see Kister, "On Strangers and Allies," 120-26.
[2296]
4
Biographies
She died three years before the Emigration, at the age of sixty-
five. This information was transmitted to me by al-Harith [b. Mu¬
hammad]—[Muhammad] Ibn Sa'd—Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Wa-
qidi]—Muhammad b. Salih and 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abd al-'Aziz.
Khadijah died in the month of Ramadan that year and was bur¬
ied in al-Hajun. 4
[Those Who Died in the Year 8]
(May i, 629-April 19, 630)
Among those who died at the beginning of the year 8 was Zaynab,
daughter of the Prophet. 5
Zaynab was the Prophet's eldest daughter.
The cause of her death was as follows: When she was sent away
from Mecca to the Prophet [in Medina] Habbar b. al-Aswad and
another man overtook her,- as it was reported, one of them pushed
her, whereupon she fell on a rock, miscarried her child, and lost a
lot of blood. She had this injury and ultimately died of it.
Among those who were killed was Ja'far b. Abi Talib b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib b. Hashim b 'Abd Manaf. 6
Ja'far was killed as a shahid 7 in [the battle of] Mu’tah. 8
4. A mountain in Mecca where a cemetery was situated; see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-
buldan, II, 215.
5. "Zainab bint Muhammad," El 1 , VII, 1200 (V. Vacca). Cf. Guillaume, 314-16;
Lings, 158-59; Ibn Sa'd, VIII, 20-24; Ibn Hisham, n, 308-12; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I,
269, 357, 397-400; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’zlkh, 56; al-Halabi, n, 205-6, IH, 106;
Ibnal-JawzI, Muntazam, m, 124-25; al-Dhahabl, Siyar, n, 247; al-Tabari, Ta’iikh,
I, 1348-50. See also p. 13, below.
6. The Prophet's uncle. See "Dja'far b. Abi Talib," El 2 , n, 372 (L. Veccia Vag-
lieri); Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 49-50; idem, Tabaqat, 4-5; Ibn Hanbal,
Fada’il, 889-91; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 283-84.
7. A Muslim killed in battle against infidels is promised paradise uncondi¬
tionally,- he is a shahid, usually translated as "martyr." Although the translation is
literally accurate, the connotations of the two terms are completely different.
Martyrdom connotes the death of a powerless, suffering individual at the hands of
an oppressor, whereas shahadah connotes mainly fearlessness in battle. I have
therefore chosen to leave shahid untranslated.
8. A town east of the Dead Sea, where a Muslim raiding force was defeated by a
Byzantine force in the year 8/629. See "Mu’ta," El 2 , VII, 756-57 (F. Buhl);
Guillaume, 531-40; Muir, 392-95,- Lings 286-90; Watt, Muhammad at Medina,
53 - 55 ; al-Waqidl, 755-69; Ibn Hisham, IV, 15-30; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1614-28;
Ibn Abi Shaybah, Musannaf, IV, 577.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 5
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Salamah [b. al-Fadl]
and Abu Tumaylah—Ibn Ishaq—Yahya b. 'Abbad—his father: My
stepfather 9 belonged to the Banu Murrah b. 'Awf, 10 and took part
in that raid; that is, the raid of Mu’tah. He told me [the follow¬
ing]: 11 "By God, it is as if I [can even now] see Ja'far as he jumped [2,297]
down from his roan mare, hamstrung her, and fought the enemy
until he was killed."
It was reported that Ja'far was the first Muslim who hamstrung
[his horse]. 12
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b.
Muhammad b. 'Umar b. 'All—his father: A Byzantine soldier hit
him, that is, Ja'far, and cut him in half; one half fell in a vineyard.
Thirty or thirty-odd wounds were found on one half of his body.
Ja'far had been converted to Islam before the Prophet entered
the house of al-Arqam to preach from there. 13 He then emigrated
to Abyssinia in the second emigration, 14 with his wife Asma’ bt.
'Umays, where he stayed until after the Prophet's Emigration to
Medina. 15 He returned from Abyssinia to the Prophet while the
latter was in Khaybar, in the year 7/628. 16
9. Abi alladhl arda'anl, meaning the husband of the child's wet nurse. Cf. Ibn
Ishaq, Sizah, 218; al-Waqidi, 13, 688.
10. An important north Arabian tribe; see "Murra," EP, VII, 628-30 (E. Landau-
Tasseron).
11. Cf. Guillaume, 534; Ibn Abi Shaybah, Musannaf, IV, 577,- al-Halabi, HI, 77;
Ibn al-Athir, Kamil, n, 113-14; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, r6i4.
12. Arab warriors of pre-Islamic times practiced 'aqr, that is, cutting their own
horses' hamstrings during battle to prevent the possibility of fleeing the enemy.
Muslim scholars debated the permissibility of this act and placed restrictions upon
it. The original pre-Islamic social significance of the custom was obfuscated in
Islamic times by the argument that the purpose of hamstringing was to prevent a
victorious enemy from obtaining Muslim horses from a Muslim defeat. See Ibn
Hudhayl, I, 40, 48 (text), n, 207, 225 (translation). Mercier is incorrect in translat¬
ing 'aqi as having the horse killed.
13. See p. 47, below.
14. While Muhammad was active in Mecca, some dozens of his followers emi¬
grated to Abyssinia at his suggestion, for reasons that are not entirely clear, proba¬
bly in a.d. 615-17. The followers gradually returned, though some stayed till
7/628. See Guillaume, 146-53,167-69; Lings, 8r-84; Watt, Muhammad at Mecca,
109-17; Caetani, I, 262-84.
15. That is, in the year 622. See Guillaume, 221-27, 281; Lings, 118-22; "Hid-
jra," EP, m, 366-67 (W. M. Watt).
16. Khaybar was a Jewish settlement north of Medina, conquered by Muham¬
mad in Muharram 7/May 628. See Guillaume, 510-19; Lings, 263-69,- "Khaybar,"
EP, IV, 1137-43 (L. Veccia Vagheri); al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1575-84.
6
Biographies
Ja'far was killed in Jumada I, 8/September 629, having been one
of the Prophet's commanders of the expedition sent against the
Byzantines. 17
Ja'far's kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Zayd al-Hibb ("the beloved") 18 b. Harithah b. Sharahll b. 'Abd
al-'Uzza b. Imri’ al-Qays b. 'Amir b. al Nu'man b. 'Amir b. 'Abd
Wadd b. 'Awf b. Kinanah b. 'Awf b. 'Udhrah b. Zayd al-Lat b.
Rufaydah b. Thawr b. Kalb b. Wabarah b. Taghlib b. Halwan b.
'Imran b. al-Haf b. Quda'ah—whose [real name] was 'Amr—b.
Malik b. 'Amr b. Murrah b. Malik b. Himyar b. Saba’ b. Yashjub b.
Ya'rub b. Qahtan. 19
It was reported that in pre-Islamic times Zayd's mother, Su'da
bt. Tha'labah b. 'Abd 'Amir b. Aflat b. Silsilah of the Banu Ma'n of
Tayyi’, 20 [once] paid a visit to her family and brought Zayd along
[2298] with her. Horsemen of the Banu al-Qayn b. Jasr 21 raided the tents
of the Banu Ma'n, the clan of Zayd's mother, and seized Zayd, who
was then already grown up, [a young man] of full stature. They
brought him to the market at 'Ukkaz 22 and offered him for sale,
whereupon Hakim b. Hizam b. Khuwaylid b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b.
Qusayy purchased him for his paternal aunt, Khadljah bt.
Khuwaylid, for 400 dirhams. When the Prophet married Khadljah
she gave him Zayd, and he took him.
Zayd's father, Harithah b. Sharahll, said after he had lost him:
17. That is, Mu’tah.
18. So called because the Prophet loved him. See "Zaid b. Haritha," EP, VII,
1194 {V. Vacca); Ibn Sa'd, III/i, 27-32; al-Zubayr b. Bakkar, 316-22; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 49-50,- idem, Tabaqat, 6 ; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 467-73, III
(MahmudI), 283-84; Ibn Hisham, I, 264-66.
19. The key names in this long genealogy are Qahtan, the eponym of all the so-
called "southern" (Yemeni) Arabs; Quda'ah, a large confederation with branches
extending as far north as Syria already in pre-Islamic times,- and Kalb, one of the
most powerful tribes of the Quda'ah. See "Kalb b. Wabara," EP, IV, 492-94 (A. A.
Dixon); "Kuda'a," EP, V, 315-18 (M. J. Kister); "Kahtan," EP, TV, 447 (A. Fischer
[A. K. Irvine]).
20. A large confederation of southern origin, owning large territories in Najd.
See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat 398-404; Caskel, II, 57-61.
21. A powerful tribe of the Quda'ah confederation; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat 453-
54 -
22. An important market held every year in the vicinity of Mecca. See "'Ukkaz,"
in Glasse, 407; Kister, "Mecca and Tamim," 146, 156.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 7
I weep for Zayd not knowing what became of him.
Is he alive, is he to be expected, or has Death come over
him?
By God I ask yet do not comprehend.
Was it the plain or the mountain that brought about your
end?
I wish that I knew: Will you ever return?
In this world only for your coming back I yearn.
The sun reminds me of him when it dawns,
evoking his memory as the dusk falls.
When the winds blow they stir up memories like dust.
O how long my sorrow and fear for him last!
I shall hasten all my reddish-white camels all over the earth,
toiling.
Neither I nor the camels will be weary of wandering
All my life long, until I die,
for every man is mortal, even though hopes lie.
To 'Amr and Qays 23 do I entrust [Zayd's fate]
and to Yazid and then to Jabal.
He means Jabalah b. Harithah, Zayd's elder brother. By Yazid he
means Zayd's half-brother, Yazid b. Ka'b b. Sharahil.
People from [the tribe of] Kalb came to Mecca on pilgrimage and
saw Zayd. They recognized one another, and Zayd said: "Convey
the following verses to my family, for I know that they have
grieved for me." Then he said:
Carry a message from me to my people, for I am far away,
that close to the House 24 and the places of pilgrimage I
stay.
So let go of the grief that has deeply saddened you,
and do not hasten all your camels all over the earth.
I live with the best of families, may God be blessed;
from father to son, of Ma'add 25 they are the noblest.
23. Brothers of Harithah, Zayd's father; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 563 (s.v. Zayd b.
Harithah).
24. That is, the Ka'bah.
25. Ma'add, together with his "son" Nizar and his "father," 'Adnan, are con¬
sidered the patriarchs, or eponyms, of the tribes believed to be of northern origin. In
fact these are generic names for these tribes, and as such they are interchangeable.
[2299]
8
Biographies
The Kalbi people went away and informed Zayd's father. He
exclaimed: "My son, by the Lord of the Ka'bah!" They described
Zayd's situation and the people with whom he was staying.
Harithah and Ka'b, sons of Sharahil, then set out to ransom Zayd.
They came to Mecca and asked about the Prophet, whereupon
they were told that he was in the mosque. They went in to [see]
[2300] him and said: "O son of 'Abdallah, O son of 'Abd al-Muttalib, O
son of Hashim, 26 O son of the chief of the clan! You are the people
of God's sanctuary,- you live next to it and you are protected by
it. 27 By His house you set captives free and feed the prisoners. 28
We come to see you about a member of our family who is staying
with you, so be benevolent and kind toward us in the matter of his
ransom, for we will pay you handsomely." The Prophet asked
"Who is he?" and they replied "Zayd b. Harithah." The Prophet
said "I would like to suggest something else," so they asked
"What is it?" He said: "I shall invite him and give him the option.
If he opts for [leaving with] you, you can have him without paying
a ransom, but if he chooses [to stay with] me, by God, I am not the
sort of person who would prefer anyone over the one who had
chosen him." The two of them said: "You have been kind and
more than fair toward us."
The Prophet then called Zayd and asked him "Do you recognize
these people?" Zayd said "Yes." The Prophet asked "Who are
they?" and Zayd replied "This is my father, and this [other person]
is my paternal uncle," and the Prophet said "And I am the one
whom you have known and whose companionship you have expe¬
rienced, so choose between me and them." Zayd said "I am not the
kind of person who would choose anyone in preference to you,- to
me you are like a father and a paternal uncle." The two men said
to him "Woe to you, O Zayd, would you prefer slavery to freedom,
your father, your paternal uncle, and to your family?" He said
26. See Table 2, p. xxix.
27. On the exclusive status of the Quraysh, Muhammad's tribe, in relation to
the Ka'bah, see Kister, "Mecca and Tamlm"; his views are challenged by Crone,
Meccan Trade. See also Rubin, "IlafSimon, Meccan Trade.
28. This seems a contradiction in terms. The variant al-ja'i ' "the hungry" for
"the prisoners" ( al-aslr ) seems more appropriate; see al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, 2300 note
b )■
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 9
"Yes, for I have seen something in this man, and I am not the kind
of person who would ever choose anyone in preference to him."
The Prophet, having witnessed this, took Zayd out to the Hijr 29
and said "O all those who are present, witness that Zayd [hereby]
becomes my [adopted] son, with mutual rights of inheritance."
When Zayd's father and paternal uncle saw this, they were satis¬
fied and went away.
[Zayd b. Harithah] was thus called Zayd b. Muhammad until
God revealed Islam. I was told all this by al-Harith [b. Muham¬
mad]—Ibn Sa'd—Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbi]—his father
[Muhammad al-Kalbi], Jamil b. Marthad al-Ta’I, and others.
[Hisham] related part of the story on the authority of his [2301]
father—[Badham] Abu Salih—['Abdallah] Ibn 'Abbas. Through the
chain of transmission going back to Ibn 'Abbas, [Hisham] related
[the following]: The Prophet gave to [Zayd] in marriage Zaynab bt.
Jahsh b. Ri’ab al-Asadiyyah, whose mother was Umaymah bt.
'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim. 30 Zayd later divorced her, and the
Prophet married her. The Munafiqun 31 made this a topic of their
conversation and reviled the Prophet, saying "Muhammad pro¬
hibits [marriage] with the [former] wives of one's own sons, but he
married the [former] wife of his son Zayd." As a result of this God
revealed the following verse: "Muhammad is not the father of any
of your men, nay, he is the messenger of God and the seal of the
prophets . . . ," etc. 32 God also revealed the verse "Call them by
their fathers' names," 33 so from that day onward [Zayd] was called
29. The sacred place in front of the Ka'bah where sacrifices were made, oaths
taken, etc.; see Rubin, "Ka'ba."
30. That is, a paternal aunt of the Prophet. When Jahsh, originally of the bedouin
tribe of Asad, decided to settle in Mecca, he became an ally of the leader Umayyah
b. 'Abd Shams and married Umaymah, daughter of the rival leader, 'Abd al-
Muttalib, grandfather of the Prophet. See Muhammad Ibn Habib, Munammaq,
3S7; Kister, "On Strangers and Allies," 138-39.
31. Usually translated as "the Hypocrites," this term refers to Muhammad's
opponents among the Muslims in Medina. See "Munafikun," EP, VII, 561-62 (A.
A. Brockett); Lings, 237-39; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 274-83.
32. Qur’an, 33:40 On the doctrine of the Seal of the Prophets, see Y. Friedmann,
"Finality."
33. Qur’an 33:5. This may also be translated as "trace their pedigrees back to
their [real] fathers," and, indeed, the verse has both meanings at once. The declara-
IO
Biographies
Zayd b. Harithah, and [other] adopted sons were named after their
[real] fathers. Al-Miqdad was called [ibn] 'Amr after he had been
named al- Miqdad b. al-Aswad since al-Aswad b. 'Abd Yaghuth
had adopted him.
Zayd was killed in Jumada I/September that year at the age of
fifty-five.
It was reported that his kunyah was Abu Salamah.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Muhammad b.
al-Hasan b. Usamah b. Zayd 34 —his father: The Prophet was ten
years Zayd's senior. Zayd was a short, flat-nosed man, of a very
dark brown skin ; his kunyah was Abu Usamah.
Zayd participated in the battles of Badr and Uhud 35 and was
appointed deputy in Medina when the Prophet left for the raid of
al-Muraysi'. 36 Zayd also took part in the event of the Ditch (al-
Khandaq), the expedition to al-Hudaybiyyah, and the conquest of
Khaybar. 37 He was one of the famous archers among the Prophet's
Companions.
tion was aimed at refuting the charge of incest raised against Muhammad. See pp.
26, 180-82, below.
34. That is, great-grandson of Zayd.
35. Badr lies southwest of Medina; it was the site of the Muslims' first victory
over their major enemy, the Quraysh. The battle took place in the spring of 2/624,
two years after the Prophet's Emigration. Uhud is a mountain near Medina where
Muhammad and his followers were defeated by the Quraysh and their allies in the
year 3/625. See Kennedy, 35, 37-38; Watt, Muhammad at Medina, r-16, 21-29;
Guillaume, 289-314, 370-426; Wellhausen, Muhammad, 57-91, ior-48;
Caetani, 1 ,472-96, 541-65; Hamldullah, Battlefields, 15,20; "Badr," EP, 1 ,867-88
(W. M. Watt); al-Waqidi, r2-i72,199-333; IbnHisham, II, 257-374, HI, 64-178; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 288-308, 311—38; al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh, I, 1284-1359, 1383-
1425 -
36. In the year 5/626. See al-Waqidi, 404-13; Wellhausen, Muhammad, 175-90.
It was also called the raid of Banu al-Mustaliq,- see Ibn Hisham, III, 302-9. Here,
however, Abu Dharr, not Zayd, acted as the Prophet's deputy. See also Guillaume,
490-93; al-Tabari, Ta’nkh, I, 1511-17.
37. Al-Khandaq (the Ditch) is the name given in Muslim tradition to the siege by
the Quraysh and their allies of Medina in the year 5/627. It is related that the
Muslims dug a ditch to defend the town, and the besiegers eventually dispersed
without achieving any result. See "Khandak," EP, IV, 1020 (W. M. Watt); Watt,
Muhammad at Medina, 35-39; Guillaume, 456-61; Wellhausen, Muhammad,
190-210; Caetani, I, 611-26; al-Tabari, Ta’iikh, I, 1463-85. Al-Hudaybiyyah is a
place near Mecca where Muhammad concluded a ten-year peace treaty with the
Meccans. See "Hudaybiya," EP, m, 539 (W. M. Watt); Watt, "Expedition"; Lecker,
"Hudaybiyya-Treaty"; Hawting, "Hudaybiyya"; Guillaume, 499-5 io; Lings, 247-
56; Wellhausen, Muhammad, 241-64; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1528-59.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented
ii
Thabit b. al-Jidh' of the Banu Salimah of the Ansar, that is,
Thabit b. Tha'labah b. Zayd b. al-Harith b. Haram b. Ka'b. 38
Al-Jidh' was [the nickname of] Tha'labah b. Ka'b, who was [2302]
so called, as was reported, because of his bravery and courage.
Another version of the name is Thabit b. Tha'labah al-Jadha'. 39
Thabit witnessed the 'Aqabah meeting with the seventy An-
saris who swore allegiance to the Prophet that night. 40 He [also]
participated in the battles of Badr, Uhud, and the Ditch and the
expedition to al-Hudaybiyyah, the conquest of Khaybar, the con¬
quest of Mecca, the battle of Hunayn, and the [siege of] al-Ta’if, 41
where he was killed and became a shahid.
[The Year 9]
(April 20, 630-April 8, 631)
In the year 9/630, in Sha'ban/November, Umm Kulthum, daugh¬
ter of the Prophet, died. 42
The Prophet said the ritual prayer over her bier, and it was
reported that 'All b. Abi Talib, al-Fadl b. al-'Abbas, and Usamah b.
Zayd descended into her grave 43 She is the one to whom Umm
38. Khallfahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 55 ; IbnSa'd, III/2, iio-ii; al-Baladhuri, Ansab,
I, 247- On the Ansar see "Ansar," EP-, I, 514-15 (W. M. Watt): Hasson,
"Contribution."
39. fidh' means a palm trunk (conveying the notion of hardiness), whereas jad-
ha' means a strong young man.
40. See "\Akaba," EP, I, 314 (W. M. Watt); Guillaume, 198-207; Kister,
"Papyrus."
41. In the year 8/630 Mecca fell to the Muslims with hardly any resistance. It
was then that most of the Quraysh, in particular the noble families, were con¬
verted to Islam. Shortly afterward the Thaqif, the ruling tribe of the nearby town al-
Ta’if, organized a bedouin army, which was defeated by Muhammad at a place
called Hunayn. Muhammad then laid siege to al-Ta’if but had to withdraw without
achieving any result. Shortly afterward, however, the Thaqif joined Islam of then-
own volition. See Kennedy, 42-43; Guillaume, 540-61, 587-92; Watt, Muham¬
mad at Medina, 6 5 - 73 ; Welihausen, Muhammad, 319-73; Caetani, II, 105-79;
Hamldullah, Battlefields, 36; Kister, "Ta’if", al-Waqidi, 780-992; IbnHisham, IV,
31-129, 182-88; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 353-68; al-Tabari, Ta’nkh, I, 1618-44,
1654-74.
42. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 57; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 401.
43. Descending into the grave of the deceased was apparently a pre-Islamic
custom, at least in Medina. It was sometimes, but not regularly, practiced by the
Prophet in person. Historians of Medina mention five such instances. See 'Umar b.
Shabbah, 1 ,121-24; al-Samhudi, IH, 897-99. The practice continued in early Islam;
12 Biographies
'Atiyyah referred when she said: "I washed one of the Prophet's
daughters." 44
According to Anas b. Malik: When Umm Kulthum was laid in
her grave the Prophet said "Let no one who has become impure by
approaching his wife tonight, descend into the grave"; he said: "Is
there among you anyone who has not become impure by ap¬
proaching his wife tonight?" Abu Talhah 45 said "I, O Messenger of
God"; so the Prophet said "Descend," and Abu Talhah did so.
[The Year n]
(March 29, 632-March ij, 633)
In the year 11/632, on 3 Ramadan/November 22, Fatimah, daugh¬
ter of Muhammad [the Prophet], passed away, at the age of twenty-
nine or so. 46
Opinions differ as to the time of Fatimah's death. According to
Abu Ja'far Muhammad b. 'All, 47 she died three months after the
[2303] Prophet, whereas, according to Yazid b. Abi Ziyad—'Abdallah b.
al-Harith, it was eight months [after the Prophet].
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ma'mar [b.
Rashid]—[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri—'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr]—'A’ishah
[the Prophet's wife], and also Ibn Jurayj—al-Zuhri—'Urwah:
Fatimah died six months after the Prophet, and this is the sound
[account], according to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]. She died on Monday
the 3rd of Ramadan n/November 22, 632. 48
see, e.g., Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 380, s.v. Fatimah al-Zahra’; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn
Habib, Ta’rikh, 96,101. However, it is not included among Muhammad's funerary
practices as recorded by Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyyah, I, 139-46.
44. That is, in preparation for her burial. Umm 'Atiyyah, an Ansari woman, is
connected with traditions about washing the dead and otherwise,- see Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, IV, 476-77.
45. Zayd b. Sahl, an Ansari and a close Companion of the Prophet. See Ihn Hajar,
Isabah, I, 566-67; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, IX, r34-4r,- al-Dhahabi, Siyai, II, 27-
34 -
46. See "Fatima," El 2 , II, 841-50 |L. Veccia Vaglieri); al-Amin, n, 535 - 639 ; Ibn
Sa'd, in/2, r 1-20; Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 60-61; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, 1 ,402-
5; Ibn Hanbal, Fada'il, 754-65; al-Suyuti, Thughui-, 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, Ta’i¬
ikh, 84, 98; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1869.
47. That is, Muhammad al-Baqir,- see pp. 229-30, below.
48. Laylat al-thulatha’ is Monday because the Arabs count the days by the
nights that precede them. According to Cattenoz, however, this date was a Sunday.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 13
According to Ja'far [al-Sadiq] b. Muhammad, her kunyah was
Umm Ablha. 49
Abu al-'As b. al-Rabi' b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. 'Abd Shams b. 'Abd
Manaf b. Qusayy. 50 Abu al-'As's name was Miqsam. His mother
was Halah bt. Khuwaylid b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy, and
his maternal aunt was Khadljah bt. Khuwaylid, the Prophet's wife.
The Prophet gave his daughter Zaynab to him in marriage before
[the rise of] Islam, and she bore him 'All and Umamah. 'All died in
childhood, whereas Umamah lived and was married to 'All b. Abi
Talib after the death of Fatimah, the Prophet's daughter.
Abu al-'As b. al-Rabi' participated in the battle of Badr on the
side of the unbelievers and was taken prisoner by 'Abdallah b.
fubayr b. al-Nu'man al-Ansarl, 51 When the Meccans sent [a
delegation to negotiate] the ransom of their prisoners, 'Amr b. al-
Rabi', brother of Abu al-'As, came to ransom his brother.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Salamah [b. al-
Fadl]—Muhammad [Ibn Ishaq]—Yahya b. 'Abbad b. 'Abdallah b.
al-Zubayr—his father, 'Abbad—'A’ishah: When the Meccans sent
[a delegation to negotiate] the ransom of their prisoners, Zaynab,
the Prophet's daughter, sent valuables as a ransom for Abu al-'As.
She sent a necklace that [her mother] Khadljah had given her be¬
fore conducting her to Abu al-'As for the first time, to consum- [2304
mate their marriage. When the Prophet saw it his heart softened
toward her a great deal, and he said [to his followers] "If you think
it appropriate to set the prisoner free on her behalf, and [also] to
49. Meaning "mother of her father," a unique kunyah the sense of which is by
no means clear. Whenever it is mentioned it is not explained; the same applies to
Fatimah's granddaughter and to Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyyah's daughter, both
called Umm Ablha; see al-Baladhuri, Ansab, HI, (Mahmudi) 271; Ibn Ishaq, Siyai,
251. This appellation is found in the context of the Nusayri-'Alawi religion, where
it refers to belief in reincarnation. Fatimah is believed to be the reincarnation of
Aminah, the Prophet's mother, who is in turn the reincarnation of the Virgin
Mary. As proof of this argument Fatimah's kunyah, Umm Ablha, is adduced. See
al-Tabarani, "Majmu' al-a'yad," 175 .1 owe this information to my colleague Meir
Bar-Asher. Fatimah, however, is commonly compared by the Shi'is to the Virgin
Mary without involving the doctrine of reincarnation or this strange kunyah.
50. Ibn Hibban, Mashdhiz, 56; al-Waqidl, 553-55; Wellhausen, Muhammad,
233 - 34 ; al-Tabari, Ta’iikh, 1 ,1346-49, 1350-52. See also the references in note 5.
The clan's name is 'Abd Shams, of the Quraysh.
5T. A prominent Ansari who was killed in the battle of Uhud; see Ibn Hajar,
I$abah, H, 287.
14
Biographies
return to her that which belongs to her, do so." They said "Yes, O
Messenger of God!" So they set Abu al-'As free and returned to
Zaynab that which belonged to her.
Abu-al-'As remained married to Zaynab, even though he was
still a pagan. 52 Shortly before the fath, that is, the conquest of
Mecca, 53 he went to Syria [carrying] merchandise [for sale], as well
as goods that the Quraysh delivered through him. After he fin¬
ished his trade and was on his way back he came across one of the
Prophet's raiding parties; according to another version, it was the
Prophet himself who had sent the party [to raid] the caravan Abu
al-'As was traveling with on its way back from Syria. 54 [The party]
comprised 170 mounted raiders under the command of Zayd b.
Harithah. This occurred in Jumada I, 6/October 627. The party
appropriated goods and took some of the caravan's passengers pris¬
oner, but Abu al-'As escaped, and they could not overtake him.
The party returned [to Medina] with the booty, and Abu al-'As
came at night and entered [the dwelling of] Zaynab, the Prophet's
daughter, seeking her protection. She granted him protection for
as long as he was occupied with retrieving his property. 55 In the
morning the Prophet came out for the morning prayer. He uttered
the formula "God is great" (Allah akbar), and the people did the
same; according to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Salamah [b. al-
Fadl]—Muhammad Ibn Ishaq—Yazid b. Ruman: Zaynab called
out "O people, I have granted protection to Abu al-'As b. al-Rabi‘."
On finishing the prayer the Prophet came before the people and
said: "O people, did you hear what I heard?" They replied "Yes,"
whereupon he said: "By He Who holds Muhammad's soul in His
52. Literally, the sentence reads "Abu al-'As remained with her, professing pa¬
ganism [or, in spite of his paganism]," but as the story continues it becomes
evident that Zaynab lived in Medina, whereas Abu al-'As lived in Mecca. They
were separated until Abu al-'As was converted to Islam; see note 57.
53. The term fath usually refers to the conquest of Mecca in the year 8/630. The
original meaning may have been different, although still connected with the sanc¬
tuary in Mecca; see Hawting, "Hudaybiyya."
54. The raid of al-'Is,- see the references in note 50, above.
55. Literally, "in the matter of demanding his property." Granting protection,
jiwai, was common in pre-Islamic times. Protection was sometimes granted
against all hazards, at other times only against certain stipulated ones. See Gold-
ziher, Muslim Studies, I, 22-23; P- n6, below.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 15
hands, I never knew about any of this until I heard of it [now], just
as you did. [Know that] the lowest-ranking Muslim [is authorized] [2305]
to grant [someone] protection from other Muslims." 56 The
Prophet then retreated and went to see his daughter Zaynab. He
said to her "O daughter, treat Abu al-'As well, but do not let him
touch you, because you are not lawful to him." 57
According to Ibn Ishaq—'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr: The Prophet
sent [a message] to the raiding party that had looted Abu al-'As's
property, saying: "You know this man's standing in relation to us;
now you plundered property that belongs to him. If you act in a
commendable way, you will return that which belongs to him,
and this would be pleasing to us. However, if you refuse to do so
[you will be excused], because it is booty imparted to you by God,
and you are more entitled to it [than anyone else]." They said "O
Messenger of God, of course we will return it to him." They re¬
turned Abu al-'As's property to him, to the point that someone
would even come with a rope, another with a worn-out leather bag
and a waterskin, yet another with a peg, until they returned to him
all his property; nothing was missing. Abu al-'As then left for
Mecca, where he handed every Qurashl proprietor, that is, those
who had delivered goods through him, the property that belonged
to them. Then he said "O people of Quraysh, has there remained
with me any property belonging to any of you that you did not yet
retrieve?" They said "No, may God reward you; indeed we found
that you are faithful and noble." He said: "I testify that there is no
god but Allah and that Muhammad is His servant and messenger. I
56. That is, the Muslim community was legally responsible for the safety of
anyone granted protection by any individual Muslim, regardless of the circum¬
stances. This saying, here attributed to the Prophet (a hadith ), may have originated
during the Muslim conquests after Muhammad's death, as a solution to the prob¬
lem of the treaties with enemies. For example, objections were raised when Khalid
b. al-Walid concluded a peace treaty with leaders of Damascus, because he was not
commander-in-chief. Yet the commander-in-chief, Abu 'Ubaydah, ratified the
treaty, saying "the lowest ranking Muslim. ..." See al-Baladhurl, Futuh, 122.
Note that Abu 'Ubaydah does not attribute the saying to the Prophet. See the
discussion, e.g., in Abu Yusuf, 61, 63 (where the example of Zaynab is mentioned),
68-69 (where protection granted by a slave is discussed). See also Ibn Abi Shaybah,
Musannaf, VII, 689-90; Ibn al-Murtada, V, 452; Ben Shemesh, III, 65-66; cf. al-
Waqidl, 793.
57. The Muslims had to divorce their pagan spouses; see note 59.
16 Biographies
was prevented from embracing Islam while I was staying with
Muhammad only by the fear that you would think I [did so] merely
to embezzle your property. Now that God has returned it to you
and I am free from it, I become converted to Islam." Abu al-'As
then departed and went to the Prophet.
According to Ibn Ishaq—Da’ud b. al-Husayn—'Ikrimah, the
client 58 of ['Abdallah] Ibn 'Abbas—Ibn 'Abbas: The Prophet re¬
turned Zaynab [to her husband Abu al-'As] by force of their initial
marriage, without renewing it, after six years [of separation]. 59
Abu al-'As returned to Mecca after embracing Islam and did not
participate in any military [or other] event with the Prophet. 60
[2306] He later moved to Medina, where he died in Dhu al-Hijjah 12/
February 634, during the caliphate of Abu Bakr. He appointed al-
Zubayr b. al-'Awwam as the executor of his will.
According to Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbl]—Ma'ruf b. Khar-
rabudha: Abu al-'As b. al-Rabi' went on a [business] trip to Syria;
remembering his wife Zaynab, the Prophet's daughter, he recited
the following verses:
I remembered Zaynab when passing through Iram, 61
and I said: "Blessed be the man 62 who dwells by the holy
place.
58. A client, in Arabic mawla, is a person linked to another in any of a number of
legal ways called wala’-, see "Mawla," EP, VI, 874-82 (P. Crone).
59. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh,l, 1347. According to others, Abu al-'As had to paythe
bride price and marry Zaynab again,- e.g., al-Baladhuri, Ansab I, 399. See the legal
discussion in Abu Yusuf, 100.
60. The term mashhad (pi. mashahid ), literally, "a scene," refers to battles, as
well as to other events in the life of the Prophet (e.g., the treaty of al-Hudaybiyyah).
Participation with the Prophet in these events imparted great prestige to his fol¬
lowers and constituted their claim to fame, as well as to material benefits after the
Prophet's death. A person's record is called sabiqah, i.e., "priority, privilege."
6r. The text is vocalized wariakat in the third person (as also in Ibn Sa'd, VIII,
2r), in order to make it conform to the meter. This vocalization seems impossible,
however, because Iram is written with an allf at the end ( irama ), which means that
it is the object, not the subject of the verb. See al-Amin, XXXm, 2r4, who has
adiaktu, "I arrived at," for warraktu; the editor remarks that he does not under¬
stand the verse. See also al-Marzubani, 332 (jawaztu "I passed through"); Ibn
Manzur, Mukhtasai, XXIX, 44 ( waradtu "I reached"). Iram is explained here as
another name for Damascus.
62. Literally, "May God grant rain unto the man. . . ."
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 17
May God reward the virtuous daughter of the reliable one! 63
That which a husband knows he will praise.
'Ikrimah b. Abi Jahl—Abu Jahl's name was 'Ami—b. Hisham b.
al-Mughirah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. Makhzum. 64
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Abu Bakr b.
'Abdallah b. Abi Sabrah—Musa b. 'Uqbah—Abu Hablbah, the
client of al-Zubayr [b. al-'Awwam]—'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr: On
the day of the conquest of Mecca 'Ikrimah b. Abi Jahl ran away to
the Yemen, fearing that the Prophet would kill him. 65 His wife
Umm Hakim bt. al-Harith b. Hisham, who was a clever woman,
had already become a follower of the Prophet. She went to the
Prophet and said "My cousin 66 'Ikrimah fled from you to the Ye¬
men, fearing that you would kill him, so grant him protection."
The Prophet said "I grant him the protection of God; whoever
meets him must not harm him." 67 Umm Hakim set out to look
for 'Ikrimah and caught up with him somewhere on the coast of
Tihamah, already embarked on a boat. She started waving to him,
saying: "O cousin, I come to you from the man who is the kindest [2307]
toward his kin, 68 the most just and the most virtuous of all people.
Do not ruin yourself [by fleeing], for I have asked him to grant you
protection, and he did." 'Ikrimah said "Did you do that?" and she
replied "Yes, I spoke with him, and he granted you protection." So
'Ikrimah went back with her. As he drew near Mecca the Prophet
told his Companions "'Ikrimah b. Abi Jahl will come to you as a
63. Al-amin "the reliable one" was an epithet of the Prophet.
64. Ibn Sa'd, V, 329, VH/2 126; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 88, ioo ; idem,
Tabaqat, 20, 299; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 59; al-RazI, 147-48; Ibn Abi Shaybah,
Musannaf, IV, 577; al-MizzI, Tahdhib, XX, 247. The Makhzum was a leading clan
among the Quraysh; see Ibn Hazm, famhaiat, 141.
65. See a similar story told about Safwan b. Umayyah; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I,
1644-46.
66. 'Ikrimah and his wife were paternal first cousins; see Ibn Hazm, famharat,
MS-
67. Cf. al-Halabi, III, 106-7; Ibn al-Athir, Kamil, II, 123-24.
68. Awsal al-nas. Being kind to one's family, i.e., practicing silat al-iahim, was
one of the highly appreciated social values in both the pre-Islamic and the Islamic
periods. It is distinct from tribal group solidarity, 'asabiyyah, which was con¬
demned by Islam.
18 Biographies
believer and an Emigrant; 69 do not curse his father, 70 for to curse
the dead [only] harms the living and does not reach the dead."
'Ikrimah then arrived at the Prophet's door with his wife. She,
however, preceded him, asked permission to see the Prophet, and
went in. 'Umar informed the Prophet that 'Ikrimah had arrived, at
which the Prophet rejoiced and jumped to his feet—he did not
[even] have his cloak on—out of joy for 'Ikrimah's [arrival]. He said
[to the woman] "Bring him in," whereupon 'Ikrimah came in and
said "O Muhammad, 71 this woman here informs me that you
have granted me protection." The Prophet said "So you are pro¬
tected." 'Ikrimah reported: At that point I said "I declare that there
is no god but Allah alone; He has no partner, and you are the
servant of God and His messenger." I [also] said "You are the most
just, truthful, and faithful of all people." I said this bowing my
head because I felt ashamed before him. Then I said "O Messenger
of God, forgive me all my enmity toward you and all the cam¬
paigns 72 in which I hastened [to participate] so as to support pa¬
ganism." The Prophet said "O God, forgive 'Ikrimah all his en¬
mity toward me and all the campaigns in which he hastened [to
participate] in order to avert [others] from Your path." [Then] I said
"O Messenger of God, instruct me with what you know is best, so
that I shall know it." The Prophet replied "Declare that you tes¬
tify that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is His
servant and messenger, and exert yourself in the path of God."
'Ikrimah then said 73 "By God, every sum of money I spent on
averting [others] from the path of God I shall doubly reciprocate,
69. The Emigrants, Muhajiiun, constituted the elite of the Muslim community,
both during the Prophet's lifetime and afterward. In this class were included those
who emigrated to Medina with the Prophet and afterward until the conquest of
Mecca. In some instances bedouins who remained in their own territory but com¬
mitted themselves to Islam were also included. The account of 'Ikrimah's conver¬
sion is an attempt to include the Quraysh, who were converted after the conquest
of Mecca, in the Islamic elite. See also p. 115 and note 541, below.
70. That is, Abu Jahl, who had been a fervent opponent of the Muslims and was
killed in the battle of Badr ; see "Abu Djahl," El 2 , 1 , 115 (W. M. Watt).
71. Unbelievers addressed the PropTIet by his name, whereas Muslims always
said "O Messenger of God," as indeed 'Ikrimah does later in the story.
72. Or, undertakings, deeds; see Glossarium, s.v. maikab.
73. The story reverts to the third person at this point.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 19
[spending it] in the way of God." He later exerted himself in battle
and was killed, becoming a shahid, at the battle of Ajnadayn 74
during the caliphate of Abu Bakr.
In the year of his Pilgrimage 75 the Prophet appointed 'Ikrimah
tax collector of the tribal confederation of Hawazin. 76 'Ikrimah
was in Tabalah 77 when the Prophet died.
[Those Who Died in the Year 14]
(February 25, 633-February 13, 636)
Among those who died in the year 14 was Nawfal b. al-Harith b. [2,308]
'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf. 78
Nawfal's kunyah was Abu al-Harith, after his son al-Harith. It
was reported that Nawfal was the eldest convert to Islam among
the Banu Hashim. He was older than his paternal uncles
Hamzah 79 and al-'Abbas, older [too] than his brothers Rabi'ah,
Abu Sufyan, and 'Abd Shams, 80 sons of al-Harith.
Nawfal b. al-Harith was taken prisoner [by the Muslims] at
Badr.
According to Ibn Sa'd 81 —'All b. 'Isa al-Nawfall—his father—
his paternal uncle Ishaq b. 'Abdallah b. al-Harith—'Abdallah b. al-
74. A battle between the Muslims and a Byzantine force, usually said to have
taken place between al-Ramlah and Bayt Jibrin in Palestine in the year 13/634.
Both the ___location and the date are, however, disputed; see Donner, Early Islamic
Conquests, 128-30.
75. Three months before his death, in 10/632, the Prophet performed a pil¬
grimage to Mecca. This occasion is called "the Farewell Pilgrimage" ( hajjat al-
wada').
76. The Hawazin was a large tribal confederation, attached to the town of al-
Ta’if; see "Hawazin," EP-, HI, 285-86 (W. M. Watt). As for tax collectors sent by the
Prophet, there are various lists; see p. 83, below.
77. A place on the way to the Yemen, about rso miles south of Mecca; see
Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, I, 8r6-T7-
78. Of the Prophet's clan, the Banu Hashim. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’nkh,
104; idem, Tabaqat, 6; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 58.
79. An early convert who was killed in the battle of Uhud ; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah,
I, 353 - 54 -
80. The Prophet changed his name to 'Abdallah; see note 234, below. He is
counted among the Companions; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 292.
81. Ibn Sa'd, TV/i, 31.
20
Biographies
Harith b. Nawfal: When Nawfal b. al-Harith was taken prisoner at
Badr the Prophet said to him "Ransom yourself, O Nawfal." The
latter replied "I have nothing to pay as ransom, O Messenger of
God," whereupon the Prophet said: "Ransom yourself with your
lances, which [are stored] at Juddah." 82 Nawfal said "I testify that
you are the messenger of God." He then ransomed himself with
those lances, which numbered 1,000.
The Prophet established the bond of brotherhood ( mu’akhah )
between Nawfal and al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib. 83 In pre-
Islamic times the two were equal partners, 84 and they loved each
other.
Nawfal took part in the conquest of Mecca, the battle of Hu-
nayn, and the siege of al-Ta’if, on the Prophet's side. He stood
firmly by the Prophet at Hunayn; 85 he had [also] supplied the
Prophet with 3,000 lances for that battle, whereupon the Prophet
said to him "O Abu al-Harith, it is as if I look at your lances
smashing the idolators' backbones." 86
Nawfal b. al-Harith died one year and three months after 'Umar
b. al-Khattab's accession to the caliphate. 87 'Umar said the prayer
over his bier and walked with [the mourners] to al-Baqi', 88 where
Nawfal was buried.
82. A town on the Red Sea shore; see "Djudda," El 2 , II, 571-72 (R. Hartmann
[Phebe Ann Marr]|.
83. After the E migr ation to Medina Muhammad instituted "brotherhood"
{mu’akhah) between pairs of Muslims. Among other things such "brothers" inher¬
ited from one another. See Watt, Muhammad at Medina, 248-49. Guillaume,
234-35; Simon, "L'institution"; Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbai, 71; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 270.
84. That is, their partnership included all their property (shirkat al-
mufawadah), as opposed to partnership in part of the property only (shirkat
al-'inan ).
85. This is worthy of note because at a certain point during this battle most of
the Muslims defected, and it took a second offensive to gain victory. See al-Waqidi,
897-907; p. 25, below.
86. Ka-anni anzuru ila limahika. . . . This expression denotes foreknowledge of
events and is often used as a literary device to anticipate later developments in the
story. Here it also points to the prophetic powers of Muhammad.
87- In the year 13/634.
88. Al-Baqi' was the first Islamic cemetery in Medina, instituted during the
Prophet's lifetime. Most of the Companions, the members of the Prophet's family,
and many Successors j tabi'un) were buried there. See "Bakr al-Gharkad," El 2 , 1 ,
957-58 (A. J. Wensinck [A. S. Bazmee Ansari]); 'Umar b. Shabbah, I, 86-133.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 21
Abu Sufyan b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim. 89
He was the Prophet's milk brother because Hallmah 90 nursed
him [too] for a few days.
Abu Sufyan had amicable [relations] with the Prophet. [How- [2309]
ever], when the Prophet was sent [on his divine mission] Abu
Sufyan became his enemy and composed satirical poems against
him and his Companions. He showed hatred toward the Prophet
for twenty years, never remaining behind when the Quraysh set
out to fight Muhammad. When there was talk about the Prophet's
going to Mecca in the Year of the Conquest [fath], God put the be¬
lief in Islam in the heart of Abu Sufyan. He thus met the Prophet
before the latter camped at al-Abwa’. 91 Abu Sufyan embraced Is¬
lam, together with his son Ja'far, and set out with the Prophet to
participate in the conquest of Mecca and the battle of Hunayn.
Abu Sufyan related [the following]: When we met the enemy in
battle at Hunayn I jumped off my horse, my sword unsheathed in
my hand, while the Prophet was looking at me ; God knows that I
wished to die for him. Al-’Abbas then said "O Messenger of God,
this is your [milk] brother and paternal cousin Abu Sufyan b. al-
Harith, so regard him with favor." The Prophet said: "I do. May
God forgive him all his enmity toward me." The Prophet then
turned to me, saying "My brother, upon my life!" and I kissed his
foot in the stirrup.
Abu Sufyan b. al-Harith died in Medina four months minus
thirteen days after the death of his brother Nawfal b. al-Harith.
According to another report, he died in the year 20 (December 21,
640-December 9, 641). 'Umar b. al-Khattab said the prayer over
his bier, and he was buried in the comer of the court of 'Aqil b. Abi
Talib in al-Baqi'. He had dug a grave for himself three days before
he died.
89. Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 361, 365, 477, 539, in (Dun), 296; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqdt, 6; Ibn Hibban, Mashahiz, 44; Ibn Sa'd, IV/i, 34-37; Ibn
Qudamah, 105-8.
90. Hallmah was a bedouin woman who was hired as wet nurse for Muhammad.
See Guillaume, 70; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 274.
9r. Cf. Ibn Sa'd, IV/r, 34. Al-Abwa’is a place on the road from Mecca to Medina.
One of Muhammad's first military expeditions was to this place,- see "Abwa’," El 2 ,
I, 169 (W. M. Watt); al-Waqidl, rr-i2 ; Wellhausen, Muhammad, 34. The same
place served the Quraysh as a campsite on their way to fight the Prophet at Badr
(2/624); see al-Waqidi, 145; Wellhausen, 80.
22
Biographies
[Those Who Were Killed in the Year 16]
(February 2, 63j-January 22, 638)
Am ong those who were killed in the year 16 was Sa'd b. 'Ubayd b.
al-Nu'man b. Qays b. 'Amr b. Zayd b. Umayyah b. Zayd. 92
He was called Sa'd the Reciter. 93
Sa'd's kunyah was Abu Zayd.
[2310] According to Anas b. Malik, Sa'd was one of the six who cob
lected the Qur’an during the Prophet's lifetime 94
Sa'd took part in the battles of Badr, Uhud, the Ditch, and all the
[other] battles, on the Prophet's side. He was killed as a shahid in
the battle of al-Qadisiyyah 95 in the year 16/637, aged sixty-four.
That same year Mariyah, the mother of Ibrahim son of the
Prophet, died. 96 'Umar b. al-Khattab said the prayer over her bier.
Her grave is in al-Baqi'.
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 23
(November 19, 643-November 6, 644)
Among them was 'Umar b. al-Khattab b. Nufayl b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b.
Riyah b. 'Abdallah b. Qurt b. Razah b. 'Adi b. Ka'b. 97
92. An Ansari, father of 'Umayr b. Sa'd, who was one of 'Umar's governors in al-
Kufah. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 103; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 29.
93. That is, reciter or reader of the Qur’an. See "Kur’an," EP, V, 426 (A. T.
Welch); Ibn al-Jazari.
94. There is a debate over the meaning of jama'a al-qui’an, jama’a signifying
both "to collect" and "to comprise, [to be in possession of] the whole of. ..."
Accordingly the phrase could mean "collected" or "memorized the whole of the
Qur’an." In the prevailing Muslim tradition it is maintained that the Qur’an was
collected by order of the third caliph, 'Uthman, but there are also traditions that it
had already been collected during the Prophet's lifetime. See Jeffery, 5-7; Burton;
Wansbrough, chap, i; Sharon, "Umayyads," 131, n. 37. In addition, there is confu¬
sion regarding the identity of Abu Zayd, who collected (or memorized) the Qur’an.
See p. 284, below; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 31.
95. Al-Qadisiyyah, in southwestern Iraq, was the site of a decisive victory by the
Muslims over the Persians, probably in the year 16/637. See "Kadisiyya," EP, IV,
384-87 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); Kennedy, 67; Donner, Early Islamic Conquests, 203-
10 and passim; Kamal; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2213-2361.
96. A Coptic concubine of the Prophet. The son she bore him died in infancy.
Like 'A’ishah, Muhammad's most beloved wife, she was charged with and acquit¬
ted of adultery. See "Mariya," EP, Vl,S7S (F. Buhl); Caetani, II, 237-38; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 106; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 448-53.
97. The second caliph, of the Qurashi clan the Banu ‘Adi. See "'Omar ibn al-
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 23
'Umar's kunyah was Abu Hafs.
According to Ibn Sa'd 98 —Ya'qub b. Ibrahim b. Sa'd—his
father—Salih b. Kaysan—Ibn Shihab [al-Zuhrl]: The possessors of
the Scriptures (ahl al-kitab ) 99 were the first to give 'Umar the
name Faruq, 100 and the Muslims transmitted it from them; no
report has reached us of any mention of this name by the
Prophet. 101
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl] 102 —Abu Bakr b. Isma'Il b.
Muhammad b. Sa'd—his father: 'Umar was stabbed on Wednes¬
day, the 26th of Dhu al-Hijjah, 23/November 3, 644, and was
buried on Sunday morning, the 1st of Muharram, 24/November 7,
644.
[Those Who Died in the Year 32]
(August 12, 652-August i, 6S3)
Among them was al-Tufayl b. al-Harith b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd
Manaf. 103
He was a brother of 'Ubaydah b. al-Harith, who had fought a
duel against 'Utbah b. Rabi'ah 104 at the battle of Badr.
Khattab," El 1 , HI, 982-84 (G. Levi Della Vida); Kennedy, 57-70,- Ibn Sa'd, III, 190-
274; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 126-27; idem, Tabaqat, 22,- Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il,
244-448; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 23; Ibn al-Jawzi, Ta’rikh.
98. Ibn Sa'd, in/i, 193.
99. Ahl al-kitab, literally "People of the Book," originally referred to Jews and
Christians and later extended to include Zoroastrians. They all have a special legal
status within the Muslim state and as such are termed ahl al-dhimmah. The latter
term (and status) was sometimes applied to members of yet other religions, includ¬
ing non-Arab idolators. See " Ahl al-kitab," El 1 , 1, 264-66 (G. Vajda); "Dhimma,"
El 2 , II, 227-31 (C. Cahen); Fattal; Bat Ye'or ; Friedmann, "Temple."
roo. For the most recent discussion of ‘Umar's surname al-Faruq, see Bashear,
"Title."
ior. But see al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, 1,2728-29, where this same report is preceded by
another, in which it is related that it was the Prophet who gave 'Umar this name.
102. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3726.
103. Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 34; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 429; Ibn Sa'd, ni/i, 35.
The clan's name is the Banu al-Muttalib, related to the Prophet's clan, the Banu
Hashim. See Ibn Flazm, Jamharat 72-74; al-Zubayri, 92-97.
104. Duels were often fought in the course of battles, not necessarily deciding
the final outcome. ‘Utbah b. Rabi'ah, of the 'Abd Shams clan, was one of the
QurashI leaders who bitterly opposed the Prophet and, while Muhammad was still
in Mecca, attempted to find a way to end his preaching. He was eventually killed at
Badr by the Muslims. See Guillaume, 118, 132-33, r9r, 296-98; Ibn Hazm, Jam¬
harat, 76.
24
Biographies
Al-Tufayl b. al-Harith took part in the battles of Badr, Uhud, and
all the [other] battles, on the Prophet's side.
He died in the year 32 at the age of seventy.
Al-Husayn b. al-Harith b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd Manaf. 105
He was a brother of 'Ubaydah and al-Tufayl, sons of al-Harith.
[2311] He died that same year, a few months after his brother al-Tufayl.
Al-Husayn had participated in Badr, Uhud, and all the [other]
battles on the Prophet's side.
Al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf, the
paternal uncle of the Prophet. 106
His mother was Nutaylah, daughter of Janab b. Kulayb b. Malik
b. 'Amr b. ' Amir b. Zayd Manah b. 'Amir—also named al-
Dahyan—b. Sa'd b. al-Khazraj b. Taymallah b. al-Namir b. Qasit b.
Hinb b. Afsa b. Du'miyy b. Jadilah b. Asad b. Rabi'ah b. Nizar b.
Ma'addb. 'Adnan. 107
Al-'Abbas’ kunyah was Abu al-Fadl [after] al-Fadl, his eldest son.
It was reported that al-'Abbas was three years the Prophet's
senior: The latter was bom in the year of the Elephant, 108 whereas
al-'Abbas was born three years before that.
Al-'Abbas participated in the conquest of Mecca, the battle of
Hunayn, the siege of al-Ta’if, and the expedition to Tabuk 109 on
105. Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 308; Ibn Sa'd, III/i, 36.
106. That is, the eponym of the 'Abbasid dynasty. Al-'Abbas was a late convert,
and his descendants reshaped his biography in the process of legitimizing their
rule. See “'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib," EP, I, 8-9 |W. M. Watt); Sharon, Black
Banners, 35, 93-99 and passim; Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 144; idem, Tabaqat,
4; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il, 915-49; Ibn Hibban, Mashahiz, 27-28; Ibn Sa'd, IV/1,1-22;
Akhbar al-dawlah, passim.
107. The meaningful names in this long chain are al-Namir b. Qasit, a tribe of
the great Rabi'ah confederation, and 'Amir al-Dahyan, who was a powerful chief in
his time. See Caskel, II, 22-23; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 300-2; "Rabi'a and Mudar,"
EP, Vin, 352-54 (H. Kindermann).
ro8. The Year of the Elephant was the year in which the Yemeni ruler Abrahah
the Abyssinian attacked Mecca but was repelled with God's intervention. The
event is recorded in Qur’an ros and in Arab histories. Traditionally the event is
placed in the year a.d. 570, and so is Muhammad's birth. Actually Abrahah's
campaign took place in the 550s. See Kister, "Campaign"; Conrad, "Abraha."
109. A town on the northern frontier of Arabia. Muhammad made a great
campaign there in the year 9/631 but retreated after ten days because of discon¬
tent among his followers. See "Tabuk," EP, VII, 593-94 (F. Buhl); Guillaume,
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 25
the Prophet's side. At the head of his family, he stood firmly by the
Prophet in the battle of Hunayn, while [other] people retreated,
deserting the Prophet.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi] 110 —Khalid b. al-Qasim al-
Bayadl—Shu'bah, the client of Ibn 'Abbas: Al-'Abbas' spine was
straight, and he used to tell us that when 'Abd al-Muttalib 111 died
his spine was [even] straighter than his.
Al-'Abbas died on Friday, 14 Rajab 32/February 19, 653, during
the caliphate of 'Uthman b. 'Affan, 112 at the age of eighty-eight.
He was buried in al-Baqi', in the burial ground of the Hashim
family.
It was reported that when al-'Abbas died his body was washed
by 'All b. Abi Talib, together with 'Abdallah, 'Ubaydallah, and
Qutham, sons of al-'Abbas. 113
According to Muhammad b. 'All, 114 al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib died in the year 34 (July 22, 654-July 10, 655). 'Uthman
[b. 'Affan] said the ritual prayer over his bier, and he was buried in
al-Baqi'.
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 33 [2312]
(August 2, 653-July 21, 654)
Among them was al-Miqdad b. 'Amr b. Tha'labah b. Malik b.
Rabi'ah b. Thumamah b. Matrud b. 'Amr b. Sa'd b. Zuhayr—
according to some, it is Sa'd b. Dahlr—b. Lu’ayy b. Tha'labah b.
602-14; Wellhausen, Muhammad, 390-416; Caetani, II, 238-53; al-Waqidi, 989-
1025.
no. Ibn Sa'd, IV/i, 20.
in. That is, al-'Abbas' father and the Prophet's grandfather.
112. The third caliph, who ruled in the years 23-35/644-56.
113. The body of die dead was washed by relatives or close friends. 'All and
al-'Abbas both belonged to the Hashim clan, and it is feasible that there were close
ties between them. However, in view of the political rivalry between the descen¬
dants of 'All (supported by the Shi'ah) and those al-'Abbas (the 'Abbasid dynasty),
reports of the close ties between the two eponyms may be biased. See Sharon,
Black Banners, chap. 4; Madelung, "Hashimiyyat"; compare the scene in which
'All, al-'Abbas, the latter's two sons al-Fadl and Qutham, and two others are
depicted washing the dead body of the Prophet; Guillaume, 687-88. This story
helped the Shi'ah to explain 'All's failure to demand the caliphate that day.
114. Perhaps Muhammad al-Baqir is meant here,- he provided other information
about the family as well. See, e.g., p. 12, above.
26
Biographies
Malik b. al-Sharid b. Ahwan b. Fas b. Duraym b. al-Qayn b. Ahwad
b. Bahra’ b. 'Amr b. al-Haf b. Quda'ah. 115
Al-Miqdad's kunyah was Abu Ma'bad.
In pre-Islamic times al-Miqdad became an ally 116 of al-Aswad b.
'Abd Yaghuth, of the Zuhrah clan. 117 The latter adopted him, and
so he was called al-Miqdad b. al-Aswad, but when [God] revealed
the Qur’anic verse "Call them by their fathers' [names]," 118 he
was [again] named al-Miqdad b. 'Amr.
According to Ibn Ishaq and Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi], al-Miqdad
participated in the second emigration to Abyssinia. He [also] took
part on the Prophet's side in the battles of Badr, Uhud, the Ditch,
and all the [other] battles. He was one of the famous archers
among the Prophet's companions.
According to Ibn Sa'd 119 —Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—
Musa b. Ya'qub—his paternal aunt—her mother, Karlmah, daugh¬
ter of al-Miqdad: She described her father to them saying: He was
tall, brown, big-bellied, with a lot of hair on his head. He used to
dye his beard yellow; it was of medium size, neither big nor small.
[2313] He was wide-eyed, his eyebrows were knitted, and his nose was
hooked.
[According to Karlmah]: Al-Miqdad died in al-Jurf, [a place]
three miles away from Medina, 120 in the year 33. People carried
115. The meaningful tribal name here is Bahra’, of the great Quda'ah confedera¬
tion. See Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 441; "Bahra’," El 2 , I, 938 (C. E. Bosworth). On al-
Miqdad, see "Mikdad b. 'Amr," El 2 , VII, 32-33 (G. H. A. Juynboll); Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 16-17; idem, Ta’rlkh, 144,- Ibn Hibban, Mashdhir, 46; Ibn Sa'd,
m/i, ri4-i6 ; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 204-5; Muhammad Ibn Habib, Munammaq,
363-64.
116. An alliance, hilf, was a legal act by which an individual was admitted into a
clan and accorded the same rights and obligations as the members of the clan. The
clan was usually represented by one of its members (in this instance al-Aswad b.
'Abd Yaghuth). See "Hilf," EP-, IH, 388-89 (E. Tyan); Crone, Roman, Provincial
and Islamic Law, 51-56. This sense of hilf should be distinguished from hilf in the
sense of an alliance between two groups, concluded for the purpose of a common
military enterprise.
ri7. An important clan of the Quraysh. See Watt, Muhammad at Mecca, 5-8
and passim,- Caskel, II, 2-4. Al-Aswad was the Prophet's maternal cousin, yet he
opposed Islam; see Mu’arrij b. 'Amr al-Sadusi, 61.
ir8. Ibn Sa'd, III/r, ri4; see also p. 9, above.
119. Ibn Sa'd, IE/1, 115.
T20. See Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, n, 62. The place was apparently a base when¬
ce the Muslim armies set out for raids. See, e.g., al-Waqidi, 1 r25; al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh,
1 , 1796 and passim.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 27
his body on their shoulders to be buried in Medina, and 'Uthman
b. 'Affan said the ritual prayer over his bier. He was seventy years
old or so when he died.
According to Ibn Sa'd 121 —Muhammad b. 'Abdallah al-Asadi—
‘Amr b. Thabit—his father—Abu Fa’id: Al-Miqdad drank castor
oil, then died.
[Those Who Were Killed in the Year 36]
(June 30, 656-June 18, 637)
Among those who were killed in the year 36 was al-Zubayr b.
al-'Awwam b. Khuwaylid b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy. 122
Al-Zubayr was converted to Islam at an early stage; it is reported
that he was the fourth or fifth convert.
According to Hisham b. 'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr]—his father: Al-
Zubayr embraced Islam when he was sixteen years old. He never
failed to participate in all the campaigns undertaken by the
Prophet. He was fifty-odd years when he was killed.
Al-Zubayr emigrated to Abyssinia twice.
The Prophet established the bond of brotherhood ( mu’akhah )
between al-Zubayr and [Abdallah] b. Mas'ud.
It was reported that al-Zubayr was neither tall nor short, light-
bearded, dark-toned, and hairy.
According to al-Harith [b. Muhammad] 123 —'Abdallah b. Mas-
lamah b. Qa'nab—Sufyan b. 'Uyaynah: The inheritance left by al-
Zubayr amounted to 40 million [dirhams]. 124
They [also] reported 125 that on the day of the battle of the
Camel, 126 that is, Thursday the 10th of Jumada II that year/
121. Ibn Sa'd, DI/i, 115.
122. One of Muhammad's closest Companions, of the Qurashi clan Asad. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 161, 168; idem, fabaqat, 13; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir,
25-26; Ibn Hanbal, Fada'il, 733-38; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, Ta’rikh, 114-15; Ibn
Sa'd, m/i, 70-73-
123. Ibn Sa'd, m/i, 71.
124. Literally, "Al-Zubayr's inheritance was divided according to forty mil¬
lions" (i.e., that amount was taken as the basis for dividing the inheritance). On al-
Zubayr's legendary wealth, see Ibn al-Zubayr, 203.
125. This can refer either to the just-mentioned chain of authorities or to an¬
other, unspecified one.
126. In the year 36/656 al-Zubayr, his associate Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah (see be-
28
Biographies
December 5, 656, after the battle had taken place, al-Zubayr rode
his horse, named Dhu al-Khimar, and left for Medina. He was
killed [on the way] in Wadi al-Siba' and was buried there. 127
'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr] said: My father was killed in [the immediate
aftermath of] the battle of the Camel, aged sixty-four.
[2314] Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah b. 'Uthman b. 'Amr b. Ka'b b. Sa'd b.
Taym b. Murrah. 128
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad. His mother was al-Sa'bah bt.
'Abdallah al-Hadraml.
Talhah was killed, in [the immediate aftermath of] the battle of
the Camel, by Marwan b. al-Hakam.
Talhah had a son named Muhammad and sumamed al-Sajjad
(the Worshipper). Talhah's kunyah was [Abu Muhammad] after
[this son]. He was killed with his father, Talhah, in the battle of
the Camel.
Talhah was an early convert to Islam, [yet] he did not take part
in the battle of Badr.
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 3 7
(June 19, 637-June 8, 638)
Among them was 'Ammar b. Yasir 129 b. 'Amir b. Malik b. Kinanah
b. Qays b. al-Husayn b. al-Wadhim b. Tha'labah b. 'Awf b.
Harithah b. 'Amir al-Akbar b. Yam b. 'Ans—that is, Zayd—b.
Malik b. Udad b. Zayd b. Yashjub b. 'Arib b. Zayd b. Kahlan b.
low), and the Prophet's widow 'A’ishah fought against the fourth caliph, 'All b. Abi
Talib, the casus belli being their request that 'All punish the murderers of the third
caliph, 'Uthman b. 'Affan. According to the prevailing versions, Talhah and al-
Zubayr were not killed in battle hut repented their move and retreated. They were
nevertheless killed by 'All's supporters. See Kennedy, 76; Wellhausen, Arab King¬
dom, 51-53; "Djamal," EP, II, 414-16 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); Caetani, IX, 23-225;
Armush; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3111-3224.
127. A wadi on the way from southern Iraq to the Hijaz; see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-
buldan, HI, 29.
128. A close Companion of the Prophet, of the Qurashi clan Taym. See "Talhah.
'Ubaidallah," El 1 , VIII, 640-41 (G. Levi Della Vida); Khallfah h. Khayyat, Ta’rikh,
160, 16s; idem, Tabaqat, 18; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il, 743-48; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir,
25; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 437; Ibn Sa'd, JR/i, 152-61.
129. "'Ammar b. Yasir," EP, I, 448 (H. Reckendorf); Ibn Sa'd, in/i, 176-89;
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta'nkh, 173; idem, Tabaqat, 21, 75,189; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il,
857-61; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 74; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 156-75, V, 48-52.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 29
Saba’ b. Yashjub b. Ya'rub b. Qahtan. [The tribe] Banu Malik b.
Udad belong to Madhhij. 130
It was reported that Yasir b. 'Amir, the father 131 of 'Ammar b.
Yasir, and his two brothers al-Harith and Malik came from the
Yemen to Mecca looking for a brother of theirs. Al-Harith and
Malik returned to the Yemen, whereas Yasir stayed in Mecca and
entered into an alliance [hilf] with Abu Hudhayfah b. al-Mughlrah
b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. Makhzum. 132 Abu Hudhayfah gave a
slave girl named Sumayyah bt. Khabbat in marriage to Yasir, and
she bore him 'Ammar, who was freed by Abu Hudhayfah. Yasir
and 'Ammar stayed with Abu Hudhayfah until he died. Then God
brought Islam [into the world], and Yasir, Sumayyah, 'Ammar, and
his brother 'Abdallah b. Yasir adhered to it. Yasir [also] had a son
older than 'Ammar and 'Abdallah, Hurayth by name, who had been [2315]
killed in pre-Islamic times by [people of the tribe of ] Banu al-Dll. 133
After Yasir's death Sumayyah was given in marriage to al-
Azraq, a Byzantine slave of al-Harith b. Kaladah al-Thaqafl. 134 Al-
Azraq was one of the Ta’ifI slaves who went out to the Prophet
during the siege of al-Ta’if, and the Prophet set them free; among
them was [also] Abu Bakrah. 135
130. Wa-banu malik bn udad min madhhij. The text here is not accurate: the
Banu Malik b. Udad were not part of the Madhhij but identical with it (the struc¬
ture of the sentence does not allow interpretation of min as mubayyinah). Madhhij
was a toponym and also the name of a large, powerful tribal group of Yemeni
origin. According to the Arab genealogists, the real name (and pedigree) of this
group is Malik b. Udad. See "Madhhidj," EP-, V, 953-54 (G. R. Smith (C. E.
Bosworth]); Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 397, 405. See also note 406, below.
131. The text has laba instead of aba, obviously an error. The Cairo edition,
508, has a hypercorrection ( mbba , "raised"), whereas the Dar al-Fikr edition, 504,
has aba.
132. A leader of the powerful Qurashi clan the Makhzum, who died before
Islam, so that not much is known about him. See al-Zubayri, 300.
133. There are a few tribes by that name, all belonging to the confederation of
Rabi'ah. See Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 295, 298.
134. A member of the tribe of Thaqlf, the people of the town al-Ta’if. He lived in
pre-Islamic times, learned the craft of medicine in Persia, and was known as the
Arab doctor of his time. See Hawting, "Development."
135. A son of the aforementioned al-Harith b. Kaladah by a slave girl named
Sumayyah (not identical with 'Ammar's mother). He was freed by the Prophet and
became a well-known Companion. His offspring attained high positions in both
learning and administration. See Ibn 'Abd al-Barr, Isti'ab, IV, 23; see Ibn Hajar,
I$abah, IV, 334-35, for the confusion between Sumayyah the slave girl of Abu
Hudhayfah and mother of 'Ammar and Sumayyah the slave girl of al-Harith b.
Kaladah and mother of Abu Bakrah and Salamah. Contrary to our text, Salamah b.
al-Azraq was not the half-brother of 'Ammar).
3°
Biographies
Sumayyah bore al-Azraq [a son], Salamah b. al-Azraq, who was
'Ammar's half-brother. Salamah's offspring later claimed that al-
Azraq had been the son of 'Amr b. al-Harith b. Abi Shamir from
Ghassan 136 and an ally [hallf] of the Banu Umayyah. 137 [Indeed] al-
Azraq and his offspring attained a high position in Mecca. They
married into the Umayyad family and had children with them.
'Ammar's kunyah was Abu al-Yaqzan.
According to all the biographers I have mentioned, 'Ammar em¬
igrated to Abyssinia in the second emigration.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Ja'far: The
Prophet established the bond of brotherhood ( mu’akhah ) between
'Ammar b. Yasir and Hudhayfah b. al-Yaman. 'Abdallah b. Ja'far
said: Hudhayfah did not take part in the battle of Badr, yet he was
an early convert. 138
[The biographers] all agree that 'Ammar b. Yasir participated in
the battles of Badr, Uhud, and the Ditch, and all the [other] events,
on the Prophet's side.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Nafi'—his
father—['Abdallah] Ibn 'Umar, who related the following: I saw
'Ammar b. Yasir during the battle of al-Yamamah 139 [standing]
high on a rock, shouting: "O Muslims, are you running away from
[2316] Paradise? I am 'Ammar b. Yasir; come over to me ." 140 1 was look-
136. Ghassan was an Arab kingdom in Syria dependent on Byzantium, on the
southern border of which it was situated. Arab genealogists acknowledge the
Ghassan as a tribal group, while admitting that its constituents were not the
descendants of one and the same eponym. See "Ghassan," El 2 , II, 1020-21 (I.
Shahid); Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 460, 472-74.
137. The family that produced the first dynasty in Islam (41-132/661-750) and
had held the leading position in Mecca before and during the Prophet's lifetime.
See Hawting, First Dynasty-, Munajjid.
138. There were two Companions by that name. The one meant here was a man
of bedouin origin, of the tribe of 'Abs, whose father had come to Medina in pre-
Islamic times and became an ally of the Awsi clan of Banu 'Abd al-Ashhal; see Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, I, 317-18; p. 133, below. The brotherhood was established before the
battle of Badr, so Hudhayfah's participation in it proves that he was an early
convert.
r39. In the year 13/633, against the Banu Hanlfah and their allies in al-
Yamamah (in the eastern part of the Arabian peninsula), led by their (false) prophet
Musaylimah. This was part of the so-called apostasy wars ( riddah ), in Abu Bakr's
time. See Shoufani, 83-84; Caetani, n, 723-62.
140. According to an ancient custom, a warrior cries out his own name in the
course of battle, evoking his own and his ancestors' past heroic deeds, thus encour-
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 31
ing at his ear, which had been cut and was dangling, while he
fought vehemently.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Abi 'Ubay-
dah—his father—Lu’lu’ah, the client of Umm al-Hakam bt.
'Ammar b. Yasir: On the day 'Ammar was killed, Hashim b.
'Utbah was carrying the flag; 141 'All's companions suffered great
losses, until the time for the afternoon [prayer] came. When the
sun began setting 'Ammar moved behind Hashim, advancing past
him. 'Ammar was holding [a vessel with] a mixture of milk and
water and was awaiting sunset in order to break his fast. When the
sun had set and he had drunk the mixture he said: "I heard the
Prophet say 'Your last meal in this world will be a mixture of milk
and water.'" He then went forward and fought until he was killed.
He was ninety-four years old.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. al-Harith—
his father—'Umarah b. Khuzaymah b. Thabit: Khuzaymah b.
Thabit [b. al-Fakih al-Ansarl] was present at the battle of the
Camel but never drew his sword. He was [also] present at the
battle of Siffin, where he said: "I shall never stray from the right
path, [as I will wait] until 'Ammar is killed so that I can see who
kills him, for I have heard the Prophet say 'The unjust party will
kill ['Ammar]."' When 'Ammar was killed Khuzaymah said "The
wrong way is now clear to me." Then he went forward and fought
until he was killed.
'Ammar's killer was Abu Ghadiyah of the Muzaynah tribe. 142
He stabbed him with a lance, and 'Ammar fell. ['Ammar] was
fighting [seated] in a litter that day; he was killed at the age of
ninety-four. When he fell [as a result of Abu Ghadiyah's blow] [2317]
aging his fellow tribesmen and intimidating the enemy. 'Ammar here encourages
the people also by reminding them that death in battle will earn them paradise.
141. The reference is to the battle of Siffin, in the year 37/657, between the
fourth caliph, 'All b. Abi Talib, and his opponent Mu'awiyah b. Abi Sufyan, who
later founded the Umayyad dynasty. See Kennedy, 78-79; Wellhausen, Arab King¬
dom, 75-112; Petersen, 186-96; Hinds, "Siffin"; Hawting, First Dynasty, 28;
Caetani, IX, 429-541; Nasrb. Muzahim; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh I, 3256-3349 (3317-22
on 'Ammar). Cf. Ibn al-jawzl, Muntazam, V, 118-19.
142. There were at least two persons by the name Abu Ghadiyah. According to
Ibn Hajar, Isabab, IV, 150-52, following many other scholars, the Abu Ghadiyah
who killed 'Ammar was not the one of the Muzaynah but the one of the tribe of
Juhaynah. Both are counted among the Companions. Cf. Nasr b. Muzahim, 339—
42.
32 Biographies
another man bent down over him and pierced his head. The two
men started quarreling, each claiming "It was I who killed him,"
whereupon 'Amr b. al-'As said "Indeed, these two are contesting
[the 'right' to enter] hell." 143 Mu'awiyah heard this, and when the
two men were gone he said to 'Amr: "I never saw anything like
what you did. These people fought with devotion for our cause,
and you tell them 'You are contesting [the "right" to enter] hell ?'"
'Amr said: "By God, this is so and, by God, you do know this [too].
I wish I had died twenty years before this."
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Abdallah b. Ja'far—Ibn
Abi 'Awn: 'Ammar was killed when he was ninety-one years old;
he had been bom before the Prophet. [He was killed like this]:
Three men approached him, namely, 'Uqbah b. 'Amir al-Juhani,
'Umar b. al-Harith al-Khawlanl, and Sharik b. Salamah al-
Muradi. 144 They drew near him together while he was saying "By
God, [even] if you beat us [so hard] that you make us reach the
palm trees of Hajar, 145 we know that we are in the right and you in
the wrong." All [three] of them pounced on him and killed him.
Some people claim that 'Uqbah b. 'Amir killed him, whereas oth¬
ers hold that it was 'Umar b. al-Harith al-Khawlanl.
Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari] says: According to Hisham b. Muhammad
[al-Kalbl]—Abu Mikhnaf: 'Ammar did not desist from urging on
Hashim b. 'Utbah, who was carrying the flag, until he [announced
a] charge. Then 'Ammar got up, leading his squadron, and Dhu al-
Kala' rose up to him, leading his own squadron. 146 They fought
143. Or, "These two will be quarreling nowhere but in hell." 'Amr, who sup¬
ported Mu'awiyah, implies that Mu'awiyah acted wrongfully and was bound to go
to hell together with his supporters. See also Nasr b. Muzahim, 333, 341.
144. 'Uqbah b. 'Amir was a famous Companion credited with the transmission
of many prophetic traditions, a poet who mastered the art of writing, and a Qur’an
reader who had a version of the holy book different from the canonical 'Uthmani
text (see note 94, above, hut he is not recorded by Jeffery). He supported Mu'awiyah
against 'All and was later appointed governor of Egypt. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n,
489; al-Kindi, 35-36. The two other persons mentioned here are apparently much
less well known; see Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasaz, X, 306.
145. Oases situated in the eastern part of the Arabian peninsula, also known as
al-Ahsa’ or Hasa; see "Hasa," El 2 , D 3 ,137-38 (F. S. Vidal).
146. Cf. Nasr b. Muzahim, 333. Dhu al-Kala', of the Yemeni people of Himyar,
was a powerful local king in the Yemen in pre-Islamic times. He was converted to
Islam as late as the time of the second caliph, 'Umar, and became one of the most
powerful leaders of the Yemeni tribes in Syria. He supported Mu'awiyah against
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 33
and were both killed, and both their squadrons were entirely [2318]
destroyed. Huwayy al-Saksakl 147 and Abu Ghadiyah al-Muzanl
[were the ones who] fell on 'Ammar and killed him. [Later] Abu
Ghadiyah was asked "How did you kill him?" He said "When our
squadrons moved toward each other, he called out 'Is anyone pre¬
pared to fight a duel?' 148 A man of the Sakasik came forward, they
exchanged blows with their swords, and 'Ammar killed the Sak-
saki. Then he called [again], 'Is anyone prepared to fight a duel?' A
man of the Himyar came forward, they exchanged blows with
their swords, and 'Ammar killed the Himyari, [but] the latter had
weakened him. [Then] 'Ammar called out [again]: 'Who is pre¬
pared to fight a duel?' I came forward, and we exchanged blows.
His hand had already weakened, and I stooped and dealt him an¬
other blow, whereupon he fell, and I hit him with my sword until
he died. People shouted 'You have killed Abu al-Yaqzan ; may God
kill you.' I said 'Go away; I do not care who you were.' 149 I swear
that I did not recognize him that day." Muhammad b. al-
Muntashir said to Abu Ghadiyah "O Abu al-Ghadiyah, on the day
of Judgment your adversary will be maiandai," meaning
"bulky." 150 Abu Ghadiyah laughed.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Abdallah b. Abi 'Ubaydah
b. Muhammad b. 'Ammar—his father—Lu’lu’ah, the client of
Umm al-Hakam bt. 'Ammar, who described 'Ammar to them say¬
ing: He was brown-toned, tall, flabby, his eyes dark blue, his
shoulders broad. He was not in the habit of dyeing his white hair.
'All and was killed in the battle of Siffln. See Hasson, Recherches, 167-70,■ Crone,
Slaves, 95; Nasr b. Muzahim, passim. On Himyar, see note 405, below.
147. Huwayy seems famous mainly for killing ‘Ammar (but he is not mentioned
by Nasr b. Muzahim or by al-Tabari in the story of 'Ammar's death); see Ibn Hazm,
Jamharat, 431-32; Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma'add, 196. His son was one of the nota¬
bles of Damascus; see Ibn Manzur, Mukhta$ar, XIX, 203. Huwayy's clan, the
Sakasik, was part of the powerful Yemeni tribe of Kindah; see "Kinda," EP-, V, 118-
20 (A. F. L. Beeston). The Kindi branches that settled in Syria after the Muslim
conquest were ardent supporters of Mu'awiyah; see Hasson, Recherches, 112-15.
148. See note 104, above.
149. Apparently Abu Ghadiyah is addressing 'Ammar, who is already dead.
150. Vocalized mazundaz in Ibn Sa'd, m/i, 187; see also al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I,
173. Although glossed by Arabic dakhm, "big, bulky," the meaning of this Persian
word is by no means clear. De Goeje suggests "terrible, grave"; Glossarium, s.v.
maiandai.
34
Biographies
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl], it was unanimously agreed
[among the scholars] that 'Ammar was killed [while fighting on
[2319] the side of] 'All b. Abi Talib at Siffin, in Safar, 37/July 657. He was
ninety-three years old and was buried at Siffin.
'Abdallah b. Budayl b. Warqa’ b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Rabi'ah b.
Jurayy b. 'Amir b. Mazin b. 'Adiyy b. 'Amr b. Rabi'ah. 151
'Abdallah participated in the conquest of Mecca, the battle of
Hunayn, and the expedition to Tabuk on the Prophet's side. He
was killed in the battle of Siffin, [fighting] on the side of 'All, the
Commander of the Faithful. 152
Khuzaymah b. Thabit b. al-Fakih b. Tha'labah b. Sa'idah b.
'Amir b. Ghayyan b. 'Amir b. Khatmah b. Jusham b. Malik b. al-
Aws. 153
[He was] the man of the two testimonies. 154
Khuzaymah's kunyah was Abu 'Umarah. He had two brothers,
Wahwah and 'Abdallah.
Khuzaymah carried the banner of [his clan, the] Khatmah, on
the day of the conquest of Mecca. He participated in the battle of
Siffin on 'Ali's side and was killed there, in the year 37.
Sa'd b. al-Harith b. al-Simmah b. 'Amr b. 'Atik b. 'Amr b. Mab-
dhul—[whose real name was] 'Amir—b. Malik b. al-Najjar. 155
Sa'd was a Companion of the Prophet. He participated in [the
151. Ibn Hibban, Mashdhli, 135; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 177; al-Tabari,
Ta’zikh, I, 3289, 3297, 3299; IbnHajar, Isabah, I, 141. The clan's name is Banu 'Adi
b. 'Amr, of the Mudar; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 239.
152. 'Abdallah was commander of the infantry; see Nasr b. Muzahim, 102, hi,
205, and passim.
153. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 83; Ibn Hibban, Mashahiz, 77; al-Baladhuri,
Ansab, I, 170; Ibn Sa'd, IV/2, 90-92, IV, 33; Nasr b. Muzahim, 363. Khuzaymah's
clan was the Banu Khatmah, a part of the Aws (one of two tribes making up the
Ansar).
154. Dhu al-shahadatayn, so called because the Prophet highly estimated him
and considered his testimony equal to that of two men ; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah , I,
425-26.
155. The Banu al-Najjar was an important clan of the Khazraj (the other of the
two tribes making up the Ansar).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 35
battle of ] Siffin on the side of 'All b. Abi Talib and was killed there.
He was the brother of Abu Juhaym b. al-Harith b. al-Simmah. 156
Abu 'Amrah, that is, Bashir b. 'Amr b. Mihsan b. 'Amr b. 'Atik b.
'Amr b. Mabdhul. 157
Abu 'Amrah was the father of 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi 'Amrah,
who transmitted [traditions] from 'Uthman b. 'Affan.
Abu 'Amrah was killed in [the battle of] Siffin [while fighting]
on 'Ali's side.
Hashim b. 'Utbah b. Abi Waqqas b. Uhayb b. 'Abd Manaf b. [2320]
Zuhrah. 158
Hashim embraced Islam on the day of the conquest of Mecca.
He is [the one known as] al-Mirqal (the swift runner). He was one-
eyed, as he had lost an eye at the battle of Yarmuk. 159
Hashim was a nephew of Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas.
He fought on 'Ali's side at Siffin, where he was in charge of the
infantry. He is the one who said:
A one-eyed man [I am], who seeks a place for his kin, 160
Who experienced life till he was wearied.
His enemies he must beat or else himself be beaten.
He was killed at Siffin.
Abu Fadalah al-Ansari. 161
156. A minor Companion, who was credited with the transmission of certain
important traditions; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, TV, 36.
157. Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, HI (Duri), 294; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 105;
Nasr b. Muzahim, 187, 357-59; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3270-71, 3290. He was of the
Banu al-Najjar, of the Khazraj (Ansar).
158. Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 34; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 176-77; Ibn
Qudamah, 389-91; Nasr b. Muzahim, passim; al-Qummi, HI, 156-57; al-Tabari,
Ta’rlkh, I, 3322-24. He belonged to the Qurashi clan the Banu Zuhrah and was
known as a brave warrior.
159. One of the major battles of the Muslim conquest of Syria; see Donner, Early
Islamic Conquests, 133-36, 142; al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh, I, 2090-2121.
160. See al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh, I, 2324; Nasr b. Muzahim, 327, 355; Ibn al-Athlr,
Kamil, HI, 314.
161. Although said to have participated in the battle of Badr, he appears to be a
rather obscure Companion,- see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, TV, 155 (full name not
mentioned).
36
Biographies
He was one of the participants in [the battle of] Badr. He was
killed at Siffin, [fighting] on 'All's side.
Sahl b. Hunayf b. Wahib b. al-'Ukaym b. Tha'labah b. 'Amr b. al-
Harith b. Majda'ah b. 'Amr b. Hanash b. 'Awf b. 'Amr b. 'Awf. 162
His kunyah was Abu Sa'd or, according to another version, Abu
'Abdallah.
Sahl's ancestor was 'Amr b. al-Harith, the one called Bahzaj (calf
of a wild cow). 163
Sahl participated in [the battles of] Badr and Uhud. At Uhud he
stood firmly by the Prophet while others retreated from him, and
he pledged himself before the Prophet to fight to the death. That
[2321] day he shot arrows defending the Prophet, whereupon the latter
said "Give arrows to Sahl, for he is easy [in spending them]." 164
Sahl also participated in the [event of the] Ditch and all the
[other] battles on the Prophet's side. He fought at Siffin on the side
of 'All b. Abi Talib.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abd
al-'Aziz—Muhammad b. Abi Umamah b. Sahl—his father: Sahl b.
Hunayf died in al-Kufah in the year 38 (June 9, 658-May 28, 659);
'All b. Abi Talib said the ritual prayer over his bier.
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 40
(May iy, 660-May 6, 661)
Among those who were killed that year was the Commander of
the Faithful 'All b. Abi Talib—the latter's name was 'Abd
Manaf—b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf b. Qu-
sayy. 165
'All's kunyah was Abu al-Hasan.
162. Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 80; Khallfahb. Khayyat, Ta'nkh, i8i ; idem, Taba-
qat, 85; Ibn Sa'd, III/2, 39-41. The clan, 'Awf b. 'Amr, belonged to the Aws (Ansar);
see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 336.
163. There is some confusion in the genealogy of Sahl. See Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab
ma'add, 372; idem, Jamharat, 630; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 336.
164. Ibn Sa'd, III/2, 40. There is a play on words here, as sahl means "easy." See
also Ibn 'Abd al-Barr, Istl'ab, n, 92; al-Mizzi, Tahdhlb, XII, 185.
165. The Prophet's paternal cousin and son-in-law and the fourth caliph (35—
40/656-661. See "'All b. Abi Talib," EP-, I, 38r-86; al-Amln, III/1—3; Ibn Sa'd, III/r,
11-27; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 182-83; idem, Tabaqat, 4-5; Ibn Hibban,
Mashdhu, 24; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il, 528-728.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 37
It was reported that 'All was struck on Thursday, 17 th
Ramadan/January 24, 661, and died on Saturday, the 19th of that
month/January 26, 661. 166 The information about him is already
recorded in our book al-Mudhayyal.
Ishaq b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Farwah asked Abu Ja'far Muhammad
[al-Baqir] b. 'All "What did 'All look like?" He said "A man of dark-
brown complexion and heavy eyes, 167 bald, big-bellied, and rather
short."
Those Who Died in the Year 50
(January 29, 670-January 17, 671)
Among them was Sa'id b. Zayd b. 'Amr b. Nufayl b. 'Abd al-'Uzza
b. Riyah b. 'Abdallah b. Qurt b. Razah b. 'Adi b. Ka'b b. Lu’ayy. 168
His kunyah was Abu al-A'war.
Sa'Id's father, Zayd b. 'Amr b. Nufayl, had abandoned the re¬
ligion of his people, the Quraysh. 169 He died while the Quraysh
were building the Ka'bah, five years before the Prophet was [first]
inspired, 170 and it is related that the Prophet said "He will be
resurrected as a community unto himself." 171
166. The dates do not correspond to the weekdays mentioned here. According to
Cattenoz' tables, the 17th of Ramadan was a Sunday and the 19th a Tuesday.
Laylat al-jum'ah and laylat al-ahad are rendered as Thursday and Saturday be¬
cause the Arabs count the days by the nights that precede them.
167. Thaqll al-'aynayn, perhaps bulging eyes or drooping eyelids.
168. One of the earliest converts and a close Companion of the Prophet. See
"Sa'id b. Zaid," El 1 , VII, 66-67 (A. J. Wensinck); Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 26;
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta'rlkh, 205; idem, Tabaqat, 22; Ibn Qudamah, 424-26.
According to 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, Ta'iikh, 122, he died in the year 46/666-67.
The clan's name is Banu 'Adi, of the Quraysh.
169. Much has been written about the pre-Islamic Arab monotheists, the hanlfs-,
the most recent study is Rubin's “Hanifiyya."
170. The precise date of this event is not known but is usually placed in about
a.d. 610. See Conrad, "Abraha," especially 233-35; on the construction history of
the Ka'bah, see Rubin, "Ka'ba."
171. Ibn Sa'd, DI/r, 277. Cf. al-Tabari, Jami', n, 8-10: As the role of Muham¬
mad's community on Judgment Day is to testify that God's messengers indeed
conveyed the messages, the argument here may be that Zayd's testimony will be
equivalent to that of the whole community. It is usually the archmonotheist, the
patriarch Abraham, who is referred to as ummah, interpreted as "leader" or "teach¬
er of what is good"; see Qur’an 16:120,- al-Tabari, Jami', XIV, 191-92.
38
Biographies
[2322] Sa'id b. Zayd had been converted to Islam before the Prophet
entered the house of al-Arqam to preach from there. 172 He partici¬
pated with the Prophet in [the battle of] Uhud, the Ditch, and all
the [other] events except [the battle of] Badr.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abd al-Malik b. Zayd, a
descendant of Sa'id b. Zayd—his father: Sa'id b. Zayd died in
al-'Aqlq, 173 and people carried him on their shoulders to Medina,
where he was buried. Sa'd [b. Abi Waqqas?] 174 and ['Abdallah] Ibn
'Umar descended into his grave. 175 He was seventy-odd years old
when he died in the year 50 or 51/670-71 or 671-72. He had been
exceptionally tall, of brown complexion, and hairy.
Al-Mughlrah b. Shu'bah b. Abi 'Amir b. Mas'ud b. Mu'attib b.
Malik b. Ka'b b. 'Amr b. Sa'd b. 'Awf b. Thaqlf—whose [real] name
was Qasiyy—b. Munabbih b. Bakr b. Hawazin b. 'Ikrimah b.
Khasafah b. Qays b. 'Aylan b. Mudar b. Nizar. 176
Al-Mughirah's kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah, and he was called
Mughlrah al-Ra’y (Mughirah of the sound opinion), for he was very
shrewd.
Al-Mughlrah went to the Prophet, embraced Islam, and stayed
with him,- thus al-Mughlrah took part in the minor pilgrimage
(' umrah) of al-Hudaybiyyah in Dhu al-Qa'dah of the year 6/April
628.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Muhammad
b. 'Umar b. 'All—his father—'All [b. Abi Talib]: When al-
Mughlrah b. Shu'bah threw his signet ring into the Prophet's grave
I said "Let it not be said by people that you descended into the
Prophet's grave, and don't you [go around] telling people that your
172. See p. 47, below.
173. The valley west of Medina; several eminent Qurashls built castles there.
See '"Aklk," El 2 , I, 336-37 (G. Rentz); 'Umar b. Shabbah, I, 146-52, 165-67; al-
Samhudi, III, 1039-71.
174. Note that a similar account ("died in al-'Aqiq and was carried to Medina")
is given about Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas; see Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 26.
175. See note 43, above.
r76. First governor of al-Kufah for Mu'awiyah. See "al-Mughira b. Shu'ba," El 2 ,
VII, 347 (H. Lammens); Hawting, First Dynasty, 40; Khalifah ETkhayyat, Tabaqat,
53, 131, 183; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 75; al-A'zami, Kuttab, 107-8. His tribe, the
Thaqxf of the town al-Ta’if, played a leading role in the early Muslim state; see
Donner, Early Islamic Conquests, 78 and passim.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 39
signet ring is in his grave." 177 So 'All went down, for he had seen
where the ring had fallen, picked it up, and gave it to al-Mughirah.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Muhammad b. Abi Musa [232,3]
al-Thaqafi—his father: Al-Mughirah died in al-Kufah in Sha'ban,
50/September 670, during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah, at the age
of seventy. He had been an extremely tall man and one-eyed; it
was [also] said that he had woolly, curled, chestnut-colored hair,
in which he used to make four partings. He had a big head, con¬
tracting lips, broken front teeth, thick arms, and broad shoulders.
Al-Hasan b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 178
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—-'Abdallah b. Ja'far [b. 'Abd
al-Rahman b. al-Miswar]—Umm Bakr bt. al-Miswar [b.
Makhramah]: Al-Hasan b. 'Ali was poisoned a few times [but]
always escaped death until the last poisoning, of which he died
because his liver had been destroyed [by it]. When he died the
women of the Banu Hashim wailed a [whole] month for him. 179
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Hafs b. 'Umar—Abu Ja'far
[Muhammad al-Baqir?]: The people mourned seven days for al-
Hasan, suspending [trade in] the markets.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Ubaydah bt. Nabil—
'A’ishah bt. Sa'd: The women of the Banu Hashim put on mourn¬
ing garments for a [whole] year, [lamenting] al-Hasan.
According to [al-Waqidi]—Da’ud b. Sinan—Tha'labah b. Abi
Malik: We were in attendance of Hasan b. 'Ali on the day he died,
and we buried him in al-Baqi'. I saw al-Baqi' [so crowded with
people that], if I had thrown a needle there, it would inevitably [2324]
have fallen on someone's head.
According to 'Ali b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]—Maslamah b.
177. Ibn Sa'd, n/2,77-78. Such sayings would have earned al-Mughirah prestige.
As he was a controversial figure, the point of the story is that such prestige was
denied him.
178. 'All's eldest son, the second imam of the Shi'ah. See "al-Hasan b. 'All", EP,
m, 240-43 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); al-Amin, IV, 3-109,- Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh,
194; idem, Tabaqat, 5,- Ibn Hanbal, Fada'il, 766-89; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 24-25;
al-Baladhuri, Ansab, m (Mahmudlj, 5-74; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, 119-20.
179 - Cf- Abu al-Layth al-Samarqandl, fol. 72a-b. Lamenting the dead ( nawh,
niyahah) was a pre-Islamic practice, banned in many sayings attributed to the
Prophet. Shedding tears for them ( buka ’) was, however, permitted; see "Niyaha,"
EP, Vm, 64-65 (T. Fahd); Juynboll, Muslim Tradition, 96-108.
40
Biographies
Muharib: Al-Hasan b. 'All died on the 5th of Rabi' I 50/April 2,
670. 'All b. Muhammad says that, according to another version, he
died in the year 51 (January 18, 671-January 7, 672) at the age of
forty-six.
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 52
(January 8, 672-December 26, 672)
Among them was Abu Ayyub. 180
His name was Khalid b. Zayd b. Kulayb b. Tha'labah b. 'Abd b.
'Awf b. Ghanm b. Malik b. al-Najjar. 181
All [the biographers] are unanimous that he was one of the sev¬
enty Ansar who swore allegiance to the Prophet on the night of the
'Aqabah meeting.
The Prophet established the bond of brotherhood ( mu’dkhdh )
between Abu Ayyub and Mus'ab b. 'Umayr. 182
Abu Ayyub participated in [the battles of] Badr, Uhud, and the
Ditch and all the [other] events on the Prophet's side.
Abu Ayyub died when Yazid b. Mu'awiyah raided Constantino¬
ple during the caliphate of his father, Mu'awiyah. 183 His grave is
at the foot of the fortress in Constantinople, in the Byzantine
territory. It was reported that the Greeks frequent his grave, reno¬
vate it, and pray there for rain in times of drought. 184
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 54
(December 16, 67 3-December 5, 674)
Among them was Hakim b. Hizam b. Khuwaylid b. Asad b. 'Abd
al-'Uzza b. Qusayy. 185
180. "Abu Ayyub," EP, 1 ,108-9; Khallfah b. Khayyat Ta’rikh, 197; idem, Taba-
qat, 89; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 49; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 242, in (Durl), 53; al-
A'zaml, Kuttab, 33-34.
181. The clan's name is Banu al-Najjar, of the Khazraj (Ansarj.
182. An early convert, of the Qurashi clan the Banu 'Abd al-Dar, who was the
Prophet's deputy in Medina before the Emigration; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, HI, 421-
22.
183. In the year 49/669-70. See al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, II, 86; al-Manbijl, 69 and n. 6.
On Yazid, who reigned after his father Mu'awiyah, see Hawting, First Dynasty, 40-
44 and passim; "Yazid," EP, vm, 1162-63 (H. Lammens).
184. Ibn Sa'd, in/2, 50.
185. A nephew of Khadijah, the Prophet's wife, of the Qurashi clan the Banu
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 41
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—al-Mundhir b. 'Abdallah—
Musa b. 'Uqbah—Abu Hablbah, the client of al-Zubayr [b.
al-'Awwam]—Hakim b. Hizam: I was bom thirteen years before
the People of the Elephant came [to raid Mecca]; I was [already] a
mature man 186 when 'Abd al-Muttalib intended to sacrifice his
son 'Abdallah, as his vow was due to be fulfilled; 187 this was five
years before the Prophet was bom. 188
Hakim b. Hizam participated in [the war] of the Fijar together
with his father, Hizam b. Khuwaylid, who was killed in the sec- [2,32,5 ]
ond Fijar war. 189
Hakim's kunyah was Abu Khalid. He had [four] sons: 'Abdallah,
Khalid, Yahya, and Hisham; their mother was Zaynab bt.
al-'Awwam b. Khuwaylid b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy. 190
According to another version, the mother of Hisham b. Hakim
was Mulaykah bt. Malik b. Sa'd, of the Banu al-Harith b. Fihr. 191
All of Hakim's sons joined the Prophet on the day of the conquest
[of Mecca] and were counted among his Companions.
It was reported that Hakim b. Hizam reached the age of 12,0.
When Mu'awiyah made the Pilgrimage [to Mecca] he passed by
him. Afterward Mu'awiyah sent Hakim a pregnant she-camel so
that he might drink her milk. That was after Mu'awiyah had asked
him what food he ate, whereupon Hakim replied "As for chewing,
there is none of that for me," so Mu'awiyah sent him that preg¬
nant she-camel. He also sent him a gift, which, however, Hakim
refused to accept, saying "After the Prophet died I took nothing
Asad. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 31; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 211; idem,
Jabaqat, 13-14; Ibn Qudamah, 270-72.
186. Literally, "I had brains"; see also note 108, above, on the Year of the
Elephant.
187. 'Abd al-Muttalib, grandfather of the Prophet, vowed that if he had ten
grown-up sons he would sacrifice one of them to God. The lot fell to 'Abdallah,
father of the Prophet, who was then ransomed with a hundred camels. See Ibn
Hisham, I, 160-64; Guillaume, 66-68; al-Tabari, Ta’iikh, I, 1073-78.
188. See p. 24, above.
189. A series of pre-Islamic battles between the Quraysh with their allies and
several other tribal groups, see E. Landau-Tasseron, "Sinful Wars."
190. That is, they were nephews of the famous Companion al-Zubayr b.
al-'Awwam.
191. A Qurashi clan. Fihr is in fact considered as the real eponym of the tribe,
Quraysh being a byname. See Caskel, n, 4; al-Zubayri, 443-46; Ibn Hazm, Jam-
haiat, 12, 176-78.
42
Biographies
[from the government], Abu Bakr and 'Umar invited me to take
my lawful share, but I refused to do so." 192
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ibn Abi al-Zinad—his fa¬
ther: Hakim b. Hizam was asked "What does wealth consist of, O
Abu Khalid?" He replied "Having few dependents."
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Hakim b. Hizam came to
Medina, where he settled and built a house ( dar ). 193 He died in
Medina in the year 54, during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah, at the
age of 120.
Makhramah b. Nawfal b. Uhayb b. 'Abd Manaf b. Zuhrah b.
Kilab. 194
His mother was Ruqayqah bt. Abi Sayfiyy b. Hashim b. 'Abd
Manaf.
Makhramah had [eight] sons: the eldest, Safwan, after whom he
was called [Abu Safwan]; al-Miswar; al-Salt al-Akbar, (the mother
of Safwan and the other two was 'Atikah bt. 'Awf b. 'Abd 'Awf b.
'Abd b. al-Harith b. Zuhrah, the sister of 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf.
She was an Emigrant, and her mother was al-Shifa’ bt. 'Awf b. 'Abd
[2326] b. al-Harith b. Zuhrah, who was also an Emigrant); al-Salt al-
Asghar ; Safwan al-Asghar ; al-'Attaf al-Akbar; al-'Attaf al-Asghar;
and Muhammad.
Makhramah b. Nawfal embraced Islam on the conquest of
Mecca. He was an expert on the genealogy and traditions of the
Quraysh and had knowledge about the stones utilized as demarca¬
tions of the sanctuary [in Mecca] (ansab al-haram). 'Umar [b. al-
Khattab] used to send him, together with Sa'Id b. Yarbu' Abu Hud,
Huwaytib b. 'Abd al-'Uzza, and Azhar b. 'Abd 'Awf, to renew these
demarcations of the sanctuary, because these [people] had knowl¬
edge of them. 195
192. Hakim is referring to the pension awarded the Muslim veterans among
others. On the system of the pensions instituted by ‘Umar ( diwan ), see Puin,-
"'Ata’," EP-, I, 729-30 (Cl. Cahen); "Diwan," ibid. II, 323-24 (A. A. Duri).
193. Dai may refer to a plot containing a courtyard and one or more buildings.
r94- Of the Qurashi clan the Banu Zuhrah. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 58;
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 211; idem, Tabaqat, 15; Ibn Qudamah, 291-92.
195. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 29-30 (the biography of the Qurashi Companion
Azhar b. 'Abd 'Awf), II, 51-52 (the biography of the Qurashi Companion Sa'id b.
Yarbu'). The sacred territory in Mecca was demarcated with the help of stones,
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 43
Makhramah b. Nawfal lost his eyesight [some time] during the
caliphate of 'Uthman.
Makhramah b. Nawfal participated in the battle of Hunayn
with the Prophet, who gave him fifty camels from the spoils.
However, according to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi], 'Abdallah b. Ja'far
denied that Makhramah was given any of that [booty] and said
that he never heard any of his family mention this. 196
Makhramah died in Medina in the year 54/673-74, during the
caliphate of Mu'awiyah; he was 115 years old when he died.
Huwaytib b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Abi Qays b. 'Abd Wadd b. Nasr b.
Malik b. Hisl b. 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. 197
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ibrahim b. Ja'far b. Ma¬
hmud b. Muhammad b. Maslamah al-Ashhall—his father:
Huwaytib b. 'Abd al-'Uzza al-'Amiri lived 120 years, sixty of them
in the Jahiliyyah and sixty in Islam. 198 When Marwan b. al-
Hakam became governor of Medina for the first time Huwaytib
came to see him, together with other senior leading [members of [2327]
the community], that is, Hakim b. Hizam and Makhramah b.
Nawfal. They all had a talk; then [the people] went home. After
that Huwaytib came to see Marwan one day and talked with him.
Marwan asked "How old are you?" Huwaytib told him, where¬
upon Marwan said "O old man, you were a late convert to Islam;
even youngsters preceded you." 199 Huwaytib said: "God is the
One whose help is sought. I had intended to be converted more
than once, [and] every time your father forbade me and hindered
me from doing so, saying: 'Will you debase your honor and leave
believed to have been first put there by Abraham under the guidance of the angel
fibril; see al-Azraql, I, 358-60.
196. The informant 'Abdallah b. Ja'far was a descendant of Makhramah; see al-
Waqidi, 1, and index.
197. Ibn Sa'd, V, 335-36; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 2ir ; idem, Tabaqat, 27;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 60; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 362; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, VII, 468-
69,- Ibn al-jawzl, Muntazam, V, 273-75. The 'Amir b. Lu’ayy are a Qurashi clan. See
Caskel, n, 3-4; al-Zubayri, 412; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 12, 166-68.
198. Jahiliyyah is the name given in the Muslim tradition to the pre-Islamic
period. The name signifies both "ignorance" (of God) and "the state of being
unbridled or unrestrained." See Goldziher, Muslim Studies, 1 ,201-8. It can usually
be translated simply as "pre-Islamic times," unless the text seems to make a point
of the contradistinction Jahiliyyah vs. Islam.
199. On the importance of precedence ( sabiqah ) see note 60, above.
44
Biographies
the religion of your forefathers for a newly created religion, be¬
coming a follower [of someone else]?'" Marwan, by God, held his
tongue and regretted what he had said to him. Then Huwaytib
said "Did not 'Uthman [b. 'Affan] inform you of what he had
endured from your father upon his conversion?" Marwan became
[even] more upset, and Huwaytib said:
Among the leading members of the Quraysh who re¬
mained faithful to the tribe's religion until the conquest of
Mecca, no one was more averse than I to what he adhered
to; but destiny [compelled me]. I participated in the battle
of Badr on the side of the idolators, and I saw wonders ,- 200 1
saw angels kill and take prisoners between heaven and
earth, and I said [to myself] "This is a [divinely] protected
man." I did not mention what I saw [to anyone]. Then we
all retreated to Mecca; we stayed there, and the people of
the Quraysh embraced Islam one after the other. When the
event of al-Hudaybiyyah occurred I was there, and I wit¬
nessed the peace treaty; [moreover], I acted as a go-
between until it was achieved. All this [time] I wanted to
be converted to Islam, but God refused [to let anything
happen] except what He willed. When we wrote the peace
treaty of al-Hudaybiyyah I was one of the witnesses, and I
said [to myself]: "The Quraysh will only be vexed by
Muhammad. I am pleased to have pushed him [away from
Mecca] with the palms of my hands." When the Prophet
came to Mecca for the minor pilgrimage of the consum¬
mation 201 I and Suhayl b. 'Amr 202 were among those who
stayed in Mecca, in order to oust the Prophet in due time,
that is, [after] three [days]. When the three [days] had elap¬
sed I came with Suhayl b. 'Amr, and we said "Your stipu-
[2328] lated time has elapsed, so get out of our territory." The
200. Literally, "examples" [from which a lesson should be learned], or "warn¬
ings."
20X. 'Umiat al-qadiyyah ; in the treaty of al-Hudaybiyyah the Quraysh agreed
that the Prophet should enter Mecca for three days during the following year (i.e.,
7/ May 11, 628-April 30, 629), in order to perform a minor pilgrimage. See Ibn
Hisham, IV, 12-14; Guillaume, 530-31; Lings, 280-85.
202. An eminent Qurashi leader of the 'Amir b. Lu’ayy clan, a late convert but a
faithful Muslim. See al-Zubayri, 417-19; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 93-94.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 45
Prophet called out "O Bilal, let no Muslim of those
who had come with us remain in Mecca after the sun has
set." 203
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Ibrahim b. Ja'far b. Mah¬
mud—his father, and Abu Bakr b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Sabrah—Musa
b. 'Uqbah—al-Mundhir b. Jahm—Huwaytib b. 'Abd al-'Uzza:
When the Prophet entered Mecca in the year of the conquest {fath)
I was seized by a great fear. I left my house and scattered my
children to safe places; then I reached the garden of 'Awf and
stayed there. Suddenly I saw Abu Dharr al-Ghifari; he was a friend
of mine, and friendship is always helpful. When I saw him I ran
away, [but] he called "Abu Muhammad!" I said "At your service."
He asked "What is the matter with you?" I said "Fear." He said
"You do not have to fear; [I grant] you protection in the name of
God." 204 I walked back to him and greeted him, and he said "Go
home." I said: "Is there a way home for me? By God, I do not think
that I shall reach it alive before I am found and killed, or else my
house will be broken into and I will be killed there. Besides, my
children are [scattered] in various places." Abu Dharr said "As¬
semble your children in one place, and I shall bring you home." He
brought me [home], then started calling at my door "Huwaytib has
been granted protection, so he is not to be harassed." Abu Dharr
then went to the Prophet and told him [all about it], whereupon
the Prophet said "Didn't we grant everyone protection except
those whom I ordered killed?" Then I was calmed, and I brought
back my children. Abu Dharr came back to me and said: "O Abu
Muhammad, how much longer? Until when? [Others] preceded
you to all the battlefields, and you missed a lot of advantages, [yet]
there is still much good [to be had]; 205 go to the Prophet and
embrace Islam so that you will be safe. 206 [Know that] the Prophet
203. The point of the story seems to be that the Prophet is a man who keeps his
word. First, he complies with the demand to leave the town. Second, only those
Muslims who had come with him for the 'umiah are to leave. This is in agreement
with the Hudaybiyyah treaty that forbade new Meccan converts to emigrate to
Medina, except by permission of their patrons.
204. Literally, "you are protected by God's protection." See note 56, above.
205. See note 60, above.
206. Aslim taslam. In this particular context safety is not relevant because
Huwaytib has already been granted protection. This, however, was a slogan often
46
Biographies
is the most kind, forbearing, and generous of all people. His honor
[2329] is your honor, and his power is your power." I said "I shall go with
you to him." So I went with him to the Prophet in al-Batha'. 207
Abu Bakr and 'Umar were with him. I stood near him and asked
Abu Dharr "What does one say to him by way of greeting?" He
answered: ["One says]: 'Peace be with you, O Messenger of God,
and God's mercy.'" 208 This I said, whereupon he replied "And
peace be with you, O Huwaytib." I said "I testify that there is no
god but Allah and that you are God's messenger." The Prophet
said "Praise be to God, Who led you to the right path." The
Prophet was glad about my conversion. He asked for a loan from
me, and I lent him 40,000 dirhams. Then I participated in [the
battle of] Hunayn and [the siege of] al-Ta’ if with him, and he gave
me 100 camels from the spoils of Hunayn.
According to Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari]: Huwaytib later went to Me¬
dina and settled there. He had a house at al-Balat, by the Qur’an
copyists' [quarter]. 209
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi al-
Zinad—his father: Huwaytib sold his house in Mecca to
Mu'awiyah for 40,000 dinars. [People] said to him "O Abu
Muhammad, 40,000 dinars?!" He said "What are 40,000 dinars to
a man who has five children?" 210 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi al-Zinad
said "By God, at that time he was among the recipients of the
monthly [rations] of food." 211
Huwaytib b. 'Abd al-'Uzza died in Medina in the year 54/673-
74, during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah, at the age of 120.
used by the Prophet when inviting tribal or foreign leaders to join Islam. See, e.g.,
Hamidullah, Majmu'at al-watha’iq, 32, 35, 77, 81.
207. That is, Mecca,- see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, I, 662.
208. The pre-Islamic formal greetings were deliberately changed in Islam; see,
e.g., al-Waqidt, 964.
209. 'Inda ashab al-masahif. Al-Sam'am, V, 308-9, equates the appellation
MasShifi with kana yaktub al-masahif {"he was a Qur’an copyist") and with sahib
al-masahif. I thank Dr. Estelle Whelan for this reference. Al-Balat was the area
around the Prophet's mosque in Medina, so called because it was paved with
stones. See ‘Umar b. Shabbah, I, r6-i7 (al-Balat), 252-53 (Huwaytib's house); al-
Samhudl, II, 734-47 (Huwaytib's house in 743-44, 746).
2ro. Al-ZubayrI, 426.
211. Qut. See Ibn al-Farra’, 239; Abu 'Ubayd, 107.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 47
Al-Arqam b. Abi al-Arqam b. Asad b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b.
Makhzum 212
Abu al-Arqam's name was 'Abd Manaf, and al-Arqam's kunyah
was Abu 'Abdallah.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Muhammad b. 'Imran b.
Hind b. 'Abdallah b. 'Uthman b. al-Arqam b. Abi al-Arqam al-
Makhzumi—his father—Yahya b. 'Imran b. 'Uthman b. al-Arqam: [2330]
My grandfather 'Uthman b. al-Arqam used to say "I am the son of
the seventh [member] of the Muslim community, for my father
was the seventh [person] to embrace Islam."
Al-Arqam's house was on the Safa ; 213 this was the house where
the Prophet stayed in the beginning of Islam, calling upon the
people to [believe in] Islam, and many people were converted to
Islam there. 214
Al-Arqam b. Abi al-Arqam participated in [the battles of] Badr,
Uhud, and the Ditch and all [the other] events on the Prophet's
side.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Muhammad b. 'Imran b.
Hind—his father: [When] al-Arqam b. Abi al-Arqam was dying he
willed it that Sa'd [b. Abi Waqqas] say the ritual prayer over his
bier. Marwan b. al-Hakam was [then] the governor of Medina for
Mu'awiyah, whereas Sa'd was staying at his castle in al-'Aqiq. Al-
Arqam died, and Sa'd demanded that [the funeral] be suspended
[until his arrival], Marwan said "Should [the burial] of a Compa¬
nion of the Prophet be suspended on account of someone's ab¬
sence?" Marwan thus wanted to say the ritual prayer, but
'Ubaydallah b. al-Arqam, backed by the Banu Makhzum, refused
Marwan this, and a quarrel broke out between them 215 Then Sa'd
212. An early convert of the QurashI clan Makhzum, whose leaders opposed the
Prophet. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahic, 57; Ibn Sa'd, HI/r, 172-74; Ibn Qudamah, 388-
89; al-A'zaml, Kuttab, 44-45.
213. A hill in Mecca, opposite the Ka'bah, see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, in, 397.
Certain rituals are performed between this hill and the Marwah during the
pilgrimage.
214. Ibn Sa'd, Dl/r, 173. Our text, as well as Cairo, 519, and Dar al-Fikr, 515,
have wa-fi, "in," instead of wa-hiya al-dar, "this was the house," evidently an
error.
215. Performing the burial ritual was in fact the governor's task, as was the
conducting of the Friday prayer. Political opposition was expressed by refusal to
join the prayer under the governor's leadership, and perhaps the present incident
had a similar political significance.
48
Biographies
arrived and said the prayer over al-Arqam's bier. This was in Me¬
dina in the year 55 (December 6, 674-November 24, 675).
Al-Arqam died at the age of eighty-odd years.
Abu Mahdhurah. 216
His name was Aws b. Mi'yar b. Lawdhan b. Rabi'ah b. 'Uwayj b.
Sa'd b. Jumah.
Abu Mahdhurah had a full brother by the name of Unays, who
was killed as an infidel at Badr.
According to Ibn Sa'd 217 —someone who traced the pedigree of
[2331] Abu Mahdhurah: His name was Samurah b. 'Umayrb. Lawdhanb.
Wahb b. Sa'd b. Jumah, and he had a full brother by the name of
Aws.
Abu Mahdhurah fathered 'Abd al-Malik and Hudayr.
He died in Mecca in the year 59 (October 23, 678-October 12,
679). He never emigrated but remained living in Mecca until his
death.
Al-Husayn b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 218
Al-Husayn was bom at the beginning of Sha'ban, 4/January 626;
his kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Al-Husayn fathered [several children].
(i) 'All al-Akbar, who was killed with his father at al-Taff. 219
His mother was Aminah bt. Abi Murrah b. 'Urwah b. Mas'ud b.
Mu'attib of the Thaqif, and her mother was the daughter of Abu
216. A member of the Qurashi clan the Banu Jumah; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat,
159-63. Genealogists tend to confuse him with his brother. See Ibn Hajar, Isdbah,
IV, 176; Ibn Hibban, Mashdhu, 56-57; Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 24;IbnHanb-
al, Fada’il, 977; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 527, IVa, r83; Ibn Qudamah, 46r.
217. Ibn Sa'd, V, 332-33.
218. 'All's second son and the third imam of the Shi'ah. See "Husayn b. 'All,"
EP, HI, 607-15 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); al-Amin, IV, rro-404; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, HI
(Mahmudi), 142-210 and passim; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’ilkh, 221, 224, 226;
idem, Tabaqat, 5, 230; Ibn Hibban, Mashahu, 25; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il, 766-88; al-
Tabari, Ta’ilkh, II, 227-390.
219. The reference is to the massacre at Karbala’ near al-Kufah, al-Taff being the
designation of the district; see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, III, 5 39. This is where al-
Husayn and many members of his family were killed by the Umayyad governor
while trying to reach their supporters in al-Kufah. See "Karbala’," EP, IV, 637-39
(E. Honigmann); Kennedy, 89-90; see also the references in the preceding note and
below.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 49
Sufyan b. Harb 220 According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl],
Hassan b. Thabit 221 composed [the following verses] about
Aminah:
Around us the sun of daytime does wander.
Who has ever seen a sun wandering in the evening?
Among the Quraysh the best protector 222 is her mother's father.
And her uncles, they are the Thaqif, if you inquire.
According to Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari], these verses are attributed to
'Umar b. Abi Rabi'ah 223 and belong to his poetry. He recites the
following:
Around us an evening sun does wander.
Who has ever seen a sun wandering in the evening?
Among the Quraysh the best protector is her mother's father,
and, if you trace her pedigree, her uncles are the Thaqif.
(2,) 'Ali al-Asghar, to whom are traced all of al-Husayn's descen¬
dants, whereas 'Ali al-Akbar had no progeny. The mother of 'Ali
al-Asghar was a concubine. According to 'Ali b. Muhammad [al-
Mada’ini], her name was Sulafah, [but] Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari] says
that, according to others, her name was Jayda.
['Ali al-Asghar] was a virtuous man and a leader.
(3) Ja'far, who had no progeny.
(4) Fatimah, whose mother was Umm Ishaq bt. Talhah b.
'Ubaydailah.
[Umm Ishaq] had been married to al-Hasan b. 'All. When he was
about to die he enjoined [his brother] al-Husayn to marry her,
which he did, and she bore him Fatimah.
(5) ‘Abdallah, who was killed together with his father.
220. Abu Sufyan was one of the most important leaders of the Quraysh at the
time of the Prophet and the father of Mu'awiyah, founder of the Umayyad dynasty,-
see "Abu Sufyan," EP, I, 151 (W. M. Watt).
221. A Medinan pre-Islamic poet who embraced Islam and became the poet of
the Prophet, serving the Islamic cause with his verses, see p. 72, below.
222. Awfd qurayshin bi-dhimmatin, i.e., among the Quraysh he is the most
loyal where the granting of protection is concerned. Such a praise indicates not
only his personal character but his high social status as well because effective
protection could be granted only by influential people.
223. A famous love poet of the Umayyad period. See "Omar b. Abi Rabl'a," El 1 ,
HI, 979 (I. Kratschkowsky); al-$afadi, XXII, 492-50^ Jabbur.
5°
Biographies
(6) Sukaynah, whose mother was al-Rabab bt. Imri’ al-Qays b.
'Adi b. Aws b. Jabir b. Ka'b b. 'Ulaym b. Hubal b. Kinanah b. Bakr b.
'Awf b. 'Udhrah b. Zaydallat b. Rufaydah b. Thawr b. Kalb. Al-
Husayn b. 'All composed [the following verses] about al-Rabab and
Sukaynah:
I swear that I love the house
where Sukaynah and al-Rabab abide.
I love them both and shall my money spend.
My admonisher will have no words to chide.
Even if scolded I shall not comply,
never in my life, until in the earth I lie.
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’inl]—Hammad b.
Salamah—Abu al-Muhazzam: We were at a funeral, and Abu
Hurayrah was with us. When we returned al-Husayn found
difficulty in ascending the road. Abu Hurayrah started to shake
the dust off al-Husayn's feet with his garment. Al-Husayn said
"You, Abu Hurayrah, do that!" Abu Hurayrah replied "Let me be,
for if people had known what I know about you they would have
carried you on their shoulders."
According to Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari]—anonymous—Khalid b.
Khidash: When the people of Fakhkh 224 were killed Hammad [b.
Salamah] would not participate in teaching sessions 225 for about a
month, and I saw that he was sad. Later he resumed teaching, [but
[2333] he was] in a poor state and for two or three months often shed
tears; I heard him say "We love the descendants of 'All as much as
we love Islam." 226
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Abu Ma'shar
[Najlh b. 'Abd al-Rahman]: Al-Husayn was killed on the 10th of
Muharram, [61/October 10, 680]. Al-Waqidl says that this is the
correct [version].
224. That is, the Shi'i rebels led by al-Husayn b. 'Al! b. al-Hasan b. al-Hasan b. al-
Hasan b. 'Alib. AbiTalib, in the year 169/785—86. See "Fakhkh," El 2 , II, 744-45 (L.
Veccia Vaglieri); van Arendonck, 62-65; al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, III, 551-68. An edition
of Akhbar fakhkh by the fourth-century author Ahmad b. Sahl al-Razi is currently
in preparation by Mahir Jarrar.
225. Labitha .. .la yajlis, literally, "would not sit," apparently in an assembly;
see "Madjlis," El 2 , V, 1031-33 (ed.). Because Hammad was a traditionist, it is
logical that the reference here is to his teaching sessions.
226. Love of the 'Alid family is a major precept of the Shi'i creed.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 51
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Ata' b. Mus¬
lim— 'Asim b. Abi al-Najud—Zirr b. Hubaysh: The first head ever
to have been put up on a spar was that of al-Husayn.
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’inl]—'All b. Muja-
hid—Hanash b. al-Harith—an old man from [the tribe of] al-Nak-
ha': Al-Hajjaj [b. Yusuf] 227 said: "Let those who did heroic deeds
stand up." Some people stood up and told [their stories]. Then
Sinan b. Anas got up and said: "I am the one who killed al-Hu¬
sayn." 228 Al-Hajjaj said "A brave act [it was indeed]!" Sinan then
returned to his home and lost his speech and his mind. He used to
eat and excrete on the spot.
[Those Who Died in the Year 64]
(August 30, 683-August ij, 684)
Among those who died in the year 64 was al-Miswar b. Makhra-
mah b. Nawfal b. Uhayb b. 'Abd Manaf b. Zuhrah b. Kilab. 229
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman, and his mother was 'Ati-
kah bt. 'Awf b. 'Abd 'Awf b. 'Abd b. al-Harith b. Zuhrah b. Kilab,
sister of 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf. She was counted among the
Emigrants who gave the oath of allegiance to the Prophet.
Al-Miswar b. Makhramah was eight years old when the Prophet
died.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Ja'far [b. 'Abd
al-Rahman b. al-Miswar b. Makhramah]—Umm Bakr, daughter of
al-Miswar b. Makhramah, and Abu 'Awn: Al-Miswar was hit by a
ballista stone that was fired at the Ka'bah. [The stone] broke up,
227. The powerful governor of al-Kufah, nominated by 'Abd al-Malik (reigned
65-86/685-705). See Hawting, First Dynasty, 58-71; "al-Hadjdjadj," El 2 , III, 39-
43 (A. Dietrich).
228. Sinan b. Anas was a member of the Nakha' tribe. For his role at Karbala’, see
al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, II, 362, 366-67; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, HI (Mahmudi), 202-5. It is
noteworthy that the most fervent supporter of al-Husayn's father, 'All b. Abi Talib,
was Malik al-Ashtar, of the same tribe of southern origin (Nakha') but a different
clan. See Ibn Hazm, famharat, 41s-, Nasr b. Muzahim, index s.v. Malik b. al-Harith
al-Ashtar; Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma'add, 291-92, 294. For the role of al-Nakha' in
Kufan politics, see Djalt, "Yamanites," i59-6r, 166.
229. A member of the Qurashi clan the Banu Zuhrah. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr,
43; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 15; al-Zubayri 264; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib,
125; Ibn Qudamah, 292-93. See also his father's biography, p. 42, above.
52 Biographies
and a chip hit al-Miswar's cheek while he was standing praying.
This made him ill for a few days; then he died. [His death occurred]
on the day when the news of Yazid's death was announced in
Mecca. 230 Ibn al-Zubayr had not [yet] declared himself caliph at
that time [but demanded] that the ruler be elected by a council
(; shura ). 231
According to Muhammad [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b.
[2334] Ja'far—Abu 'Awn and Umm Bakr, daughter of al-Miswar: Al-
Miswar died on the day Yazid b. Mu'awiyah's death was an¬
nounced [in Mecca] ; on the 1st of Rabi' II, [64/November 27, 683].
He was then sixty-two years old.
Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari] says: Al-Miswar was bom two years after
the Emigration and died on the 1st of Rabi' II, 64/November 27,
683. I was informed that Yahya b. Main held that al-Miswar b.
Makhramah died in the year 73 (May 23, 692-May 12, 693), but
this view is mistaken. 232
Those Who Died in the Year 65
(August 18, 684-August 7, 685)
Among them was Sulayman b. Surad b. al-Jawn b. Abi al-Jawn—
whose name was 'Abd al-'Uzza—b. Munqidh b. Rabi'ah b. Asram
b. Dabls b. Haram b. Hubshiyyah b. Ka'b b. 'Amr b. Rabi'ah b.
Harithah b. 'Amr Muzayqiya b. 'Amir Ma’ al-Sama’ b. Harithah al-
Ghitrif b. Imri’ al-Qays b. Tha'labah b. Mazin b. al-Azd. 233
Sulayman's kunydh was Abu Mutarrif.
230. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta’ilkh, II, 426: here al-Miswar dies fighting. The occasion is
the second fitnah ("civil war"), which lasted from 61-73/680-92. The events
described here took place in the year 64/683. See Rotter; and also the biography of
'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr below.
231. The call for the appointment of caliphs by a council (rather than by inheri¬
tance or force) was often voiced in early Islam by those opposing the government,
see Crone, "Meaning of the ’Abbasid Call."
232. The mistake arises from the confusion between the two sieges on Mecca, in
64/683 and 73/692, see Ibn Hajar, I$abah, III, 420 (s.v. Miswarb. Makhramah). On
Yahya b. Ma'in, a traditionist and biographer (d. 233/847), see F. Sezgin, I, 106-7;
Sayf.
233. Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 8i ; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta'nkh, 258; idem, Taba-
qat, ro7,137. The clan's name is Haram b. Hubshiyyah of the Khuza'ah confedera¬
tion, traced here to the southern tribe Azd and elsewhere (e.g., Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat
237-38; see also Ibn al-Kalbx, Nasab ma'add, 439, 456-60) to the northern con¬
federation of Mudar. See "Khuza’a," EP, V, 76-80 (M. J. Kister).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 53
Sulayman was converted and became a Companion of the
Prophet. His name had been Yasar, but the Prophet named him
Sulayman upon his conversion. 234
[Sulayman b. §urad was a man of] noble demeanor and respected
among his people. He was among the Muslims who settled in al-
Kufah. 235 He participated in [the battle of] Siffln on 'All's side and
was [later] one of those who wrote to al-Husayn b. 'All, asking him
to come to al-Kufah. When al-Husayn did come, [however], Sulay¬
man failed to fight on his side. 236
After al-Husayn was killed regret came over Sulayman, al-
Musayyab b. Najabah al-Fazari, and all those who had deserted al-
Husayn and failed to fight on his side. They said "There is no
atonement for what we did unless we sacrifice ourselves while
seeking to avenge al-Husayn's blood." They [therefore] encamped
at al-Nukhaylah 237 on the 1st of Rabi' n, 65/November 15, 684;
appointed Sulayman b. Surad their leader; and set out for Syria [2335]
seeking to avenge the blood of al-Husayn. They numbered 4,000
men 238 and were called "the Repenters" ( al-tawwabun) ; we have
already recorded their story in our book entitled al-Mudhayyal . 239
Sulayman b. Surad was killed in this episode by Yazid b. al-
Husayn b. Numayr, 240 who shot an arrow at him and killed him;
his head was carried off to [the caliph], Marwan b. al-Hakam, by
Adham b. Muhriz al-Bahill, 241 together with the head of al-
Musayyab b. Najabah.
Sulayman was ninety-three years old when he died.
234. The Prophet often changed people's names if they contained references to
an idol or were otherwise not pleasing. Yasar was a common name of slaves. See
Kister, "Call Yourselves."
235. On the foundation of al-Kufah during the period of the conquests, the most
recent work is Djalt, Al-Rufa.
236. That is, at Karbala’. See al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III (Mahmudl), 249-53 (on the
role of Sulayman).
237. A place near al-Kufah, where 'All was encamped before setting out for the
battle of Siffln. See al-Tabari, Ta'iikh, I, 3256, 3259; Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, IV,
77i.
238. A formulaic number; see Conrad, "Abraha."
239. See Hawting, First Dynasty, 51 ; idem, "The Tawwabun"-, al-Baladhuri,
Ansab, V, 204-23; al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh, n, 497-523, 538-76.
240. Son of the Umayyad general al-Husayn b. Numayr. See Hawting, First
Dynasty, 48-49; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 220; Nasr b. Muzahim, 228.
242. The first Muslim to be bom in Him?; he was a commander in the Umayyad
army. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3305, II, 559, 564, 568; Na?rb. Muzahim, 267-68;
Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar IV, 230-32; al-Suyup, Wasa’il, 200; al-Safadi, VUI, 330.
54
Biographies
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 68
(July 18, 68j-July 5, 688)
Among them was 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b.
Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf b. Qusayy. 242
His mother was Umm al-Fadl Lubabah al-Kubrah bt. al-Harith
b. Hazn, of the Banu Hilal b. 'Amir. 243
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’inl]: 'Abdallah b.
al-'Abbas fathered [several children].
(1) 'All, the leader among ['Abdallah's] offspring. He was born in
the year 40/660-61 or, according to another version, in the year of
[the battle of] the Camel, that is, 36/656-57. He was the hand¬
somest and comeliest of the Quraysh on earth and the most
[devoted to] prayer among them, so that he was named al-Sajjad
(the one who prostrates himself habitually). 244 The caliphate was
in the hands of his descendants.
(2) Al-'Abbas, 'Abdallah's eldest, after whom he was called [Abu
al-'Abbas], (3) Muhammad, (4) 'Ubaydallah, (5) al-Fadl, (6) Luba-
bah.
Their mother was Zar'ah bt. Mishrah b. Ma'dI-Karib b. Wali'ah;
Mishrah was one of the four kings. 245
Al-'Abbas, 'Ubaydallah, al-Fadl, and Muhammad, sons of
'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas, had no offspring. As for Lubabah bt. 'Abdal¬
lah, she was married to 'All b. 'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. Abi Talib 246
and bore him [children], who [in their turn] had offspring.
242. Cousin and Companion of the Prophet, considered as the greatest authority
on Qur’an interpretation. He was the ancestor of the 'Abbasid dynasty. See "'Abd
Allah b. 'Abbas," EP, I, 40-41 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); Jeffery, 193 - 94 ; Sharon, Black
Banners, 82-84; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 28; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il 844-47; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, III (burl), 27-55; Akhbar al-dawlah, passim; Abu al-Nasr.
243. That is, 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah, an important tribal confederation of northern
origin. Some of its branches were closely related to the Quraysh in pre-Islamic
times. See "'Amir b. Sa'sa'a," EP, I, 441-42 (W. Caskel); Kister, "Mecca and Tam-
im," 132-34, 136-39, 157; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 272-92.
244. The Shi'ah reserve this honorary epithet for the fourth imam, 'All Zayn
al-'Abidin, see al-Amln, V, 409.
245. Traditions mention four kings of the tribe of Kindah who came to the
Prophet and embraced Islam but apostatized after his death and were killed. See
Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 428; al-Kala'i, 229; al-Hilll, 78-79; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2004;
Lecker, "Kinda."
246. An eminent member of the Talibi family and the ancestor of the further
progeny of that family. See Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 68; Ibn Qudamah, 118; al-
Zubayri, 82.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 5 5
(7) Asma’ bt. 'Abdallah. She was married to 'Abdallah b.
'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas, to whom she bore Hasan and Husayn,- 247 [2336]
her mother was a concubine.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: The scholars in our midst
agree that Ibn 'Abbas was bom shortly before the Banu Hashim
came out of the ravine where they had been besieged. 248 This was
three years before the Emigration. Ibn 'Abbas was thirteen years
old when the Prophet died. This is proved by what he says in a
tradition transmitted by Malik [b. Anas]—[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri—
'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah [b. al-'Abbas]—'Abdallah b. 'Abbas: I was
riding a donkey during the Farewell Pilgrimage together with al-
Fadl, and I passed by the Prophet while he was praying. I was
already nearing puberty at that time.
According to Da’ud b. 'Amr al-Dabbl—['Abd al-Rahman b.
'Abdallah] Ibn Abi al-Zinad—his father and 'Abdallah b. al-Fadl b.
'Ayyash b. Abi Rabi'ah b. al-Harith—the reliable source—Hassan
b. Thabit: We, that is, the Ansar, demanded [something] from
'Umar [b. al-Khattab] or 'Uthman [b. 'Affan]—Ibn Abi al-Zinad has
doubts [about who it was]—so we brought along 'Abdallah b.
'Abbas together with several of the Prophet's Companions. Ibn
'Abbas spoke, and they spoke, and they mentioned the Ansar and
their merits ( manaqib ), but the ruler excused himself [and refused
the request]; 249 it was a major request we made. [The ruler] went
on addressing them until they stood up and condoned [his posi¬
tion], except Ibn 'Abbas, who said "Nay, by God, the Ansar cannot
be forsaken [after] the help and shelter they gave [to the Prophet]."
He mentioned their excellence and said "Here is the poet of the
Prophet, who defended him [with his poetry]." 'Abdallah did not
cease from addressing [the ruler] with impressive speech, refuting
247. Akhbai al-dawlah, 118. I could find hardly any detail on this 'Abdallah,
except that he transmitted traditions. See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, V, 267; Ibn
Qudimah, i6i ; al-Zubayri, 29.
248. As part of their struggle against the Prophet, the Quraysh are said to have
proclaimed a boycott of the Prophet's relatives, i.e., the clans of the Banu Hashim
and the Banu al-Muttalib. See Ibn Hisham, I, 375-80, II, T4-21; Guillaume, 159-
61, 172-75.
249. The enumeration of the merits ( manaqib ) of a group or an individual was a
common practice among the Muslims, inherited from pre-Islamic times; see Gold-
ziher Muslim Studies, I, 45-46. There was emphasis on the merits of the Ansar in
particular, precisely because in practice they were gradually deprived of political
power; see Hasson, "Contribution."
56
Biographies
all his arguments, until he had no alternative but to comply with
our demand. So we departed, our demand carried out with the help
of [‘Abdallah's] words. I then passed by the mosque, by the people
who had been together with [Ibn ‘Abbas] but had not achieved
what he had; I said so that they would hear "Indeed, he was the
most worthy of you to achieve this." They said "No doubt." I said,
referring to ‘Abdallah "By God, this is the vestige of prophethood
and the legacy of Ahmad, 250 and he was the most worthy of it
[2337] among you." 251 And I said, referring to ‘Abdallah: 252
When he speaks he leaves no words for others;
his are not disjointed but carefully chosen words.
Adequate he is, fulfilling the hearts' desires,
leaving the guileful speechless, both in earnest and in jest.
The highest [merit] you attained easily;
the highest peak you gained, being neither base nor lowly.
According to Khalid b. al-Qasim al-Bayadl—Shu'bah, [the client
of Ibn ‘Abbas]—Ibn 'Abbas: I was bom three years before the Emi¬
gration, while we were in the ravine [boycotted], and I was thir¬
teen years old when the Prophet died.
Ibn 'Abbas died in the year 68 at the age of seventy-one.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Muhammad b. 'Uqbah
and Muhammad b. Rifa'ah b. Tha'labah b. Abi Malik—Sh'ubah,
the client of Ibn 'Abbas: 'Abdallah b. ‘Abbas died in al-Ta’if in the
year 68 at the age of seventy-two.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ishaq b. Yahya—Abu Sal-
amah al-Hadrami: I saw the grave of Ibn 'Abbas, and [Muhammad]
Ibn al-Hanafiyyah was tending it; 253 he ordered that the top of the
grave be made flat. 254
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]—Hafs b. May-
mun [b. Mihran]—his father: 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas died in al-Ta’if.
250. That is, the Prophet, see Qur’an, 61:6.
25 r. The story alludes to the 'Abbasids' right to the caliphate.
252. Hassanb. Thabit, I, 33^32.
253. See note ri3, above.
254. On the interdiction to elevate graves and to build over them, see Ibn
Qayyim al-Jawziyyah, I, 146. A construction was, however, built over Ibn 'Abbas'
grave at a much later date; see al-'Ujaymi, 66-67.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 57
A white bird came and entered the bier. 255 When he was laid in the
grave we heard a voice reciting "O confident soul, go back to your
Lord pleased and pleasing." 256
According to anonymous source(s)—'All b. Muhammad [al- [2338]
Mada’inI]: 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas died at the age of seventy-four.
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 14
(May 13, 693-May 1, 694)
Among them was Abu Sa'id al-Khudri. 257
His name was Sa'd b. Malik b. Sinan b. Tha'labah b. 'Ubayd b. al-
Abjar—whose name was Khudrah—b. 'Awf b. al-Harith b. al-
Khazraj 258
Some [scholars] claim that Khudrah was the mother of al-Abjar.
Qatadah b. al-Nu'man al-Zafari of the People of Badr 259 was Abu
Sa'id's half-brother by his mother.
According to Ibn 'Umar [ai-Waqidl]—al-Dahhak b. 'Uthman—
Muhammad b. Yahya b. Habban—Ibn Muhayrlz [al-Jumahl] and
Abu Sirmah—Abu Sa'id al-Khudri: I joined the Prophet on the raid
of Banu al-Mustaliq. According to Ibn 'Umar: He was then fifteen
years old. He also participated in the [siege of the] Ditch and the
events ( mashahid ) that occurred afterward.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Sa'id b. Abi Zayd—
Rubayh b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Sa'id—his father—Abu Sa'id: I
was presented before the Prophet on the day of the battle of Uhud;
I was thirteen years old. My father took me by the hand and said
"O Messenger of God, he is large-boned, even if short." The
Prophet examined me closely from head to foot and said "Send
him back"; so he sent him back. 260
255. The text has bayna al-na'sh wa-al-sarir, both words signifying "bier." Cf.
in al-'Ujaymi, 65 (where the bird enters inside the shrouds); Ibn al-Jawzi, Man-
tazam, VI, 75; al-Dhahabi, Siyaz, in, 358; al-Safadi, XVII, 234.
256. Qur’an, 89:27.
257. An eminent Ansari. See Ibn Hibban, Mashdhir, 30,• Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta'iikh, 268; idem, Tabaqat, 96.
258. The clan's name is Banu Khudrah, of the Khazraj (Ansar); see Ibn Hazm,
Jamharat, 472.
259. That is, those who had participated in the battle of Badr. See note 60, above.
260. The account revolves around a point of law, i.e., the age of legal majority in
Islam. See "Baligh," EP, I, 993 (ed.); Conrad, "Abraha," n. 94.
58
Biographies
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Abd al-'Aziz b. 'Uqbah—
Iyas b. Salamah b. al-Akwa': Abu Sa'id al-Khudri died in the year
74 -
Those Who Died in the Year 78
(March 30, 697-March 19, 698)
[2339] Among them was Jabir b. 'Abdallah b. 'Amt b. Haram b. Tha'labah
b. Haram b. Ka'b b. Ghanm b. Ka'b b. Salimah b. Sa'd b. 'All b. Asad
b. Saridah b. Tazid b. Jusham b. al-Khazraj. 261
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
[Jabir] was present at [the meeting in] al-'Aqabah among the
seventy Ansar who gave the Prophet the oath of allegiance there.
He was one of the youngest among them. [Later] he wanted to take
part in the battle of Badr, but his father ordered him to stay behind
to keep watch on his sisters, who numbered nine. His father also
left him behind when he went out for [the battle of] Uhud. [Jabir]
participated in the subsequent events.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Ibrahim b. Ja'far—his fa¬
ther: I asked Jabir b. 'Abdallah how many raids the Prophet had
launched, and he said: "The Prophet had personally launched
twenty-seven raids, and I participated in sixteen of them with
him. I could not go with a raid until my father was killed at Uhud,
[because] he always left me behind to keep watch on my sisters,
who numbered nine. The first raid in which I took part at [the
Prophet's] side was Hamra’ al-Asad, 262 [then the rest] to the last of
his raids."
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Kharijah b. al-
Harith: Jabir b. 'Abdallah died in the year 78 at the age of ninety-
four after having lost his sight. I saw a striped cloth on his bier.
261. Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 248; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 261; idem, Taba-
qat, 102; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 30. The name of Jabir's clan is Banu Salimah of the
Khazraj (Ansar); see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 358.
262. On the day after the defeat at Uhud, inShawwal 3/625. See al-Waqidl, 334-
40; Wellhausen, Muhammad, 149-51. Cf. Ibn Hisham, HI, 108, iio-ii;
Guillaume, 390-91.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 59
Aban b. 'Uthman, 263 who was the governor of Medina, said the
ritual prayer over his bier.
Those Who Died or Were Killed in the Year 80
(March 9, 699-February 25, 700J
Among them was 'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. Abi Talib b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib. 264
His kunyah was Abu Ja'far, and his mother was Asma’ bt.
'Umays.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: 'Abdallah b. Ja'far died in
Medina in the Year of the Juhaf (sweeping), that is, the torrent that
occurred in the interior of Mecca and swept away pilgrims and
camels together with their loads 265 Aban b. 'Uthman, who ruled
as governor of Medina on behalf of 'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan, said
the ritual prayer over his bier. He was ninety years old when he
died.
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]: 'Abdallah b. [2340]
Ja'far died in the year 84 (January 24, 703-January 13, 704) or 85
(January 14, 704-January i, 705 ). 266
'Amr b. Hurayth b. 'Amr b. 'Uthman b. 'Abdallah b. 'Amr b.
Makhzum. 267
His kunyah was Abu Sa'id.
263. Son of the third caliph 'Uthman b. 'Affan, of the Umayyad family. He
served as governor of Medina for 'Abd al-Malik (65-86/685-705) but was dismissed
after seven years. He is considered an important authority on prophetic tradition
and the Prophet's campaigns. See "Aban b. 'Uthman," EP-, I, 2-3 (K. V. Zetters-
teen); Duri, Rise of Histoiical Writing, 24-25.
264. Of the Prophet's clan, Hashim,- see the genealogical table. See also "'Abdal¬
lah b. Ja'far," EP-, I, 44 (K. V. Zettersteen); Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 27; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 279; Ibn Qudamah, 116-18. See his father's biography, pp. 4-5,
above.
265. Al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, n, 1040.
266. The text is garbled here [sanat arba' awkhams wa-thamanin sanah ). Cf.
Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 289. Note that from this point onward no chronological order
is maintained in the Dhayl.
267. Of the QurashI clan Banu Makhzum. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 79;
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 276; idem, Tabaqat, 20, Ibn Qudamah, 388. On his
political role in Umayyad times, see also al-Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa, 213-15, 221-
22, V, 351-52.
6 o
Biographies
'Amr was twelve years old when the Prophet died. According to
Abu Nu'aym al-Fadl b. Dukayn, 'Amr b. Hurayth died in al-Kufah
in the year 85/704, during the caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik b.
Marwan.
'Aqil b. Abi Talib b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim 268
He was one of those who were taken prisoner in the battle of
Badr, and, as he had no money, al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib ran¬
somed him.
According to Ibn Sa'd 269 —'Ali b. 'Isa al-Nawfall—his father—
his paternal uncle Ishaq b. 'Abdallah—'Abdallah b. al-Harith:
Al-'Abbas ransomed himself and his nephew 'Aqil for eighty
ounces of gold or, according to another version, for a thousand
dinars.
According to Ibn Sa'd 270 —'Ali b. 'Isa—Aban b. 'Uthman—
Mu'awiyah b. 'Ammar al-Duhni—Abu 'Abdallah Ja'far [al-Sadiq]
b. Muhammad: On the day of [the battle of] Badr the Prophet said
"Go and have a look who of my family, the Banu Hashim, is
here." 271 'Ali b. Abi Talib went and saw al-'Abbas [b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib], Nawfal [b. ai-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib], and 'Aqil. 'All
withdrew, and 'Aqil called out to him "O son of Umm 'Ali, by God
you have seen us." So 'Ali went to the Prophet and told him that
he saw al-'Abbas, Nawfal, and 'Aqil. The Prophet drew near until
he stood very close to 'Aqil and said "O Abu Yazid, Abu Jahl has
been killed." 'Aqil said: "In that case, no one will contest you [for
authority] in Tihamah. 272 If your [words] take effect on the people,
[fine]; if not, dominate them [by force]."
According to Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari], there is a report saying that
'Aqil returned to Mecca and stayed there. Later, at the beginning
[2341] of the year 8/629, he went to the Prophet as an Emigrant and took
part in the expedition of Mu’tah. He then returned and became ill,
268. The Prophet's paternal cousin, brother of 'All. See "'Akll b. Abi Talib," EP,
I, 337 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 27; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 301,
365, in (Duri), 296; Ibn Qudamah, 112.
269. Ibn Sa'd, IV/i, 29.
270. Cf. Ibn Sa'd, IV/i, 29; al-Dhahabl, Siyar, I, 218-19.
271. That is, among the prisoners.
272. The strip of land along the west and south coasts of Arabia, see "Tihama,"
EP, Vm, 763-65 (A. Grohmann).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 61
so he is not mentioned [among the participants] in the conquest of
Mecca, [the siege] of al-Ta’if, and [the battle of] Hunayn.
It was reported that 'Aqil b. Abi Talib died after having lost his
sight, during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah.
Rabi'ah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd
Manaf. 273
He is the one about whom the Prophet said, on the day of the
conquest of Mecca: "I say, every [open case of] blood revenge and
every privilege of the Jahiliyyah are hereby rendered null and
void. 274 The first case of blood revenge that I thus declare annulled
is that of Rabi'ah b. al-Harith." The Prophet said: "The first case of
blood revenge that I declare annulled is that of Rabi'ah b. al-
Harith," even though Rabi'ah was alive only because there was a
vendetta Rabi'ah was entitled to seek in pre-Islamic times. 275
[The story is as follows]: A small child of Rabi'ah was given to a
wet nurse from the Banu Layth b. Bakr, 276 who were in a state of
war with the Hudhayl. 277 This son of Rabi'ah b. al-Harith, who
was a small child, crept out in front of the tents, and the Hudhayl
threw a rock at him, which hit him and crushed his head. The
advent of Islam occurred before Rabi'ah b. al-Harith could avenge
his son's blood, and the Prophet declared annulled [the obligation]
to seek vengeance for that blood and did not let Rabi'ah approach
his son's assassin. 278 This is what is meant by the Prophet's an¬
nulling the revenge for his blood: It means that he invalidated
Rabi'ah's right to seek vengeance for it because it was one of the
pre-Islamic vendetta cases, rendered void by Islam. 279
273. A cousin of the Prophet. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 57,- Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 127-, idem, Tabaqat, 5-6; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 70; Ibn Sa'd, IV/i,
32-33; ibn Qudamah, 103.
274. Literally, "are under these two feet of mine."
275. Seeking blood revenge was both an obligation and a right, ending only with
the seeker's death.
276. A clan of the northern tribe of Kinanah whose territories lay in the vicinity
of Mecca. See "Kinana," EP, V, ir 6 (W. M. Watt); Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, r8o.
277. A northern tribe, in the vicinity of Mecca and al-Ta’if. See "Hudhayl," EP,
HI, 540-41 (G. Rentz); Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 196-98.
278. Or "did not enable Rabi'ah to take action against his son's assassin." See
also Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 70.
279. Islam modified the pre-Islamic law of vengeance; see Coulson, r8.
62
Biographies
As for the slain son of Rabi'ah, there is disagreement over his
name. According to Ibn 'Umar it was Adam b. Rabi'ah, whereas
others say that it was Tammam b. Rabi'ah and yet others hold that
it was lyas b. Rabi'ah.
All [the scholars] agree that Rabi'ah b. al-Harith was [several]
years older than his paternal uncle al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib.
[2342] It was reported that Rabi'ah b. al-Harith did not take part in [the
battle of] Badr with the idolators [because] he was away [on a trip
to] Syria. Later, during the period of the Ditch, he went to the
Prophet as an Emigrant. He participated in [the battle of] Hunayn
on the Prophet's side and was among those of the Prophet's family
and Companions who persevered [with the fighting]. 280
Rabi'ah died after his brothers Nawfal and Abu Sufyan, during
the caliphate of 'Umar b. al-Khattab.
'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd
Manaf. 281
His name was previously 'Abd Shams, and when he was con¬
verted the Prophet called him 'Abdallah. 282
['Abdallah b. al-Harith] left Mecca before the conquest ( fath ) and
went to the Prophet as an Emigrant. He accompanied the Prophet
on one of his raids and died in Safra’. 283 The Prophet buried him in
his gown, that is, the Prophet's gown, and said about him: "He is
happy; [the ultimate] happiness overtook him." 284
Ja'far b. Abi Sufyan b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Ha¬
shim. 285
He was one of those Companions who persevered [with the
fighting] on the Prophet's side at the battle of Hunayn.
Ja'far and his father remained with the Prophet until the latter's
death.
280. See p. 25, above.
281. Brother of Rabi'ah of the preceding biography, seelbnHajar, Isabah, n, 292.
282. See note 234, above.
283. A place near Badr, see Ibn Manzur, Lisan, TV, 465.
284. Sa'adah, "happiness," refers to the attaining of Paradise. See also note 7,
above.
285. He belonged to the Prophet's clan, Hashim, see al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III
(Dun), 296-97.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 63
Ja'far died in the middle of the caliphate of Mu'awiyah, may God
damn him. 286
Al-Harith b. Nawfal b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Ha-
shim. 287
Al-Harith was [already] mature in the Prophet's lifetime.
He became a Companion on the conversion of his father. 288 His
son 'Abdallah was bom during the Prophet's lifetime; the baby
was brought to the Prophet, who performed on him the ritual of
rubbing the palate with chewed dates ( tahnlk ) and blessed him. 289
According to Ibn Sa'd 290 —'All b. 'Isa—his father: Al-Harith b.
Nawfal moved to al-Basrah during the governorship of 'Abdallah
b. 'Amir b. Kurayz, 291 built a house [dar] on a piece of land, and
settled there. He died in al-Basrah at the end of the caliphate of
'Uthman.
'Abd al-Muttalib b. Rabi'ah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b.
Hashim. 292
'Abd al-Muttalib transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet; he [2343]
was [already] mature in the Prophet's lifetime.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Ibn Sa'd—'All b. 'Isa al-
Nawfall: 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Rabi'ah stayed in Medina until the
time of [the caliphate of] 'Umar b. al-Khattab. He then moved to
Syria, where he built a house [dar] and settled. He died in
Damascus during the caliphate of Yazid b. Mu'awiyah.
286. The text as a rule uses terms of blessing after the names of the Prophet and
the Companions, which I omit in the translation. Here the custom is reversed. On
the traditional Muslim attitude toward the Umayyads, see Hawting, First
Dynasty, 11-20.
287. Of the Prophet's clan. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 63; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I,
440, III (Dun), 297; Ibn Qudamah, 100-1.
288. See p. 19, above.
289. See Gil'adi. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1935.
290. Ibn Sa'd, IV/1, 39.
291. Maternal cousin of the third caliph, 'Uthman, and governor of al-Basrah on
his behalf; see "'Abdallah b. 'Amir," El 2 , 1 , 43 (H. A. R. Gibb).
292. A member of the Prophet's clan. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 246;
idem, Tabaqat, 7; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III (Dun), 24-25, 295-96; Ibn Qudamah,
103-4.
64
Biographies
'Utbah b. Abi Lahab—whose name was 'Abd al-'Uzza—b. 'Abd
al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf. 293
According to Ibn Sa'd 294 —'All b. 'Isa b. 'Abdallah al-Nawfall—
Hamzah b. 'Utbah b. Ibrahim al-Lihbi—Ibrahim b. 'Amir b. Abi
Sufyan b. Mu'attib and other Hashimi shaykhs of ours—Ibn
'Abbas—his father al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib: When the
Prophet arrived in Mecca on its conquest he said to me "O 'Abbas,
where are your nephews 'Utbah and Mu'attib? I do not see them."
I said "O Messenger of God, they withdrew to the side, together
with other idolators of the Quraysh." The Prophet said "Go and
bring them to me." So I rode to 'Uranah, 295 [where they were
staying,] and went to them and said "The Prophet invites you."
They hastened to ride with me and came to the Prophet. He called
on them to embrace Islam, and they did, giving him the oath of
allegiance. Then the Prophet stood up, took their hands, and,
walking between them, led them to the multazam, that is, the
area between the door of the Ka'bah and the Black Stone. 296 He
prayed for a while, then left, his face reflecting joy. I said to him
"O Messenger of God, may God make you joyful; I see joy re¬
flected in your face." The Prophet said "Yes, I had asked a gift
from God, these two cousins of mine, and he gave them to me."
According to Hamzah b. 'Utbah: Shortly after this the two
['Utbah and Mu'attib] went with the Prophet to Hunayn and took
[2344] part in the battle. That day they were among those of the Prophet's
family and Companions who persevered with [the fighting] on the
Prophet's side. 297 Mu'attib lost an eye in that battle.
None of the men of the Hashim clan remained to live in Mecca
after its conquest except 'Utbah and Mu'attib, sons of Abu Lahab.
293. Abu Lahab b. 'Abd al-Muttalib, an uncle of the Prophet, was one of his
fiercest enemies. See Rubin, "Abu Lahab." On 'Utbah, see al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I,
131, 401; Ibn Qudamah, 143.
294. Ibn Sa'd, TV/i, 41-42.
295. A valley near 'Arafat, to the east of Mecca; see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan,
IE, 657-
296. According to the Muslim tradition, a prayer uttered in this particular place
is bound to be answered. There is, however, a view placing the multazam at the
rear of the Ka'bah, see al-Azraqi, I, 246-49.
297. See p. 25, above.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 65
Usamah, son of Zayd b. Harithah, the Prophet's beloved. 298
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad. His mother was Umm Ay-
man, whose name was Barakah, the nurse and client of the
Prophet.
Usamah was bom in Mecca. He grew to manhood without expe¬
riencing anything but Islam, never adhering to any other religion.
He emigrated to Medina together with his father, Zayd, who was,
as some people say, the first man to have been converted to Is¬
lam. 299 Usamah never left the Prophet's side.
According to Ibn Sa'd—al-Fadl b. Dukayn—Hanash [b. al-
Harith]—his father: The Prophet appointed Usamah at the age of
eighteen. 300
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: The number of Usamah's
descendants, both men and women, never exceeded twenty in any
given generation.
Usamah was twenty years old when the Prophet died. He then
settled in Wadi al-Qura 301 and later in Medina. He died in al-Jurf
at the end of the caliphate of Mu'awiyah.
Abu Rafi', client of the Prophet. 302
His name was Aslam.
298. Ibn Hibban, Mashdhir, 30; Khalifah b. Khayyaj, Ta’iikh, 65, 216; idem,
Tabaqat, 6-7; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il, 834-37; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 470-76.
299. The identity of the first Muslim became a point of debate among the
Muslims. According to Sunni Islam, the first to have believed in the Prophet was
Abu Bakr, a merit that, among others, made him worthy of the caliphate. Accord¬
ing to the Shi'ah, however, the first Muslim was 'All. A neutral view places this
merit with Zayd b. Harithah, whose descendants had nothing to do with the
contention for power.
300. Ibn Sa'd, IV/i, 46. Shortly before his death the Prophet prepared an expedi¬
tion against the Byzantines, appointing the young Usamah as commander, to
avenge the death of his father, Zayd, killed in Mu’tah. The Prophet died, and Abu
Bakr dispatched the army in spite of loud protests from Muslims objecting to
Usamah because of his young age. See al-Tabari, Ta'iikh, I, 1796-97, 1845-48.
301. The fertile valley to the north of Medina; see "Wadi al-Kura," El 1 , VIII,
1077-78 (A. Grohmann).
302. Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 53; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, r86; al-Baladhuri,
Ansab, I, 477-78, m (Duri), 21. Al-Sadr, 30, says that he was 'All's appointee over
the treasury of al-Kufah and the first ShT! to compile a collection of traditions and
legal issues.
66
Biographies
Abu Rafi' had been a slave of al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib and
was given as a present to the Prophet. When the latter received
the good news of al-'Abbas' conversion to Islam he set Abu Rafi'
free.
Abu Rafi' emigrated to Medina after [the battle of] Badr and
stayed with the Prophet. He participated in [the battles of] Uhud
and the Ditch, and all the [other] events. The Prophet gave his
client Salma to him in marriage, and she participated with him in
[the conquest of] Khaybar.
Salma bore Abu Rafi' [a son], 'Ubaydallah b. Abi Rafi', who acted
as scribe for 'All b. Abi Talib.
Salman al-Farisi 303
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
The Ditch was the first military action in which Salman took
part.
[2345] According to Ja'far b. Sulayman—Hisham b. Hassan—al-Hasan:
Salman's pension ('ata’) was 5,000 [dirhams a year], and he was
appointed over 30,000 men. He used to collect firewood clad in a
cloak, half of which he used for covering himself, whereas the
other half he spread.
Each time his pension was due he did not take it and lived off his
own handwoven palm leaves. 304
According to Ibn 'Umar: Salman al-Farisi died during the calip¬
hate of 'Uthman b. 'Affan.
Al-Aswad b. Nawfal b. Khuwaylid b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b.
Qusayy 305
He was an early convert to Islam in Mecca and emigrated to
Abyssinia in the second emigration. According to Musa b. 'Uqbah,
303. A famous Companion, see "Salman al-Farisi," El 1 , IV, 116-17 (G. Levi
Della Vida); Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 76; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 173; idem,
Tabaqat, 7. He is credited with having suggested to the Prophet the digging of the
Ditch for defense against the besieging Quraysh in the year 5/627.
304. Ya'kulu min safif yadihi, literally, "he ate from the plait of palm leaves of
his hand." The parallel text adduced by de Goeje from Ibn al-Athir's Usd al-ghabah
has wa-akala min kasb yadihi kana yasuffu al-khus, "he ate from the earnings of
his hand; he wove palm leaves." See also Ibn Sa'd, IV/i, 62.
305. A member of the Qurashi clan Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza. He was a nephew of
Khadijah, the Prophet's wife, and an early convert. See al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 202;
Ibn Qudamah, 274.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 67
it was Nawfal b. Khuwaylid [not his son al-Aswad] who embraced
Islam and emigrated to Abyssinia. 306
Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Aswad b. Nawfal b.
Khuwaylid. 307
His kunyah was Abu al-Aswad. He is the one known as "the
orphan of 'Urwah b. al-Zubayr." 308
Abu al-Rum b. 'Umayr b. Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf b. 'Abd al-Dar
b. Qusayy 309
His mother was Byzantine. He was a half-brother of Mus'ab b.
'Umayr.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl], Abu al-Rum was an early
convert in Mecca and emigrated to Abyssinia in the second emi¬
gration. He also took part in [the battle of] Uhud.
Jahm b. Qays b. Shurahbll b. Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf b. 'Abd al-
Dar b. Qusayy. 310
Jahm was an early convert to Islam and emigrated to Abyssinia
in the second emigration. This is unanimously accepted [among
the scholars]. His wife, Huraymalah bt. 'Abd al-Aswad b. Khuzay- [2346]
mah b. Uqaysh b. 'Amir b. Bayadah al-Khuza'iyyah, and the two
sons she had borne him, 'Amr and Khuzaymah, sons of Jahm, were
with him. Huraymalah died in Abyssinia.
Al-Walld b. al-Walld b. al-Mughlrah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b.
Makhzum. 311
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl] on the authority of Muham¬
mad b. 'Abdallah 312 —[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhrl—'Urwah [b. ai-Zu-
306. Notwithstanding, Nawfal is also said to have been a fierce opponent of
Islam in its early period; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 46.
307. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’ilkh, 421, see also al-A'zami, MaghazI, 61-62.
308. 'Urwah was his guardian according to the will of his father, 'Abd al-
Rahman.
309. A member of the Qurashi clan Banu Abd al-Dar (this Hashim is not identi¬
cal with the Prophet's ancestor). See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 125-27; al-Baladhuri,
Ansab, I, 203; Ibn Qudamah, 245.
310. Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 203; Ibn Qudamah, 247. The clan is the same as in
the preceding biography.
311. Brother of the famous Companion and general Khalid b. al-Walld, of the
Qurashi clan Makhzum. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, HI, 639-40; Ibn Qudamah, 349-50.
312. The reference is perhaps to Ibn Abi Sabrah; see, e.g., al-Waqidi, ro97.
68
Biographies
bayr] and on the authority of Ibrahim b. Ja'far—his father: Sala-
mah b. Hisham, 313 'Ayyash b. Abi Rabi'ah, 314 and al-Walid b. al-
Walid left [Mecca], emigrating to [Medina to join] the Prophet.
People from the Quraysh went after them to bring them back but
failed to overtake them. When the three reached the edge of the
basalt area of Medina ( hariah ) al-Walld's finger was cut and bled,
whereupon he said: 315
What are you but a bleeding finger?
It is in the path of God that you suffer.
[Later] he had a heart failure and died in Medina. Umm Salamah
bt. Abi Umayyah 316 mourned him and said:
For al-Walid b. al-Walid b. al-Mughirah, O my eye, let your
tears flow.
The like of al-Walid b. al-Walid Abu al-Walid protect the clan
[against its foe].
The Prophet said "Do not say this, Umm Salamah, but say
'Death has come justly, this is what you turned away from/" 317
Ibn Umm Maktum.. 318
Opinions differ as to his name. The Medinan scholars say that it
was 'Abdallah, whereas the Iraqis and Hisham b. Muhammad [al-
Kalbl] hold that it was 'Amr b. Qays b. Za’idah b. al-Asamm b.
[2347] Rawahahb. Hajar b. 'Abdb. Ma'isb. 'Amirb. Lu’ayy. He was called
by the name of his mother, Umm Maktum, whose [full] name was
'Atikah bt. 'Abdallah b. 'Ankathah b. 'Amir b. Makhzum b.
Yaqazah.
Ibn Umm Maktum was an early convert to Islam in Mecca. He
313. Cousin of al-Walid and brother of Abu Jahl. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 68-69,-
Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, X, 94-96.
314. Cousin of al-Walid, apparently of the Meccans who were converted after
the Muslim conquest of their city. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, III, 47.
315. Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, X, 95. In al-Bukhari's Sahlh, II, 202 {jihad, 9] the
verse is attributed to the Prophet, who was wounded in a battle. I thank Prof.
Yohanan Friedmann for this reference.
316. That is, the Prophet's wife. She belonged to the same clan as al-Walid.
3T7. Qur’an, 50:18. The Prophet's objection is raised by the pre-Islamic ( jahill )
style of the lament.
318. Of the Qurashi clan 'Amirb. Lu’ayy; see Ibn Hazm, famhaiat, 171. He was an
early convert, and the Prophet often appointed him as deputy in Medina when he left
on raids. See, e.g., al-Baladhurl, Ansab, 1 ,310-11 and passim; Ibn Qudamah, 488-89.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 69
was blind. He came to Medina as an Emigrant, [but] opinions differ
as to the time of his arrival. According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-
Waqidi], he arrived shortly after [the battle of] Badr and lived in
the house of the Qur’an reciters, which was the house of
Makhramah b. Nawfal. 319
[Ibn Umm Maktum] used to act as muezzin for the Prophet in
Medina, together with Bilal. Whenever the Prophet went out on a
raid he appointed him to lead the public prayer in Medina.
Ibn Umm Maktum carried the Muslim banner in the battle of
al-Qadisiyyah. He later returned to Medina, where he died.
Abu Dharr Jundab b. Junadah b. Sufyan b. 'Ubayd b. Haram b.
Ghifar b. Mulayl b. Damrah b. Bakr b. 'Abd Manah b. Kinanah b.
Khuzaymah b. Mudrikah b. Alyas b. Mudar b. Nizar. 320
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Musa b. ‘Ubaydah—
Nu'aym b. 'Abdallah al-Mujmir—his father: Abu Dharr's name
was Jundab b. Junadah; this was [also] the opinion of Muhammad
b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi], Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbl], and other
historians. Ibn 'Umar says that, according to Najih Abu Ma'shar,
Abu Dharr's name was Burayr b. Jundab.
According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—Abu Bakr b. 'Abdallah b.
Abi Sabrah—Musa b. 'Uqbah—'Ata’ b. Abi Marwan—his father:
Abu Dharr said "I was the fifth [person] to embrace Islam."
According to Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari]: Abu Dharr returned to his [2348]
clan's territory after his conversion, where he stayed until after
the battles of Badr, Uhud, and the Ditch. He then joined the
Prophet in Medina. 321 According to Ibn Sa'd 322 —'Abdallah b.
'Ami Abu Ma'mar al-Minqari—'Abd al-Warith b. Sa'Id—al-
Husayn al-Mu'allim—Abu Buraydah: When Abu Musa al-Ash'arl
arrived [in al-Kufah] he met Abu Dharr and started seeking his
company. Al-Ash'arl was a short, slender man, whereas Abu
Dharr was black and hairy. Al-Ash'arl started clinging to him, and
Abu Dharr would say "Go away and leave me alone," and al-
319. Cf. 'Umar b. Shabbah, I, 241, 253.
320. "Abu Dharr," EP,l, 114-15 (J. Robson); Cameron, Abu Dharr-, Ibn Hibban,
Mashahii, 30-31 ; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 31-32; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V,
52-56; Ibn Sa'd, IV/1, 161-75. He was an early convert of the Ghifar clan, which
belonged to the northern tribe of Kinanah; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 176.
321. Cf. Landau-Tasseron, "F. McG. Dormer," 501 (about Muhajirun who re¬
turned to their clans).
322. Ibn Sa'd, IV/1, 169.
70
Biographies
Ash'arl would say "Welcome, O brother," whereupon Abu Dharr
would push him and say "I am no brother of yours; I was your
brother before you were appointed governor." Later Abu Dharr
met Abu Hurayrah, who sought his company and said to him
"Welcome my brother," whereupon Abu Dharr replied "Go away
and leave me alone; did you not act as governor on behalf of those
[rulers]?" Abu Hurayrah said "Yes." Abu Dharr asked "Did you
trespass by building luxurious buildings or [unlawfully] acquiring
estates or flocks?" Abu Hurayrah said "No," whereupon Abu
Dharr said "You are my brother." 323
According to Ibn Sa'd 324 —al-Fadl b. Dukayn—Salih b.
Rustam—Abu 'Amir—Humayd b. Hilal—al-Ahnaf b. Qays: Abu
Dharr, as I saw him, was a tall, dark-brown-toned man with white
hair and a white beard.
According to Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari], Abu Dharr died during the
caliphate of 'Uthman in al-Rabadhah. 325
Buraydah b. al-Husayb b. 'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. al-A raj b. Sa'd
b. Rizah b. 'Adi b. Sahm b. Mazin b. al-Harith b. Salaman b. Aslam
b. Afsa b. Harithah b. 'Amr b. 'Amir, that is, Ma’ al-Sama’. 326
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Buraydah was converted to Islam when the Prophet passed by
him during his Emigration [to Medina].
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Hashim b. 'Asim al-
[2349] Aslami—his father: While emigrating from Mecca to Medina the
Prophet arrived at al-Ghamlm. 327 Buraydah b. al-Husayb went to
him [there], and the Prophet called on him to join Islam. Buraydah
323. Abu Dharr, considered one of the first ascetics in Islam, expresses here the
negative attitude toward government as such, because of the corruption often
involved in it. See Goitein, "Attitudes"; Kister, "Social Concepts"; 'Athamina,
"'Ulama’." As for Abu Hurayrah, he was accused of corruption by the caliph
'Umar, the present account notwithstanding; see al-Baladhuri, Futuh, 82.
324. Ibn Sa'd, TV/i, 169.
325. Al-Rababhali is an Islamic town about 200 kilometers southeast of Medina;
see al-Rashid, Al-Rabadha. Abu Dharr, who lived in Syria, was exiled to this place
because the governor, Mu'awiyah, had had complaints against him. See al-Tabari,
Ta’rikh, I, 2858-62, 2895-97.
326. A part of the decendants of this 'Amir, including Buraydah's clan, the
Aslam, formed the large tribal confederation called Khuza'ah, the genealogy of
which is confused. On Buraydah see Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, ioo-i; al-A'zami,
Kuttab, 47; Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 3-4, VII/2, 99-100; Khalifah b. Khayyat Ta’rikh, 246.
327. A place near Medina, see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, III, 817-18.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 71
was converted with those who were with him, numbering about
eighty families. The Prophet said the evening prayer, and they
prayed standing behind him.
According to [Ibn 'Umar]—Hashim b. 'Asim al-Aslami—al-
Mundhir b. fahm: That night, the Prophet taught Buraydah a part
of surat Maryam. After [the battles of] Badr and Uhud Buraydah
went to the Prophet in Medina and learned the rest of it. He be¬
came a resident of Medina, stayed with the Prophet, and partici¬
pated in the raids from that point onward. 328
After the Prophet's death Buraydah remained in Medina until
[the area of] al-Basrah was conquered and a garrison was estab¬
lished there. 329 He moved to al-Basrah, took possession of a piece
of land, [and built a house [dar) there]. He then left for Khurasan,
to participate in raids there. He died in Merv during the rule of
Yazid b. Mu'awiyah, and his offspring stayed there.
Dihyah b. Khallfah b. Farwah b. Fadalah b. Zayd b. Imri’ al-Qays
b. al-Khazj, that is, Zayd Manah—b. 'Amir b. Bakr b. 'Amir al-
Akbar (senior) b. 'Awf b. Bakr b. 'Awf b. 'Udhrah b. Zayd al-Lat b.
Rufaydah b. Thawr b. Kalb b. Wabarah b. Taghlib b. Halwan b. al-
Haf b. Quda'ah. 330
Dihyah was an early convert [but] did not take part in [the battle
of] Badr. It was said that he resembled [the angel] Jibrll.
Dihyah participated on the Prophet's side in the events that
followed [the battle of] Badr. He lived until the time of the calip¬
hate of Mu'awiyah.
Aws b. Qayzi b. 'Amr b. Zayd b. Jusham b. Harithah and his two [2350]
sons, Kabathah and 'Abdallah, sons of Aws. 331
They took part in [the battle of] Uhud. 332
'Arabah b. Aws b. Qayzi came with them on the day of Uhud,
328. Buraydah was appointed to several tasks by the Prophet; see, e.g., al-
Waqidl, 404-5, 410.
329. "Basra," EP-, I, 1085-86 (Ch. Pellat); al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, I, 2377. See also
Dormer, "Tribal Settlement"; al-'Ali, al-TanzImat al-ijtima'iyyah.
330. A member of the 'Udhrah, a part of the great tribe Kalb. On Dihyah, see
recently S. Bashear, "Mission"; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlz, 94; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I,
377 , S 3 1 -
331. Of the Harithah clan, of the Aws (An?ar), see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 87.
332. They were, however, among those who ran away. See al-Baladhuri, Ansab,
I, 326.
72
Biographies
but he was considered too young [to fight] and was sent back. 333
'Arabah is the one about whom al-Shammakh b. Dirar 334 says:
If you carry my saddle and bring me to 'Arabah,
then choke with your aorta's blood. 335
'Uthman b. Hunayf b. Wahib b. 'Ukaym b. Tha'labah b. al-
Harith b. Majda'ah b. 'Amr b. Hanash b. 'Awf b. 'Amr b. 'Awf 336
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
'Uthman was sent by 'Umar b. al-Khattab to supervise the sur¬
vey of the land of Iraq [for the assessment of taxes]. 337 [Later] he
acted as governor of al-Basrah for 'All [b. Abi Talib], when the oath
of allegiance was taken on the latter's behalf. 338
['Uthman b. Hunayf] died in al-Basrah during the caliphate of
Mu'awiyah.
Hassan b. Thabit b. al-Mundhir b. Haram b. 'Amr b. Zayd
Manah b. 'Adi b. 'Amr b. Malik b. al-Najjar, the Prophet's poet 339
His kunyah was Abu al-Walld.
Hassan was an early convert [but] did not participate in any
battle with the Prophet, [owing to] his cowardice.
He died during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah at the age of 120;
sixty years of his life he had lived during the Jahiliyyah and sixty
during Islam.
Nawfal b. Mu'awiyah b. Sakhr b. Ya'mur b. Nufathah b. 'Adi b.
al-Dil b. Bakr b. 'Abd Manah b. Kinanah 340
333. See note 260, above.
334. A pre-Islamic poet of the northern Dhubyan tribe. On him see al-Hadi, al-
Shammakh b. diiai, on the tribe, 52-74.
335. The poet apparently addresses his (she)-camel, meaning to say that if he
reaches 'Arabah he need make no further journey. The verse is part of a poem, see p.
74, below.
336. Of the clan Banu 'Awf b. 'Amr, from the Aws (Ansar). See Ibn Hazm,
Jamharat, 336; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 49; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 163.
337. See Dennett, 23; Morony, 37, 101-6; see also 484-85.
338. On the advent of new caliphs, it was the duty of the governors to secure the
oath of allegiance from the subjects in the provinces. See al-Tabari, Ta'iikh, I, 3087,
and 3ir5-2i for 'Uthman's role during 'All's time.
339. See "Hassan b. Thabit," El 2 , III, 271-73 (W. Arafat); Hassan, I, 3-7 (intro¬
duction by W. Arafat); Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 32. The clan's name is Banu al-
Najjar, from the Khazraj tribe (Ansar), see Ibn Hazm, famhaiat, 346.
340. Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 62; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 34. The clan's
name is in fact Banu al-Du’il, from the Kinanah tribe; see Ibn Hazm, famhaiat,
184-85.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 73
His family was the leading one among the Banu al-DIl, and his
father, Mu'awiyah, was the chief of the Banu al-DIl in the battle of
al-Fijar 341 Ta’abbata Sharran 342 said about him:
No, by [the life of] her father, we did not alight at 'Amir's [2351]
or by 'Amir's or by Nawfal the Nufathl. 343
[Nawfal's] son, Salma b. Nawfal, was the most generous among
the Arabs. The Ja'farf poet said about him:
We select chiefs who are not leaders at all;
nay, the praiseworthy chief is Salma b. Nawfal. 344
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Abu Bakr b.
'Abdallah b. Abi Sabrah—Juthah b. 'Ubayd al-Dili: Nawfal b.
Mu'awiyah al-Dlll lived sixty years during the Jahiliyyah and sixty
years during Islam. He participated with the idolators of the
Quraysh in [the battles of] Badr, Uhud, and the Ditch, where he
was harmful [to the Muslims], acquiring fame thereby. He later
embraced Islam and took part in the conquest of Mecca, [the battle
of] Hunayn, and [the siege of] al-Ta’if on the Prophet's side.
Nawfal settled in Medina with the Banu al-Dil. He transmitted
[traditions] from the Prophet.
Nawfal died in Medina during the caliphate of Yazld b.
Mu'awiyah, may God curse them both. 345
'Arabah b. Aws b. Qayzl b. 'Amr b. Zayd b. Jusham b. Harithah b.
al-Harith 346
His father, Aws b. Qayzl, and his brothers 'Abdallah and Ka-
bathah, sons of Aws, took part in [the battle of] Uhud, whereas he
was considered too young ( saghii ) and was sent back. 347 He was
allowed [to participate] in the Ditch (Khandaq).
341. On these pre-Islamic battles, see Landau-Tasseron, "Sinful wars."
342. A pre-Islamic poet; see F. Sezgin, n, 137-39.
343. Cf. Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahanl, XVHI, 214 (Ibn Qawfal instead of Nawfal; that
is, the verse does not allude to Nawfal). The two 'Amirs mentioned are 'Amir b. al-
Tufayl and 'Amir b. Malik, both of them tribal chiefs in the confederation 'Amir b.
Sa'sa'ah.
344. Cf. Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahanl, XII, 76; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 70; al-Mubarrad,
75 (where the name is Salm, not Salma). There is no clue to the identity of the poet
in any of these sources.
345. See note 286, above.
346. See p. ji, above; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 473.
347. See note 260, above.
74
Biographies
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Umar b. 'Uqbah—'Asim
[2352] b. 'Umar b. Qatadah: At the time of Uhud 'Arabah b. Aws was
fourteen years and five months old, and the Prophet sent him back
and refused to allow him [to participate in the battle].
According to Muhammad, 'Arabah was the one eulogized by al-
Shammakh b. Dirar. The latter came [once] to Medina, and
'Arabah loaded his camel with dates:
I found 'Arabah al-Awsi unequaled
in his involvement in charity.
His right hand always receives
the hoisted flag of nobility. 348
'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib. 349
'Ubaydallah fathered Muhammad, after whom he was called
[Abu Muhammad], al-'Abbas, and al-'Aliyah, who was married to
'All b. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas. She bore him Muhammad b. 'All,
among whose descendants the 'Abbasid caliphate was inherited.
['Ubaydallah also fathered] 'Abd al-Rahman and Qutham, who
were killed by Busr b. Abi Artah al-'Amiri in the Yemen. 350
'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas was one year younger than 'Abdallah b.
al-'Abbas. He heard and transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet
and lived to the time of Yazid b. Mu'awiyah.
'All b. Abi Talib appointed 'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas governor of
the Yemen. He also appointed him to lead the pilgrimage, and he
did, in the year 39/660. That year the people agreed that Shaybah
b. 'Uthman b. Abi Talhah [should conduct the pilgrimage], and so
he did 351
348. These verses, as well as the one on p. 72, above, are part of a poem, for
which see al-Shammakh, 96-97. See also Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 341,- al-Baladhurl,
Ansab, I, 277; Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahanl, VUI, 102; al-Mubarrad, 75, 396. Here the
phrase "right hand" is explained as "powerfully."
349. Cousin of the Prophet. See al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III (Duri), 24, 55-65;
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 173, 182, 214.
350. This occurred in the year 40/660, during the attempt of Mu'awiyah's gener¬
al Busr to seize the Hijaz and the Yemen from 'All's men. 'Ubaydallah was gover¬
nor of the Yemen for 'All; see al-Tabari Ta’ilkh, I, 3451-52.
351. These are in fact conflicting versions as to who conducted the pilgrimage in
the year 39/660. According to one of them, it was 'Ubydallah b. 'Abbas. According
to the other, Mu'awiyah, contending with 'All for power, sent a representative of
his own to perform this task. The latter, however, was not accepted, so a com¬
promise was reached, under which a neutral person (Shaybah b. 'Uthman) con-
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 75
'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas was a brave and generous leader. He
used to slaughter a camel every day [and distribute the meat]. He
was in charge of the vanguard [of the army] dispatched by al-Hasan
b. 'All against Mu'awiyah. 352
'Ubaydallah's full brother, Qutham b. al-'Abbas. 353
Qutham participated in raids in Khurasan when Sa'id b.
'Uthman governed it. 354 Sa'id wanted to give him a thousand
shares of the spoils, but Qutham said: "No. First allocate the fifth
( khums ) [which is due to the public treasury], 355 then give the
people their lawful shares, and afterward you can give me what
you want."
Qutham was a pious, virtuous man; he died in Samarkand.
Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari] said: According to 'Ali b. Muhammad [al-
Mada’ini]: Qutham b. 'Abbas was a governor of Mecca on behalf of [2353]
'All and conducted the pilgrimage.
It was said that he resembled the Prophet. 356
Ma'bad b. al-'Abbas and Kathlr b. al-'Abbas. 357
According to 'Ali b. Muhammad al-Mada’ini, the mother of Ka-
thir and Tammam was a Byzantine concubine whose name was
Musliyah.
Kathlr died in Yanbu' 358 from an ulcer in the throat.
Tammam b. al-'Abbas. 359
ducted the pilgrimage. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2448. On Shaybah b. 'Uthman, see
Ibn Sa'd, V, 331; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, IV, 329-30. Cf. also note 371, below.
352. For conflicting accounts of 'Ubaydallah's role in the relations between al-
Hasan and Mu'awiyah, see al-Tabari, TaTIkh, II, 1-2, al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III (Ma¬
hmud!), 33-34, 37-38.
353. He worked in the service of 'All b. Abi Talib. See "Kutham b. al-'Abbas,"
EP, V, 551 (C. E. Bosworth); al-Baladhuri, Ansab, ID (Duri), 65-66.
354. Sa'id was governor of Khurasan. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, II, 177-80; Ibn
Manzur, Mukhtasar, EX, 334-36; Khalifah b. Khayyaf, Tabaqat, 240; Muhammad
Ibn Habib, Mughtalin, 165-68.
3 5 5. A fifth [khums] of all booty is said to belong to God, to be used for special
purposes. See Ben Shemesh, I, 23-24, n, 51-53, HI, 51-55.
356. See the list of those who resembled the Prophet in Muhammad Ibn Habib,
Muhabbai, 46-47; and also Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 60, 69, 70, 73.
357. Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, HI (Duri), 22, 66 (on Ma'had), 60 (on Kathlr, who was a
scholar).
358. An oasis near Medina; see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, IV, 1038-39.
359. He worked in the service of 'Ali b. Abi Talib. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 185; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, m (Duri), 60; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3107.
76
Biographies
He was one of the most violent men of his time. He was the
youngest of his father's sons.
'Abdallah b. Zam'ah b. al-Aswad b. al-Muttalib b. Asad b. 'Abd
al-'Uzza b. Qusayy 360
His mother was Qarlbah al-Kubra (senior) bt. Abi Umayyah b.
al-Mughirah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. Makhzum; her mother was
'Atikah bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim 361
'Amir b. Kurayz b. Rabi'ah b. Habib b. 'Abd Shams b. 'Abd Manaf
b. Qusayy. 362
His mother was al-Bayda’, that is, Umm Hakim bt. 'Abd al-
Muttalib b. Hashim.
'Amir b. Kurayz was converted to Islam on the day of the con¬
quest of Mecca and lived to the [time of the] caliphate of 'Uthman
b. Affan. He went to al-Basrah to his son 'Abdallah b. 'Amir while
the latter was governor there on behalf of 'Uthman b. 'Affan.
Abu Hashim b. 'Utbah b. Rabi'ah b. 'Abd Shams b. 'Abd
Manaf. 363
He was converted to Islam on the day of the conquest of Mecca.
[Later] he left for Syria, where he settled until his death.
Qays b. Makhramah b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd Manaf. 364
Al-Salt b. Makhramah b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd Manaf b. Qu¬
sayy. 365
He was converted to Islam on the day of the conquest of Mecca.
360. Of the QurashI clan Banu Asadb. 'Abd al-'Uzza. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir,
63; Khalifahb. Khayyat Ta'rikh, 230; idem, Tabaqat, 14; Ibn Qudamah, 277.
361. Aunt of the Prophet, famous for a dream in which she foresaw the battle of
Badr. See Ibn Hisham, II, 258-59? Muhammad Ibn Habib, Munammaq, 337-38, see
also 33, 50; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 357-58.
362. A member of the powerful QurashI clan the Banu 'Abd Shams and notori¬
ous for his stupidity. See al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 82; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 256.
363. A member of the QurashI clan the Banu 'Abd Shams. See Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 172; idem, Tabaqat, 12; Ibn Qudamah, 217-18.
364. Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 63; Ibn Qudamah, 235; al-Zubayrl, 92. He belonged
to the QurashI clan the Banu al-Muttalib b. 'Abd Manaf; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat,
71-74.. The next five biographies are of people of the same clan.
365. Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 233.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 77
Juhaym b. al-Salt b. Makhramah b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd
Manaf 366
'Abdallah b. Qays b. Makhramah b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd
Manaf. 367
He was converted to Islam on the day of the conquest of Mecca.
Rukanah b. 'Abd Yazid b. Hashim b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd Manaf [2,354]
b. Qusayy. 368
He was converted to Islam on the day of the conquest [of
Mecca]. He then went to Medina, where he settled until his death,
at the beginning of the caliphate of Mu'awiyah.
His full brother 'Ujayr b. 'Abd Yazid b. Hashim b. al-
Muttalib. 369
Abu Nabiqah. 370
His name was 'Abdallah b. 'Alqamah b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd
Manaf.
Al-Aswad b. Abl al-Bakhtari-—the latter's name was al-'As—b.
Hashim b. al-Harith b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy. 371
Al-Aswad was converted to Islam on the day of the conquest [of
Mecca], whereas his father Abu al-Bakhtari was killed in the battle
of Badr as an idolator.
Habbar b. al-Aswad b. al-Muttalib b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b.
Qusayy 372
366. He served the Prophet as a scribe. See al-A'zami, Kuttab, 51-52; Ibn
Qudamah, 237.
367. He lived in Medina and fulfilled certain functions there for al-Hajjaj b.
Yusuf. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahu, 114; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 294; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 374.
368. Ibn Hibban, Mashdhii, 6i; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 9; Ibn Qudamah,
234; al-Zubayri, 95-96.
369. IbnPIajar, Isabah, n, 466; Ibn Qudamah, 235.
370. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 196; Ibn Qudamah, 237-38.
371. A member of the QurashI clan Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza. According to al-
Zubayr b. Bakkar, he was accepted as neutral leader during the war between 'All
and Mu'awiyah; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 42.
372. Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 357-58; Ibn Qudamah, 219. See also p. 000, above
(biography of Zaynab).
78
Biographies
It was reported that Habbar used to relate [the following story]:
When the Prophet came out and preached [the belief in] Allah I
was among those who showed hatred toward him, opposed him,
and harmed him.
[When] the Prophet sent someone to Mecca to fetch his daugh¬
ter Zaynab some people from the Quraysh obstructed her way, and
Habbar was among them. He poked her and wounded her back
with a lance, and she lost the baby she was carrying; she was then
brought back to the dwellings of the Banu 'Abd Manaf. Habbar b.
al-Aswad had committed a grave sin against Islam, and the
Prophet allowed his blood to be shed with impunity. Whenever he
sent a party on a raid he gave orders concerning Habbar, saying "If
you seize him put him between two logs of firewood and bum
him." He would then say: "Only the Lord of Fire is entitled to
torture with fire. 373 If you seize him cut off his hands and feet,
then kill him."
Abu Ja'far [al-Tabari] said: According to Muhammad b. 'Umar
[2355] [al-Waqidi]—Waqid b. Abi Thabit—Yazid b. Ruman—al-Zubayr
b. al-'Awwam: The Prophet never sent a raiding party without
telling them "If you seize Habbar, cut off his hands and feet, then
[execute him byj hitting his neck." 374 By God, I used to look for
him and ask about him, and God knows that, had I seized him
before he went to the Prophet, I would have killed him. Then he
came to the Prophet while I was sitting with him and started
making excuses to the Prophet, saying: "O Muhammad, curse
those who curse you and harm those who harm you. I hastened to
curse and harm you [while] I was forsaken [by God], but God has
helped me and led me to Islam." I looked at the Prophet, who
bowed his head out of shame for Habbar's excuses. The Prophet
said "I forgive you, for [conversion to] Islam nullifies whatever
was [committed] before it." 375 Habbar was hated more than any-
373. Arabic nar signifies both "fire" and "hell," so the sentence means that only
God, Who controls [heaven and] hell, may exact punishment by fire. As a rule, the
Muslims refrained from executions by fire. Cf. al-Baladhuri, Futuh, 107.
374. Cf. al-Waqidi, 857.
375. Al-islam yajubbu ma kana qablahu, a hadlth reflecting the tolerance of
Islam toward former enemies who repented. Even the false prophet Tulayhah, who
embraced Islam after his defeat in the apostasy wars, was forgiven and considered a
good Muslim and eventually a shahid. On him, see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 234. See
the hadlth in Ibn Hanbal, Musnad, IV, 199.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 79
one ; the Prophet heard about his forbearance in the face of harass¬
ment and said [to him] "O Habbar, curse those who curse you."
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Hisham b. 'Umarah—
Sa'id b. Muhammad b. Jubayr b. Mut'im—his father—his grand¬
father: I was sitting with the Prophet in his mosque, among [oth¬
ers of] his Companions, on his return from Ji'ranah 376 when Hab¬
bar b. al-Aswad appeared at the Prophet's door. The people saw
him and said "O Messenger of God, here is Habbar b. al-Aswad."
The Prophet said "I saw him." Someone wanted to go up to him,
but the Prophet motioned him to sit down. Habbar then [ap¬
proached until he] stood very close to the Prophet and said: "O
Messenger of God, peace be with you. I testify that there is no God
but Allah, and I testify that you are the messenger of God. I had
roamed the country, fleeing from you ; I had wanted to join the
non-Arabs, but then I remembered you and your kindness, your [2356]
virtue, your compassion, and your forbearance to those who act
impetuously toward you. O Messenger of God, we have been idol-
ators, but God has led us to the right path through you and saved
us from damnation. Forgive my impetuous ways and whatever
you heard about me, for I admit my wickedness and confess my
sin." The Prophet said: "I forgive you, for Allah treated you benev¬
olently by showing you the way to Islam. [Conversion to] Islam
nullifies whatever was [committed] before it."
Hind b. Abi Halah—whose name was al-Nabbash—b. Zurarah
b. Waqdan b. Habib b. Salamah b. Ghuwayy b. Jirwah b. Usayyid b.
Amr b. Tamlm. 377
Abu Halah and his two brothers, 'Awf and Unays, came to
Mecca and entered into an alliance ( hilf ) with the Banu 'Abd al-
Dar b. Qusayy b. Kilab. The [brothers] remained to live with them
in Mecca, and Abu Halah married Khadijah bt. Khuwaylid. She
bore him two sons, Hind and Halah. Halah died, whereas Hind
376. A place 10 miles from Mecca where the Prophet assembled the spoils from
the battle of Hunayn for distribution in the year 8/630. See al-Waqidi, 939-49;
Wellhausen, Muhammad, 373-81; Ibn Hisham, IV, 130-43; Guillaume, 592-97.
377. Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 43,199. He was of the Tamlmi clan Usayyid,
which had a special status in Mecca in pre-Islamic times. See Ibn Hazm, Jamharat,
210; Kister, "On Strangers and Allies," 120-26. On the large, powerful confedera¬
tion of Tamim (of northern origin), see Kister, "Mecca and Tamlm"; "Tamlm,"
El 1 , IV, 643-46 (Levi Della Vida); Caskel, H, 7-10.
8o
Biographies
lived to see [the advent of] Islam and was converted. Al-Hasan b.
'All [b. Abi Talibj transmitted [traditions] from him; he used to say
"I was told by my maternal uncle Hind b. Abi Halah." 378
According to [Abu 'Ubaydah] Ma'mar b. Muthanna: Hind was
passing through al-Basrah, and died there. The market was can¬
celed that day, and there was no loading and unloading of ships.
They said "The brother of Fatimah, the brother of Fatimah, may
God bless her!" 379
Al-Muhajir b. Abi Umayyah b. al-Mughirah b. 'Abdallah b.
'Umar b. Makhzum. 380
[He was a] full brother of Umm Salamah bt. Abi Umayyah, the
Prophet's wife.
The name of Abu Umayyah b. al-Mughirah was Suhayl. He is
[the one known as] Zad al-Rakb (provider for the passengers).
Whenever he set out on a journey, he took it upon himself [to pay]
the expenses of his companions and fellow travelers on that jour¬
ney. He was therefore called Zad al-Rakb. 381
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Abu Bakr b. 'Abdallah b.
[2357] Abi Sabrah—al-Muhajir b. Mismar: The Prophet was angry with
al-Muhajir b. Abi Umayyah, so the latter said to Umm Salamah
"Speak to the Prophet for me, for today is your day with him." So
she let him enter her house, and when the Prophet came in he was
taken by surprise as al-Muhajir approached him from behind and
seized him by the waist. The Prophet laughed, and Umm Salamah
said [to the Prophet] "Regard him with favor, may God regard you
with favor ." So the Prophet regarded him with favor and appointed
him over San'a’. Al-Muhajir left [for San'a’], and when [on his way
378. Being the son of Khadljah from her first marriage, Hind was half-brother of
Fatimah, daughter of the Prophet and mother of al-Hasan. See the genealogical
table 2, p. xxix.
379. §alawat allah 'alayha, a formula used specifically after mention of the
Prophet's name. As a rule, other formulas are used after mention of members of the
Prophet's family, such as ''peace be upon him/her" or "may God be pleased with
him/her." See Robson; Ibn al-'Arabi.
380. A member of the QurashI clan Makhzum and one of the Prophet's tax
collectors. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 62, 84; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, 1 ,529,- al-
Razi, 145-46; Ibn Qudamah, 372-73.
38r. Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbar, 137; Ibn Qudamah, 370.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 81
there] he arrived in Mecca he learned of the rise of al-'AnsI in
San'a’ 382 He returned to Medina, where he stayed until the
Prophet's death. Abu Bakr then appointed him over San'a’, and he
left to take his post. [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi] said to Ibn Abi Sabrah
"But, according to the version I have, the Prophet sent al-Muhajir
as governor, and he was in San'a’ when the Prophet died." Ibn Abi
Sabrah replied "That [which I told you] is what I was informed by
Muhajir b. Mismar."
Safwan b. Umayyah b. Khalaf b. Wahb b. Hudhafah b. Jumah b.
'Amr b. Husays. 383
His kunyah was Abu Wahb.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Yazid al-
Hudhali—Abu Husayn: The Prophet asked Safwan b. Umayyah
for a loan of 50,000 [dirhams?] while he was in Mecca, and he lent
it to him.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Safwan always
remained a good Muslim, [but] we have no information of his
taking part in any raid with the Prophet or after the latter's death.
He remained to live in Mecca until his death at the beginning of
Mu'awiyah's caliphate.
'Abdallah b. Sa'd b. Abi Sarh b. al-Harith b. Hubayb b. Jadhimah
b. Malik b. Hisl b. 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. 384
'Abdallah was an early convert and one of the Prophet's scribes.
He later apostatized and was [again] converted to Islam on the day
of the conquest of Mecca. The information about him is already [2358]
[recorded] in our book entitled The Supplemented: The Abridged
History of the Messengers and Kings.
382. Al-Aswad al-'Ansi posed as a prophet in the Yemen some time before
Muhammad's death. The Prophet succeeded in having him killed. See "Aswad
al-'Ansi," EP, I, 728 (W. M. Watt); al-Kala'i, 213-15; Ibn Hubaysh, 124-25.
383. A member of the Qurashi clan Jumah; see Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 56; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 304-5, 362-63; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 24; Ibn
Qudamah, 452-54.
384. A statesman and general of the Qurashi clan the Banu 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. See
"'Abdallah b. Sa'd," EP, I, 51-52 (C. H. Becker); Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 90; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 358; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 64, 13-35, 15 7 ; al-A'zami,
Kuttab, 83-89.
82
Biographies
Al-Aqra' b. Habis b. 'Iqal b. Muhammad b. Sufyan b. Mujashi' b.
Darim b. Malik b. Hanzalah b. Malik b. Zayd Manah b. Tamim. 385
He was a member of the TamimI delegation that came to the
Prophet, and the latter gave him ioo camels from the booty of
Hunayn. Al-'Abbas b. Mirdas composed verses about this. 386
Sa'sa'ah b. Najiyah b. 'Iqal b. Muhammad b. Sufyan b.
Mujashi' 387
Sa'sa'ah went to the Prophet and embraced Islam. Among his
posterity were the poet al-Farazdaq b. Ghalib b. Sa'sa'ah 388 and the
preacher 'Iqal b. Shabbah b. 'Iqal b. Sa'sa'ah. 389
Al-Zibriqan b. Badr b. Imri’ al-Qays b. Khalaf b. Bahdalah b.'Awf
b. Ka'b b. Sa'd b. Zayd Manah b. Tamim. 390
Al-Zibriqan's real name was al-Husayn. He was a poet and [so]
handsome [that] he was called "the moon of Najd." He was a
member of the Tamimi delegation that went to the Prophet and
was appointed by the latter to collect the legal alms ( sadaqah )
from his people, the Banu Sa'd b. Zayd Manah b. Tamim. He was
in this post when the Prophet died. [Then] the Arabs apostatized
and refused to pay the legal alms, but al-Zibriqan firmly adhered
to Islam, collected the alms from his people, and handed them
over to Abu Bakr. 391
385. "Akra' b. Habis," EP, I, 343 (M. J. Kister). He was a tribal chief of the
Tamimi clan Mujashi'; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 230-31.
386. Although the text so implies, there was no connection between the par¬
ticipation of al-Aqra' in the delegation and his receiving the gift; see Landau-
Tasseron, "Processes." On the Prophet's gifts to tribal leaders after the battle of
Hunayn and the SulamI al-‘Abbas b. Mirdas' protest against receiving only four
camels, see al-Waqidi, 946-47.
387. Of the Mujashi'; see Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 69-70. He was famous for his
objection to the pre-Islamic custom of burying alive female babies,- see, e.g., Abu al-
Faraj al-Isfahanl, XIX, 2-3.
388. A famous poet who flourished in the Umayyad period; see "al-Farazdak,"
EP, II, 788-89 (R. Blachere).
389. A companion of the Umayyad caliphs Hisham and al-Walld II. See al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, VI, 228; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, XVII, 91-93; al-Tabari, Ta’i-
Ikh, I, 1730, 1755-56, 1820.
390. A tribal chief of the Tamimi clan the Bahdalah. See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat,
219, 466; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 530,• Landau-Tasseron, "Processes," 254.
391. See Kister, " Ilia bihaqqihi Bashear, "Zakat"-, Shoufani, Al-Riddah.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 83
Malik b. Nuwayrah b. Jamrah b. 'Ubayd b. Tha'labah b. Yarbu' b.
Hanzalah b. Malik b. Zayd Manah b. Tamlm. 392
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Utbah b. Jabirah—Hu- [2359]
sayn b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Amr b. Sa'd b. Mu'adh: The Prophet
returned to Medina from the pilgrimage in the year 10/632. When
he saw the new moon of Muharram of the year 11/632 he sent tax
collectors to several Arab [tribes]. 393 He appointed Malik b.
Nuwayrah/ who had already embraced Islam, to collect the legal
alms from the Banu Yarbu'.
Malik was a poet, and his nickname was al-Jaful 394
Labid b. Rabi'ah b. Malik b. Ja'far b. Kilab, the poet. 395
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Musa b. Shaybah b. 'Amr b.
'Abdallah b. Ka'b b. Malik b. Kharijah b. 'Abdallah b. Ka'b: The
delegation of the Banu Kilab went to the Prophet in the year 9/6 3 o-
31. They were thirteen people, including Labid b. Rabi'ah, and
were lodged at the house of Ramlah bt. al-Hadath. 396 They came to
the Prophet, greeted him with the Islamic greeting, 397 and em¬
braced Islam, whereupon they returned to their tribe's territory.
According to Ibn Sa'd 398 —Nasr b. Bab—Da’ud b. Abi Hind—
['Amir b. Sharahll] al-Sha'bl: 'Umar b. al-Khattab wrote to al-
392. A member of the Tamimi clan the Yarbu'. See Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 224-
28; "Malik b. Nuwayra," EP, VI, 267-69 (E. Landau-Tasseron).
393. Cf. al-Waqidl, 973, where the tax collectors are said to have been sent on
the emergence of the new moon in the year 9/630. Al-Waqidi's sources here are
different, and Malik b. Nuwayrah is not included in this list. These two lists, both
quoted on the authority of al-Waqidi, can also be found in Ibn Sa'd, H/i, 115; Ibn
Hubaysh, 23-24; al-Kala'i, 43, and others. For yet other lists, see Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 63; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 529-30,• al-Ya'qubi, II, 122; Ibn His-
ham, IV, 246; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1750; Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbai, 125-
28) and also Shoufani, Al-Riddah, 96.
394. That is, "the one who frightens [the camels away[," referring to the story
that he scattered the sadaqah camels (and gave them back to those who had paid
them). Jaful, however, also means "hairy."
395. A member of the Ja'far b. Kilab from the 'Amir b. $a's'ah tribe. See Ibn
Hazm, Jamhazat, 284-87; "Labid b. Rabi'a," EP, V, 583-84 (C. Brockelmann).
396. This is al-Waqidi's version; other scholars call her Ramlah bt. al-Harith.
Her house is mentioned in the Sirah and elsewhere as a lodging. See Ibn Ha jar,
Isabah, IV, 305; al-Waqidl, 192, 975, 988; Ibn Sa'd, Vin, 327; Ibn Hubaysh, 122.
397. See p. 000, above.
398. The parallel text in Ibn Sa'd could not be traced.
8 4
Biographies
Mughlrah b. Shu'bah, his governor in al-Kufah: "Invite the poets
who live in your jurisdiction, and ask them to recite the poetry
they composed both in pre-Islamic and Islamic times; then write
to me about it." So al-Mughirah invited them. He said to Labid
"Recite to me the poetry you composed both in pre-Islamic and
Islamic times." Labid replied "Allah gave me surat al-Baqaiah
and surat Al ' Imran 399 instead of that." Al-Mughirah then said to
al-Aghlab al-'Ijli 400 "Recite to me," and he said:
Is it rajaz or a poem 401 that you need?
What you ask can easily be achieved.
Al-Mughirah wrote about this to 'Umar, and he wrote back:
[2360] "Cut al-Aghlab's pension by 500 [dirhams], and add them to La-
bid's." Al-Aghlab traveled to 'Umar, [came before him], and said
"Would you cut my pension for obeying you?" 'Umar then wrote
to al-Mughirah "Return to al-Aghlab the 500 you have cut, [but]
leave intact the increase in Labid b. Rabi'ah's pension."
Hubshi b. Junadah b. Nasr b. Usamah b. al-Harith b. Mu'ayt b.
'Amr b. Jandal b. Murrah b. Sa'sa'ah b. Mu'awiyah b. Bakr b.
Hawazin. 402
The Banu Murrah b. Sa'sa'ah are the Banu Salul; Salul was a
woman, the mother of the Banu Murrah, that is, Salul bt. Dhuhl b.
Shayban b. Tha'labah; and they are known by her [name],
Hubshi b. Junadah was a Companion of the Prophet. He fought
on the side of 'All [b. Abi Talib] in the battles he led.
Abu Umamah al-Bahili. 403
His name was Sudayy b. 'Ajlan, from the Banu Sahm b. 'Amr b.
Tha'labah b. Ghanm b. Qutaybah b. Ma'n b. Malik b. A'sur—
whose name was Munabbih—b. Sa'd b. Qays b. 'Aylan.
399. Chapters 2 and 3 of the Qur’an.
400. A poet bom before Islam,- he died in 22/642. See "al-Aghlab," EP, I, 247 (C.
Pellat).
401. Rajaz is a certain kind of meter, in which the verses are less rigidly struc¬
tured than in a regular poem; see "Radjaz," EP, VUI, 375-78 (M. Ullmann).
402. IbnHazm, famhaiat, 271-72-, Khalifahh. Khayyat, Tabaqdt, 55-56.
403. The male ancestor of the tribe was Malik b. A'sur, but it was known as
Bahilah, after Malik's wife. Their pedigree is confused. See Ibn Hazm, Jamhazat,
245-47; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 293; idem, Tabaqdt, 46, 302.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 85
Zayd al-Khayl b. Muhalhil b. Zayd b. Munhib b. 'Abd Ruda b. al-
Mukhtalis b. Thuwab b. Kinanah b. Malik b. Nabil b. Aswadan—
whose name was Nabhan—b. 'Amr b. al-Ghawth b. Tayyi’ b.
Udad b. Zayd b. Yashjub b. Ya'rub b. Qahtan 404
The mother of Tayyi’ was Dallah bt. Manjishan b. Killah b.
Radman b. Himyar, 405 whose mother gave birth to her on a hill by
the name of Madhhij, so Dallah was called Madhhij after that hill [2361]
and all her descendants are called Banu Madhhij 406
Tayyi’ had been named Julhumah, and he was called Tayyi’,
according to a certain opinion, only because he was the first to
have plastered the [walls of the] watering places (tawa al-
manahil), and some say that it was because he was the first to
have plastered the walls of a well.
Zayd al-Khayl died in a place called Fardah, 407 while returning
after [visiting] the Prophet.
According to Hisham [Ibn al-Kalbi]—his father: The clan of
Zayd al-Khayl was called the Banu al-Mukhtalis. Zayd had several
children: 408
(1) Miknaf b. Zayd, after whom Zayd was called [Abu Miknaf ].
He embraced Islam and ranked among the Prophet's Companions.
He took part in the wars of apostasy ( liddah ) [on the Muslim side]
under the command of Khalid b. al-Walid and showed courage.
(2) Hurayth b. Zayd; he was a horseman. He ranked among the
Prophet's Companions and took part in the wars of apostasy under
the command of Khalid b. al-Walid. He [also] was a poet.
(3) 'Urwah b. Zayd. He took part in the battles of Qadisiyyah,
404. The clan's name is Banu al-Mukhtalis, the larger group being the Nabhan;
see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 403-4. Zayd was a poet and tribal chief in pre-Islamic
times,- see Landau-Tasseron, "Tayyi’," 57.
405. An ancient Arab people from southern Arabia, incorporated by Arab
genealogists into the tribal scheme as a son of Saba’ (ancient Sheba). See "Himyar,"
El 1 , n, 310-12 (J. H. Mordtmann); Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 432; Caskel, II, 66-73.
406. Theoretically all Arab tribes had male eponyms. When it was obvious that
a tribe's name had been otherwise coined, a story was adduced by the genealogists
to explain it.
407. A mountain or, according to another version, a watering place in the terri¬
tory of Tayyi’, see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, in, 871.
408. On Zayd's children and their role in the apostasy wars, see Landau-
Tasseron, "Tayyi’," 57-59.
86 Biographies
Quss al-Natif, and Mihran 409 and showed courage. He composed
verses about it.
Zayd al-Khayl was a poet.
'Adi b. Hatim al-Jawad (the generous) b. 'Abdallah b. Sa'd b. al-
Hashraj b. Imri’ al-Qays b. 'Adi b. Akhzam b. Rabi'ah b. Jarwal b.
Thu'al b. 'Amr b. al-Ghawth b. Tayyi’. 410
His kunyah was Abu Tarif.
'Adi b. Hatim took part in the battles of Qadisiyyah, 411 Mihran,
Quss al-Natif, and Nukhaylah. He was the standard bearer. He
fought in the battle of the Camel on the side of the Commander of
the Faithful 'All b. Abi Talib, where he lost an eye and his son was
killed. He [also] took part in the battles of Siffin and Nahrawan on
'All's side. 412
'Adi died during the rule of al-Mukhtar 413 in al-Kufah, at the age
of 120.
[2362] 'Amr b. al-Musabbih b. Ka'b b. Tarif b. 'Asar b. Ghanm b.
Harithah b. Thuwab b. Ma'n b. 'Atud b. 'Unayn b. Salaman b.
Thu'al b. 'Amr b. al-Ghawth b. Tayyi’ 414
409. Quss al-Natif is another name for the battle of the Bridge in Iraq in the year
13/634 or 14/635. See Donner, Early Islamic Conquests, 191-92; al-Baladhun,
Futuh, 251-52; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2174-83. Mihran is another name for the
battle of Nukhaylah in Iraq, which took place before al-Qadisiyyah, but cf. the
biography of 'Adi b. Hatim, below, where the two names seem to refer to two
disparate events; Nukhaylah is also known as al-Buwayb. See al-Baladhuri, ibid.,
253-55; Donner, ibid., 198.
410. A tribal leader who embraced Islam and was appointed tax collector by the
Prophet. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 75; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 68-69; al-
Dabbi, 23-25. The clan's name was Banu Thu'al. See also Landau-Tasseron, "Tay¬
yi’," 53 - 56 , 59-60. ,
41 r. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2221, where he is said to have been the com¬
mander of the Tayyi’.
412. A town in Iraq, the site of 'All's victory over the Khawarij who rebelled
against him in the year 37/658; see Wellhausen, Arab Kingdom, 84-86.
413. Leader of a successful pro-'Alid revolt. He ruled al-Kufah in 66-67/685-87;
see "al-Mukhtar," EP, VII, 521-24 (G. R. Hawting],
414. A member of the Banu Thu'al, he is considered to be one of the mu'am-
marun, those who lived more than 120 years. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, m, r 6, and also
"Mu'ammar," EP, VII, 258 (G. H. A. Juynboll).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 87
He was the best archer among the Arabs, and [the poet] Imru’ al-
Qays 415 said about him:
How many archers of the Banu Thu'al
draw their hands out of the hiding place?
Wabarah b. al-fahdar al-Ma'ni of the Banu Daghsh said: 416
The raven pushed—I wished that it did not—
causing me and Salma and Umm al-Hawshab to part. 417
I wished that the core of that raven's heart
by 'Amr's perfectly made arrows was shot.
'Amr b. al-Musabbih lived 150 years. He lived to the Prophet's
time, went to see him, and embraced Islam.
Al-Ash'ath b. Qays, that is, al-Ashajj (scarface), b. Ma'di-Karib b.
Mu'awiyah b. Jabalah b. 'Adi b. Rabi'ah b. Mu'awiyah al-Akramln
b. al-Harith b. Mu'awiyah b. al-Harith b. Mu'awiyah b. Thawr b.
Muratti' b. Kindah. 418
[Al-Ash'ath] was a Kindi; Kindah's [real] name was Thawr b.
'Ufayr b. 'Adi b. al-Harith b. Murrah b. Udad b. Zayd b. Yashjub b.
'Arib b. Kahlan b. Saba’ b. Yashjub b. Ya'rub b. Qahtan.
Al-Ash'ath's [real] name was Ma'di-Karib, but his hair was al¬
ways disheveled, so he was nicknamed al-Ash'ath (the
disheveled). His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
415. See "Imru’ al-Kays b. Hudjr," El 2 , HI, 1177-78 (S. Boustany); Tuetey. The
verses are in al-Sandubi, Sharh diwan Imii’ al-Qays, 86, and Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab
ma'add, 239, from which apparently al-Tabari quoted it; cf. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, m,
16 ( wa-qala Ibn al-Kalbi thumma al-Tabari. . . )
416. Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma’add-, Ibn Manzur, Lisan, I, 743 s.v. l.gh.b (both
variants omitting the obscure part about Umm al-Hawshab). In Ibn al-Kalbi, 236,
the poet is called Wabarah b. Salamah and the family the Banu Da's of the Ta’i clan
Ma'n. Note Jahdam/Qahdham in Ibn al-Kalbi (apparently corresponding to our
text's Jahdar).
417. The raven is the symbol of separation from the beloved in ancient Arabic
poetry. Salma is obviously the beloved's name. I could not find out what Umm al-
Hawshab refers to.
418. Of the Banu Jabalah of Kindah; see Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 139. Al-
Ash'ath was an important leader both in pre-Islamic and Islamic times. He served
'Uthman as a governor and 'All as a general and played a crucial role in Kufan
politics. See "al-Ash'ath b. Kays," EP-, I, 696-97 (H. Reckendorf); Crone, Slaves,
110—11; Lecker, "Kinda"; idem, "Judaism Among Kinda"; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
TaTikh, 129, 149, 175-77; Ibn Hibban, Mashablr, 78.
88
Biographies
[2363] Al-Ash'ath went to see the Prophet with seventy [other] riders
from Kindah. He later took part in the wars of apostasy ( riddah ),
was taken prisoner, and was sent to Abu Bakr. 419 He repented and
remained to live in Medina until 'Umar b. al-Khattab, during his
caliphate, urged the people to participate in the military expedi¬
tions to Iraq. 420 Al-Ash'ath joined [a regiment] under [the com¬
mand of] Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas and took part in the battles of
Qadisiyyah, Mada’in, Jalula’, and Nihawand. 421 He chose for him¬
self a piece of land in al-Kufah when the Muslims founded the
garrison, built a house [dar] among [the other members of] the
Kindah, and lived there until his death.
Al-Ash'ath was present at the Arbitration (tahklm al-
hakamayn ). 422 'All wanted to appoint 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas as
arbiter to confront 'Amr b. al-'As, 423 but al- Ash'ath b. Qays re¬
fused [to accept this], saying: "This case should not be judged by
two Mudaris! One of the arbitrators must be a Yemeni." 424 So 'All
appointed Abu Musa al-Ash'ari, and al-Ash'ath was one of the
witnesses to the document [of arbitration].
Al-Ash'ath's brother Sayf b. Qays. 425
419. On the apostasy of the Kindah after the Prophet's death and al-Ash'ath's
leading role, see Ibn Hubaysh, 131-41; al-Kala'I, 222-42; Lecker, "Kinda"; Lecker,
"Judaism."
420. The former apostates were not allowed to take part in the conquests until a
shortage of manpower was felt, during Umar's caliphate; see Landau-Tasseron, "F.
McG. Donner," 506-8. In addition, the Muslims were reluctant to raid Iraq, where
they had suffered setbacks in the beginning; see al-Baladhuri, Futuh (Beirut), 252-
53 -
421. Al-Mada’in |Ctesiphon) in Iraq, Jalula’ and Nihawand in Persia were Sasa-
nian cities and sites of battles during the Muslim conquests. See Donner, Early
Islamic Conquests, 209-10,• al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh, I, 2431-44, 2457-74, 2596-2637;
al-Baladhuri, Futuh, 262-65, 302-7.
422. The battle of Siffln between 'Ah and Mu'awiyah (37/657) ended with an
agreement to arbitration; see Hinds, "Siffln Agreement."
423. 'Amr, Mu'awiyah's appointee, was known as an exceptionally shrewd per¬
son ( dahiyah ).
424. The Mudar (the "northern" tribes) and the Yemen (the "southern" tribes)
were in fact the two rival factions that dominated the political life of the Umayyad
period. It should be noted that in the tribal context the designations "southerners"
and "northerners" are not geographical but genealogical terms. The names Qays
and Kalb are also used to denote these factions. See Crone, Slaves-, Landau-
Tasseron, "Waning of the Umayyads."
425. Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma'add, 14T; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 104.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 89
He went with al-Ash'ath b. Qays to see the Prophet. The latter
told him to act as the [clan's] muezzin, and so he did until his
death.
Their brother Ibrahim b. Qays. 426
He went to see the Prophet together with al-Ash'ath and em¬
braced Islam.
Al-Harith b. Sa'id b. Qays b. al-Harith b. Shayban b. al-'Atik b.
Mu'awiyah al-Akramin. 427
He went to see the Prophet.
Amanah b. Qays b. al-Harith b. Shayban b. al-'Atik b.
Mu'awiyah al-Akramin. 428
He went to see the Prophet and embraced Islam. He lived a long
life, and the poet 'Udah b. Bada said about him: 429
I wish to live long, O Umm Khalid,
just as Amanah b. Qays b. Shayban did.
He lived so long "he is not a mortal" people would say;
many an old man and youth he saw pass away.
After a [long] period of time
a great calamity befell him like Nasr b. Duhman. 430
As if among the living not an hour did he linger,
[now] he is placed in the grave's custody, shrouded in linen.
Amanah's son Yazid b. Amanah joined [his father] in his visit [to
the Prophet]. He embraced Islam and later apostatized and was
killed as an apostate in the battle of Nujayr. 431 This was reported
by Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbl]. 432
426. IbnHajar, Isabah, I, 15.
427. The clan's name is Shayban, it was of the Kindah tribe, see Ibn al-Kalbl,
Nasab ma'add, 159, Ibn yajar, Isabah, 279.
428. Uncle of the aforementioned al-Harith.
429. Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma'add, 160, Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 62-63. The poet
belonged to the Nakha'.
430. A folkloric figure connected with several stories and proverbs. According to
one of them, he lived a very long time and, after having aged, was again rejuve¬
nated. See al-Zamakhshari, I, 254-55.
431. Al-Nujayr was a fortress of the Kindah in Hadramawt where the Kindi
apostates were besieged and defeated by the Muslims. See note 419, above.
432. Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 160.
[2364]
90
Biographies
Ma'dan b. al-Aswad b. 'Abdallah b. al-Harith al-Walladah b.
'Ami b. Mu'awiyah b. al-Harith al-Akbar (senior). 433
Ma'dan was nicknamed al-Jafshlsh. 434
He came to see the Prophet together with al-Ash'ath b. Qays. He
is the one who said to the Prophet "O Messenger of God, are you
not one of us?" The Prophet remained silent. [This was repeated]
twice, and the third time the Prophet said: "We do not trace our
pedigree through the female line, and we shall not disown our
male ancestors. We are the descendants of al-Nadr b. Kinanah." 435
Al-Ash'ath said [to Ma'dan] "May God break your teeth; why did
you not keep quiet?"
According to the tradition of Kindah, al-Jafshlsh was the one
who said:
We obeyed the Messenger of God, for he spoke the truth,
but, [I] wonder, what is the kingship of Abu Bakr to us?
Will he, when he dies, beqeath it to a young camel?
this by God is a backbreaking [upheaval]. 436
[2365] This was reported by Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbl], 437 but
Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl] held that these two verses were
composed by Harithah b. Suraqah b. Ma'di Karib al-Kindi, who
433. The clan is Banu al-Harith al-Walladah of the Kindah. 'Abdallah's original
name was Shaytan, "devil," changed by the Prophet, see p. 5 3, above; Ibn al-Kalbi,
Nasab ma'add, 172.
434. Opinions differ as to the identity of al-Jafshlsh. I could not, however, find
an explanation of the nickname. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 240-41. My search in the
direction of south Arabian yielded no results either. See also Lecker, "Kinda."
435. Several tribal groups attempted to establish their kinship with the
Quraysh, the ruling tribe, either through the Prophet himself or otherwise. See E.
Landau-Tasseron, "Asad," 13,- idem, "Murra."
436. These verses are variously attributed to several poets. They reflect the
reluctance of many Arab tribes to submit to the hegemony of Medina after the
Prophet's death, in the so-called apostasy period. See p. 82, above. For these verses,
see al-Hutay’ah, 329-30,• al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1875-76; Ibn 'Asakir, Tahdhib, VH,
96; Ibn Hubaysh, 15, 133; al-Kala'I, 37, 227; Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, II, 286-87
(s.v. "Hadramawt"); Ibn A'tham, I, 49; see also Kister, "Ilia bi-haqqihi’ ," 35. The
second verse mockingly refers to the kunyah "Abu Bakr," literally, "father of the
young camel"; c.f. al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1890. See also Muhammad Ibn Habib,
Muhabbar, 185, where a Kindi woman by the name of Umm Ma'dan is listed
among those who rejoiced in the Prophet's death, together with Malkah, daughter
of Amanah.
437. Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 173. The composer of the verses, however, is
here Abu Hunayy Masruq b. Ma'di Karib.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 91
withheld the legal alms from [the tax collector] Ziyad b. Labid and
joined those who apostatized. 438
Qays b. al-Makshuh—whose [real] name was Hubayrah—b.
'Abd Yaghuth b. al-Ghuzayyil b. Salamah b. Bida b. 'Amir b. 'Aw-
bathan b. Zahir b. Murad. 439
Qays's father, Hubayrah, was nicknamed al-Makshuh because
he had a complaint in his flank resulting from a fire (kushiha bi-al-
nar ) ; that is, he had a bum on his flank ( kashh ). He had been a
leader of the Murad, and [so was] his son Qays.
[Qays] was the [best] horseman of the Madhhij tribe. It was
reported that he was the one who had pierced the head of [al-
Aswad] al-'Ansi. The [tribal confederation of] Mudar used to call
him Qays Ghudar (treacherous), to which he would reply "1 am
not treacherous, but I inflict death on Mudar." 440
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Abdallah b.
'Amr b. Zuhayr—Muhammad b. 'Umarah b. Khuzaymah b.
Thabit: When 'Amr b. Ma'di Karib heard about the Prophet he said
to Qays b. al-Makshuh al-Muradl: "O Qays, you are the leader of
your tribe at present. We have heard that a man of the Quraysh, by
the name of Muhammad, has arisen in the Hijaz, claiming to be a
prophet. Let us go to him and learn the truth about him. If he is a
prophet, as he claims, the matter will be clear to us when we meet
him ; [in that case] we should follow him. If he is not [a prophet],
we will leam the truth about him. If someone else from your tribe
precedes us to him, [that man] will assume leadership and rule us,
and we will be his subordinates." 441 Qays refused [the suggestion]
438. See Ibn Hubaysh, 133; al-Kala'I, 226-28.
439. There are two people by that name, see Ibn al-Kalbi Nasab ma'add, 335,
3 51. The one discussed here, famous for his part in killing the false Yemeni prophet
al-Aswad, belonged to the Banu Zahir of the tribe of Murad. See Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasad
ma'add, 335; Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 84, ro2 ; Ibn Sa'd, V, 383. For the Murad,
a part of Madhhij that dwelt in the Yemen east of Najran, see Ibn Hazm, famhaiat,
406-7; "Murad," EP, VII, 591-92 (G. Levi Della Vida).
440. Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasad ma'add, 335. This exchange reflects the enmity be¬
tween the "northern" and "southern" confederations. See note 424. Qays's reply
rhymes in Arabic.
44r. This statement presupposes a ruling status for the Prophet. Rise to leader¬
ship of a clan could depend on a person's connections with rulers of states outside
the clan (such as al-HIrah and Ghassan in pre-Islamic times, the Prophet and the
caliphs in Islamic times).
92
Biographies
and said that the idea was foolish. 'Amr b. Ma'di Karib rode to
Medina leading ten of his fellow tribesmen, embraced Islam, and
returned to his [tribe's] territory. 442
[2366] Safwan b. 'Assal, of the Banu al-Rabad b. Zahir b. 'Amir b.
'Awbathan b. Zahir b. Murad. 443
As a pension recipient he counted as one of the Jamal. 444
He embraced Islam and was a Companion of the Prophet.
'Amr b. al-Hamiq b. al-Kahin b. Habib b. 'Amr b. al-Qayn b.
Razah b. 'Amr b. Sa'd b. 'Amr b. Ka'b b. 'Amr. 445
He gave the oath of allegiance to the Prophet during the
Farewell Pilgrimage and ranked among the Companions after
that.
'Amr was among those who took part in the assault on 'Uthman
b. 'Affan. 446 He later participated with 'All b. Abi Talib in the
battles led by him. He was killed in the Jazirah by Ibn Umm al-
Hakam. 447
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Isa b. 'Abd al-Rahman—
['Amir b. Sharahll] al-Sha'bi: The first head to have been carried [to
the ruler] in Islamic times was the head of 'Amr b. al-Hamiq. 448
Kurz b.'Alqamah b. Hilal b. Juraybah b.'Abd-Nuhm b. Hulayl b.
Hubshiyyah b. Salul b. Ka'b b. 'Amr b. Harithah b. 'Amr Muzay-
442. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1732-34, for a similar version. The chain of au¬
thorities is different.
443. Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 8o ; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqdt, 74-75, 134; Ibn
al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 335.
444. A clan of the Murad; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 476-77. The tribal leaders
received the pensions {'ata’) on behalf of their people and were responsible for
distributing them individually. Sometimes people were listed with clans other
than their own for the purpose of receiving pensions.
445. Of the Khuza'ah confederation. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 94; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqdt, 107, 136; idem, Ta’nkh, 176, 197; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa,
236-37; Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbai, 292, 490,• Nasr b. Muzahim, passim.
446. The reference is to the murder of the third caliph, 'Uthman, in the year
35/656, see Kennedy, 69-75.
447. He was killed in retaliation for the murder of 'Uthman. Ibn Umm al-
Hakam, 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abdallah b. 'Uthman al-Thaqafi, was Mu'awiyah's
governor of Mosul; see al-Tabari, Ta’nkh, II, 127-28.
448. Cf. Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbai, 292; al-Suyutl, Wasa’il, 8i ; Ibn
Qutaybah, Awa’il, 41.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 93
qiya’ b. 'Amir Ma’ al-Sama’ b. Harithah al-Ghitrif b. Imri’ al-Qays
b. Tha'labah b. Mazin b. al-Azd b. al-Ghawth b. Nabt b. Malik b.
Zayd b. Kahlan b. Saba’ b. Yashjub b. Ya'rub b. Qahtan. 449
Kurz embraced Islam on the day of the conquest of Mecca. He
lived a long life. [Once] one of the signs marking the [boundaries
of] the sacred territory in Mecca (a’lam al-haram) could not be
found. Marwan b. al-Hakam wrote to Mu'awiyah about it, and he
wrote [back] "If Kurz b.' Alqamah is still alive, ask him to lead you
to it." [Marwan] did this, so Kurz is the one who set the boundaries
of the sacred territory in Mu'awiyah's time; they are in the same
position even now. 450
Al-Haysuman b. Iyas b. 'Abdallah b. Dubay'ah b. 'Amr b. Mazin [2367]
b. 'Adi b. 'Amr. 451
He had a leading position within his clan. He embraced Islam
and was a good Muslim (hasuna islamuhu ). 452
Mikhnaf b. Sulaym b. al-Harith b. 'Awf b. Tha'labah b. ' Amir b.
Dhuhl b. Mazin b. Dhubyan b. Tha'labah b. al-Dul b. Sa'd Manah
b. Ghamid b. 'Abdallah b. Ka'b b. al-Harith b. Ka'b b. 'Abdallah b.
Malik b. Nasr b. al-Azd 453
Mikhnaf embraced Islam and ranked among the Companions.
His family was the leading one among the Azd in al-Kufah. He had
three brothers: 'Abd Shams, who was killed in the battle of
449. The clan's name is Banu 'Abd Nuhm, it was of the Khuza'ah confederation.
See ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 236; Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma'add, 444. Kurz was the one
who went after the Prophet when the latter emigrated but miraculously lost track
of him ; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, III, 291.
450. Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 236, and see p. 42, above. Marwan was Mu'awiyah's
governor in Mecca.
451. The clan was the Banu 'Adi of the Khuza'ah confederation; see Ibn Hazm,
Jamhaiat, 239. Al-Haysuman is known as the one who brought the Quraysh the
bad news of their defeat at Badr ; see also al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 294; Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, I, 366, quoting, among others, al-Tabari ( Ta’ilkh, I, 1338); Ibn al-Kalbl,
Nasab ma'add, 454.
452. This phrase usually denotes people whose sincerity was doubtful, e.g.,
people who had apostatized then embraced Islam again.
453. The clan was the Banu Tha'labah b. 'Amir of the Azd, one of the most
important southern tribal confederations in Umayyad times. Mikhnaf was one of
the main leaders. He served 'All as governor of Isfahan and as a general in the battle
of Siffin. See Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma'add, 482; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 377; Khalifah
b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 113; Nasrb. Muzahim, 104-5, and passim; also "Azd," El 2 , 1 ,
811-13 (G. Strenziok).
94
Biographies
Nukhaylah; al-Saq'ab, who was killed in the battle of the Camel;
and 'Abdallah, who was [also] killed in the battle of the Camel. 454
Among the descendants of Mikhnaf b. Sulaym was Abu
Mikhnaf Lut b. Yahya b. Sa'id b. Mikhnaf b. Sulaym. 455 Accounts
of people's battles (ayyam al-nas) are transmitted from him.
Fayruz b. al-Daylaml. 456
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah. He belonged to the descendants
( abna ’) of the Persians who had been sent by Khusraw to the Ye¬
men, conquered it, and drove out the Abyssinians. 457
According to 'Abd al-Mun'im: They later traced their pedigree
to the Banu Dabbah, 458 saying "We had been taken prisoner in pre-
Islamic times." 459 'Abd al-Mun'im was mistaken in what he said,
for [the story] was like this: Dabbah b. Udd had three sons. One of
them assaulted another descendant of Dabbah and killed him. His
father wanted to kill him [in retaliation], so he ran away and set-
[2368] tied in the Daylam mountains, 460 where he fathered several chil¬
dren. His descendants claim even today that they have in their
possession his saddle and utensils.
Fayruz is the one who killed al-'Ansi, that is, al-Aswad b. Ka'b
al-Kadhdhab (the liar), who claimed to be a prophet in the Yemen.
The Prophet said "He was killed by the virtuous man Fayruz b. al-
Daylaml."
454. Cf. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 172.
455. "Abu Mikhnaf," EP, 1 ,140 (H. A. R. Gibb); Duri, Rise of Historical Writing,
43-44; Mustafa, I, 178-79; U. Sezgin, Abu Mihnaf.
456. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 7; idem, Ta’rikh, 84; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, III,
210; Ibn Sa'd, V, 389.
457. The reference is to the Persian intervention in the Yemen under Khusraw
Anushirwan (531-79), see "Abna’," EP, I, 102 (K. V. Zettersteen); al-Tabari, Ta’¬
rikh, I, 901-66.
458. Dabbah b. Udd, of the northern Mudar confederation. See "Dabba," EP, D,
71-72 (W. Caskel); Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 203. Genealogists mention that "the
[Persian people] Daylam are said to be descendants of Basil b. Dabbah," without
further explanation. See Ibn Hazm, loc. cit. ; al-Wazir, 135.
459. Change (or forgery) of genealogy was common, often accomplished by ma¬
nipulating the history of a female ancestor, e.g., claiming that she had remarried
and brought along her son from the previous marriage, so that he (and his descen¬
dants) were erroneously traced to the stepfather; here the argument is that a male
ancestor from the Dabbah had been captured and remained among the Abna’ so
that his descendants were thought to belong to that group.
460. In the highlands of Gilan ; see "Daylam," EP, 189-90 (Minorsky).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 95
Fayruz went to see the Prophet and transmitted [traditions]
from him. Some people transmitted [traditions] from Fayruz, say¬
ing "I was told by al-Daylaml al-Himyarl," whereas others say
"On the authority of al-Daylami," which is the same thing; it is
Fayruz al-Daylami. He was called al-Himyari only because he
lived among the Himyar and was their ally.
Fayruz died during the caliphate of 'Uthman.
The Names of Those Companions Who Outlived the
Prophet and Transmitted Traditions and
Knowledge 461
The names of those who lived after the Prophet from the Banu
’Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf . 462
Al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib, the paternal uncle of the Prophet,
and his sons al-Fadl, 'Abdallah, and 'Ubaydallah. All of them lived
during the time of the Prophet and transmitted [traditions] from
him, and knowledge was transmitted from them.
The oldest among al-'Abbas' children whom I have mentioned
was al-Fadl, after whom al-'Abbas was called [Abu al-Fadl]. 463 He
was the first of them to die. He died before his father, in Syria, in
the plague of 'Amwas. 464
'Abdallah [b. al-'Abbas] was the one who broadened the people's
knowledge. He was given a long life and lived until the days of the
war between Ibn al-Zubayr and 'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan. 465 I
have already mentioned his death date and other details about
him.
'Ubaydallah was the youngest of al-'Abbas' three sons; 'Abdal¬
lah was a year older than he. 'Ubaydallah died before 'Abdallah,
461. In fact, the next chapters (up to p. 119) deal with members, allies, and
clients of QurashI clans: the Banu Hashim, al-Muttalib, Nawfal, Asad, 'Abd al-Dar,
Zuhrah, Taym b. Murrah, Makhzum, 'Adi b. Ka'b, fumah and 'Amir b. Lu’ayy.
462. That is, the Prophet's clan.
463. Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 28; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III (Duri), 23-26; Khallfah
b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 87-88; idem, Tabaqat, 4.
464. Amwas, ancient Emmaus in Palestine, was the site of a Muslim military
camp during the conquests. Many fell victim there to the plague of the year 18/639.
See "'Amwas," El 2 , 1 , 460-61 (Sourdel-Thomine); Conrad, "Plague," chap. 5.
465. That is, the second civil war, see pp. 51-52, above.
9 6 Biographies
during the time of Yazid b. Mu'awiyah, whereas 'Abdallah's death
occurred two years later.
The mother of al-Fadl, 'Abdallah, 'Ubaydallah, and Qutham was
[2369] the same [woman], that is, Umm al-Fadl Lubabah al-Kubra (senior)
bt. al-Harith b. Hazn, of the Banu Hilal b. 'Amir.
In addition to these, others among al-'Abbas' children transmit¬
ted knowledge and traditions, such as Kathir, Tammam, and
Ma'bad. None of them, however, is known really to have heard
[traditions directly] from the Prophet, except those whom I
mentioned.
'All and 'Aqil, sons of Abu Talib b. 'Abd al-Muttalib; al-Hasan
and al-Husayn, sons of 'All b. Abi Talib; and 'Abdallah b. Ja'far b.
Abi Taiib. All of them outlived the Prophet and transmitted
knowledge and traditions. I have already mentioned their death
dates and the periods of their lives.
Al-Harith b. Nawfal b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim
b. 'Abd Manaf.
Among his offspring was 'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. Nawfal, who
was accepted [as leader] by the people of al-Basrah during the time
of [the strife between] the Zubayri and the Marwanl factions. 466
His nickname was Babbah.
[Al-Harith] lived during the Prophet's time and transmitted [tra¬
ditions] from him.
Some traditions transmitted by al-Harith from the Prophet :
According to 'All b. Sahl al-Ramli—Mu’ammil b. Isma'Il—
Sufyan—'Asim b. 'Ubaydallah—'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah b.
'Utbah—'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. Nawfal—his father: Whenever
the Prophet heard the muezzin call "I testify that there is no God
but Allah; I testify that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah" he
would say "[It is] as he says." When the muezzin called "Come to
prayer" the Prophet would say "There is neither might nor power
466. The reference is to the second civil war ( fitnah ). In the confusion after the
death of Yazid b. Mu'awiyah (64/683) people in the provinces ousted their official
governors and chose others in their place. See al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 132, 188
(read bi-babbah instead of baynahu), 190, 273; Ibn Hazm, famhaiat, 70; Ibn Hib-
ban, Mashahii, 1 15.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 97
but in God." And when the muezzin reached the [line] "Come and
be saved" the Prophet would say "There is neither might nor
power but in God." 467
According to Hilal b. al-'Ala’ al-Raqqi—Hafs b. 'Umar Abu [2370]
'Umar al-Hawdl—Hammam—Layth—'Alqamah b. Marthad—
'Abdallah b. al-Harith—his father: The Prophet taught us how to
say the prayer over the dead: "O God, forgive our living and our
dead; make peace between us and bring our hearts together. O
God, this is your servant so-and-so son of so-and-so; we know
nothing but good [about him], [but] You know him better. Forgive
us, and forgive him." I was the youngest among the people [pre¬
sent], and I asked: "What if I do not know good things [about
him]?" The Prophet replied: "Say only what you know."
'Abd al-Muttalib b. Rabi'ah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b.
Hashim b. 'Abd Manaf.
According to the biographers, he was [already] a mature man in
the Prophet's lifetime. He transmitted from him a few traditions,
among them the following. According to Abu Kurayb [Muham¬
mad b. al-'Ala’]—[Muhammad] Ibn Fudayl—Yazid b. Abi Ziyad—
'Abdallah b. al-Harith—'Abd al-Muttaiib b. Rabi'ah b. al-Harith b.
'Abd al-Muttalib: I was with the Prophet when al-'Abbas came in
to see him. Al-'Abbas was angry, and the Prophet asked him
"What is it that made you angry?" Al-'Abbas said: "O Messenger
of God, what is it between us and the Quraysh? When they meet
one another they do so with cheerful countenance, and when they
meet us it is otherwise." The Prophet flew into a rage until his
face reddened and the vein between his eyes was filled with blood;
whenever he became angry [this vein] would be filled with blood.
When he relaxed he said "[I swear] by He who holds Muhammad's
soul in His hand, belief does not enter a man's heart until he loves
you for the sake of God and His messenger." Then he said "O
people, whoever harasses al-'Abbas, it is as if he harassed me;
indeed, one's paternal uncle is like one's father." 468
467. See "Adhan," EP-, I, 187-88 (T. W. Juynboll).
468. 'Amm al-rajul sinw abihi. Sinw means "growing from one root, a brother,"
but the sentence conveys more than the undeniable fact that "one's uncle is the
brother of one's father." The idea that one's paternal uncle is like a father to one
98
Biographies
Rabi'ah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim.
His kunyah was Abu Arwa.
[2371] Rabi'ah is the one about whom the Prophet said, on the day
Mecca was conquered "I say, every [open case of] blood revenge
and every privilege from pre-Islamic times are hereby rendered
null and void, and the first case of blood revenge that I thus declare
annulled is that of Rabi'ah b. al-Harith." 469 The reason for this
was that a son of Rabi'ah was killed in pre-Islamic times, and the
[right and obligation] to avenge his blood was canceled by Islam.
The Prophet did not enable Rabi'ah to pursue the vendetta against
the assassin of his son.
Rabi'ah outlived the Prophet until 'Umar's caliphate and trans¬
mitted [traditions] from him. It was reported that he was two years
older than his paternal uncle al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib.
A tradition traced back to him : According to Muhammad b.
Humayd—Jarir [b. 'Abd al-Hamid]—'Ata’ [b. al-Sa’ib]—'Abdallah
b. Rabi'ah—his father—a man of the Quraysh: I saw the Prophet
in pre-Islamic times standing at [the place of assembly at] 'Arafat
with the idolators; then I saw him in Islamic times standing at the
same place, 470 so I knew that it was God who made him stand like
this. 471
The Clients fMawaliJ of the Banu Hashim
Those who outlived the Prophet, transmitted [traditions] from
him, and from whom knowledge was transmitted.
Salman al-Farisi.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
According to al-Harith b. Muhammad—Ibn Sa'd 472 —Isma'il b.
'Abdallah b. Zurarah al-Jarmi—Ja'far b. Sulayman—Hisham b.
figures in other prophetic traditions as well and served the propaganda of the
'Abbasid dynasty against the Shi'ah; see Goldziher, Muslim Studies, II, 100, 102,
107. The point that the people should love al-'Abbas also reflects the specific
struggle against the Shi'ah, for whom the love of 'All and his family was a central
feature of the creed.
469. See p. 61, above.
470. Or "in the same way."
471. See "'Arafa," El 2 , 1 , 604-5 (A. J. Wensinck, and H. A. R. Gibb|.
472. Ibn Sa'd, IV/i, 62.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 99
Hassan—al-Hasan: Salman's pension was 5,000 [dirhams], and he
was appointed over 30,000 people. He used to gather firewood clad
in a cloak, half of which he used for covering himself; the other
half he spread. Each time his pension was due he did not take it
but lived off his own handwoven palm leaves.
According to Isma'Il b. Musa al-Suddi—Sharik—Abu Rabi'ah
al-Iyadi—Ibn Buraydah—his father: The Prophet said "God has
ordered me to love four [people]." The Prophet was asked: "Who [2372]
are they? Tell us their names." He said " 'All is one of them"—he
said that three times—" and Abu Dharr and al-Miqdad [b. al-
Aswad] and Salman. God has ordered me to love them and told me
that He loves them."
Salman died in al-Mada’in during 'Uthman's caliphate.
Abu Rafi', the Prophet's client.
His name was Aslam.
Abu Rafi' had been a slave of al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib, who
gave him [as a present] to the Prophet. The latter freed him and
gave him his client Salma in marriage. She bore Abu Rafi' his son
'Ubaydallah b. Abi Rafi'.
Usamah b. Zayd al-Hibb (the beloved) b. Harithah.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
His mother was Umm Ayman, the Prophet's client and nurse.
It was reported that Usamah was twenty years old when the
Prophet died. After the Prophet's death he settled in Wadi al-Qura
but returned later to Medina and died in al-Jurf at the end of
Mu'awiyah's caliphate.
Thawban, the Prophet's client. 473
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Thawban was one of those whom the Prophet favored by grant¬
ing them freedom. He remained with the Prophet until the latter's
473. Thawban b. Yuhdad, of Yemeni origin. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh,
2ii; idem, Tabaqat, 7; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 85; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, V, 346-
49 -
100
Biographies
death, whereupon he moved to Syria and settled in Hims. He had a
house [dar] there [that he gave away as] charity ( sadaqah ) 474
It was reported that Thawban belonged to the clan called
Hakam b. Sa'd al-'Ashirah. 475
Dumayrah b. Abi Dumayrah. 476
He transmitted from the Prophet the following [tradition]. Ac¬
cording to Yunus b. 'Abd al-A'la—['Abdallah] Ibn Wahb—Ibn Abi
Dhi’b [al-'Amirl]—Husayn b. 'Abdallah b. Dumayrah—his
father—his grandfather Dumayrah: The Prophet passed by Umm
Dumayrah, who was weeping. He asked her: "Why are you weep¬
ing? Are you hungry or cold? 477 She answered "O Messenger of
God, I was separated from my son." The Prophet said "A child
[2373] should not be separated from its mother." The Prophet then sent
to the man who owned Dumayrah, asking him to come [and see
him], and bought Dumayrah from him for a young camel.
Zayd Abu Yasar, the Prophet's client. 478
He transmitted from the Prophet the following [tradition]. Ac¬
cording to Musa b. Isma'il—Hafs b. 'Umar al-Shanni—his father
'Umar b. Murrah—Bilal b. Yasar b. Zayd, the Prophet's client—
his father—his grandfather: The Prophet said: "Whoever says 'I
ask forgiveness of God, beside Whom there is no god, the Ever-
Living, the Self-Existing. To Him I come back' he will be forgiven
even if he runs away from an army while it is on the move."
The Allies (HulafaV of the Banu Hashim
Abu Marthad al-GhanawI. 479
474. Sadaqah means charity, legal alms, and also property the fruits of which
are given away by the owner for charity or other good purposes. For the latter sense,
the term waqf is more common.
475. A southern clan; see Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 300-2; Ibn Hazm, Jam-
haiat, 407-9.
476. Counted among the Companions, with no details. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II,
214.
477. Literally, "naked."
478. Zayd b. Bula, a black slave freed by the Prophet, see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I,
561.
479. Kannazb. al-Husaynb. Yarbu'. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 8, 47; Ibn
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented ioi
According to Muhammad b. Bashshar—'Abd al-Rahman [b.
Mahdi]—'Abdallah b. al-Mubarak—'Abd al-Rahman b. Yazid—
Busrb. 'Ubaydallah—Abu Idris—Wathilahb. al-Asqa'—AbuMar-
thad al-Ghanawi—the Prophet: Do not sit on graves, and do not
pray toward them. 480
His son Marthad b. Abi Marthad. 481
He was killed in the battle of al-Raji' 482
According to Sulayman b. 'Abd al-Jabbar—Isma'Il b. Aban—
Yahya b. Ya'la al-Aslaml, who was trustworthy—'All b. Musa—
al-Qasim [Abu 'Abd al-Rahman al-Shami]—Marthad b. Abi Mar¬
thad al-Ghanawi, who was one of the participants in [the battle of]
Badr—the Prophet: If you want your prayer to be accepted, let the
best among you act as imam and lead the prayer, for they are your
deputation [which mediates] between you and your Lord.
His grandson Unays b. Marthad b. Abi Marthad al-Ghanawi. 483 [2374]
His kunyah was Abu Yazid.
The age difference between him and his father was twenty-one
years.
Unays participated on the Prophet's side in the conquest of
Mecca and the battle of Hunayn. He was the Prophet's spy in the
battle of Awtas. 484
Abu Marthad was an ally ( halif] of Hamzah b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib. 485
According to Zakariya’ b. Yahya b. Aban al-Misri—Abu Salih,
al-Layth's scribe—al-Layth b. Sa'd—Yahya b. Sa'id—Khalid b. Abi
Hibban, Mashahii, 39. The Ghani belonged to the northern Qays confederation.
See Caskel, II, 21-22; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 247-48; Ibn al-Kalbl, Jamhaiat, 463-
70.
480. This tradition must be part of the religious debate over the veneration of
the dead. See Goldziher, Muslim Studies, I, 209-38.
481. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 8.
482. An event in which six deputies of the Prophet, sent to teach Is lam to some
bedouin clans on their request, were murdered (3/625). See Ibn Hisham, HI, 178-
85; al-Waqidi, 354-63; Guillaume, 426-29.
483. Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 37-38.
484. Part of the events of Hunayn in the year 8/630. See Ibn Hisham, IV, 97; al-
Waqidl, 915.
485. So was his son Marthad. See Mu’arrij, 28-29; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 247; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 270.
102
Biographies
'Imran—al-Hakam b. Mas'ud al-Najranl—Unays b. Abi Mar-
thad—the Prophet: "There will be a deaf and dumb internal strug¬
gle ( fitnah ), a deaf, dumb, and blind one. 486 Those who will lie
down during this war will be better than those who will sit, those
who will sit better than those who will stand, those who will
stand better than those who will walk, those who will walk better
than those who will run. Whoever comes [demanding the people's
allegiance], let [those who are present] stretch their necks [in sup¬
port]." 487 So I was told by Zakariya’ b. Yahya, who said: Unays b.
Abi Marthad al-Ansari. But [in fact] it is Unays b. Marthad b. Abi
Marthad al-Ghanawi, of the clan of Ghani b. Ya'sur b. Sa'd b. Qays
b. 'Aylan b. Mudar.
Those of the Banu al-Muttalib b. ’Abd Manaf b.
Qusayy Who Transmitted [Traditions] from the
Prophet
Among them was Rukanah b. 'Abd Yazid b. Hashim b. al-Muttalib
b. 'Abd Manaf b. Qusayy.
He was among those who embraced Islam upon the conquest [of
Mecca]. He outlived the Prophet and died at the beginning of
Mu'awiyah's caliphate.
Qays b. Makhramah b. al-Muttalib b. Abd Manaf b. Qusayy.
[2375] Jubayr b. Mut'im b. 'Adi b. Nawfal b. 'Abd Manaf. 488
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad or Abu 'Ali. He embraced
Islam before the conquest [of Mecca] and settled in Medina, where
he died during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah.
486. That is, endless, or leading to the wrong course; see Lane s.v. bkm.
487. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3153, where a similar saying is voiced by Abu
Musa al-Ash'ari. "Stretching the neck" is a metaphor for lending support; cf. al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 581. This and many other traditions in the same vein reflect
the great fear and aversion Islam felt toward disunity and hence toward opposition
to the government. In certain circles it was held that even the worst ruler was
better than none at all. See Kister, "Social Concepts"; "Fitna," EP, II, 930-3r (L.
Gardet); Lewis, Islam in History, chap. 6.
488. Of the Banu Nawfal, brother clan of Hashim and al-Mutalib; see al-
Zubayri, 197-205; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 32; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 9; Ibn
Qudamah, 239-40.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 103
Jubayr's father, Mut'im b. 'Adi, was one of the notables of the
Quraysh. He had granted the Prophet protection from the idola-
tors, and when the battle of Badr occurred and people from the
Quraysh were taken prisoner the Prophet said "If Mut'im b. 'Adi
had been alive I would have freed those foul-smelling [idola¬
ters] 489 on his behalf." 490 [The Prophet said this] because [Mut'im]
had done him a favor. 491
Hassan b. Thabit said about [Mut'im b. 'Adi]: 492
If glory had had the power to grant a man immortality,
Mut'im's glory would have saved him [from obscurity].
You protected the Prophet from them, and they as your slaves
[obeyed]
as long as the talbiyah was uttered and ihram observed. 493
Jubayr transmitted many traditions from the Prophet.
'Uqbah b. al-Harith b. 'Amir b. Nawfal b. 'Abd Manaf b.
Qusayy. 494
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Bashshar—'Abd al-Wahhab [b.
'Abd al-Majld al-Thaqafi]—Ayyub—'Abdallah b. Abi Mulaykah—
'Uqbah b. al-Harith: Al-Nu'ayman, or Ibn al-Nu'ayman, was
brought [to the Prophet] after he had been drinking [alcohol]. The
Prophet ordered the people present in the house to beat him, and I
was among them. We beat him with shoes and palm branches.
489. Idolators are referred to as dirt and foul-smelling creatures; see Ibn Manz ur,
Lisan, XDI, 426-27.
490. Al-Zubayri, 200; Ibn Qudamah, 240; Ibn Hisham, n, 20. The usual practice,
both in pre-Islamic and in the Prophet's times, was to free prisoners against a
ransom, unless the captor granted them their freedom as a special favor to them¬
selves or to someone who interceded on their behalf.
491- That is, by granting him protection on his return from al-Ta’If. According
to another version, Mut'im was the one who instigated the anulling of the Qurashi
boycott of the Banu Hashim,- see Ibn Hisham, n, 15-16.
492. Hassan, Diwan, I, 198-99; Ibn Hisham, II, r9-20.
493. Meaning "always." The talbiyah was the formula expressing devotion to
the gods in pre-Islamic times. Ihiam was the state of consecration observed by
those who performed the pilgrimage to Mecca. Both rituals are also performed in
Islam with the necessary modifications. See "Ihram," El 2 , m, 1052-53 (A. J. Wen-
sinck and J. Jomier); "Talbiya," El 1 , IV, 640 (A. J. Wensinck); Kister, "Labbayka."
494. Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 64, Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 9,- al-Zubayri,
204-5.
104 Biographies
[ 2376 ] The Allies of the Banu. Nawfal b.'Abd Manafb. Qusayy
'Utbah b. Ghazwan b. Jabir b. Uhayb b. Nusayb b. Zayd b. Malik b.
al-Harith b. 'Awf b. Mazin b. Mansur b. 'Ikrimah b. Khasafah b.
Qays b. 'Aylan b. Mudar. 495
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah or Abu Ghazwan.
'Utbah was an early convert and was among those who emi¬
grated to Abyssinia in the second emigration. He was the one who
selected the site of al-Basrah, founded the garrison there, and built
its [first] mosque. 496
'Utbah transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet, among them
the following. According to Muhammad b. Bashshar—Safwan b.
'Isa al-Zuhri—'Amr b. 'Isa Abu Na'amah al-'Adawi—Khalid b.
'Umayr and Shuways Abu al-Raqqad—'Utbah b. Ghazwan: I saw
myself [in a situation where I was] one of seven [people] standing
by the Prophet; we had no food but acacia leaves, until the flesh
inside our mouths became ulcerated. Once I stumbled on a mantle
and split it in two to share it with Sa'd 497
Among their allies was Ya'la b. Umayyah b. Ubayy b. 'Ubaydah
b. Hammam b. al-Harith b. Bakr b. Zayd b. Malik b. Hanzalah b.
Malik b. Zayd Manah b. Tamlm. 498
His mother was Munyah bt. Jabir b. Uhayb b. Nusayb b. Zayd b.
Malik b. al-Harith b. 'Awf b. Mazin b. Mansur, the paternal aunt of
'Utbah b. Ghazwan.
495. The clan is the Banu Mazin b. Mansur, of the northern Qays confederation;
see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 260; Ibn Hibban, Mashdhir, 66; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 95-98; idem, Tabaqat, io ; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 201; Ibn Sa'd, III/i, 69,
VH/i, 1-3.
496. Cf. al-Taban, Ta’rikh, I, 2377-88; see also Donner, "Tribal Settlement in
Basra."
497. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2380. A tradition much more important than this
one is ascribed to 'Utbah by al-Tabaranl, i.e., the man kadhdhaba tradition, in
which the Prophet says "Whoever tells lies about me, let him seek for himself a
place in hell"; see Ibn Hajar. Isabah, II, 45 5. On this tradition, see Juynboll, Muslim
Tradition, 96-133.
498. The clan is the Banu al-'Adawiyyah of the great northern tribe of Tamim. It
is called after a female ancestor and includes the descendants of Zayd b. Malik
(Ya'la's ancestor) and those of two of his brothers,- see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 228-29.
On Ya'la, who served as governor and judge under the first three caliphs, then
joined 'All, see Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 91, 158; idem, Tabaqat, 45; Ibn
Hibban, Mashdhir, 58.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 105
'Utbah and Ya'la b. Umayyah were among the allies of al-Harith
b. Nawfal b. 'Abd Manaf b. Qusayy. Ya'la b. Umayyah, his father, [2377]
Umayyah b. Ubayy, his brother Salamah b. Umayyah, and his
sister Nafisah bt. Munyah were converted to Islam. Ya'la partici¬
pated on the Prophet's side in [the battle of] Hunayn, [the siege of]
al-Ta’if, and [the expedition to] Tabuk. He and his brother Sal¬
amah transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
The Names of the Companions Who Outlived the
Prophet and from Whom Knowledge Was
Transmitted, of the Banu Asad b. Abd al-'Uzza b.
Qusayy b. Kilab
Among them was al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam b. Khuwaylid b. Asad
b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy.
His mother was Safiyyah bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd
Manaf, the paternal aunt of the Prophet.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
It was reported that al-Zubayr was the fourth or fifth convert.
He emigrated to Abyssinia twice and did not fail to participate in
all the Prophet's military activities.
The Prophet established the bond of brotherhood ( mu’akhah )
between al-Zubayr and 'Abdallah b. Mas'ud.
Al-Zubayr was killed in Wadi al-Siba' on Thursday, 10 Jumada II
36/December 5, 656, while returning to Medina from the battle of
the Camel, and was buried there. He was then sixty-four years old.
Al-Zubayr transmitted many traditions from the Prophet.
His son 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr. 499
His mother was Asma’ bt. Abi Bakr.
'Abdallah was bom in Shawwal 2/March-April 624. It was re¬
ported that his mother, Asma’, emigrated to the Prophet while
499. The first child bom among the Emigrants in Medina, a Companion of the
Prophet, and a close associate of his maternal aunt the Prophet's wife 'A’ishah, on
whose side he fought against 'All. He established a rival caliphate in Mecca in 64-
73/683-92 and was eventually killed by the Syrian army dispatched by the caliph
'Abd al-Malik (these events were part of the second civil war, or fitnah). See
"'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr," EP-, I, 54-5 5 (H. A. R. Gibb); Hawting, First Dynasty, 46-
49,- Rotter; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 188-204; al-Kharbutall.
106 Biographies
pregnant with him. His kunyahs were Abu Bakr and Abu
Khubayb.
Hakim b. Hizam b. Khuwaylid b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b.
Qusayy.
His mother was Umm Hakim bt. Zuhayr b. al-Harith b. Asad b.
'Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy.
[2378] According to al-Harith [b. Muhammad]-—Ibn Sa'd 500 —Muham¬
mad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—al-Mundhir b. 'Abdallah—Musa b.
'Uqbah—Abu Hablbah, the client of al-Zubayr—Hakim b. Hizam:
I was born thirteen years before the People of the Elephant arrived.
I was [already] a mature man when 'Abd al-Muttalib intended to
sacrifice his son 'Abdallah, as his vow was due to be fulfilled. This
was five years before the Prophet was born.
Hakim's kunyah was Abu Khalid. He died in Medina at the age
of 120, during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah.
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
Hakim counts among the converts of the conquest [of Mecca],
and so do his sons Khalid and Hisham. The two of them embraced
Islam together with him on the day of the conquest of Mecca. Two
brothers of theirs, 'Abdallah and Yahya, sons of Hakim b. Hizam,
were also converted to Islam on that day.
The Names of Those Who Transmitted [Traditions]
from the Prophet, of the Banu ’Abd al-Dar b. Qusayy
b. Kilab
Among them was Shaybah the Hajib (doorkeeper) b. 'Uthman,
that is, al-Awqas (the short-necked) b. Abi Talhah—whose [real]
name was 'Abdallah—b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. 'Uthman b. 'Abd al-Dar
b. Qusayy. 501
He embraced Islam at Hunayn, while the Prophet was fighting
the Hawazin. 502 He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
500. The parallel text in Ibn Sa'd could not be traced.
501. Of the Abd al-Dar, traditionally the doorkeepers of the Ka'bah. Shaybah
and 'Uthman b. Talhah received the keys of the Ka'bah from the Prophet in confir¬
mation of their position. See al-Zubayrl, 252-53; Ibn Qudamah, 250 (read dafa'a
for rafa'a); Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 14; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 56.
502. Several Qurashis participated in the battle of Hunayn (after the conquest of
Mecca) without having embraced Islam first.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 107
'Uthman b. Talhah b. Abl Talhah b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Uthman b.
'Abd al-Dar b. Qusayy b. Kilab. 503
He emigrated to the Prophet during the armistice of Hudaybiy-
yah, in Safar 8/June 629.
Abu al-Sanabil b. Ba'kak b. al-Harith b. al-Sabbaq b. 'Abd al-Dar [2379]
b. Qusayy b. Kilab. 504
He counts as one of the converts of the conquest [of Mecca].
The Names of Those Who Transmitted [Traditions]
from the Prophet, of the Banu Zuhrah b. Kilab,
Brother of Qusayy b. Kilab.
Among them was 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf b. 'Abd 'Awf b. 'Abd b.
al-Harith b. Zuhrah b. Kilab. 505
Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas—whose name was Malik—b. Uhayb b. 'Abd
Manaf b. Zuhrah b. Kilab b. Murrah. 506
Sa'd's kunyah was Abu Ishaq.
Al-Miswar b. Makhramah b. Nawfal b. Uhayb b. 'Abd Manaf b.
Zuhrah b. Kilab.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman.
He was the son of 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf's sister.
Al-Miswar was eight years old when the Prophet died. He trans¬
mitted [traditions] from the Prophet, among them the following.
503. Al-ZubayrI, 252-53; Ibn Qudamah, 249-50; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta'ilkh,
190; idem, Tabaqat, 14; ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 51; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 361, in
(Dun), 16.
504. Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 43; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 14-15; Ibn Quda¬
mah, 252-53.
505. A wealthy and respected Qurashi, one of Muhammad's closest Compa¬
nions. He played a crucial part in the election of the third caliph, 'Uthman.
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 15; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 26; Ibn Hanbal, Fada'il,
728-32; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 203-4.
506. An early convert who was a close and trusted Companion of the Prophet.
Later he served as the chief commander of the conquering Muslim army in Iraq and
the governor of al-Kufah. He took a neutral stand in the strife between 'All and
Mu'awiyah and died some time in the years 50-58/670-78. See "Sa'd b. Abi Wak-
kas," El 1 , IV, 29-30 (K. V. Zettersteen); Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 15; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahir, 26; Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il, 748-54; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 16-21
and passim; Ibn Qudamah, 287-88.
io8 Biographies
According to Ma'mar [b. Rashid] al-Bahrani—Abu 'Amir—
'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. al-Miswar b. Makhramah—Umm Bakr bt. al-
Miswar—al-Miswar: I was standing behind the Prophet while he
was performing ablutions, when a Jew passed by. The Jew said
"Lift his garment off his back." I approached to lift the Prophet's
garment, and the Prophet sprinkled my face with water.
Nafi' b. 'Utbah b. Abi Waqqas b. Uhayb b. 'Abd Manaf b. Zuhrah
b. Kilab. 507
Nafi' counts as one of the converts of the conquest, for he em¬
braced Islam on the day of the conquest of Mecca. He was the
brother of Hashim b. 'Utbah al-Mirqal (the swift runner).
Nafi' b. 'Utbah transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet,
[among them the following]. According to Muhammad b. Khalaf
al-'Asqalani—Rawwad b. al-Jarrah—al-Mas'udi—'Abd al-Malik
[2380] b. 'Umayr—Jabir b. Samurah—Nafi' b. 'Utbah—the Prophet: You
will fight the [inhabitants of the] Arabian peninsula, and God will
conquer them; you will fight the Byzantines, and God will con¬
quer them; you will fight the Persians, and God will conquer
them; you will fight the Deceiver, 508 and God will conquer
him. 509
'Abd al-Rahman b. Azhar b. 'Awf b. 'Abd 'Awf b. 'Abd b. al-
Harith b. Zuhrah b. Kilab. 510
He participated in [the battle of] Hunayn on the Prophet's side.
'Abd al-Rahman transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet,
[among them the following]. According to Yunus b. 'Abd al-A'la
al-Sadafl—['Abdallah] Ibn Wahb—Usamah b. Zayd al-Laythl—
Ibn Shihab [al-Zuhrl]—'Abd al-Rahman b. Azhar: It is as if I can
see the Prophet even now looking for Khalid b. al-Walid's camel
among the [rest of the] camels on the day of Hunayn. While he was
at that a man was brought before him who had been drinking
[alcohol]. The Prophet told the people "Beat him." Some of them
507. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 15, 126; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 129.
508. Al-Dajjal, a figure parallel to the Antichrist, is the embodiment of evil in
Islamic eschatology. War against him is one of the Portents of the Hour; see "al-
Dadjdjal," El 2 , II, 76-77 (A. Abel).
509. Cf. Ibn Qudamah, 290-91; Yusuf b. Yahya al-Sulaml, 276-77.
510. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 16; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 5 2; Ibn Qudamah,
302-3.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 109
beat him with their shoes, other with sticks, still others with rods,
that is, green palm branches. The Prophet then took some earth
and threw it in the man's face. 511
'Abdallah b. al-Arqam b. 'Abd Yaghuth b. Wahb b. 'Abd Manaf b.
Zuhrah b. Kilab 512
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet, among them the
following. According to Tamim b. al-Muntasir al-Wasiti—Yazid,
that is, Ibn Harun—Muhammad, that is, Ibn Ishaq—Hisham b.
'Urwah—his father—'Abdallah b. al-Arqam b. 'Abd Yaghuth—
the Prophet: If any of you feels something in his stomach when [2381]
the time for prayer has come, let him go first to the lavatory.
Safwan [b. Makhramah b. Nawfal] al-Zuhrl. 513
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—al-Hakam b. Bashir—
Bashir b. Salman—al-Qasim b. Safwan al-Zuhri—his father—the
Prophet: Delay the noon prayer until the cooler time of the day, for
the heat pertains to hellfire. 514
'Abdallah b. 'Adi b. Hamra’ al-Zuhri. 515
According to 'Abdallah b. Yusuf al-Jubayri—Ahmad b. 'Abd al-
Rahman al-Harrani—Hajjaj b. Abi Mani'—'Ubaydallah b. Abi
Ziyad—[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri—Abu Salamah b. 'Abd al-
Rahman—Abu 'Amr b. 'Adi b. Hamra’ al-Zuhri: Standing at al-
Hazawwarah 516 in the market of Mecca, the Prophet said "By
God, you are the best place on earth"; or [in another version]: "[By
God, you are] the place that I love the most on God's earth. If I had
not been forced out of you, I would not have left you."
Si 1. Cf. p. 103, above.
512. He served 'Umar and 'Uthman as treasurer,- see Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’-
rikh, 130, 157; idem, Tabaqat, 16; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 58-59; Ibn Qudamah,
294.
513. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 190.
514. Cf. Abu Zur'ah, 607-8, where the tradition is attributed to another person.
515. Ibn Hibban, Mashdbh, 63; Ibn Qudamah, 304.
516. The old marketplace in Mecca, later incorporated in the area of the Holy
Mosque (i.e., the Ka'bah); see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, II, 262; al-Azraqi, 301, 497.
no
Biographies
Those Who Transmitted [Traditions] from the
Prophet, of the Allies of the Banu Zuhrah
'Abdallah b. Mas'ud b. Ghafil b. Habib b. Shamkh b. Far b.
[2382] Makhzum b. Sahilah b. Kahil b. al-Harith b. Tamim b. Sa'd b.
Hudhayl b. Mudrikah b. al-Yas b. Mudar. 517
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman.
Mas'ud b. Ghafil, 'Abdallah's father, had entered an alliance
with 'Abd b. al-Harith b. Zuhrah 518 in pre-Islamic times.
Al-Miqdad b. 'Amr b. Tha'labah b. Malik b. Rabi'ah.
He is called al-Miqdad b. al-Aswad.
In pre-Islamic times [al-Miqdad] concluded an alliance with al-
Aswad b. 'Abd Yaghuth b. Wahb b. 'Abd Manaf b. Zuhrah b. Kilab.
Al-Aswad adopted him, and he was called al-Miqdad b. al-Aswad
until God revealed the [following verse] in disapproval of His
Prophet: "Call them by their fathers' names; this is more just in
the eyes of God." Consequently he was called al-Miqdad b. 'Amr.
Khabbab b. al-Aratt b. Jandalah b. Sa'd b. Khuzaymah b. Ka'b, of
the Banu Sa'd b. Zayd Manah b. Tamim. 519
Khabbab had been taken prisoner and sold in Mecca. [A woman
named] Umm Anmar bt. Siba' of the Khuza'ah tribe, allies of 'Awf
b. 'Abd 'Awf b. 'Abd b. al-Harith b. Zuhrah, bought Khabbab and
set him free. According to another version, Khabbab's mother and
the mother of Siba' were the same. At any rate, Khabbab b. al-
Aratt joined the family of Siba' 520 and as a consequence claimed to
have entered an alliance with the Banu Zuhrah.
517. The tribe's name is Hudhayl; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 197. 'Abdallah b.
Mas'ud was a close Companion of the Prophet of humble bedouin origin. He held
important positions in the caliphates of 'Umar and 'Uthman and was known as one
of the greatest experts on the Qur’an and religious law. See "Ibn Mas'ud," EP-, III,
873-75 (J.-C. Vadet); Jeffery, 20-24; Schacht, Origins, 231-33; Khallfahb. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 16; IbnHanbal, Pada’il, 837-44; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 29; al-Baladhuri,
Ansab, I, 204-5, V, 36-38. , „ , . ,
518. An important family from the Qurashi Zuhrah clan ; see al-Zubayri, 265.
519. Of the Tamim! clan Sa'd b. Zayd Manah; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 215. On
Khabbab, see Kister, "On Strangers and Allies," 126-27; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 17; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 76; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 175-80.
520. That is, either as a family member or as a client; freedmen became allies, or
clients, of their former masters. See Crone, Roman, Provincial and Islamic Law,
36-38.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented in
Khabbab transmitted many traditions from the Prophet.
Shurahbil b. Hasanah. 521
Hasanah was his mother, of the 'Adul clan. 522 His father was
'Abdallah b. al-Muta' b. 'Amr b. Kindah, an ally of the Banu
Zuhrah.
The Names of Those Who Transmitted [Traditions] [2383]
from the Prophet, of the Banu Taym b. Murrah 523
Among them was Abu Bakr 'Abdallah b. Abi Quhafah—whose
name was 'Uthman—b. 'Amir b. 'Amr b. Ka' b b. Sa'd b. Taym b.
Murrah. 524
[Those Who Transmitted Traditions], of the Banu
Makhzum b. Yaqazah b. Murrah b. Ka'b
Khalid b. al-Walid b. al-Mughirah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. Makh¬
zum. 525
His kunyah was Abu Sulayman.
Khalid's mother was 'Asma’ ; that is, Lubabah al-Sughra (junior),
bt. al-Harithb. Haznb. Bujayrb. al-Huzamb. Ruwaybahb. 'Abdal¬
lah b. Hilal b. 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah. She was the sister of Umm al-Fadl
bt. al-Harith, also called Lubabah, the mother of al-'Abbas b. 'Abd
al-Muttalib's sons. Khalid b. al-Walid was thus a maternal cousin
of 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas and a nephew of Maymunah bt. al-
Harith, the Prophet's wife.
521. He was one of the Prophet's scribes and a commander during the conquests.
See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 41,• al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 214; al-A'zami, Kuttab, 72.
522. She was a client of a member of the Jumah; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 162;
Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 272 .1 could not trace the clan 'Adul.
523. A Qurashi clan,- see Ibn Hazm Jamhaiat, 135-40.
524. That is, the first caliph, who was the Prophet's closest Companion and
father-in-law. See "Abu Bakr," EP, I, 109-n (W. M. Watt); Khallfah b. Khayyat,
Ta'iikh, 64-90,- idem, Tabaqat, 16-17,- Ibn Hanbal, Fada’il, 65-106.
525. An important general in Muhammad's time and later, during the apostasy
wars and the beginning of the conquests. He was dismissed by the second caliph,
'Umar b. al-Khattab. He was nicknamed "the sword of God." "Khalid b. al-Walid,"
EP, TV, 928-29 (P. Crone); Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 19-20; Ibn Hanbal,
Fada’il, 813-17; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 56; IbnQudamah, 345-49; al-A'zaml, Kut-
tab, 60-62; Akram.
112
Biographies
Khalid transmitted traditions from the Prophet.
'Ayyash b. Abi Rabi'ah b. al-Mughirah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b.
Makhzum. 526
He was half-brother of Abu Jahl b. Hisham, their mother being
Asma’ bt. Mukharribah b. Jandal b. Ubayr b. Nahshal b. Darim b.
Ghanm. 527
'Ayyash was among the emigrants to Abyssinia together with
his wife Asma’ bt. Salamah b. Mukharribah; 528 she bore him his
son 'Abdallah b. 'Ayyash in Abyssinia. 'Ayyash later returned to
Mecca [where he stayed] until the Prophet died, whereupon he
[2384] moved to Syria and participated in the holy wars. 529 He then re¬
turned to Mecca, where he lived until his death.
'Ayyash transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet; among the
traditions transmitted from him is [the following]. According to
Muhammad b. Sahl b. 'Askar al-Bukhari—'Abd al-Razzaq [b.
Hammam al-San'ani]—Ma'mar [b. Rashid]—Ayyub [b. Abi Ta-
mlmah] 530 —Nafi' [client of 'Abdallah Ibn 'Umar]—'Ayyash b. Abi
Rabi'ah—the Prophet: A wind will come before the Hour 531 and
will take the souls of all the believers.
'Abdallah b. Abi Umayyah b. al-Mughirah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar
b. Makhzum. 532
His mother was 'Atikah bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd
Manaf. 533 He was the brother of Umm Salamah, the Prophet's
wife.
'Abdallah participated on the Prophet's side in the conquest of
Mecca, [the battle] of Hunayn, and [the siege of] al-Ta’if. He was
hit and killed by an arrow during the siege of al-Ta’if. This is what
526. Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 64; al-Baladhun, Ansab, I, 208-10; Ibn Qudamah,
375 - 76 .
527. The clan is the Nahshal, from the Tamim tribe; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat,
230; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 232.
528. Ibn Hajar, I$abah, IV, 229.
529. That is, the conquests.
530. See Motzki, 3.
531. That is, the Day of Judgment.
532. Maternal cousin of the Prophet and an opponent of Islam until the year
8/630. See Ibn Qudamah, 373-74; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 145-46.
533. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 357-58.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 113
the biographers say, and there is no disagreement among them
over this point.
'Umar b. Abi Salamah b. 'Abd al-Asad b. Hilal b. 'Abdallah b.
'Umar b. Makhzum. 534
It was reported that the Prophet fostered him from the time he
was nine years old.
'Umar participated in [the battle of] the Camel on the side of
'All [b. Abi Talib], who later appointed him governor of Fars. He
died in Medina during the caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan.
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet.
'Umar's brother Salamah b. Abi Salamah outlived the Prophet
[and died during] the caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan, but no
transmission from the Prophet is recorded from him. He was older
than his brother 'Umar b. Abi Salamah. Umm Salamah, the
Prophet's wife, was the mother of both of them. Their father, Abu
Salamah, died during the Prophet's lifetime. His name was 'Abdal¬
lah b. 'Abd al-Asad.
'Amr b. Hurayth b. 'Amr b. 'Uthman b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b.
Makhzum.
His kunyah was Abu Sa'Id.
It was reported that 'Amr was twelve years old when the [2385]
Prophet died. He settled in al-Kufah, where he died in the year 85
(January 14, 704-January 2, 705).
'Amr transmitted traditions from the Prophet, among them the
following. According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—Ibn
Numayr and Waki' [b. al-Jarrah]—Isma'il b. Abi Khalid—al-
Asbagh, client of 'Amr b. Hurayth—'Amr b. Hurayth: I used to
pray together with the Prophet. At the dawn prayer he used to
recite [the following verse]: "I swear not by [the stars] that lag, that
run, and that fade away." 535 It is as if I can [even now] hear his
voice.
534. IbnHibban, Mashahlr, 50; Khallfahb. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 184, 294, 303; Ibn
Qudamah, 383.
535. Qur’an 81:15-16, trans. Bell, n, 639.
Biographies
114
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—Waki' [b. al-
Jarrah]: He recited [the following]: "When the sun shall be
veiled." 536
According to 'Abd al-Hamid b. Bayan al-Qannad—Muhammad
b. Yazid—Isma'il b. Abi Khalid—Asbagh, client of 'Amr b.
Hurayth—'Amr b. Hurayth: I prayed with the Prophet the dawn
prayer; it is as if I can [even now] hear his voice, reciting "I swear
not by [the stars] that lag, that run, and that fade away." My
mother then took me to him, and he prayed for my sucess in
gaining a livelihood.
'Amr's brother Sa'id b. Hurayth. 537
He was older than 'Amr.
It was reported that Sa'id participated on the Prophet's side in
the conquest of Mecca, at the age of fifteen. He settled in al-Kufah,
together with his brother 'Amr, after the Prophet's death.
Sa'id transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet, among them the
following. According to [Muhammad] Ibn Bashshar—'Abd al-
Wahhab b. 'Abd al-Majid—Isma'il b. Ibrahim b. Muhajir—'Abd
al-Malik b. 'Umayr—'Amr b. Hurayth—his brother Sa'id b. Hu¬
rayth—the Prophet: He who sells a house and does not buy an¬
other one instead is not likely to see blessing in that money.
[2386] 'Abdallah b. Abi Rabi'ah—whose name was 'Amr—b. Makh-
zum. 538
He was a full brother of 'Ayyash b. Abi Rabi'ah and the father of
the poet 'Umar b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Rabi'ah.
'Abdallah b. Abi Rabi'ah embraced Islam on the day of the con¬
quest of Mecca. His name had been Bahlr, and the Prophet re¬
named him 'Abdallah when he was converted. 539
'Abdallah transmitted from the Prophet [the following]. Accord¬
ing to Sulayman b. 'Abd al-Jabbar—Zakariya’ b. 'Adi—Hatim—
Isma'il b. Ibrahim al-Makhzumi—his father—his grandfather, the
last reported that the Prophet borrowed from him [a sum of
536. Qur’an 81:1, trans. Bell, II, 638.
537. Khallfah b. Khayyat:, Tabaqat, 20, 126; Ibn Qudamah, 388.
538. He served the Prophet, 'Umar, and 'Uthman as governor in the Yemen,- see
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 128; idem, Tabaqat , 21; Ibn Qudamah, 377-78.
539. See note 234, above.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 115
money] between 13,000 and 19,000 [dirhams?]. When the Prophet
returned from [the battle of] Hunayn he called him and said:
"Take your money, may God bless your family and your property.
The reward for lending money is only full back payment and
praise." 540
'Ikrimah b. Abi Jahl—whose name was 'Amr—b. Hisham b. al-
Mughlrah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. Makhzum.
He embraced Islam after the conquest of Mecca.
According to Ahmad b. 'Uthman b. Hakim al-Awdi—Shurayh
b. Salamah—Ibrahim b. Yusuf—his father—Abu Ishaq [al-
Sabi'i]—'Amir b. Sa'd [b. Abi Waqqas]: When 'Ikrimah b. Abi Jahl
came to the Prophet the latter said to him "Welcome, O rider and
passenger," or "Emigrant." 541 ['Ikrimah] related: I said "What
shall I say, O Messenger of God?" He replied "Say 'I testify that
there is no God but Allah and that you are God's messenger.'" I
said this, then I continued "What shall I say, O Messenger of
God?" He replied "Say, 'O Messenger of God, I ask you to bear
witness that I am an Emigrant.'" I said that, whereupon the
Prophet said "I will grant you today anything you ask [provided
that it is something] I would have granted anyone else." I said: "I
shall not ask you for money, as I am one of the richest among the
Quraysh, but I ask you to forgive me for having fought against you
and for having spent money in order to divert [others] from the [2387]
path of God. If I live long [enough], I shall double that amount [and
spend it on the opposite purpose]."
Al-Sa’ib b. Abi al-Sa’ib, father of 'Abdallah b. al-Sa’ib. 542
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi], he was the
Prophet's partner in pre-Islamic times,- so it is according to al-
Harith—Ibn Sa'd—[Muhammad b. 'Umar], According to Hisham
b. Muhammad b. al-Kalbl, however, the Prophet's partner in pre-
540. Apparently this is a tradition against usury, strictly forbidden in Islam.
541. The narrator is not sure of the correct wording and gives two alternatives.
The significance of the difference is that, according to the prevailing view, the
status of Emigrant was not granted to people who were converted after the con¬
quest of Mecca [la hijrah ba'da al-fath). The second version contradicts this view.
542. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 20; Ibn Qudamah, 386. 'Abdallah was also a
Companion, known for being the Meccan expert reader,- see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II,
314; al-Safadi, XVII, 187-88; Ibn Sa'd, V, 329, Ibn al-Jazari, I, 419-20.
116 Biographies
Islamic times was 'Abdallah b. al-Sa’ib b. Abi al-Sa’ib. At any rate,
the one discussed in this biography is al-Sa’ib.
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—Mus'ab b.
al-Miqdam—Isra’il—Ibrahim b. Muhajir—Mujahid—al-Sa’ib:
'Uthman b. 'Affan and Zuhayr b. Umayyah brought me [to the
Prophet], They asked permission to go in to see him and [upon
receiving it, went in and] praised me before him. The Prophet said
"I know him better [than you do]; were you not my partner in pre-
Islamic times?" I said: "Yes, may my father and my mother be
ransom for you. 543 You were a very good partner; you never quar¬
reled or competed [unfairly]." [Hearing this,] the Prophet said to
me: "O Sa’ib, contemplate the virtues you had in the Jahiliyyah,
and adhere to them in Islam. Act hospitably toward your guest, be
benevolent toward orphans, and respect those to whom you
granted protection (/dr)." 544
Al-Sa’ib b. Abi al-Sa’ib and his son 'Abdallah embraced Islam on
the day of the conquest of Mecca. 'Abdallah's kunyah was Abu
'Abd al-Rahman. As for Qays b. al-Sa’ib, he was a paternal cousin
of 'Abdallah b. al-Sa’ib. [His full name] was Qays b. al-Sa’ib b.
'Uwaymir b. 'A’idh b. 'Imran b. Makhzum. According to al-
[2388] Waqidi, he was Mujahid's patron. Al-Waqidi reported [the follow¬
ing] on the authority of 'Abd al-Hamid b. 'Imran—Musa b. Abi
Kathir—Mujahid: The following verse was revealed in connection
with my patron Qays b. al-Sa’ib: "Those who can afford it may
ransom [the duty to fast] by feeding a poor man. . . ," 545 So he
broke the fast and fed one poor man against each day.
The Allies of the Banu Makhzum Who Outlived the
Prophet and Transmitted [Traditions] from Him
'Ammar b. Yasir b. 'Amir b. Malik b. Kinanah b. Madhhij.
It was reported that Yasir and his two brothers al-Harith and
Malik came to Mecca from the Yemen, searching for a brother
of theirs. Al-Harith and Malik returned [later] to the Yemen,
543. A formula often used when addressing the Prophet, indicating the speaker's
reverence toward him.
544. Jar means at once a neighbor, a person who is given protection, and the one
who grants protection. See also note 55, above.
545. Qur’an 2:184.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 117
whereas Yasir remained in Mecca and entered an alliance with
Abu Hudhayfah b. al-Mughlrah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. Makh-
zum. Abu Hudhayfah's name was Muhashshim, or Muhashim,
and he was one of Those Who Mocked the Prophet ( mus -
tahzi’un ). 546 Abu Hudhayfah gave Yasir in marriage a slave girl of
his named Sumayyah bt. Khabbat; she bore him 'Ammar, who was
freed by Abu Hudhayfah. Yasir, Sumayyah, and 'Ammar were con¬
verted upon the rise of Islam. 'Ammar participated on the
Prophet's side in all the events ( mashahid ). He outlived the
Prophet and transmitted [traditions] from him. He was killed in
[the battle of] Siffin, [fighting] on 'All's side.
Those of the Banu 'Adi b. Ka'b 547 b. Lu’ayy b. Ghalib
Who Outlived the Prophet and Transmitted
[Traditions] from Him
'Umar b. al-Khattab b. Nufayl b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Riyah b. 'Abdal¬
lah b. Qurt b. Razah b. 'Adi b. Ka'b.
His kunyah was Abu Hafs.
'Umar's son 'Abdallah. 548
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman.
['Umar's] brother Zayd b. al-Khattab b. Nufayl. 549
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman.
Zayd was older than his brother 'Umar and an earlier convert.
He was the standard-bearer in the battle of Yamamah. It was re¬
ported that he did not cease to advance, carrying [the flag], and to
fight with his sword until he was killed.
Sa'id b. Zayd b. 'Amr b. Nufayl b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Riyah b.
'Abdallah b. Qurt b. Razah b. 'Adi b. Ka'b b. Lu’ayy.
His kunyah was Abu al-A'war.
546. See Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbar, 158-60; Ibn Ishaq, Siyar, 273-75.
547. A QurashI clan,- see Ibn Hazm, jamharat, 150-59.
548. He was admired for his piety, honesty, and erudition in prophetic traditions
and customs. See "'Abdallah b. 'Umar," EP, I, 53-54 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); Schacht,
Origins, 25; Ibn Qudamah, 406-8.
549. Ibn Qudamah, 419-20; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 30; Khallfah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rlkh, 108, 112; idem, Tabaqat, 22.
[2389]
n8
Biographies
Sa'id was an early convert. He had embraced Islam before the
Prophet entered the house of al-Arqam to preach from there. Sa'id
did not take part in [the battle of ] Badr, but he did participate in
Uhud and [all] the Prophet's battles that took place afterward.
[Those of the Banu Jumah Who Outlived the Prophet
and Transmitted Traditions from Him]
Safwan b. Umayyah b. Khalaf b. Wahb b. Hudhafah b. Jumah.
He outlived the Prophet and transmitted [traditions] from him.
He belonged to the converts of the conquest [of Mecca],
According to Yusuf b. Hammad al-Ma'nl—'Uthman b. 'Abd al-
Rahman al-Jumahi—Muhammad b. al-Fadl b. al-'Abbas: Safwan b.
Umayyah came to see us while we were having a feast. When the
food was served he said "Eat the meat with your front teeth, for I
heard the Prophet say 'Eat meat with your front teeth, for it is more
appetizing, more wholesome and more enjoyable [in this way].'"
Abu Mahdhurah the muezzin.
His name was Aws b. Mi'yar b. Lawdhan b. Rabi'ah b. Sa'd b.
Jumah. There is another version of his name and genealogy: Sa-
murah b. 'Umayr b. Lawdhan b. Wahb b. Sa'd b. Jumah. He had a
full brother named Aws.
He outlived the Prophet for some time and transmitted [tradi¬
tions] from him.
[2390] According to Musa b. Sahl al-Ramli—Muhammad b. 'Amr b.
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abdallah b. Muhayrlz—his father 'Amr b.
'Abd al-Rahman—his father—his grandfather, 'Abdallah b. Mu-
hayrlz: I saw Abu Mahdhurah, the Prophet's Companion, and he
had a lot of hair [on his head]. I said "O Uncle, why don't you cut
your hair?" He said "I wouldn't cut hair the Prophet had stroked
and blessed."
[The Companions] of the Banu Amir b. Lu’ayy b.
Ghalib [Who Outlived the Prophet and Transmitted
Traditions from Him]
Ibn Umm Maktum, the Prophet's muezzin.
There are different opinions as regards his name. The Medinan
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 119
genealogists hold that it was 'Abdallah, whereas, according to the
Iraqi genealogists, it was 'Amr. All are agreed, however, about his
genealogy: He was the son of Qays b. Za’idah b. al-Asamm b.
Rawahah b. Hajar b. Ma'Is b. 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. Another version has
Za’idah b. al-Asamm b. Harim b. Rawahah.
Ibn Umm Maktum outlived the Prophet and transmitted [tradi¬
tions] from him.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Yahya b. al-Durays—
Abu Sinan—'Amr b. Murrah—Abu al-Bakhtarl—Ibn Umm
Maktum—the Prophet: Had you known what I know, you would
have laughed little and wept a lot.
'Amir b. Mas'ud. 550
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umarah al-Asadi—'Ubaydallah b.
Musa—Isra’il—Abu Ishaq—an old man of the Quraysh by the
name of 'Amir b. Mas'ud—the Prophet: Fasting in winter is like
spoils easily acquired, for the nights are long and the days are
short. 551
[Those of the Kinanah Who Outlived the Prophet and
Transmitted Traditions from Him] 552
Nawfal b. Mu'awiyah b. 'Amr b. Sakhr b. Ya'mur b. Nufathah b.
Adi b. al-DIl.
He outlived the Prophet and transmitted [traditions] from him.
According to Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-Hakam—Ibn
5 50. I was not able to trace an 'Amiri by this name (as al-Tabari's rubric necessi¬
tates). There is, however, a rather well-known Jumahl named 'Amir b. Mas'ud who
was elected governor by the Kufans at the beginning of the second civil war. See al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa, 87, 100-r, V, r9o. The description here ("an old man of the
Quraysh") is not appropriate for such a figure. However, Ibn Hajar Isabah, II, 260,
Tahdhib, V, 70, ascribes to this Jumahl the same tradition recorded in the Dhayl.
See also Ibn Qudamah, 456. It is worthwhile noting that this tradition is not
recorded in Zaghlul's Mawsu'at atiaf al-hadlth.
551. There is a play on words here: "spoils easily acquired" is in Arabic
ghanimah baiidah, and the latter word's common meaning is "cold."
552. No heading is given in the text. The biographies following Nawfal's are of
people of the Layth and Ghifar clans. Both these and al-DIl, Nawfal's clan, be¬
longed to the Kinanah tribe.
[239l]
12.0
Biographies
Abi Fudayk—Ibn Abi Dhi’b [al-'Amiri]—Ibn Shihab [al-Zuhri]—
Abu Bakr b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Harith b. Hisham—Nawfal b.
Mu'awiyah al-Dili—the Prophet: Whoever misses a prayer, it is as
if he were deprived of his family and property.
Sulayman b. Ukaymah al-Laythl . 553
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Sa'Id b. 'Amr al-Sakuni—al-Walid b. Salamah al-
Filastlnl—Ya'qub b. 'Abdallah b. Sulayman b. Ukaymah al-
Laythi—his father—his grandfather: We said to the Prophet "We
hear traditions, and we cannot repeat them [exactly] as we heard
them." The Prophet replied "There is no harm done as long as you
do not make forbidden things lawful or lawful things forbidden
and as long as you convey the correct meaning [of the tradi¬
tion ]." 554
Fadalah al-Laythl . 555
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to al-Hasan b. Qaza'ah al-Bahili—Maslamah b.
'Alqamah—Da’ud b. Abi Hind—Abu Harb—'Abdallah b. Fada¬
lah—his father: I went to the Prophet and embraced Islam,- he
informed me about the prayer times, and I said "O Messenger of
God, these are hours at short intervals, and I am a working man, so
give me a general guideline." The Prophet said "Do your best not
to neglect the two 'asrs." I asked "What are the two ’asis, O Mes¬
senger of God?" He replied "The prayer before dawn and the one
before sunset ." 556
553. Called Sulaym in Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 73. The tradition is recorded here
with the same isnad.
554. The issue raised here is the permissibility of transmitting paraphrased
traditions, a practice apparently common in the early days of Islam,- in later times
transmission verbatim was required. See Goldziher, Muslim Studies, H, 186-87
[liwayah bi-al-ma'na vs. riwayah bi-al-lafz).
555. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 30,• Ibn Hajar, Isabah, III, 208. Biographers
are confused about this obscure figure.
556. 'Asiayn and 'asran, both dual forms of 'asi, literally meaning "the two
afternoon prayers," but the Arabic allows the combination of two different things
under a dual appellation, for example, al-'Umarani, which means not "the two
men named 'Umar" but "Abu Bakr and 'Umar." For the time of the prayers, see
Rubin, "Morning and Evening Prayers"; "Mikat," EP, VII, 26-27 (A. J. Wensinck).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 121
According to Ishaq b. Shahin al-Wasiti—Khalid b. 'Abdallah— [2392]
Da’ud—Abu Harb—'Abdallah b. Fadalah al-Laythl—his father.
The Prophet taught me, among other things, [the following]: "Ob¬
serve the five prayers." I said: "I have work to do at such hours, so
give me a general guideline that will suffice if I observe it." The
Prophet said "Observe the two ' asrs This meant nothing in our
dialect, so I asked "What are the two 'asrs 7 ." He said "The prayer
before dawn and the one before sunset."
Shaddad b. Usamah b. 'Amr, that is, al-Hadi, b. 'Abdallah b. Jabir
b. Bishr b. 'Utwarah b. 'Amir b. Layth. 557
His wife was Salma bt. 'Umays, sister of Asma’ bt. 'Umays al-
Khath'amiyyah.
Shaddad transmitted from the Prophet [the following]. Accord¬
ing to Musa b. Isma'Il—Jarir b. Hazim—Muhammad b. 'Abdallah
b. Abi Ya'qub al-Dabbl—'Abdaliah b. Shaddad b. al-Hadi—his fa¬
ther: The Prophet came out to us in one of the—I think he said:
two evening prayers (salatay al-'ashiyy )—carrying one of his
daughter's children, al-Hasan or al-Husayn. He moved forward
and placed him at his right foot. The Prophet bowed for a long
time during his prayer. I raised my head from among the people,
and there was the Prophet bowing, the child riding his back. I
resumed bowing, and when the Prophet [was finished and] was
about to leave people asked him "O Messenger of God, at this [2393]
prayer you performed the bowing in a way you [never] did before;
was it a [divine] order or inspiration?" He said "Nothing of this
kind; only this [grand] child of mine rode my back, and I hated to
rush him before he was satisfied."
Khufaf b. Ima’ b. Rahdah b. Khurbah b. Khalaf b. Harithah b.
Ghifar. 558
Khufaf transmitted from the Prophet [the following]. According
to [Muhammad] Ibn Bashshar—'Abd al-Wahhab b. 'Abd al-
Majld—Muhammad b. 'Amr—Khalid b. 'Abdallah b. Harmalah—
al-Harith b. Khufaf b. Ima’ b. Rahdah—Khufaf b. Ima’: The
Prophet prostrated himself, then raised his head and said: "May
557. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 8, 30, 127; Ibn Hafar, Isabah, n, 141-42.
558. A bedouin who threw in his lot with the Prophet as early as the year 2/624.
See al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh, I, 1311; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 33.
122
Biographies
God forgive the Ghifar and be in peace with the Aslam. O God,
curse Ri'l, Dhakwan, and 'Usayyah." 559 Khufaf said: This is why
the unbelievers were cursed.
Rafi' b. 'Amr, al-Hakam b. 'Amr's brother. 560
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to 'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Walid al-Jurjani—Muslim b.
Ibrahim—Sulayman b. al-Mughirah—Humayd b. Hilal—'Abdal¬
lah b. al-Samit—Abu Dharr: the Prophet said "My community
after me," or he said: 561 "There will be in my community people
who will read the Qur’an, but it will not pass through their
throats. They will fall out of the religion as [swiftly] as an arrow
bolts when shot and will not return [to believe]. They will be the
worst of mankind and of [the whole] Creation." Sulayman said "I
am very much inclined to think that he said 'The trait [by which
they will be known] will be their [internal] disagreement/" 562
[2394] 'Abdallah b. al-Samit related: I met Rafi' b. 'Amr al-Ghifari, al-
Hakam b. 'Amr's brother, and I said to him "I [transmit a tradition
I] heard from Abu Dharr, where he said such-and-so," and I men¬
tioned to him this report. He said: "Why does this surprise you? I
heard it from the Prophet."
Nasr b. 'Abidah al-Nasrl. 563
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umarah al-Asadi—'Ubaydallah b.
Musa—Isra’il—Abu Ishaq—'Abdah b. Hazn al-Nasri: Camel herd¬
ers and shepherds held a disputation for rank in the Prophet's
559. The clan names Ghifar and Aslam originate in the roots gh-f-r and s-l-m,
denoting forgiveness and peace respectively. Ri'l, Dhakwan, and 'Usayyah are
clans of the Sulaym tribe. On the last three see Lecker, Banii Sulaym, passim. They
were involved in the massacre of the Prophet's Companions at Bi’r Ma'unah in the
year 4/62,6; see Kister, "Expedition of Bi’r Ma'una."
560. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 32; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 68. He was of the
Ghifar clan; his brother al-Hakam was governor of Khurasan in the time of
Mu'awiyah. See also al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, H, 79.
561. That is, another version.
562. Al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, l, 1682; IbnHisham, IV, 139. This is a political tradition
aimed against disunity, hence against disobedience to the rulers. See note 487,
above.
563. There is a confusion regarding his name and identity; see below, where he
is called 'Abdah b. Hazn ; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 434.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 123
presence. 564 The camel herders said: "What are you, shepherds, do
you [ever] surpass anyone for any [merit] or gain anything [worth¬
while]? 565 These are merely wretched sheep you graze, then bring
back in the evening." [Thus] the camel herders silenced the shep¬
herds, whereupon the Prophet said: "Da’ud was sent [as a prophet],
and he had been a shepherd; Musa was sent [as a prophet], and he
had been a shepherd. And I was sent [as a prophet], and I had grazed
the sheep of my family at Ajyad." 566 So the shepherds won the
contest from the camel herders.
[Those of the Tamim Who Outlived the Prophet and
Transmitted Traditions from Him ] 567
Al-Farazdaq's paternal uncle.
He transmitted from the Prophet [the following]. According to
Yazid b. Harun—Jarir b. Hazim—al-Hasan—Sa'sa'ah b. Mu'awi-
yah, the poet al-Farazdaq's paternal uncle. This is what Yazid
said. 568 [Anyway, Sa'sa'ah] came to the Prophet, and [the latter]
read to him the following verse: "Whoever has done a particle's
weight of good shall see it, and whoever has done a particle's
weight of evil shall see it." 569 Whereupon [Sa'sa'ah] said "This
suffices me ; I shall not hear another [verse]." 570
Sulaym b. Jabir al-Hujaymi, Abu Jurayy. 571 [2395]
564. Competitions for superiority ( mufakharah ) were common in pre-Islamic
times. They consisted of an argument held by the competitors in public or in the
presence of an arbiter; see Goldziher, Muslim Studies, I, 57-63.
565. Hal tajubbuna shay’an aw tusibunahu. The Cairo and Dar al-Fikr editions
(both, incidentally, on p. 567!) have tahubbuna, "you like," which does not make
sense here, whereas the variant adduced by de Goeje is takhubbuna. The meaning
"surpass" for tajubbuna is to be found in Kazimirski, s.v. j-b-b.
566. A place in Mecca; see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, I, 138.
567. No heading is given in the text, but the next three biographies are of
Tamimis.
568. Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 25. Note that al-Farazdaq's pedigree is al-Farazdaq b. Ghalib
b. Sa'sa'ah, so that his paternal uncle should be son of Sa'sa'ah, not son of
Mu'awiyah. There is a confusion between Sa'sa'ah b. Mu'awiyah, uncle of the
famous Tamimi leader al-Ahnaf b. Qays, and Sa'sa'ah b. Najiyah, al-Farazdaq's
grandfather,- see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 185-86.
569. Qur’an 99:7-8; Bell, n, 672.
570. This expresses admiration; cf. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 186.
571. Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 73; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 42, 179.
124
Biographies
According to Ishaq b. Ibrahim al-Sawwaf—Yusuf b. Ya'qub al-
SadusI—'Abd al-Wahid b. Wasil—Abu Ghifar—Abu Tamimah—
Abu Jurayy: I came across someone surrounded by people who
obeyed him. They were content with whatever he told them. I said
to myself "This is a man!" [I asked] who he was, and I was told that
he was God's Messenger. I said "May peace be upon you O Mes¬
senger of God, may peace be upon you." The Prophet said " 'May
peace be upon you' is a greeting for the dead; you should say 'Peace
be upon you.'" 572 So I said "Peace be upon you, O Messenger of
God; are you [indeed] God's Messenger?" He said: "Yes, I am the
Messenger of God, Who will hear your prayer if any harm comes to
you or a drought befalls you. And, if you enter a land or [another
version:] a desert and your riding beast is lost and you pray to Him,
He will guide it back to you." I said "Let my father and mother be
ransom for you, O Messenger of God; [please] instruct me." The
Prophet said "Do not curse anyone." I never cursed after this any
free man or slave or sheep or camel. [The Prophet also] said: "Do
not skimp on good deeds; if you speak to your brother, do so with a
cheerful face, for this is a good deed. Raise your garment (izdr) 573
halfway up your leg, or else [leave it] down your ankles. Beware of
letting loose your garment, for this is vanity, and God does not
like vanity. And, if someone admonishes you for something he
knows about you, do not [retaliate by] admonishing him for some¬
thing you know about him, for the evil outcome of such an act
will affect you."
Harmalah al-'Anbari. 574
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
[2396] According to Ibn al-Muthanna—'Abd al-Rahman b. Mahdi—
Qurrah b. Khalid—Dirghamah b. 'Ulaybah b. Harmalah al-'An¬
bari—his father—his [grandfather: I went to the Prophet together
with [other] delegates from the clan. [While we were there] he led
572. The difference is in the order of the words, which cannot be translated very
well into English. The greeting for the dead is 'alayka al-salam, whereas the usual
greeting is al-salam 'alayka. Cf. Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyyah, II, 26; Abu al-Layth al-
Samarqandi, fol. 34a-b.
573. That is, that which covers the lower part of the body.
574. Harmalah b. 'Abdallah b. Anas, a rather insignificant Companion of the
Tamimi clan Banu al-'Anbar ; see Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqdt, 42. On the 'An-
baris, see Landau-Tasseron, "Processes."
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 125
the morning prayer for us. I looked at the faces of the people and
hardly knew them, that is, because of the darkness. 575
Those of the Banu Dabbah b. Udd b. Tabikhah b. al-
Yas b. Mudar [Who Outlived the Prophet and
Transmitted Traditions from Him]
Salman b. 'Amir al-Dabbl . 576
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet, among them the
following. According to Bishr b. Dihyah al-Basri—Hammad b.
Zayd—'Asim—Hafsah bt. Sirin—al-Rabab, a woman of the Banu
Dabbah—Salman b. 'Amir—the Prophet: Have dates for break¬
fast, and if no dates are available, have water, for water is pure.
'Abdallah b. Sarjis al-Muzani. 577
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Nasr b. 'Ali al-Jahdami—Nuh b. Qays—'Abdallah
b. 'Imran—'Asim al-Ahwal—'Abdallah b. Sarjis al-Muzani—the
Prophet: Following the right course, being temperate, and aiming
at what is right form one of twenty-four parts of prophecy. 578
Maysarah al-Fajr, who was, as was reported, Budayl b. May-
sarah's father. 579
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Bashshar—'Abd al-Rahman—
Mansur b. Sa'd—Budayl—'Abdallah b. Shaqiq—Maysarah al-Fajr: [2397]
I said "O Messenger of God, when was it ordained that you should
575. Ghalas means the darkness at the end of the night. This tradition is about
the correct time for the morning prayer.
576. Khallfahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 39, 177.
577. As he is included in the chapter on Dabbah, he is probably not of the well-
known Muzaynah tribe but of the 'Ami b. Udd, a brother tribe of Dabbah, known as
Muzaynah after their female ancestor. See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 201. 'Abdallah was
an ally of the Qurashl clan Makhzum. His being the Prophet's Companion is
disputed; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 315-16.
578. That is, such behavior is characteristic of prophets and therefore commen¬
dable. Other commendable traits or modes of behavior are characterized in the
same way. See Abu Da’ud, Sunan, Kitab al-Adab, no. 3; Malik, al-Muwatta’, Kitab
al-sha'ar, no. 17.
579. Said to belong to the 'Amiri tribe the Banu 'Uqayl but apparently known
only in connection with this tradition. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, HI, 470; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, S 9 ; Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 41.
12,6
Biographies
be a prophet?" He replied "At the time when Adam was in the
process of being created." 580
Those of the Banu Ja'dah b. Ka'b b. RabTah b. 'Amir
b. Sa'sa'ah 581 [Who Outlived the Prophet and
Transmitted Traditions from Him]
The poet Nabighah of the Ja'dah. 582
His name was Qays b. 'Abdallah b. 'Udas b. Rabi'ah b. Ja'dah. He
transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to 'Umar b. Isma'il al-Hamdani—Ya'la b. al-Ashdaq
al-'Uqayli—al-Nabighah: I recited poetry to the Prophet, saying:
Our glory reached the skies, our forefathers' too,
yet it is a higher rank we aspire to.
There is no good in deliberateness ( hilm) without
bursts of anger ( bawadir ) to keep its purity intact.
There is no good in impetuousity ( jahl ) without
a firm man ( halim ), who accomplishes when starting an
act. 583
The Prophet said: "You [spoke] well, Abu Layla"—he said that
three times—"may your teeth not be broken. What is the rank
[you aspire to], O Abu Layla?" I said "Paradise." He said "Paradise,
if God so wills."
The poet Humayd b. Thawr al-Hilall. 584
580. Literally, "when Adam was between spirit and body."
581. A clan of the great northern confederation 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah; see Ibn Hazm,
Jamharat, 289.
582. "Al-Nabighah al-Dja'di," El 2 , VII, 842-43 (A. Arazi); al-Sandubi, 371-84;
Abu Zayd al-Qurashi, n, 773.
583. The verses are part of a long poem,- see Abu Zayd al-Qurashi, II, 774-86 (66,
72, 73). On the concept of hilm, i.e., moral integrity, deliberation, mildness, as
opposed to jahl, i.e., impetuousity, hastiness, passion, see Goldziher, Muslim
Studies, I, 201-8.
584. Of the Amiri tribe the Banu Hilal; he flourished in the first/seventh cen¬
tury. See "Humaydb. Thawr," El 2 , III, 573 (J. W. Frick); Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani, IV,
97-98.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 127
Those of the Band Numayr 585 b. ’Amir b. Sa’sa’ah
[Who Outlived the Prophet and Transmitted
Traditions from Him]
Abu Zuhayr al-Numayri. 586
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet, among them the
following. According to Muhammad b. 'Awf al-Ta’i—Muhammad
b. Isma'Il—Damdam—Shurayh—Abu Zuhayr al-Numayri—the
Prophet: Do not fight locusts, for they are counted among the
greatest armies of God. 587
Yazid b. 'Amir al-Suwa’i. 588
He had fought on the idolaters' side in the battle of Hunayn and [2,398]
was later converted to Islam. He transmitted [traditions] from the
Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. Yazid al-Adami—Ma'n, that is, b.
isa al-Qazzaz—Sa'id b. al-Sa’ib al-Ta’ifi—his father—Yazid b.
'Amir: When the Muslims retreated in the battle of Hunayn, the
Prophet stretched out his hand to the ground and picked up a
handful of soil. He advanced with it toward the idolators who
were pursuing the Muslims, threw it in their faces, and said "Go
back, may your faces be deformed." We withdrew, every one of us
noticing the others' taking motes out of their eyes.
Hubshi b. Junadah b. Nasr b. Usamah b. al-Harith b. Mu'ayt b.
'Amr b. Jandal b. Murrah b. §a'sa'ah.
He was a Companion of the Prophet and transmitted traditions
from him.
585. Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 279-80; Caskel, II, 15.
586. Confused with one Abu Zuhayr al-Anmarl; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 77-78
(including the locust tradition).
587. Cf. Qur’an 7:133. The black spots on their wings are inscriptions identify¬
ing God as the Lord of the world, Creator and Commander of the locust army,- see
al-Kashshi, 54. There is a debate among scholars whether or not the killing of
locusts is permissible. See Abu al-Layth al-Samarqandi, fol. 9oa-b; Kister,
"Locust's Wing." On the permissibility of killing lizards, snakes, and ants, see
Muslim, Sahih, 1752-60 (kitab al-salam, 37-39).
588. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 54, 285,- Ibn Hajar, Isabah, III, 659. On the
'Amiri clan Suwa’ah, see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 273.
128
Biographies
According to Isma'il b. Musa al-Suddi—Sharlk—Abu Ishaq—
Hubshi b. Junadah al-Salull—the Prophet: 'All [b. Abi Talib] be¬
longs to my family, and I belong to his family. No one should pay
my debt but me or 'All. 589
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Hakkam [b. Salm]—
'Anbasah [b. Sa'id]—Abu Ishaq—Hubshi b. Junadah: I heard the
Prophet say: "All belongs to my family, and I belong to his family.
No one should transmit my messages except myself or 'All." He
said it on the Farewell Pilgrimage. 590
Abu Maryam Malik b. Rabi'ah al-Salull, father of Burayd b. Abi
Maryam. 591
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Jarir [b. 'Abd al-
Hamid]—'Ata’ [b. al-Sa’ib]—Burayd b. Abi Maryam—his father:
The Prophet stood among us on a certain occasion and told us
about the events that will occur until Doomsday.
[2399] Al-Hirmas b. Ziyad al-Bahili. 592
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet, among them the
following. According to al-'Abbas b. Abi Talib—'Abdallah b. 'Im¬
ran al-Isbahani—Yahya b. Durays al-RazI—'Ikrimah b. 'Ammar—
Hirmas: I was riding behind my father, 593 and I saw the Prophet
riding a camel and uttering the formula labbayka. He was per-
589. One of the merits of the first caliph, Abu Bakr, which made him qualified to
rule (in the eyes of Sunni Islam], was his participation with the Prophet in the
Emigration. The Shi'i propaganda counterbalanced this argument with the claim
that 'All remained in Mecca and joined the Prophet in Medina later for one of two
purposes (or both): to cover up, at peril of his own life, for the Prophet until he was
safely far from Mecca or to pay the Prophet's debts. In addition, the very expression
"'Alt belongs to my family and I to his," was used in Shi'i propaganda to legitimize
the Shi'i claim to rule.
590. This is a tradition legitimizing the Shi'i claim to power by making 'All the
sole authorized transmitter of messages from the Prophet. The messages men¬
tioned here refer to the Prophet's divine mission. Note that in his speech at the
Farewell Pilgrimage the Prophet asked the audience several times "hal bal-
laghtul" that is, "have I effectively transmitted the divine message?"
591. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 55, 183; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 71.
592. Khallfah b. Khayyat Tabaqat, 47, 289; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 413.
593. That is, on the same riding beast.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 129
forming the Hajj and the lesser pilgrimage (' umrah ) together [on
that occasion]. 594
[Those of the Banu Taghlib 595 Who Outlived the
Prophet and Transmitted Traditions from Him]
Harb b. 'Ubaydallah's maternal grandfather. 596
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—farir [b. 'Abd al-
Hamid]—'Ata’ [b. al-Sa’ib]—Harb b. 'Ubaydallah—his maternal
grandfather, who was a man of the Banu Taghlib: 597 We embraced
Islam and went to the Prophet. I said [to him] "My people have
embraced Islam, so teach us." He said "Go and teach them about
the prayer and the giving of legal alms." He then informed me
about the legal alms due on camels, cattle, sheep, gold, and sil¬
ver. 598 I turned [to go] away, having memorized everything he
taught me, except the legal alms. I went back to him and said "I
have memorized everything, except the legal alms." So he taught
me again, but when I turned [to go] away I forgot them [again]. So I
went back to him and said: "I have memorized everything but the
legal alms. Shall I [simply] tax them the tenth [of their property]?"
the Prophet said "No, the tenth is obligatory only on Jews and
Christians, not on Muslims." 599
5 94. There was a debate about the permissibility of performing the Hajj and the
lesser pilgrimage {'umrah) together, see Rubin, "Great Pilgrimage." On the for¬
mula labbayka, see p. 103, above.
595. A large confederation of northern origin. They dwelt in southern Iraq be¬
fore Islam and professed Christianity, continuing to adhere to it after the Muslim
conquests. See Caskel, II, 27; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 303-7, 469.
596. The origin of such an entry would be a chain of transmission ( isnad ) run¬
ning "Harb b 'Ubaydallah heard his maternal grandfather ..." This grandfather is
ignored in most of my sources; Harb himself was a Kufan of the tribe of Thaqif. See
Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, IV, 172; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, n, 198.
597. Abu TJbayd, 212.
598. See Ben Shemesh, I, 94-103, HI, 45-50, 54-57, for detailed sums of legal
alms, as well as debates on various types of property.
599. See the discussion on the permissibility of levying the tenth {'ushr) in Abu
TJbayd, 211-18; Ben Shemesh, I, ro3-9, H, 78-83, m, 30. The Banu Taghlib who
remained Christians refused to pay the jizyah (poll tax taken from non-Mus lim s)
because it involved humiliation, whereas they were proud Arabs. A compromise
was reached according to which they paid a tenth of their property. See Abu
'Ubayd, 217; Ben Shemesh, I, 54-58; cf. van Arendonck, 143, 325-26 (appendix VI).
130
Biographies
The Names of Those Who Believed in the Prophet and
Followed Him during His Lifetime, Then Outlived
Him and Transmitted [Traditions] from Him, of
Yemeni Tribes
Among them [were people] of the offspring of Aws b. Harithah b.
Tha'labah b. 'Amr b. 'Amir b. Harithah b. Imri’ al-Qays b. Tha'la-
bah b. Mazin b. al-Azd b. al-Ghawth b. Nabt b. Malik b. Zayd b.
[2400] Kahlan b. Saba’ b. Yashjub b. Ya'rub b. Qahtan. 600 Qahtan is the
ancestor of all the Yemeni lineages.
The genealogists disagree about the pedigree of Qahtan [him¬
self]. 601 Some trace him back to Isma'il b. Ibrahim, saying that his
[name] was Qahtan b. al-Hamaysa' b. Tayman b. Nabt b. Isma'il b.
Ibrahim. Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbi] held this genealogy [as
true]. He quoted his father as saying that he had been contem¬
poraneous with [older] scholars and genealogists who traced
Qahtan's pedigree in this way. Other [genealogists] argue that the
[name] was Qahtan b. Faligh b. 'Abir b. Shalakh—there is a version
with kh and one with h —b. Arfakhshad b. Nuh, may God bless
him and all the other prophets. 602
The mother of [the clans] al-Aws and al-Khazraj, sons of
Harithah, was al-'Anqa’, that is, Qaylah bt. Kahil b. 'Udhrah b.
Sa'd, that is, Sa'd b. Hudhaym. [This Sa'd] was traced back to
Hudhaym because the latter, who had been an Abyssinian slave,
raised hi m , so Hudhaym's name became predominant in Sa'd's
genealogy. In fact, Sa'd's [genealogy] was Sa'd b. Zayd b. Layth b.
Sud b. Aslum b. al-Haf b. Quda'ah.
Sa'd b. Mu'adh was the Aws' leader until his death on the
Prophet's return from the attack on the Banu Qurayzah. 603 I have
already recorded his biography. 604
600. By Aws b. Harithah the Medinan tribe is meant; it belonged to the great
southern confederation of the Azd.
6or. See, e.g., Ibn Hazm, famharat, 7-8. About the permissibility of such
debates, see Goldziher, Muslim Studies, I, 95-96.
602. Salla Allah 'alayhi-, see note 379, above.
603. The last Jewish tribe in Medina, besieged by the Prophet in the year 5/627.
The men were executed, the women and children taken into slavery. See Kister,
"Massacre."
604. Not found in this fragment ( Muntakhab min dhayl al-mudhayyal ). See on
him El 1 , IV, 30 (K. V. Zettersteen); Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 77; Ibn Hanbal,
Fada’il, 818-26.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 131
Khuzaymah b. Thabit b. al-Fakih b. Tha'labah b. Sa'idah b.
'Amir b. Ghayyan b. 'Amir b. Khatmah.
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet.
According to al-'Abbas b. Abi Talib—Sa'd b. 'Abd al-Hamld b.
Ja'far al-Ansari—'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Imran b. Ibrahim b.
Muhammad b. Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah—Khuzaymah b. Muham¬
mad b. 'Umarah b. Khuzaymah b. Thabit—his father—his
grandfather—Khuzaymah b. Thabit—the Prophet: Beware of the
prayer of the wronged, for it is carried by the clouds, because God
says "By My Might and Glory, I shall help you, even if it will take [2401]
time." 605
Khuzaymah b. Thabit's brother.
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet, among them the
following. According to 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-
Hakam—Abu Zur'ah [al-Dimashql]—Yunus [b. Yazid al-Ayll]—
Ibn Shihab [al-Zuhri]—'Umarah b. Khuzaymah b. Thabit. [Now],
Khuzaymah b. Thabit was the man whose testimony was con¬
sidered by the Prophet as equivalent to that of two people. 'Umar¬
ah quotes his paternal uncle [that is, Khuzaymah's brother], who
was a Companion of the Prophet [as saying]: Khuzaymah b. Thabit
saw himself in a dream, prostrating himself above the Prophet's
forehead. Khuzaymah went to the Prophet and told him [about it],
whereupon the Prophet lay down and said "Make your dream
true." So Khuzaymah prostrated himself above the Prophet's
forehead.
'Abdallah b. Hanzalah b. al-Rahib. 606
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. Isma'll al-Sulaml—al-Hasan b.
Sawwar, Abu al-'Ala’—'Ikrimah b. 'Ammar—Damdam b. Jaws—
'Abdallah b. Hanzalah b. al-Rahib: I saw the Prophet performing
605. "God says" means "there is a verse in the Qur’an," but this particular
sentence is not in the Qur’an. According to De Goeje, this may be a paraphrase of
Qur’an 22:41.
606. An eminent Ansari killed in Medina by the caliph's army in the battle of al-
Harrah, one of the events of the second civil war (in the year 64/683). See "'Abd
Allah b. Hanzala," El 2 , 1 , 43; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 227-30; idem, Tabaqat,
23 6 -37.
Biographies
132
the circumambulation of the House 607 riding a she camel, with¬
out striking or urging her, without calling "Go on! go on!"
'Uwaymir b. Ashqar, of the Banu Harithah b. al-Harith. 608
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to al-'Abbas b. al-Walid al-Bayrutl—his father—al-
Awza'I 609 —Yahya b. Said al-Ansari—'Abbad b. Tamim—
'Uwaymir b. Ashqar al-Ansari al-Mazini, [who related] that [once]
he had slaughtered his sacrificial animal before the Prophet
[2402] prayed. 610 He then went to the Prophet and told him [about it],
whereupon the Prophet ordered him to go back [and go on with]
the offering.
According to Yunus b. 'Abd al-A'la al-Sadafi—['Abdallah] Ibn
Wahb—'Amr b. al-Harith and Malik b. Anas—Yahya b. Said al-
Ansari—'Abbad b. Tamim—'Uwaymir b. Ashqar al-Ansari [who
related] that [once] he had slaughtered a sacrificial animal on the
Day of the Sacrifices before sunrise. He mentioned this to the
Prophet, who ordered him to go back and sacrifice another
animal. 611
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Sinan al-Qazzaz—Musa [b. Ism-
all Abu Salamah]—Hammad [b. Salamah]—Yahya b. Said—
'Abbad b. Tamim—'Uwaymir b. Ashqar, who had slaughtered be¬
fore the Prophet prayed, and the Prophet ordered him to do it
again.
Mujammi' b. Jariyah, of the Banu 'Amr b. 'Awf. 612
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet.
607. That is, the Ka’bah.
608. Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 105.
609. An early, famous Syrian jurist; see his biography p. 255, below.
610. That is, during the festival of 'Id al-Adha, on Dhu al-Hijjah 10.
611. This tradition is the exact opposite of the previous one, reflecting the
jurists' debate on this point. The difference between the two depends on the read¬
ing of one letter. Ya'uda li-dahiyyatihi in the first tradition means "to go back to
his sacrifice," whereas ya'uda bi-dahiyyah ukhra in the second tradition means
"to come back with another sacrifice." De Goeje's explanation that li-dahiyyatihi
means bi-ukhia ("with another one") is unwarranted.
612. Considered one of the Munafiqun ("the Hypocrites"), i.e., those Muslims
who opposed the Prophet on certain occasions. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, HI, 366; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 276.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 133
According to al-Hasan b. 'Arafah—Isma'll b. 'Ayyash al-
HimsI—'Abd al-'Aziz b. 'Ubaydallah—Ya'qub b. Mujammi' b.
Jariyah—his father: The Prophet walked in the funeral of a man of
the Banu 'Amr b. Awf. Upon arriving at the cemetery he said:
"Peace be upon [you], grave dwellers"—he said that three times—
"[upon] those among you who were believers and Muslims. You
have arrived ahead of us, and we shall follow you. May God forgive
us and you."
Hudhayfah b. al-Yaman, Abu 'Abdallah. 613
He originated in the [tribe of] 'Abs b. Baghld and [later] became
an ally of the Banu 'Abd al-Ashhal. 614 He transmitted many tradi¬
tions from the Prophet.
Abu Ayyub Khalid b. Zayd b. Kulayb b. Tha'labah b. 'Abd b.
'Awf b. Ghanm b. Malik b. al-Najjar, that is, Taymallah b. Tha'la- [2403]
bah b. 'Amr b. al-Khazraj. 615
Abu Ayyub was present at the 'Aqabah meeting with the sev¬
enty Ansaris. He took part on the Prophet's side in [the battles] of
Badr, Uhud, and the Ditch and all the [other] events. He transmit¬
ted many traditions from the Prophet.
Thabit b. Qays b. Shammas b. Imri’ al-Qays b. Malik al-Agharr
b. Tha'labah b. Ka'b b. al-Khazraj b. al-Harith b. al-Khazraj. 616
He transmitted traditions from the Prophet.
According to Yunus b. 'Abd al-A'la al-Sadafl—['Abdallah] Ibn
Wahb—Da’ud b. 'Abd al-Rahman al-Makki—'Amr b. Yahya al-
Mazini—Yusuf b. Muhammad b. Thabit b. Qays b. Shammas—
his father—his grandfather, who reported that he entered the
Prophet's [house to see him], and the Prophet said "O Lord, re-
613. An eminent Companion who served as a general during the conquests. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 29,120-25, 131-32, 135; idem, Tabaqat, 48-49; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahir, 74-75.
614. A clan of the Aws (Ansar).
615. The following biographies are of people of the Khazraj, the brother of the
Aws.
616. The spokesman of the Ansar and their commander in the battle of
Yamamah in the apostasy wars; see Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 94; Ibn Hibban,
Mashahir, 34.
134
Biographies
move the sorrow from Qays b. Shammas." 617 The Prophet then
took some earth from Buthan, 618 put it in a vessel containing
some water, and poured it on him.
Abu al-Yasar Ka'b b. 'Amr. 619
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Humayd b. Mas'adah al-Saml—Bishr b. al-
Mufaddal—'Abd al-Rahman b. Ishaq—'Abd al-Rahman b.
Mu'awiyah—Hanzalah b. Qays—Abu al-Yasar al-Badri 620 —the
Prophet: Whoever wishes that God would shade him in His
shadow—and he motioned with his hand—let him sell to the poor
on credit, or discount [some money] for him.
'Ubayd b. Rifa'ah al-Zuraql. 621
According to Hawtharah b. Muhammad al-Minqari and Sa'id b.
[2404] al-Rabi' al-Razi—Sufyan—'Amr—'Urwah b. 'Amir—'Ubayd b.
Rifa'ah al-Zuraqi: Asma’ said: "O Messenger of God, the Banu
Ja'far are hit by the evil eye. Shall we seek a [counter]charm for
them?" He said "Yes; had anything come before predestination, it
would have been the evil eye." 622
Khallad b. Rifa'ah b. Rafi'. 623
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to 'Ubaydallah b. Sa'd al-Zuhri—his paternal uncle—
Sharik—'Abdallah b. 'Awn—'All b. Yahya—Khallad b. Rifa'ah b.
617. Note that it is not Thabit but his father who is blessed. This may be
because the blessing is uttered in rhymed, rhythmic prose. The addition of
"Thabit" would have spoiled the rhythm, whereas the omission of Shammas
would have spoiled the rhyme.
618. One of the three wadis of Medina. See Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, I, 662; al-
Samhudi, 1071-72.
619. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, ro2 ; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 39.
620. That is, one who participated in the battle of Badr.
621. Khalifah b. Khayyat Tabaqat, 253; Ibn Sa'd, V, 204.
622. Practices connected with magic or sorcery had pagan origins and were
therefore objectionable, but often they could not be abolished; hence the debates
on them that arose among Muslims and the ascription to the Prophet of their
condemnation or otherwise. See Fahd, chap. 4; cf. Guillaume, 240 n.
623. Brother of the former; see Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 100.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 135
Rafi', who was counted among the participants in [the battle of]
Badr: A man came to the Prophet, who was sitting, and prayed
close to him. When he had finished he approached the Prophet and
greeted him. The Prophet said "Pray again, because [it is as if ] you
did not pray." He prayed as before, and when he had finished,
approached the Prophet and greeted [him]. The Prophet said to
him "Pray again, because [it is as if] you did not pray." The man
said "O Prophet of God, teach me." The Prophet said: "When you
turn towards the Ka'bah utter the formula 'God is the greatest/
then recite whatever God wishes you to recite,- 624 when you lower
your head put your hands on your knees and stretch your back.
You have to make room for lowering your head. When you raise
your body straighten your spine so that your bones return to [their
right places in their] joints. Make room for your prostration, and
when you raise your body sit on your left thigh. Do the same in
every lowering of the head and every prostration until you finish
[your prayer]."
Ziyad b. Labid b. Tha'labah b. Sinan, one of the Banu Bayadah b.
'Amir b. Zurayq. 625
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Ibn Waki'—his father—al-A'mash—Salam b. Abi
al-Ja'd—Ziyad b. Labid: The Prophet mentioned something and
said: "That [will be] at the time when knowledge will have died
out." We said "O Messenger of God, how will knowledge die out [2405]
while we read the Qur’an and teach it to our children, who [in
their turn] will teach it to their children until Doomsday?" 626 He
said: "May your mother be bereaved of you, O Ziyad . 627 1 thought
that you were one of the most learned men in Medina. Do not
624. That is, of verses of the Qur’an.
625. An eminent Ansari; he was appointed by the Prophet as tax collector in
Hadramawt. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 62, 84; idem, Tabaqat, ioo-i; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 245, 529.
626. The issue raised here is that of religious authority and whether or not a
Muslim needs an interpreter and mediator between himself and God (such as the
[Umayyad] caliph, the 'ulama', the Shi'i Imam). See Crone and Hinds,- Landau-
Tasseron, "Cyclical Reform."
627. This is not a curse but a term of reprimand.
136
Biographies
these Jews and Christians read their Bible and their Gospel, [yet]
know nothing of what is in them?"
Abu Ibrahim al-Ansari's father. 628
According to Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. Bazi'—Bishr b. al-
Mufaddal—Hisham al-Dastawa’i—Yahya b. Abi Kathir—Abu
Ibrahim al-Ansari—his father, who heard the Prophet pray over
the dead, saying: O God, forgive our living and our dead, our pre¬
sent and our absent [members], our male and our female [mem¬
bers], our young and our old.
According to Ibn al-Muthanna—al-Walid b. Muslim—al-
Awza'i—Yahya—Abu Ibrahim, [who was] a man of the Banu 'Abd
al-Ashhal—his father, who heard the Prophet pray in a funeral,
saying: "O God, forgive the first and the last among us, and our
living and our dead, our male and our female, our young and our
old, our present and our absent. O God, do not deprive us of the
reward [of this act], and do not lead us astray after this."
Yahya recorded on the authority of Abu Salamah—the Prophet,
a similar tradition, to which he added: Whomever You resurrect,
let him be a Muslim, and whomever You take unto You, do so
while he is a believer.
'Umayr al-Ansari. 629
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Ibn Waki'—his father—Sa'id b. Sa'id al-Taghlibi or
al-Tha'labl—al-Tabari was not sure about it 630 —Sa'id b. 'Umayr
al-Ansari, who ranked among those who took part in Badr—the
[2406] Prophet: Whoever of my community prays for me sincerely and
from [the depth of] his soul, God will reward him by blessing him
ten times, 631 by raising him ten degrees, by writing ten good deeds
to his credit, and erasing ten evils from his record.
628. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 124.
629. 'Umayr b. 'Uqbah b. Niyar,- see Ibn Haiar, Isabah, III, 34; Tahdhlb, TV,
62.
630. Evidently this is a remark by a scribe or the student who took down the
material from al-Tabari by dictation, as was the custom among the Muslim
scholars.
631. Literally, "God will pray for him ten times, as a reward for it." For salla in
the sense of "bless," see note 379, above.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 137
The Names of Some of Those Belonging to Other
Yemeni Tribes Who Believed in the Prophet and
Followed Him during His Lifetime, Outlived Him,
and Transmitted Traditions from Him
Those of the Khuza'ah, who are the offspring of Ka'b, Mulayh and
'Adi, sons of Rabi'ah b. Harithah b. 'Amr Muzayqiya’ b. 'Amir Ma’
al-Sama’ b. Harithah al-Ghitrff b. Imri’ al-Qays b. Tha'labah b.
Mazin. [The Khuza'ah belong to the tribe of] Azd b. al-Ghawth b.
Nabt b. Malik b. Zayd b. Kahlan b. Saba’ b. Yashjub b. Ya'rub b.
Qahtan.
Al-Husayn b. 'Ubayd b. Khalaf b. 'Abd Nuhm b. Juraybah b.
Jahmah b. Ghadirah b. Hubshiyyah b. Ka'b b. 'Amr, the father of
'Imran b. Husayn. 632
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Harun b. al-Mug-
hirah—'Amr, that is, Ibn Abi Qays—Mansur—Rib'i—'Imran b.
al-Husayn—his father, [who related] that he had come to the
Prophet before embracing Islam and said: "O Muhammad, 'Abd al-
Muttalib was better for his people than you. He used to feed them
liver and meat of camel humps, whereas you harm them." 633
Then he said "Teach me," whereupon the Prophet replied "Say 'O [2407]
God, guard me against the evil of my [own] soul, and make me
resolve upon the right course/" Al-Husayn came to the Prophet
[again] after he had embraced Islam and asked "What shall I say?"
The Prophet said "Say 'O God, forgive [the sins I committed] se¬
cretly and openly, by mistake and intentionally, knowingly and
ignorantly / "
Sulayman b. Surad b. al-Jawn b. Abi al-Jawn—that is, 'Abd
al-'Uzza—b. Munqidh.
Sulayman's kunyah was Abu Mutarrif. His name had been
Yasar before he embraced Islam, but the Prophet gave him the
name Sulayman on the occasion of his conversion. 634
632. Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, ID, 88; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 337-38. According to the
latter source, his conversion to Islam is not certain.
633. Literally, "you hurt their throats."
634. See note 234, above.
I3«
Biographies
He participated in the battles of the Camel and Siffln on the side
of 'All b. Abi Talib. According to another version, he did not take
part in the Camel, but there is no disagreement [among historians]
over his participation in Siffln. He was killed by Yazid b. al-
Husayn b. Numayr at 'Ayn al-Wardah, near Qarqisiya’, as the Re-
penters' leader and commander.
Sulayman transmitted traditions from the Prophet.
According to Nasr b. 'All al-Jahdaml—his father—Shu'bah—
'Abd al-Akram, who was someone from al-Kufah—his father—Su¬
layman b. Surad: The Prophet came to us and we spent several
nights unable to get, or [another version] it was impossible to get,
food.
Hubaysh b. Khalid al-Ash'ar b. Khulayf. 635
He transmitted from the Prophet the following. According to
Abu Hisham Muhammad b. Sulayman b. al-Hakam b. Ayyub b.
Sulayman b. Thabit b. Yasar al-Ka'bi al-Raba'I—his paternal uncle
Ayyub b. al-Hakam b. Ayyub—Hizam b. Hisham—his father His¬
ham b. Hubaysh—his grandfather Hubaysh b. Khalid, a Compa¬
nion of the Prophet: When the Prophet left Mecca emigrating to
Medina he was accompanied by Abu Bakr, the latter's client 'Amir
[2408] b. Fuhayrah, and their guide, 'Abdallah b. al-Urayqit of the Banu
al-Layth. [On their way] they passed by the two tents of Umm
Ma'bad al-Khuza'iyyah. She was a strong woman, free yet dig¬
nified in her discourse with men,- 636 she used to sit erect 637 in the
court in front of the tent and [order] drink and food to be served.
They sought to buy from her meat and dates but did not obtain any
635. Brother of Umm Ma'bad, the protagonist of the following story. He was
himself a Companion and was one of the few killed during the conquest of Mecca;
see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 310.
636. Barzah, from the root b-r-z meaning to appear, protrude, be seen. The term
implies that also in pre-Islamic times the norm for women was to keep distance
from men (for Umm Ma'bad is not yet converted), but there was a possibility of
closer, yet not dishonorable, contacts. See de Goeje's Glossarium under b-r-z,- see
Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani, XIV, 159 on the conduct of Sukaynah, daughter of al-
Husayn. I thank my colleague, Prof. Albert Arazi for this reference.
637. Tahtabi. Ihtiba’ is a peculiar manner of sitting, with the legs and back
confined together in a garment, considered characteristic of the Arab and Muslim
nobility; see al-Dhahabl, MIzan (ed. Bijawi), III, 272, no. 6403 .1 owe this reference
to Prof. M. J. Kister.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 139
of this for [at that time] the people were poor ( murmilin Abu
Hisham [replaces this word with] mushtln, that is, suffering from
want during the winter, but according to al-Tabari it should be
musnitln, that is, going through a period of drought. [Anyway], the
Prophet then saw an ewe in the comer of the tent and asked "What
is this ewe, O Umm Ma'bad ?" She replied "This is an ewe that was
too exhausted to [join] the sheep." He asked "Does she have any
milk?" to which she replied "She is too exhausted for this." He
asked "Will you permit me to milk her?" She said "Yes, [I swear]
by my father and mother, if you think that she has milk, do milk
her." The Prophet had her brought before him, passed his hand
over her udder, mentioned the name of God, and prayed for Umm
Ma'bad that her ewe [be blessed]. The ewe parted her legs widely,
let the milk flow abundantly, then stood ruminating. The Prophet
asked for a vessel [big enough] to sustain the [whole] family and
milked into it in a stream until it was covered with froth. He then
gave Umm Ma'bad to drink until her thirst was quenched, and he
gave his companions to drink until their thirst was quenched, and
he was the last to drink, so they [all] quenched their thirst. The
Prophet then milked [the ewe] into the vessel again until he filled
it. 638 He left it with Umm Ma'bad, accepted the oath of allegiance
from her, and left [with his companions].
Shortly afterward her husband, Abu Ma'bad, arrived, driving a
few lean goats, so emaciated that they were staggering, even in the
morning; 639 there was hardly any marrow in their bones. When
Abu Ma'bad saw the milk he was surprised and asked: "Where did
you get this, O Umm Ma'bad, the sheep pasturing far away [or
else] not pregnant? There is no milking ewe in the tent, [is there]?"
She replied "No, by God, but a blessed man passed by us, whose
story is such-and-so." Abu Ma'bad said "Describe him to me, O
Umm Ma'bad." She said "I saw a radiant man with a luminous [2409]
face and harmonious build unspoiled by thinness and not tainted
by small-headedness." Such is the version of Abu Hisham, but it
638. Cf. the version about 'Abdallah b. Mas'ud milking an ewe for the Prophet
and Abu Bakr on their way to Medina in Kister, “Land Property," 275. For a list of
miracles performed by the Prophet, see Ibn Hazm, Jawami' al-shah, 7-14.
639. Tasawakna huzlan duhan ; See note a to p. 2408.
140
Biographies
should be "unspoiled by fleshiness and not tainted by [excessive]
leanness." 640 "He is comely and fine-looking, with large black
eyes and thick eyelashes." Abu Hisham's version is "long [eye¬
lashes]." "His voice is [like] neighing (sahl)"; the shaykh 641 says:
This is a mistake, it should be sahal with h [that is, a rough voice].
"His neck is long, his beard thick, his brows fine, arched, and
joined. When silent he has an air of dignity, and when he speaks he
is stately and lustrous. He is the most handsome and majestic
person [when you observe him] from a distance and the nicest and
kindest when close to [you]. His speech is sweet and clear, like
strung beads shed from their string; [he speaks] neither too little
nor too much. He is of middle stature, neither loathsome for tall¬
ness nor offensive to the eye for shortness. He seemed like a
branch that [stands out] between two others, being the most beau¬
tiful to look at and the most harmoniously proportioned among
the three. 642 He had companions surrounding him who, when he
spoke, listened silently to what he said (nasatu li-qawlihi )." Al-
Tabari remarks: It should be ansatu li-qawlihi. 643 "When he com¬
manded they hastened to fulfill his command; they rushed and
served him promptly, without his being stem or reproachful [to
them] ( mufannid )." Abu Hisham says that this is a mistake; it
[should be] "or aggressive" ( mu’tadin). 644 Abu Ma'bad said: "By
God, this is the man of the Quraysh we were told about in Mecca. I
intended to become a companion of his, and indeed I shall if I find
a way to do so." Then a loud voice was heard in Bakkah; 645 people
heard it but did not know to whom it belonged. It recited the
following: 646
640. The version from Abu Hisham (as given by de Goeje) is lam ya'ibhu
nuhluhu wa-lam tuzii bi-hi suqlah. The corrected version is lam ta'ibhu thujlah
wa-lam tuzii bi-hi suqlah. Cairo and Dar al-Fikr (both, incidentally, 578) have
nuhlah or nihlah instead of nuhluhu.
641. That is, al-Tabari; see p. 143, below.
642. That is, the Prophet, Abu Bakr, and the latter's client.
643. That is, in the fourth form, rather than in the first. The dictionaries, how¬
ever, have both forms in the same sense.
644. The number of scribal errors in this passage points to its extremely rich and
difficult language.
645. Bakkah is another name for Mecca; see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, I, 706.
646. See al-Tabari, Ta’ilkh, I, 1241.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 141
May God the Lord of the people grant the best reward [2410]
to the two companions who drank at midday at the two
tents of Umm Ma'bad.
They stopped there, bringing true guidance, and she followed.
Happiness is the lot of one who becomes a companion of
Muhammad.
O come, clan of Qusayy, 647 [see] how God removed from your
midst
leadership and priceless noble deeds.
Let the Banu Ka'b rejoice in their woman's undertaking,
as she stayed there for the believers, waiting.
Ask your sister about her jar and ewe;
if you ask, the ewe [itself] will confirm it to you.
A barren ewe was brought and for him her milk was flowing,
the pure substance of the ewe's udder, foaming.
Al-Tabari remarks that this is how Abu Hisham recited it, but it
should in fact be as follows: "And the ewe's udder flowed for him
with the pure substance, foaming."
He left her with Umm Ma'bad as a pledge, for someone [else] to
milk
who would lead her time and again to the watering place
and back.
When Hassan b. Thabit, the Prophet's poet, heard this he com¬
posed verses in reply to the voice, saying: 648
People whose Prophet has left them will fail;
holy are those to whom he travels by morning or night.
He left the people, and their minds lost the trail,
whereas he settled among others, bringing new light.
Through him their Lord guided them after they had gone astray.
He directed them rightly,- whoever seeks the Truth shall find
Are they alike, people who erred and foolishly acted blind,
and others who follow the rightly guided one in the right
way?
647. Qusayy was the eponym of the Quraysh.
648. Hassan, I, 464-65. The reply is composed in the same rhyme and meter as
the verses spoken by the voice.
142-
Biographies
From Him unto the people of Yathrib came down
the chariots of Truth, bringing the auspicious one,
A Prophet who sees what men around him do not
and reads the book of God in every worshiping spot
(. masjid ).
Al-Tabari says: Our version is "in every assembly" ( mashhad ).
[2411] If he sometimes utters an obscure saying,
it is confirmed on the same day or the next morning.
Let Abu Bakr rejoice in his fate, which is felicity;
he will prosper by following one made prosperous by the
Almighty.
Let the Banu Ka'b rejoice in their woman's undertaking
as she stayed there for the believers, waiting.
[Abu Ma'bad] then joined the Prophet and embraced Islam.
According to Ibrahim al-Qari’ (the Qur’an reader) Abu Ishaq al-
Kufi—Bishr b. Hasan Abu Ahmad al-Sukkari—'Abd al-Malik b.
Wahb al-Madhhiji—al-Hurr b. al-Sayyah al-Nakha'i—Abu Ma'¬
bad al-Khuza'I: On the night of his Emigration from Mecca to
Medina the Prophet left together with Abu Bakr, the latter's client
'Amir b. Fuhayrah, and their guide 'Abdallah b. Urayqit al-Laythl.
They passed by the two tents of Umm Ma'bad al-Khuza'iyyah. She
was a strong woman, free yet dignified in her discourse with men;
she used to sit erect in the court in front of the tent and [order]
drink and food to be served. They sought to buy from her meat and
dates but did not obtain any of this from her, for [at that time] the
people were poor ( murmilun ), as they were going through a period
of drought ( musnitun ). Umm Ma'bad said [to the visitors] "If we
had had anything, offering you food would not have been
difficult." The Prophet [then] saw an ewe in the comer of her tent
and asked "What is this ewe, O Umm Ma'bad?" She replied "An
ewe that was too exhausted [to join] the sheep." He asked "Does
she have any milk?" She said "She is too exhausted for this." He
asked "Will you permit me to milk her?" She said "Yes, [I swear]
by my father and mother, if you think that she has milk, do milk
her." The Prophet had the ewe brought before him, passed his
hand over her udder, and mentioned the name of God. The ewe
parted her legs widely, let the milk flow abundantly, then stood
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 143
ruminating. The Prophet asked for a vessel [big enough] to sustain
the [whole] family and milked into it in a stream until it was [2412]
covered with froth. He then gave Umm Ma'bad to drink until her
thirst was quenched; then [the rest] were given to drink until they
quenched their thirst. The Prophet said "The one who serves
drink to the people is the last to drink." They all drank again 649
until they quenched their thirst. Then they 650 milked into the
vessel a second time, repeating the first [procedure], whereupon
the Prophet left the vessel with Umm Ma'bad [and went away].
Shortly afterward her husband, Abu Ma'bad, came, leading a few
ill-fed, lean goats, so exhausted that they tottered as they walked,
so thin that there remained no marrow in their bones. When he
saw the milk he wondered and asked "Where did you get this, the
sheep herding far away and no milking beast being around the
tent?" She said "Nay, by God, but a blessed man passed by us,
whose story was such-and-so." He said "By God, I think he is the
man of the Quraysh we were told about; describe him to me, O
Umm Ma'bad." She said: "I saw a radiant man with a luminous
face and harmonious build, unspoiled by fleshiness or by small-
headedness. He is comely and fine looking, with large black eyes
and thick eyelashes. His voice is [like] neighing" ( sahl); al-Tabari
says that it should be "rough" ( sahal ). "[He has] a fair complexion
and black eyes, and his brows are fine, arched, and joined. His neck
is long and his beard thick." Al-Tabari says: "The [correct word] is
kathathah. " 6S1 "When silent he has an air of dignity, and when he
speaks he is stately and lustrous. His speech is like strung beads
shed from their string, sweet and clear; [he speaks] neither too [2413]
little nor too much. He is the finest-looking and handsomest man
[when you observe him] from a distance and the nicest and kindest
when close to [you]. He is of middle stature; you would not find
him loathsome for tallness or offensive to the eye for shortness.
He was like a branch that [stands out] between two others, being
the most beautiful to look at and the most harmoniously propor¬
tioned among the three. He had companions surrounding him
649. Literally, "they all had a second drink after the first one"; the Arabic has a
special term for each turn.
650. The verb is in the plural but should refer to the Prophet.
651. The word replaced by al-Tabari is kathafah, a more common word for
"thick." The point of replacing it is not clear to me.
144
Biographies
who, when he spoke, listened to what he said and, when he com¬
manded, hastened to fulfill his command; they rushed and served
him promptly without his being stem or reproachful [to them]."
Abu Ma'bad said: "By God, this is the man of Quraysh we were
told about. Had I met him I would have sought to become one of
his Companions. Indeed, I shall do this if I find a way." Then a
loud voice was heard in Mecca; the people heard it and did not
know who it was that spoke between heaven and earth. [The
voice] said [the following]:
May God the Lord of the people grant the best reward
to the two companions who alighted at the two tents of
Umm Ma'bad.
They stopped there as the harbingers of piety; then on they
rode.
Happiness is the lot of one who becomes a Companion of
Muhammad.
O come, clan of Qusayy, [see] how God removed from your
midst
leadership and priceless noble deeds.
Ask your sister about her jar and ewe ;
if you ask, the ewe [itself] will confirm it to you.
A barren ewe was brought, and for him her milk was flowing,
the pure [substance] of the ewe's udder, foaming.
He left it with her as pledge that someone [else] would milk
abundantly, going to the watering place and back.
In the morning the people missed their Prophet. They followed
the way to the two tents of Umm Ma'bad until they caught up
with him. 652
Hassan [b. Thabit] answered that voice, saying:
People whose Prophet has left them will fail;
holy are those to whom he travels by morning or night. 653
[2414] He left the people, and their minds lost the trail,
652. It is not clear who are "the people" mentioned here, because the Prophet
and Abu Bakr are usually said to have been the last Muslims to emigrate (except for
'All b. Abl Talib).
653. Or "Holy are those who travel to him by morning or by night."
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 145
whereas he settled among others, bringing new light.
Are they alike, people who erred and foolishly acted blind
and others, who follow him who is guided to what is right,
A Prophet who sees what men around him do not
and reads the book of God in every meeting spot?
If an obscure expression he happens to say,
it is confirmed the same morning or the next day.
Let Abu Bakr rejoice in his fate, which is felicity;
he will prosper by following one made prosperous by the
Almighty.
Let the Banu Ka'b rejoice in their woman's undertaking
as she stayed there for the believers, waiting.
Hunaydah b. Khalid al-Khuza'i. 654
According to Muhammad b. 'Umarah al-Asad!—'Ubaydallah b.
Musa—Isra’il—Abu Ishaq—Hunaydah b. Khalid al-Khuza'I: The
Prophet was fighting when a man came to him and said "O Mes¬
senger of God, give me a sword to fight with." The Prophet asked
"Perhaps you want to be in the rear rank of the fighters?" and the
man replied "No." The Prophet gave him a sword, which he took,
reciting the [following] verses:
I am a man who gave an oath to his friend
[there] at the palm trees' feet
That I shall never betray and turn to the rear rank
but shall with the sword of God and the Apostle hit.
He continued to fight until [the enemy] turned to him and killed
him.
Numayr al-Khuza'i. 655
According to Muhammad b. Khalaf al-'Asqalani and Muham¬
mad b. 'Awf al-Ta’i, of Hims—al-Firyabi—'Isam b. Qudamah—
Malik b. Numayr al-Khuza'i—his father: The latter saw the
654. Ibn Hajar, Isdbah, D3, 612.
655. Khallfahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 108.
146
Biographies
[2415] Prophet sitting during the prayer, putting his arm on his right
thigh, raising his slightly bent forefinger, and praying. 656
Nafi' b. 'Abd al-Harith. 657
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Bashshar—'Abd al-Rahman [b.
Mahdl]—Sufyan [al-Thawrl]—Habib—someone—Nafi' b. 'Abd
al-Harith—the Prophet: A spacious home, a good neighbor, and a
comfortable means of transport are among the things that make a
Muslim happy.
'Amr b. Sha’s. 658
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Salamah [b. al-
Fadl]—[Muhammad] Ibn Ishaq—Aban b. Salih—'Isa b. al-Fadl b.
Ma'qil b. Sinan al-Ashja'i—Abu Burdah b. Niyar b. Mikraz al-
Aslami 659 —his maternal uncle 'Amr b. Sha’s—the Prophet: Who¬
ever harms 'All harms me.
Al-Qa'qa' b. Abi Hadrad. 660
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. Ibrahim, known as Ibn Sudran, and
Ya'qub b. Ibrahim b. Jubayr al-Wasiti—Safwan b. 'Isa—'Abdallah
b. Sa'Id—his father—al-Qa'qa' b. Abi Hadrad al-Aslami: The
Prophet used to say: Subject yourselves to a hard life, wear coarse
clothes, and walk barefoot.
Mu'adh b. Anas al-Juhani. 661
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—Sa'id b. al-
Walid—['Abdallah] Ibn Mubarak—Yahya b. Ayyub—'Abdallah b.
[2416] Sulayman—Isma'Il b. Yahya al-Ma'afirl—Sahl b. Mu'adh b. Anas
656. Wa-huwa yad'u, i.e., appeals to God, as distinct from yusalli , i.e., performs
the ritual prayer. See also Ibn Sa'd, Vll/r, 42-43.
657. His being a Companion was disputed, but he nevertheless was a respected
Muslim and served 'Umar as governor of Mecca. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 62,-
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 127; idem, Tabaqat, 109.
6s8. Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 62.
659. That is, the Aslam of Khuza'ah; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 240.
660. Khallfahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, rro-rr.
66r. He does not belong in this chapter on Khuza'is, being of the Juhaynah and
an ally of the Ansar. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 95; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
i2r.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 147
al-Juhanl—his father—the Prophet: Whoever protects a believer
from a Hypocrite's ( munafiq ) evil tongue, God will send an angel
to him who will protect his flesh from hell's fire on the Day of
Judgment; and whoever imputes [evil] to a believer wishing to
disgrace him, God will detain him on the bridge of hell until he
rejects what he said.
The Names of the Ash’arts Who Transmitted
[Traditions] from the Prophet
These are the Banu al-Ash'ar, whose [real] name was Nabt b. Udad
b. Zayd b. Yashjub b. 'Arib b. Zayd b. Kahlan b. Saba’ b. Yashjub b.
Ya'rub b. Qahtan 662
Abu Musa, 'Abdallah and his brother Abu Burdah. 663
Abu Malik al-Ash'ari. 664
According to Yunus b. 'Abd al-A'la—['Abdallah] Ibn Wahb—
Mu'awiyah b. Salih—Hatim b. Kurayb—Malik b. Abi Maryam—
'Abd al-Rahman b. Ghanm al-Ash'ari—Abu Malik al-Ash'ari—
the Prophet: Indeed, people of my community will drink wine,
calling it by other names, 665 and will have musical instruments
played before them. God will make the earth swallow them up
and will turn them into monkeys and pigs. 666
662. A Yemeni tribe,- see Caskel, n, 66; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 397-98; Ibn al-
Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 339-42.
663. An eminent Companion who served as a commander during the conquests
and a governor of al-Kufah and al-Basrah for 'Umar. See "al-Ash'ari, Abu Musa,"
EP, I, 695-96 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); Jeffery, 209-11; Ibn Hibban, Mashahiz, 65;
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 132-33. On Abu Burdah, see Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 68, 133; Ibn Hibban, Mashahiz, 167-68; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 18.
664. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 68. He is known as a sort of religious guide
to his clan. See Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasaz, XXIX, 141-45.
665. There is a debate among Muslim scholars about what exactly wine is and
whether only grape wine is forbidden or any other alcohol as well; see "Khamr,"
EP, IV, 994-97 (A. J. Wensinck).
666. Cf. Qur’an 5:65.
148
Biographies
The Names of [the People of] Hadramawt 667 Who
Transmitted [Traditions] from the Prophet
Wa’il b. Hujr al-Hadrami. 668
[2417] 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'A’ish al-Hadrami. 669
According to al-'Abbas b. al-Walid—his father—Ibn Jabir and al-
Awza'I—Khalid b. al-Lajlaj—'Abd al-Rahman b. 'A’ish al-
Hadrami: One morning the Prophet was leading us in prayer,
when someone said to him "I never saw your face as radiant as this
morning." The Prophet replied:
The thing with me is, that my Lord appeared before me in
the most wonderful way, and said: "O Muhammad, [do
you know] what the celestial council disputes about?" I
said: "You know better, my Lord." He put His hand be¬
tween my shoulders; I felt its coolness in my chest, and I
knew what there was in heaven and on earth. He recited
the following verse: "Thus do We show Abraham the
kingdom of the heavens and the earth, and [it is] so that he
may be one of the convinced." 670 He asked [again]: "What
does the celestial council dispute about, O Muhammad?"
I said: "About the atonements, 671 my Lord." He asked:
667. Hadramawt, the well-known region in the southern part of the Arabian
peninsuia, was the dwelling of the royal tribe of Kindah; see “Hadramawt," EP-, III,
51-53 |A. F. L. Beeston). Arab genealogists treat the Hadramawt as a tribal group
(cf. Genesis 10:26), and, indeed, Hadramis do behave as one (see, e.g., Nasr b.
Muzahim, passim). However, the precise place of the Hadramawt in the genealogi¬
cal scheme and their relation to other groups, especially the Kindah, are by no
means clear. See, e.g., al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 9-10; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 460;
Muhammad Ibn Habib, Munammaq, 20; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 72.
668. A king in Hadramawt (although not mentioned in al-Himyari) who em¬
braced Islam and was warmly and generously treated by the Prophet. He later
associated with Mu'awiyah and his governor Ziyad b. Ablhi. See Ibn Hibban,
Mashahlr, 77; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 460; al-Dhahabi, Siyar, II, 572-73; al-Tabari,
Ta’rlkh, II, 132-37 (on his role in the Hujr b. 'Adi affair).
669. Apparently known only in connection with the tradition recorded here,- his
being a Companion is disputed. See Ibn Sa'd, VII/2,150; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 405-
6 .
670. Qur’an 6:75, trans. Bell, I, 122,- cf. al-Tabari, fdrni', VII, 247.
671. Kaffarat, sing. Kaffarah, a technical term meaning "an expiatory or pro¬
pitiatory act that grants remission for faults of some gravity"; see "Kaffara," EP,
IV, 406-7 (J. Chelhod).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 149
"And what are they?" I said: "Arriving at the Friday
prayers by foot, sitting in the mosques after the prayers,
and performing the ritual ablution [even] in times of
danger." And He said: "Whoever acts in this way will live
in virtue and die in virtue and will be [cleansed] from his
sins, as [he was] on the day his mother gave birth to him.
Feeding [the poor], greeting [one's fellow-Muslim], and
praying at night when [other] people are sleeping are
among the virtues by which one is raised; ask, and you
will be given." The Prophet said: "O God, I ask You that
[You lead me to] the good things and keep me away from
the forbidden ones; [lead me] to love the poor, and forgive
me; if I am tempted to do evil to people, then take me unto
You before I fall in the temptation." Learn all this for, by
Him Who holds my soul in His hand, they are true.
Of the Kindah
Gharafah b. al-Harith al-Kindi. 672
According to Ibn Mahdl—['Abdallah] Ibn al-Mubarak—
Harmalah b. 'Imran—'Abdallah b. al-Harith al-Azdi—Gharafah [2418]
b. al-Harith al-Kindi: I was present at the Farewell Pilgrimage with
the Prophet; when the sacrifice camels were brought he said "Call
Abu al-Hasan for me." ['All b. Abi Talib] was summoned and the
Prophet said "Seize the lower part of the javelin." ['All did this];
the Prophet seized its upper part, and they stabbed the animals
with it. When the Prophet had finished he rode his mule and
mounted 'All behind him.
'Abdallah b. Nufayl. 673
According to 'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Walid—'Umar b. Sa'id al-
Dimashqi—Abu Bakr al-Nahshall—'Abdallah b. Salam—Abu
Salamah Sulayman b. Abi Sulaym—'Abdallah b. Nufayl al-
672. Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 9 6-, Ibn Sa'd ; VII/2, 145. According to Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, IE, 185, he was one of the notables of Egypt and corresponded with the
second caliph, 'Umar (al-Tabari does not mention him in the Annals).
673. His being a Companion is disputed, and the entry on him in Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, n, 376 (quoting also our text) records no biographical details.
150
Biographies
Kindi—the Prophet: God has already passed judgment in three
matters, so do not violate any of them. Let none of you act wrong¬
fully, for God says "O People, by acting wrongfully you only
wrong yourselves"; 674 and let none of you deceive [another], for
God says "But evil plotting encompasses only those who practice
it"; 675 and let no one of you break his word, for God says "Who¬
ever breaks faith, to his own hurt he breaks it." 676
Those Who Transmitted [Traditions] from the
Prophet, of the Rest of the Azd
Munib al-Azdi. 677
According to Musa b. Sahl—Sulayman b. 'Abd al-Rahman al-
Dimashqi—'Utbah b. Hammad—Munib b. Mudrik al-Azdi—his
father—his grandfather [Munib al-Azdi]: [Once], in pre-Islamic
times, I heard the Prophet say to the people "Say 'There is no God
but Allah/ so that you prosper." At noon a girl came with a bowl
of water, and the Prophet washed his face, then said "My girl,
rejoice and do not be sad; do not fear that your father will be
[2419] overpowered or humiliated." I asked who it was and was told
"Zaynab, his daughter." She was a young girl then.
I was also told this story by 'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Amr al-
Ghazzi—Ishaq b. Ibrahim al-Ramli—Sulayman b. 'Abd al-
Rahman Abu Ayyub al-Dimashqi—Abu Khulayd 'Utbah b. Ham-
mad al-Hakami—Munib b. Mudrik al-Azdi—his father—his
grandfather [Munib al-Azdi]: [Once], in pre-Islamic times, I heard
the Prophet say to the people "Say 'There is no God but Allah,' so
that you prosper." Some people spat in his face, others threw soil
at him, yet others cursed him. At noon a girl came with a bowl of
water, and he wahsedhis face, then said "My girl, rejoice. . ." The
rest of the story is identical with Musa b. Sahl's version.
674. Qur’an 10:24.
675. Qur’an 35:41, trans. Bell, II, 432.
676. Qur’an 48:10, trans. Bell, II, 520.
677. Abu Ayyub al-Azdi al-Ghamidi, who lived in Syria. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah,
III, 465; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, XXV, 275. His house was still known centuries
after his death, see Ibn 'Asakir, Ta’rikh, XVII, 250.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 151
Of the Hamdan
[Hamdan] is Asalah b. Malik b. Zayd b. Asalah b. Rabi'ah b. al-
Khiyar b. Malik b. Zayd b. Kahlan b. Saba’. 678
'Abd Khayr b. Yazid al-Khaywam. 679
His kunyah was Abu 'Umarah; he was contemporaneous with
the Prophet.
He reported that a letter from the Prophet had reached [his clan]
and that he remembered it.
'Abd Khayr was counted among the companions of 'All b. Abi
Talib, on whose side he participated in [the battle of] Siffln. 680
According to Muhammad b. Khalid—Mushir b. 'Abd al-Malik
b. Sal'—his father: I said to 'Abd Khayr: "O Abu 'Umarah, you are
an old man! How many years have you lived?" He replied "One
hundred and twenty years." I asked "Do you remember anything
about the Barbarians?" 681 He said: "I remember that my mother
cooked [something in a] pot for us, and I said 'Give us [something]
to eat/ but she replied '[Wait] until your father comes.' My father [242.0]
then came and said 'A letter from the Prophet arrived prohibiting
carrion meat.' I remember that [the pot] contained carrion meat
and [my father] urged us to shun it."
Suwayd b. Hubayrah, an inhabitant of al-Basrah. 682
According to 'Abdallah b. Ishaq al-Naqid al-Wasiti and al-
Husayn b. 'All al-$uda’i—Rawh—Abu Na'amah al-'AdawI ['Amr
b. 'Isa]—Muslim b. Budayl—Iyas b. Zuhayr—Suwayd b.
Hubayrah: I heard the Prophet say: The best property a man can
have is a prolific filly (muhiah ma'murah) or a fruitful palm or-
678. A large, powerful Yemeni tribal confederation. Read Awsalah for Asalah.
See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 392; "Hamdan," El 2 , HI, 122-23 (J- Schleifer [W. M.
Watt]); Abu Yasin. Note that apparently only the first biography under this rubric
is of a Hamdani.
679. A Kufan Successor. See al-Dulabi, n, 37; al-Tabari, Ta’iikh, I, 3152; Ibn
Hibban, Thiqat, V, 130-31; Ibn Hajar, I sab ah, IE, 96, and Tahdhlb, VI, 113-14.
680. Nasrb. Muzahim, 136, 342, 353.
681. Ami al-juhhal, "the matter of the Barbarians," that is, pre-Islamic times
(the Jahiliyyah).
682. A Successor,- there are various versions of his tribal affiliation. See Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, n, ioo-i; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 193.
15 *
Biographies
chard [sikkah ma’burah). Al-SudaTs version ends here, whereas
al-Naqid added to his own version: sikkah means palm trees, and
muhrah ma’muiah means [a filly] foaling many times.
Abu al-Minhal's father. 683
According to Zurayq b. al-Sikht—Shababah b. Sawwar—Salm
b. Abi Bilal—'Abd al-Malik b. Abi Bashir—Abu al-Minhal—his
father—the Prophet: Sleeping [in the time] between the setting
and the rising of the stars is most harmful.
'Umayr b. Wahb, the Prophet's maternal uncle. 684
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. 'Abdallah al-Hilali Abu Mas'ud al-
Mukattib—Sa'id b. Sallam—Hisham b. al-Ghaz—Muhammad b.
Aban—'Umayr b. Wahb, the Prophet's maternal uncle: [Once] the
Prophet saw 'Umayr approaching, so he spread his garment for
[2421] him and said "Sit down." ['Umayr] asked "Should I sit on your
garment, O Messenger of God?" the Prophet said "Sit down, for
one's maternal uncle is [like a] father to one." 685 When he sat
down the Prophet said "Shall I teach you the words God teaches
those whose happiness He wants, [words] that He does not let
them forget until they die?" 'Umayr replied "Certainly, O Mes¬
senger of God." The Prophet then said "Say 'O God, I am weak, so
strengthen me, with Your consent; take me by the forelock [and
lead me] toward what is good; with Your mercy, let me attain Your
mercy that I wish for ; let Islam be my ultimate goal; make me
[find] love with people and a covenant with you.'" 686
'Abdallah b. Hilal. 687
According to Bishr b. Adam —Zayd b. al-Hubab—Bishr b. 'Im-
683. His identity is unclear; see Ibn Hibban, Mashahu, 156. Ibn Sa'd mentions
two persons by that name with no details. The tradition recorded here is not
mentioned in Zaghlul's Mawsu'at atraf al-hadith.
684. That is, brother of the Prophet's mother, Aminah bt. Wahb of the Qurashi
clan Zuhrah, not to be confused with 'Umayr b. Wahb of the Qurashi clan Jumah;
see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, HI, 37. Almost nothing is known about him ; he is not
mentioned even once in the Siiah of Ibn Hisham and is ignored by Ibn Sa'd.
685. Cf. p. 97, above.
686. Cf. Qur’an 2:80, 9:7.
687. His identity is unclear. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 339, 378; Ibn Abi Hatim,
II/2, r93.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 153
ran—his patron 'Abdallah b. Hilal: My father brought me to the
Prophet, who put his hand on my head and blessed me. He seemed
to me an old, hairy man, who fasted during daytime and prayed
during the night. I remember the coolness of the Prophet's hand
on the crown of my head.
Mu'adh b. 'Abdallah b. Khubayb's paternal uncle. 688
According to Muhammad b. Ma'mar—Abu 'Amir—'Abdallah
b. Abi Sulayman, an old man from Medina—Mu'adh b. 'Abdallah
b. Khubayb—his father—his paternal uncle: The Prophet emerged
before us, traces of water on his head, while we were sitting in
company. We said "O Messenger of God, we see that you are
cheerful," whereupon he said "Indeed." The people then started
talking about wealth, and the Prophet said "There is nothing
wrong in wealth when a person is God fearing, but health is better
than wealth for the God fearing, and cheerfulness is a blessing."
Abu Fatimah. 689
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. 'Awf—Muhammad b. Isma'Il—his
father—Damdam—Shurayh b. 'Ubayd—Kathir b. Murrah—Abu
Fatimah, who said to the Prophet "O Messenger of God, tell me
about an act that will put me on the right path [if I perform it]." 690
The Prophet said "You should perform the emigration ( hijrah ),
for there is nothing like it." I asked [again] "O Messenger of God,
tell me about an act that will put me on the right path [if I perform
it]." He said "You should fast, for there is nothing like fasting."
I said [again] "Tell me, O Messenger of God, about an act that
will put me on the right path [if I perform it]." He said "You should
perform the prostration before God, for whenever you perform
a prostration God raises you by one degree and takes a sin off
you."
688. His identity is unclear. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, ID, 429; Ibn Abi Hatim, IV/i,
426-27.
689. An Egyptian of the Azd. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 115; al-Dulabi,
I, 47; Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 198.
690. Cf. Ibn Abi Shaybah, Iman, 16, where a similar story is attributed to the
Companion Mu'adh b. Jabal.
[2422]
154
Biographies
Wahb b. Hudhayfah. 691
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—'Uthman b.
Sa'id—Khalid—'Amr b. Yahya—his paternal uncle Wasi' b.
Habban—Wahb b. Hudhayfah—the Prophet: A man has a right to
his seat; if he gets up to fulfill some need or other, then comes
back, he has a right to his seat.
Al-Harith b. Malik. 692
According to Sahl b. Musa al-Razi—al-Hajjaj b. Muhajir—
Ayyub b. Khut—Layth—Zaydb. Rufay'—al-Harith b. Malik, who
said, while with the Prophet "I am truly a believer," whereupon
the Prophet said "Be careful with what you say, for every state¬
ment has its proper sense." 693 Al-Harith said: "O Messenger of
God, I have ordered my soul to turn away from this world, and it
[obeyed] calmly; I have abstained from drinking 694 during the
daytime and have spent the nights awake. It is as if I look at the
[2423] throne of the Lord and at paradise's dwellers paying visits to one
another and at hell's dwellers howling to one another." The
Prophet said "You have turned away [from this world], so adhere
[to your way]; you have turned away [from this world], so adhere
[to your way]." 695 The Prophet then added "Whoever likes to be¬
come happy by looking at a servant [of God] whose heart was lit
with faith by God, let him look at al-Harith b. Malik." Al-Harith
then asked [the Prophet] "Pray to God that I may die as a shahldl"
The Prophet prayed for him, and he fell as a shahid.
Abu al-Hamra’ 696
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
691. Of the KinanI clan Ghifar or the Muzaynah, a rather insignificant Compa¬
nion. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, III, 641,• Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 33.
692. An Ansari killed during the Prophet's lifetime; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I,
289-90.
693. There is a dispute among Muslim scholars as to whether it is permissible to
declare oneself a believer or to say "I am a believer if God so wills" or a similar
expression. This is connected to the commendable quality of modesty as well as to
such theological problems as the true sense of belief, the difference between belief
( Iman ) and Islam, and free will vs. predestination. See, e.g., Ibn Abi Shaybah, Iman,
21-25; idem., Musannaf, XI, 42-43.
694. Or, "made myself lean," i.e., fasted.
695. Cf. Ibn Abi Shaybah, Iman, 43.
696. Apparently not the Prophet's client mentioned in some sources (al-Dulabl,
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 155
According to 'Abd al-A'la b. Wasil and Sufyan b. Waki'—Abu
Nu'aym al-Fadl b. Dukayn—Yunus b. Abi Ishaq—Abu Da’ud—
Abu al-Hamra’: I lived in Medina for seven months during the
Prophet's lifetime,- each day at dawn I saw the Prophet come to the
door of 'All and Fatimah and call "To the prayer, to the prayer;
indeed, 'Allah simply wishes to take away the foulness from you
and to purify you thoroughly.' " 697
Al-Haddar. 698
According to Muhammad b. 'Awf—his father—Shuqayr,
al-'Abbas' client: [Shuqayr] heard al-Haddar, the Prophet's Compa¬
nion, say to al-'Abbas, after having seen him eating white bread
and other things immoderately "I never saw the Prophet satisfy
his hunger with wheat bread until God took him."
Ziyad b. Mutarrif. 699
According to Zakariya’ b. Yahya b. Aban al-Misrl—Ahmad b.
Ishkab—Yahya b. Ya'la al-Muharibl—'Ammar b. Zurayq al-
Dabbl—Abu Ishaq al-Hamdani—Ziyad b. Mutarrif—the Prophet:
Whoever wishes to live like me and to die like me and to enter the [2424]
garden some of whose branches God promised to give me, [from
trees] Fie had planted in that garden of eternity, [whoever wishes
to attain this], let him befriend 'All b. Abi Talib and his descen¬
dants after him, for they will never lead him out through the door
of the right path, and never lead him in through the door of error.
I, 25; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, in, 435-36) or he would not have "lived in Medina for
seven months" but would rather have lived there permanently. Ibn Hajar, Isabah,
IV, 46, mentions another person by that kunyah, of whom he knows only that he
participated in Badr and Uhud.
697. Qur’an 33:33, trans. Bell, n, 414. This is a version of what is called The
Tradition of the Covering (hadlth al-kisa’), which aims at identifying the ahl al-
bayt, i.e., the family of the Prophet. The proper identification of the term is
directly connected with the political issue of authority, as the Shi'is applied it to
'All, Fatimah, and their descendants only, whereas the 'Abbasids included them¬
selves in it. See Sharon, "Notes"; idem, "Development"; idem, "The Umayyads";
"Ahl al-bayt," El 1 , 1, 257-58 (I. Goldziher, C. van Arendonck, and A. S. Tritton).
For other versions of the tradition, see Ibn Hanbal, Musnad, VI, 292; Arazi and
El'ad, 241, 254 no. 39; see also Zaghlul, HI, 555.
698. A KinanI who lived in Him?; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, HI, 600.
699. Apparently known only in connection with the tradition quoted here; see
Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 559.
156
Biographies
Junadah b. Malik. 700
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’] and Muham¬
mad b. 'Umar b. al-Hayyaj al-Hamdanl—Yahya b. 'Abd al-Rah-
man—'Ubaydah b. al-Aswad—al-Qasim b. al-Walid—Mus'ab b.
'Abdallah al-Azdi—'Abdallah b. Junadah—Junadah b. Malik—the
Prophet: There are three features of the people of the Jahiliyyah
never to be given up by the people of Islam—praying to the stars
for rain, 701 finding fault with one another's genealogy, 702 and
wailing for the dead. 703
Abu Udhaynah. 704
According to 'Ubayd b. Adam b. Abi Iyas—his father—al-Layth
b. Sa'd—Musa b. 'Ulayy b. Rabah—his father—Abu Udhaynah—
the Prophet: The best of your women are those who are prolific, af¬
fectionate, obedient, and generous, provided they are God fearing.
The worst of your women are those who dress up and are con¬
ceited. These are the Hypocrites ( munafiqat ) ; such a one's reach¬
ing paradise is [a phenomenon] as rare as a white-footed raven.
Ibn Nudaylah. 705
According to Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-Hakam—Ay-
[2425] yub b. Suwayd—al-Awza'I—Abu 'Ubayd 706 —al-Qasim b. Muk-
haymirah—Ibn Nudaylah: A famine befell the people during the
Prophet's lifetime, and they appealed to him "O Messenger of
700. Of the tribe of Azd ; see al-Bukhari, Ta'iikh, II, 232-34; Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 194.
He is confused with one Junadah b. Abi Umayyah, and, to add to the confusion,
there are two by the latter name, one of them quite well known. See Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, I, 247, 245-46; Khallfahb. Khayyat, Ta'iikh, 159, 216; idem, Tabaqat, 116,
3 ° 5 , 309.
701. Prayer for rain ( istisqa ’) was practiced both in pre-Islamic and in Islamic
times, naturally with differences arising from paganism vs. monotheism. See
Goldziher, Muslim Studies, I, 41; "Istisqa’," EP-, IV,269-70 (T. Fahd).
702. Genealogy, nasab (here nisbah ), was pivotal in the social life of the Arabs
both before and after Islam. Boasting of their own genealogy and degrading that of
the others were customary among both tribes and individuals and were strongly
repudiated by Islam. See Goldziher, Muslim Studies, I, chap. 2.
703. The traditional pre-Islamic way of wailing for the dead, niyahah or nawh,
was strictly forbidden by Islam,- see note 179, above.
704. Apparently known only in connection with the tradition recorded here,- see
Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 4-5. Al-DulabI mentions only his name.
705. Apparently known only in connection with the tradition recorded here,- see
Ibn al-Athir, Usd, V, 331.
706. He was Sulayman b. ‘Abd al-Malik's doorkeeper; see de Goeje, 2424 n. h.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 157
God, announce fixed prices for us." He retorted: "Let not God call
me to account for a custom ( sunnah ) I introduced to you without
His ordering me to do it. Nay, ask God for His favor." 707
Abu al-Mu'alla's father. 708
According to al-Fadl b. Sahl al-A'raj—Mu'alla b. Mansur—
'Ubaydallah b. 'Amr—'Abd al-Malik b. 'Umayr—Abu al-Mu'al-
la—his father: The Prophet stood at the pulpit and said "My foot is
placed at one of paradise's gates." 709
Murrah. 710
According to al-Hasan b. 'Arafah—'Umar b. 'Abd al-Rahman—
Muhammad b. Juhadah—Muhammad b. 'Ajlan—Murrah's
daughter—her father—the Prophet: One who acts as guardian of
an orphan, whether on his own or someone else's behalf, will be
with me in paradise [as close to me as that], if he fears God; and he
indicated [it] with his forefinger and middle finger.
'Ubaydallah b. Mihsan. 711
According to Salih b. Mismar—Muhammad b. 'Abd al-'AzIz—
Marwan—'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Shumaylah al-Ansarl—Sala-
mah b. 'Ubaydallah b. Mihsan—his father—the Prophet: Whoever
of you gets up in the morning safe in his family and property, sound
in his body, having food for the day, it is as if he owned this world.
'Asim b. Hadrah. 712
According to 'Imran b. Bakkar al-Kala'i—Yahya b. Salih—Sa'id
707. Sunnah is a term indicating all the customs and practices of the Prophet
considered to be the paradigm of a good Muslim's behavior. Here the idea is ex¬
pressed that not only the Qur’an, but also the sunnah, has a divine origin See
Goldziher, Muslim Studies, n, 24-38 and passim.
708. An Ansari, known in connection with the tradition recorded here; see Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, IV, 182-83.
709. Tui'ah min tuia' al-jannah. Tufah means both the pulpit's flight of steps
and a gate or door. The word is here used in both meanings simultaneously, the
idea being that this very flight of steps leads to paradise.
710. I could not trace this individual.
711. An Ansari, apparently known only in connection with the tradition record¬
ed here,- see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 439-40; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 65.
712. Or Hadrad, an Ansari known in connection with the tradition recorded
here; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 245.
158
Biographies
[2426] b. Bashir—Qatadah [b. Di'amah]—al-Hasan [al-Basrl]: We entered
'Asim b. Hadrah's [home], and he said to us "The Prophet never
ate at a table, never carried a cushion with him, and never had a
doorkeeper."
Abu Maryam al-Filastini. 713
According to Muhammad b. Sahl b. 'Askar—Abu Mushir ['Abd
al-A'la b. Mushir]—Sadaqah b. Khalid—Yazid b. Abi Maryam—
al-Qasim b. Mukhaymirah—a man of the people of Filastin whose
kunyah was Abu Maryam. This man came to see Mu'awiyah, and
the latter asked him to recite a tradition ( hadith ) he had heard
from the Prophet. Abu Maryam said: I heard the Prophet say:
"Whoever is appointed by God to take care of any of the Muslims'
affairs and shuts his eyes to their need and want and poverty, God
will shut His eyes to [this ruler's] need and want and poverty on
the Day of Judgment.
Rashid b. Hubaysh. 714
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Bashshar—Muhammad b.
Bakr—Said [b. Abi 'Arubah]—Qatadah [b. Di'amah]—Muslim b.
Yasar—Abu al-Ash'ath al-San'ani—Rashid b. Hubaysh: The
Prophet visited 'Ubadah b. al-Samit, 715 who was ill, and said "Do
you know the identity of the martyrs ( shuhada ’) of my com¬
munity?" The people remained silent; 'Ubadah b. al-Samit said
"Assist me [to sit up]," which they did, and he answered: "Those
who bear patiently and seek God's reward." The Prophet then
said: "In that case, the martyrs of my community are few. [I say
that] to be killed in the path of God counts as martyrdom
(shahadah ), and so do death in a plague, drowning, death by a belly
[2427] disease, and the death of a woman in labor; [such a woman's] child
pulls his mother to paradise by the umbilical cord." Abu al-'Aw-
713. Of the Azd tribe, al-Dulabr, 1,53-54; Ibn Sa'd,VII/2,150. There is, however,
a confusion between several persons of that kunyah. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, r79;
Khalrfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 3r3; Ibn al-Athir, Usd, V, 295-96.
7r4. It is disputed whether he was a Companion or a Successor; he is known in
connection with the tradition recorded here; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 494.
7 r 5. An eminent Ansari and the first judge in Filastin. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II,
268-69; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 87-88; al-Safadl, XVI, 6r8-r9.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 159
wwam added: "And the keepers of the temple at Jerusalem (bayt
al-maqdis ) [are martyrs] and also [those who die by] fire or ulcera¬
tion in the lungs."
Aws b. Shurahbll. 716
According to 'Abdallah b. Ahmad b. Shabbuyah—Ishaq b.
Ibrahim—'Amr b. al-Harith—'Abdallah b. Salim—al-Zabidi—
'Ayyash b. Mu’nis—Abu Nimran al-Rahabl—Aws b. Shurahbll,
one of the Banu al-Mujammi'—the Prophet: He who goes [along]
with an unjust [ruler] and supports him, knowing that he is unjust,
has forsaken Islam [by this act]. 717
'Abd al-Rahman b. Khanbash. 718
According to 'Ubaydallah b. 'Umar—Ja'far b. Sulayman al-
Duba'I—Abu al-Tayyah: Someone asked 'Abd al-Rahman b.
Khanbash, who was [then] a very old man "O Ibn Khanbash, what
used the Prophet to do when the devils plotted against him?" He
said: "The devils came down upon the Prophet from the moun¬
tains and the valleys, intending [to harm] him. Among them was a
devil with a burning piece of wood with which he intended to burn
the Prophet. The Prophet was scared when he saw them, [but]
Jibril came to him and said 'O Muhammad, repeat after me "I seek
refuge in the words of God, which neither the pious nor the sinner
can transgress; [I seek refuge] from the evil that He created and
made out of nothing and caused to be and from the evil that de- [2428]
scends from the sky and that which ascends it, from the evil that
is sown in the earth and that which grows out of it, from the evil of
the temptations of night and day, and from the evil of anyone
knocking at the door, 719 except one [who brings] good, O Merci¬
ful.'" 720 Then the devils' fire was extinguished and they were
defeated by God."
716. Or Shurahbll b. Aws, a Companion, resident of Hims, known in connection
with the tradition recorded here, see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 85.
717. This is an antiquietist tradition; but cf. p. 102, above.
718. A Tamlmi, resident of al-Basrah; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 396-97.
719. Or, "the evil of every diviner" (practicing divination by pebbles).
720. Cf. Qur’an 7:200, 23:97, 41:36, 113, 114; and see note 620, above.
160 Biographies
Ibn Ju'dubah. 721
He transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to al-'Abbas b. al-Walld—Sa'id b. Mansur—Ya'qub b.
'Abd al-Rahman and 'Abd al-'Aziz b. Abi Hazim—Abu Hazim
[Salamah b. Dinar]—Muhammad b. Ka'b—Ibn Ju'dubah—the
Prophet: God is pleased with three things and hates three things
for you to do: He is pleased that you worship Him without at¬
tributing any partner to Him and that you all hold fast to the
covenant of God without being at variance with one another and
that you obey those whom God has appointed to rule you. 722 He
hates you to engage in gossip, to ask too many questions, and to
waste money. 723
Abu Mu'attib b. 'Amr. 724
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Salamah [b. al-
Fadl]—Muhammad b. Ishaq—al-Hasan b. Dinar—'Ata’ b. Abi
Marwan al-Aslami—his father—Abu Mu'attib b. 'Amr: When the
Prophet looked down on Khaybar he said to his Companions,
among whom I was [too] 725 "Stop!" Then he said: "O God, Lord
of the heavens and whatever lies under their shadows, Lord
of the earth and whatever it sustains, Lord of the devils and
whomever they lead astray, Lord of the winds and whatever they
[2429] scatter! We ask You [to give us] the good of this town and
its people and whatever is in it, and we seek refuge in You from
its evil and the evil of its people and of whatever is in it; ad¬
vance, in the name of God." He used to say this for every town he
entered.
721. Yazld b. 'Iyad, a Basran Successor, of the Kinani clan the Banu Layth. See
Ibn Sa'd, V, 305; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, XI, 308-9.
722. Unity of the community and obedience to rulers are closely connected. See
p. 102 and note 487, above.
723. Or, "property."
724. A Companion, of the Aslam tribe,- he is known to have fought in the
Muslim army during the apostasy wars. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 181; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqdt, 112, 137; al-Dulabl, I, 55.
725. See al-Waqidi, 658, where another report about Khaybar is traced back to
him (he is called Mu'attib al-Aslami there).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 161
The Biographies of the Women Who Embraced Islam
during the Prophet’s Lifetime: Those of Them Who
Passed away before the Emigration
Khadijah bt. Khuwaylid b. Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Qusayy.
Her kunyah was Umm Hind, after one of her daughters named
Hind, whom she bore to 'Atlq b. 'Abid b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b.
Makhzum, and [also] after a son of hers called Hind, whom she
bore to Abu Halah b. al-Nabbash b. Zurarah b. Waqdan b. Habib b.
Salamah b. Ghuwayy b. Jirwah b. Usayyid b. 'Amr b. Tamim.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—al-Mundhir b. 'Abdallah
al-Hizami—Musa b. 'Uqbah—Abu Habibah, al-Zubayr's client—
Hakim b. Hizam: Khadijah bt. Khuwaylid died in Ramadan of the
year io after [the beginning of] the prophethood, 726 at the age of
sixty-five. We carried her from her house to be buried at al-Hajun,
and the Prophet descended into her grave. 727 The prayer over the
bier was then not yet included in the procedure of funerals. Some¬
one asked [Hakim b. Hizam] "When was this [introduced], O Abu
Khalid?" [Hakim] replied "Three years or so before the Emigra¬
tion, shortly after the Banu Hashim came out of the ravine [where
they had been besieged]. 728
Khadijah was the Prophet's first wife, and she bore all his chil¬
dren except Ibrahim, son of Mariyah. Her kunyah was Umm Hind,
after her son from her [former] husband Abu Halah al-Tamimi.
Those of Them Who Died during the Prophet’s [2.430]
Lifetime after the Emigration
Of the Prophet’s daughters: Ruqayyah, Khadijah's daughter. 729
Ruqayyah had been married to 'Utbah b. Abi Lahab b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib before Muhammad was inspired. When the Prophet was
726. The Muslim era starts with the Emigration, and the Muslims have no
concept parallel to that of b.c.. For the years preceding the Emigration various
expressions are used. Here the beginning of the prophethood serves as a starting
point, although the Muslims differed on the exact date of this event. See al-
Sakhawi's I'lam, in Rosenthal, History, 380.
727. Cf. p. 11, above.
728. That is, after the boycott was removed from them. See p. 55, above.
729. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 24; Ibn Sayyid al-Nas, n, 365.
Biographies
162
sent [on his divine mission] and God revealed the verse "The
hands of Abu Lahab have perished/' 730 'Utbah's father said to him
"Divorce Muhammad's daughter, or else all ties between us will
be [irreversibly] severed." So 'Utbah divorced Ruqayyah without
having consummated the marriage. She embraced Islam when her
mother Khadljah did and swore allegiance to the Prophet, together
with the other women. 731 'Uthman b. 'Affan married her, and she
emigrated twice to Abyssinia with him. On the first emigration
she miscarried the child she had from 'Uthman, but later she bore
him a son whom he named 'Abdallah. When the Prophet emi¬
grated [to Medina] she followed suit, after her husband 'Uthman.
Ruqayyah fell ill when the Prophet was preparing to set out for
[the battle of] Badr, so he left 'Uthman behind [to watch over
her]. 732 She died in Ramadan, seventeen months after the
Prophet's Emigration/March 624, while the Prophet was at Badr.
Zayd b. Harithah came from Badr with the good news [of the
victory], and when he entered Medina the [people] were leveling
the earth over her [grave]. 733
Zaynab, the Prophet's daughter.
Her mother was Khadljah. She was the eldest of the Prophet's
daughters.
Zaynab's maternal cousin, Abu al-'As b. al-Rabi', had married
her before the Prophet was sent [on his divine mission]. Abu
al-'As's mother was Halah bt. Khuwaylidb. Asad, Zaynab's mater¬
nal aunt. Zaynab bore Abu al-'As [his children] 'All and Umamah;
'Ali died in infancy, whereas Umamah remained [to live]. 'All b.
[2431] Abi Talib, the Commander of the Faithful, married her after the
death of [his wife] Fatimah, daughter of the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Yahya b. 'Abd-
730. Qur’an 111:4; trans. Bell, II, 684.
731. Hina baya'ahu al-nisa’. This is not to be confused with the so-called bay’at
al-nisa’, the name given to the first pledge of the Ansar in the first 'Aqabah meet¬
ing; see Ibn Hisham, n, 75; Guillaume, 198-99.
732. This account has a political significance, as 'Uthman's opponents accused
him of cowardice and considered him therefore unqualified to rule. 'Uthman's sup¬
porters justified his absence from the battle of Badr by the permission, or even order,
of the Prophet that he should stay behind and watch over the sick Ruqayyah. As for
Uhud, it is claimed that God forgave him. See, e.g., al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 326.
733. Ibn Sa'd, VIII, 24.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 163
allah b. Abi Qatadah—'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr b. Muhammad b.
'Amr b. Hazm: Zaynab, the Prophet's daughter, died at the begin¬
ning of the year 8/the middle of the year 629.
According to al-Tabari: It was reported that the reason for her
death was [as follows]. When she left Mecca, intending to reach
Medina and join her father, Habbar b. al-Aswad caught up with her.
She was [sitting on a camel] in a litter, and he pushed her, where¬
upon she fell on a rock and, being pregnant, miscarried her child and
lost [a lot of] blood. She had this injury and ultimately died of it.
Umm Kulthum, daughter of the Prophet.
Her mother was Khadijah.
She had been married to 'Utaybah b. Abi Lahab before the
Prophet was sent [on his divine mission]. He divorced her for the
same reason that his brother 'Utbah divorced her sister Ruqayyah,
[even] before the consummation of their marriage, 734 as I men¬
tioned [before].
Umm Kulthum emigrated to Medina with the [rest of the]
Prophet's children. Following the death of Ruqayyah, daughter of
the Prophet, he gave Umm Kulthum in marriage to 'Uthman b.
'Affan, in Rabi' I 3/September 624. She remained married to him
until her death; she bore him no children.
Umm Kulthum died in Sha'ban 9/November-December 630.
Women of the Ansar, among them Umm 'Atiyyah, washed her
body, and Abu Talhah descended into her grave. 735
The Prophet’s Wives Who Died during His Lifetime 736
Zaynab bt. Khuzaymah b. al-Harith b. 'Abdallah b. 'Amr b. 'Abd
Manaf b. Hilal b. 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah, named Umm al-Masakln. 737
734. It is not clear whether or not the text argues that 'Utaybah also divorced
Umm Kulthum before the consummation of their marriage. The argument dulls
the edge of the fact that the daughters of the Prophet were already divorced when
'Uthman married them.
735. See p. rr, above.
736. On the wives of the Prophet, see Morsy, and a critique of the book in
Gilliot, "Bulletin d'islamologie", 487-89; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, r766-82; Ibn His-
ham, IV, 293-98; Ibn Ishaq, Siyar, 243-69; Abu Zur'ah, 489-95; Ibn Hazm, Jaw-
ami' al-shah, 31-38; al-Salihl, Azwaj al-nabiyy.
737. "Zainab," El 1 , IV, 1200 (V. Vacca); al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 429; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 26; Ibn Ishaq, Siyar, 258.
164 Biographies
[2432] It was reported that she was thus named in pre-Islamic times.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Muhammad b.
'Abdallah—Ibn Shihab al-Zuhri: Zaynab bt. Khuzaymah al-Hil-
aliyyah was called Umm al-Masakin. She had been married to al-
Tufayl b. al-Harith b. al-Muttalib b. 'Abd Manaf, and he divorced
her.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah, that is, Ibn
Ja'far—'Abd al-Wahid b. Abi 'Awn: [Then] 'Ubaydah b. al-Harith
married her, and he was killed in [the battle] of Badr as a shahid ,
leaving her a widow.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Kathir b. Zayd—al-Mutta¬
lib b. 'Abdallah b. Hantab, and also Muhammad b. Qudamah—his
father: The Prophet asked Zaynab bt. Khuzaymah al-Hilaliyyah,
Umm al-Masakin, in marriage, and she entrusted her affairs to
him. He let it be known that he gave her twelve and a half ounces
[of gold] as bridal gift. 738 The marriage took place in Ramadan,
thirty-one months after the Emigration/February 625. She stayed
with him eight months, then died at the end of Rabi' II, thirty-nine
months after [the Emigration]/October 626. 739 The Prophet said
the prayers over her bier and buried her at al-Baqi'.
Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi] related: I asked 'Abdallah b. Ja'far who it
was that descended into her grave, 740 and he said "three of her
brothers." I asked "How old was she when she died?" He said
"Thirty years or so."
Rayhanah bt. Zayd b. 'Amr b. Khunafah b. Sam'un b. Zayd, of
the Banu al-Nadir. 741
Rayhanah had been married to a man of the Banu Qurayzah
named al-Hakam ; therefore some genealogists traced her pedigree
to the Qurayzah.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Abdallah b.
Ja'far—Yazid b. al-Had—Tha'labah b. Abi Malik: Rayhanah bt.
738. Asdaqaha. See "Mahr," EP-, VI, 78-80 (O. Spies).
739. Although it may seem otherwise, the time here is calculated not from the
actual Emigration, which occurred in the third month of the year (Rabi' I), but from
the first month (Muharram) of the year of the Emigration.
740. Seep. 11, above.
741. A Jewess captured by the Muslims with the Banu Qurayzah. See al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 453-54; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1498.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 165
Zayd b. 'Amr b. Khunafah, of the Banu al-Nadlr, was married to [2433]
one of the [Banu Qurayzah] named al-Hakam. When the Banu
Qurayzah were taken captive the Prophet took her, set her free,
and married her. She was still married to him when she died. 742
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: Rayhanah re¬
mained married to the Prophet until her death on the Prophet's
return from the Farewell Pilgrimage; he buried her in al-Baqf. He
had married her in Muharram 6/May-June 627.
Mulaykah bt. Ka'b al-Laythi. 743
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abd al-'Aziz b. al-
Junda'i—his father—'Ata’ b. Yazld al-Junda'I: The Prophet mar¬
ried Mulaykah bt. Ka'b al-Laythl in Ramadan 8/January 630 and
consummated the marriage. She was still married to him when
she died.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Muhammad b. 'Abdal¬
lah—[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri: The same [as the preceding account].
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Our masters deny this, say¬
ing that the Prophet never married a woman of the Kinanah.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Abu Ma'shar [Najih b.
'Abd al-Rahman]: The Prophet married Mulaykah bt. Ka'b, who
was famous for her outstanding beauty. 'A’ishah went in to her
and said "Are you not ashamed to marry the man who killed your
father?" Mulaykah said that she sought refuge in God from the
Prophet. 744 [On hearing of this] the Prophet divorced her. [People
of] her clan came to the Prophet and said "She is small and has no
mind of her own ; she was beguiled [into saying what she did], so
please take her back." But the Prophet refused. They then asked
his permission to give her in marriage to a relative of hers, of the
Banu 'Udhrah; The Prophet consented, and the 'Udhri married
her.
Mulaykah's father was killed in the conquest of Mecca, at Khan-
damah, 745 by Khalid b. al-Walld.
742. According to other versions (see the previous note), she refused to marry
him and preferred to be his concubine.
743. Of the KinanI clan al-Layth b. Bakr,- see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, i8o ; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 458-59.
744. Cf. pp. 186-89, below.
745. Cf. Ibn Hisham, IV, 49-50.
166
Biographies
Sana bt. al-Salt b. Habib b. Harithah b. Hilal b. Haram b. Sam-
mal b. 'Awf al-Sulamiyyah. 746
According to Hisham b. Muhammad al-Kalbl—someone from
[2434] the family of 'Abdallah b. Khazim al-Sulami: 747 The Prophet mar¬
ried Sana bt. al-Salt b. Habib al-Sulamiyyah, but she died before he
reached her.
Khawlah bt. al-Hudhayl b. Hubayrah b. Qabisah b. al-Harith b.
Habib b. Hurqah b. Tha'labah b. Bakr b. Hubayb b. 'Amr b. Ghanm
b. Taghlib. 748
Her mother was the daughter of Khalifah b. Farwah b. Fadalah b.
Zayd b. Imri’ al-Qays b. al-Khazraj al-Kalbi and the sister of
Dihyah b. Khalifah.
According to Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbi]—al-Sharqi b.
Qutami: The Prophet married Khawlah bt. al-Hudhayl, but she
died on her way, before reaching him. She had been raised by her
maternal aunt, Khimiq bt. Khalifah, Dihyah b. Khalifah's
sister. 749
The [Death] Dates 750 of the Prophet’s Daughters,
Paternal Aunts, and Wives Who Died after Him
Fatimah, the Prophet's daughter.
Her mother was Khadijah bt. Khuwaylid. She was born at the
time when the Quraysh were building the House, 751 five years
before the beginning of the Prophet's mission.
746. Called Sana’ bt. Asma’ in other sources; of the Sulami clan the Banu Sam-
mal. See Lecker, Banu Sulaym, 84; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 463.
747. A nephew of Sana’. He was a famous warrior and governor of Khurasan; see
Lecker, Banu Sulaym, 82.
748. Her father, al-Hudhayl b. Hubayrah, of the Taghlibi clan Tha'labah b. Bakr,
was a distinguished leader in Mesopotamia in pre-Islamic times. See Ibn al-Kalbi,
Nasab ma'add, 93; idem., Jamharat, 574; Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbar, 249-
50; Naqa’id, 473, 703; Caskel, n, 286. One of his daughters, Rayhanah, was taken
captive by the Muslims during the conquests; see al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, I, 2073. On
Khawlah, see al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 460.
749. Ibn Sa'd, VIII, 1T4-15.
750. Dhikr ta’rikh man mata . . . etc. Ta’rikh means "date" as well as "history"
and "biography," but the chapter deals mainly with deaths and dates. Cf. the next
chapter, where it is clear that "dates" are meant in the rubric.
751. That is, the Ka'bah; see Rubin, "The Ka'ba," 98-104.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 167
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Abu Bakr b.
'Abdallah b. Abi Sabrah—Yahya b. Shibl—Abu Ja'far [Muhammad
b. 'Ali b. al-Husayn]: Al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib went to see 'All
and Fatimah [and heard her] say [to 'All] "I am older than you."
Al-'Abbas said: "You, Fatimah, were bom at the time when the
Quraysh were building the Ka'bah; the Prophet was then thirty-
five years old. As for you, 'All, you were bom a few years before
that."
According to al-Tabari: 'Ali married Fatimah in Rajab, five
months after the Prophet's arrival at Medina/January-February [2435]
623, and consummated the marriage on his return from [the battle
of] Badr. She was then eighteen years old. This is so according to
Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Muhammad b.
'Umar b. 'Ali—his father.
Opinions differ concerning the time of her death, although ev¬
eryone agrees that it occurred after the Prophet's death. According
to some, she died six months after the Prophet.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ma'mar [b. Rashid]—[Ibn
Shihab] al-Zuhri—'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr]—'A’ishah, [the Prophet's
wife], and [al-Waqidi]—Ibn Jurayj ['Abd al-Malik b. 'Abd
al-'Aziz]—[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri—'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr]: Fatimah,
daughter of the Prophet, died six months after him. According to
Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi], this is correct. She died on Tuesday night, 3
Ramadan 11/November 23, 632, at the age of twenty-nine or so.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ibn Jurayj ['Abd al-Malik
b. 'Abd al-'Aziz]—'Amr b. Dinar—Abu Ja'far [Muhammad b. 'Ali
b. al-Husayn]: Fatimah died three months after the Prophet.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Umar b. Muhammad b.
'Umar b. 'Ali—his father—'Ali b. al-Husayn—['Abdallah] Ibn
'Abbas: Fatimah was the first [dead person] for whom a bier was
made. Asma’ bt. 'Umays made it for her, after she had seen one
made in Abyssinia.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abd
al-'Aziz—'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr b. Muhammad b. 'Amr b. Hazm—
'Amrah bt. 'Abd al-Rahman: Al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib said
the ritual prayer over the bier of Fatimah, the Prophet's daughter,-
he, 'Ali, and al-Fadl b. al-'Abbas descended into the grave. 752
752. See p. 11, above.
i68
Biographies
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Umar b. Muhammad b.
'Umar b. 'All—his father—'All b. al-Husayn, who asked Ibn
'Abbas about the time Fatimah's burial took place. Al-'Abbas said:
"We buried her at night, after a third of it or so had elapsed." ['All
[2436] b. al-Husayn] asked who had said the prayer over her bier, and
al-'Abbas replied: "'All b. Abi Talib".
Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi] said "I asked 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi al-
Muwall 'Some people say that Fatimah's grave is at the mosque
where the funerary services are held, in al-Baql.'" 'Abd al-Rahman
said: "[No], by God, this is the mosque of Ruqayyah"—meaning
the woman who had built it—"but Fatimah was buried in al-Baqi',
in 'Aqil's place, at the comer next to the dwelling of the Jahsh
family 753 and opposite the private passageway from the Banu
Nubayh's [house], [if you look from the direction] of the Banu 'Abd
al-Dar's [house]. Her grave lies seven dhira's off the road." 754
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Ja'far—
'Abdallah b. Hasan: 755 I [once] found al-Mughirah b. 'Abd al-
Rahman 756 standing in al-Baqi', waiting for me at midday in op¬
pressive heat. I said "O Abu Hashim, what makes you stand
[here]?" He replied: "I was waiting for you; it has come to my
knowledge that Fatimah was buried in this house, in 'Aqil's place,
at the comer next to the dwelling of the Jahsh family. I would like
you to buy it for me for whatever price, to be buried there." Abdal¬
lah said "By God, I shall do that." We tried [to persuade] the 'Aqil
family, but they refused the request of 'Abdallah b. Hasan. 757
According to 'Abdallah b. Ja'far, no one doubts that Fatimah's
grave is in that place.
According to al-Harith—Muhammad b. Ja'far al-Warkani—Jarir
b. 'Abd al-Hamid—Yazid b. Abi Ziyad—'Abdallah b. al-Harith:
Fatimah, the Prophet's daughter, passed away eight months after
753. A family of bedouin (AsadI) origin, allies of the Quraysh, who joined
Muhammad early in his career; see Kister, "On Strangers and Allies", i 37 _ 39 -
754. A Dhiia' equals 29! inches.
755. Perhaps the great-grandson of 'All b. Abi Talib is meant; see Ibn Qudamah,
129. See, on him, p. 245, below.
756. One of the rich, generous notables of the QurashI clan the Makhzum dur¬
ing Umayyad times; see Ibn Qudamah, 361-63.
757. There is a shift in the narration here. The story starts with 'Abdallah b.
Hasan as the narrator, but from "We tried . . ." until the end the narrator is al-
Mughirah.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 169
him. She became emaciated and complained to Asma’ about the
thinness of her body. She asked her "Could you cover me with
something?" Asma’ said "I saw the Abyssinians prepare a bed- [2437]
stead for the [dead] women, then fasten the bier to the bedposts."
So [Fatimah] ordered them to do that [when she died].
According to al-Harith—al-Mada’ini—Abu Zakariyya’
al-'Ajlani: A bier was made for Fatimah before she died. She looked
at it and said "You have shielded me; may God shield you."
Safiyyah, daughter of 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim. 758
Her mother was Halah bt. Wuhayb b. 'Abd Manaf b. Zuhrah b.
Kilab. She was a sister of Hamzah b. 'Abd al-Muttalib from both
parents.
Safiyyah was married to al-Harith b. Harb b. Umayyah b. 'Abd
Shams in pre-Islamic times and bore him [a child named] Safiyy.
She was later married to al-'Awwam b. Khuwaylid b. Asad, to
whom she bore al-Zubayr and 'Abd al-Ka'bah.
Safiyyah embraced Islam and gave the Prophet the oath of alle¬
giance. She emigrated to Medina, [where] she died during the
caliphate of 'Umar b. al-Khattab. Her grave is in al-Baqi', in the
courtyard in front of al-Mughirah b. Shu'bah's dwelling.
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]: Safiyyah bt. 'Abd
al-Muttalib [once] killed a man in a duel.
The Death Dates of the Prophet’s Wives Who Died
after Him
Sawdah bt. Zam'ah b. Qays b. 'Abd Wadd b. Nasr b. Malik b. Hisl
b. 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. 759
Her mother was al-Shamus bt. Qays b. 'Amr b. Zayd b. Labid b.
Khidash b. 'Amir b. Ghanm b. 'Adi b. al-Najjar, of the Ansar. She
was married to al-Sakran b. 'Amr, and they both emigrated to
Abyssinia in the second emigration.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Makhramah b. Bukayr—
his father: Al-Sakran b. 'Amr returned with his wife Sawdah bt.
758. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 120; idem, Tabaqat, 331; al-Baladhuri, An-
sab, HI (Duri), 313; al-Zubayri, 17.
759. Of the QurashI clan 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. See Khallfhah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
335; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 407-9,- Ibn Ishaq, Siyai, 254.
170
Biographies
Zam'ah from Abyssinia to Mecca, where he died, leaving her a
widow. When it was lawful for her [to marry again] 760 the Prophet
sent her a message, asking her to marry him. She said "O Mes-
[2438] senger of God, I entrust my affairs to you." The Prophet said "Ask
a man of your clan to give you in marriage." She asked Hatib b.
' Amr b. 'Abd Shams b. 'Abd Wadd, and he gave her [to the Prophet]
in marriage. She was the first woman the Prophet married after
Khadijah's [death]. 761
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Muhammad b. 'Abdallah
b. Muslim—his father: The Prophet married Sawdah in Ramadan,
in the tenth year after the [beginning of] his prophethood. This
was after Khadijah's death and before his marriage to 'A’ishah. He
consummated the marriage in Mecca, then emigrated to Medina.
Sawdah bt. Zam'ah died in Medina in Shawwal 54/September-
October 674, during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah b. Abi Sufyan.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi], this is the correct version.
According to Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbl]—his father—
Abu Salih [Badham]—['Abdallah] Ibn 'Abbas: Sawdah bt. Zam'ah
was married to al-Sakran b. 'Amr, brother of Suhayl b. 'Amr.
[Once] she dreamed that the Prophet walked until he trod on her
neck. She told her husband about it and he said "By your father's
life, if your dream is true, then I shall die, and Muhammad will
marry you." She said "[God] forbid!" According to Hisham, [she
said] this by way of banishing the [idea]. Another night she
dreamed that a moon fell down from the sky on her while she was
lying down. She told her husband, and he said "By your father's
life, it shall not be long before I die and you will be given in
marriage to [the Prophet]." Since that day al-Sakran suffered from
some complaint; it was not long before he died and the Prophet
married Sawdah.
According to al-Harith—Da’ud b. al-Muhabbar—'Abd al-
Hamldb. Bahram—Shahr [b. Hawshab?]—['Abdallah] Ibn 'Abbas:
The Prophet asked to be given in marriage a woman of his tribe by
760. According to the Muslim law, a widow or divorced woman should wait for
a certain period before remarrying (in order to see whether she is pregnant by her
former husband); see "'Idda," El 2 , III, roro-13 (Y. Linant de Bellefonds).
761. The Prophet never married another woman during Khadijah's lifetime.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 171
the name of Sawdah. She had [already] five or six small children
from her [former] husband, who was dead by then. The Prophet
asked her "What is it that prevents you from [marrying] me?" She [2439]
replied "O Prophet of God, nothing prevents me from [marrying]
you but that you are the most beloved person to me and I respect
you [too much to let] these little children squeal around your head
all the time." The Prophet asked "Is there anything else that pre¬
vents you from [marrying] me?" She replied "No, by God." The
Prophet said to her "The best women ever to have ridden the
backs of camels 762 are the virtuous women of the Quraysh, who
are the most affectionate toward small children and the most ex¬
cellent in doing good to their husbands when they [the women] are
wealthy. 763
'A’ishah, daughter of Abu Bakr. 764
Her mother was Umm Ruman bt. 'Umayr b. 'Amir, of the Banu
Duhman b. al-Harith b. Ghanm b. Malik b. Kinanah. 765
The Prophet married 'A’ishah in Shawwal in the tenth year after
the [beginning of his] prophethood, three years before the Emigra¬
tion. He consummated the marriage in Shawwal, eight months
after the Emigration. On the day he consummated the marriage
with her she was nine years old.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Musa b. Muhammad b.
'Abd al-Rahman—Raytah—'Amrah [bt. 'Abd al-Rahman b.
Sa'd]: 766 'A’ishah was asked when the Prophet consummated his
marriage with her, and she said:
The Prophet left us and his daughters behind when he
emigrated to Medina. Having arrived at Medina, he sent
762. That is, Arab women.
763. Ahnahu 'aid waladin fi sigharihi wa-ai'ahu 'ala ba'lin fi dhat yadin. The
root h-n-w specifically denotes widows who remain unmarried in order to devote
themselves to their children. Cf. al-Waqidi, 867, where the text says "and the most
generous with their property towards their husbands." The context of the tradition
in al-Waqidi is, however, different. See also p. 197, below.
764. The Prophet's most beloved wife and the only one involved in politics after
his death. See "'A’isha bint Abi Bakr," El 2 , 1 , 307-8; al-Baladhurl, Ansdb, 1 , 409-22;
Ibn Qudamah, 73-74; Ibn Ishaq, Siyar, 255-56.
765. Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, r88.
766. Al-Baladhuri, Ansdb, I, 269-70.
172
Biographies
[2440]
Zayd b. Harithah and his client Abu Rafi' for us. He gave
them two camels and 500 dirhams he had taken from Abu
Bakr to buy [other] beasts they needed. Abu Bakr sent with
them 'Abdallah b. Urayqit al-DIli, with two or three
camels. He wrote to [his son] 'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr to take
his wife Umm Ruman, together with me and my sister
Asma’, al-Zubayr's wife, [and leave for Medina]. They all
left [Medina] together, and when they arrived at
Qudayd 767 Zayd b. Harithah bought three camels with
those 500 dirhams. All of them then entered Mecca, where
they met Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah on his way to leave town,
together with Abu Bakr's family. 768 So we all left: Zayd b.
Harithah, Abu Rafi', Fatimah, Umm Kulthum, and
Sawdah bt. Zam'ah. Zayd mounted Umm Ayman and [his
son] Usamah b. Zayd on a riding beast; 'Abdallah b. Abi
Bakr took Umm Ruman and his two sisters, and Talhah b.
'Ubaydallah came [too]. We all went together, 769 and
when we reached Bayd in TamannI 770 my camel broke
loose. I was sitting in the litter together with my mother,
and she started exclaiming "Alas, my daughter, alas [you]
bride"; then they caught up with our camel, after it had
safely descended the Lift. 771 We then arrived at Medina,
and I stayed with Abu Bakr's children, and [Abu Bakr]
went to the Prophet. 772 The latter was then busy building
the mosque and our homes around it, 773 where he [later]
housed his wives. We stayed in Abu Bakr's house for a few
days,- then Abu Bakr asked [the Prophet] "O Messenger of
767. A place near Mecca, see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, IV, 42. Note that the
story temporarily reverts from the first to the third person.
768. Talhah and Abu Bakr belonged to the same QurashI clan, the Banu Taym.
769. The text (and Cairo, 601, and Dar al-Fikr, 604) has "the two of them went
together" ( wa-istahaba ), which makes no sense here. The difference between the
two words is one character, n j wa-istahabna), which can easily be overlooked in a
manuscript.
770. See Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, I, 795, 874.
771. A wadi between Mecca and Medina,- see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, I, 360-
61.
772. De Goeje interprets nazala ila here not as "went" but as "stayed" or "lived
with," the agent of the verb being, according to him, Usamah b. Zayd; see 2440 n. c.
773. See al-Samhudl, II, 322-40.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 173
God, what prevents you from consummating the marriage
with your wife?" The Prophet said "The bridal gift
( sadaq )." Abu Bakr gave him the bridal gift, twelve and a
half ounces [of gold], and the Prophet sent for us. 774 He
consummated our marriage in my house, the one where I
live now and where he passed away. 775
The Prophet made a door in the mosque for his own use, op¬
posite the door of 'A’ishah.
['A’ishah said]: The Prophet consummated his marriage with
Sawdah in one of these houses that are next to mine,- he used to
stay with her.
‘A’ishah died in Ramadan 58/June-July 678.
Those who hold this view. According to Ibn 'Umar [al-
Waqidi]—'Abd al-Rahman b. ‘Abd al-'Aziz—'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr
b. Muhammad b. 'Amr b. Hazm: Abu Hurayrah said the prayer [2441]
over 'A’ishah's bier in Ramadan 58/June-July 678. She died after
the night prayer. 776
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: 'A’ishah died on
Tuesday night, the 17th of Ramadan 58/July 13, 678, and was
buried the same night after the night prayer. She was then sixty-
six years old.
According to Ibn ‘Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ibn Abi Sabrah—Musa b.
Maysarah—Salim Sabalan: 'A’ishah died the night of the 17th of
Ramadan, after the night prayer. She had ordered that she should
be buried the same night. The Ansar gathered and attended [the
funeral], and no other night was ever seen that was more crowded
than that one. [Even] the people of the villages outside Medina
( al-'awali ) came. She was buried in al-Baqi'.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ibn Juray) [‘Abd al-Malik
b. 'Abd al-'Aziz]—Nafi' [client of 'Abdallah b. 'Umar]: I was pres-
774 - It is not cleat whether Abu Bakr pays this sum as dowry or gives the
Prophet the money to pay the bridal gift because the Prophet was short of cash. See
also p. r 89, below.
775* See al-Samhudi, n, 458-60, 540-42.
776. Itar or witz, a prayer consisting of an odd number of prayer units (rak'ahs)
performed at night; see "Witr," El 1 , IV, 1139-40 (A. J. Wensinck).
174
Biographies
ent [at 'A’ishah's funeral when] Abu Hurayrah said the prayer over
her bier; ['Abdallah] b. 'Umar was in the crowd and did not con¬
demn it. 777 Marwan had gone on a lesser pilgrimage ( ’umrah) that
year and appointed Abu Hurayrah vice-governor.
Hafsah, daughter of 'Umar b. al-Khattab. 778
Her mother was Zaynab bt. Maz'un, sister of 'Uthman b.
Maz'un. 779
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Usamah b. Zayd b.
Aslam—his father—his grandfather—'Umar: Hafsah was bom
while the Quraysh were building the Ka'bah, five years before the
Prophet was sent on his divine mission.
According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—Abu Bakr b. 'Abdallah b.
Abi Sabrah—Husayn b. Abi Husayn: The Prophet married Hafsah
in Sha'ban, thirty months after [the Emigration]/February-March
625, before the battle of Uhud.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Hafsah died in Sha'ban
45/October-November 665 during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah.
She was then sixty years old.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ma'mar [b. Rashid]—[Ibn
Shihab] al-Zuhri—Salim [b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. al-Khattab]—
his father: Hafsah died, and Marwan b. al-Hakam, who was then
the governor of Medina, said the prayer over her bier.
[2442] According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—'All b. Muslim—[Sa'Id b.
Abi Sa'id] al-Maqbari—his father: I saw Marwan carrying her bier,
holding it between the two posts, from the Hazm family's to al-
Mughirah b. Shu'bah's house; Abu Hurayrah carried her from al-
Mughlrah's house to her grave.
According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Nafi'—his
father: [The people who] descended into Hafsah's grave 780 were
777. It is not clear what was condemnable here; perhaps that it was not the
governor, Marwan b. al-Hakam, who held the funeral service, as stated in the next
sentence. See also below.
778. "Hafsa," El 2 , III, 63-65; Jeffery, 212,-13; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 422-28;
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 334,- Ibn Qudamah, 75-76; Ibn Ishaq, Siyai, 257.
779. A member of the QurashI clan the Jumah and an early convert, known for
his asceticism; see Ibn Qudamah, 444-45.
780. Seep. 11, above.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 175
'Abdallah and 'Asim, sons of 'Umar, and Salim, 'Abdallah, and
Hamzah, sons of 'Abdallah b. 'Umar.
Umm Salamah, whose [real] name was Hind bt. Abi Umayyah,
whose [real] name was Suhayl Zad al-Rakb 781 b. al-Mughirah b.
'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. Makhzum. 782
Her mother was 'Atikah bt. 'Amir b. Rabi'ah b. Malik b. Jad-
himah b. 'Alqamah Jidhl al-Ti'an b. Firas b. Ghanm b. Malik b.
Kinanah. 783
Umm Salamah was married to Abu Salamah, whose [real] name
was 'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-Asad b. Hilal. 784 Both of them partici¬
pated in the two emigrations to Abyssinia, where Umm Salamah
bore Zaynab bt. Abi Salamah. She later [also] bore her husband
Salamah, 'Umar, and Durrah, sons of Abi Salamah.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi] 785 —'Umar b. 'Uthman—
'Abd al-Malik b. 'Ubayd—Sa'id b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. Yarbu'—
'Umar b. Abi Salamah: My father participated in the battle of
Uhud, and Abu Usamah al-Jushami shot him in the arm with
an arrow. He stayed a month treating his injury, which eventu¬
ally healed. The Prophet then sent my father to Qatan, 786 in Mu-
harram, thirty five months [after the Emigration]/June 625. He
was away for twenty-nine days, then returned to Medina, on the [2443]
eighth of Safar 4/July 21, 625; by then his wound had reopened. He
died from it on the eighth of Jumada II 4/November 15, 625. My
mother observed the legal period of waiting before remarrying
['iddah) and became lawful [for marriage] on the 20th of Shawwal
4/March 25, 626. The Prophet married her at the end of Shaw¬
wal 4/March 626. 787 She died in Dhu al-Qa'dah 59/September-
October 679.
781. See p. 78, above.
782. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 334; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 429-32; Ibn
Ishaq, Siyar, 260-61. See also Jeffery, 235.
783. 'Alqamah and other members of the Firas family were famous warriors; see
Ibn Hazm, [amharat, 188.
784. The Prophet's milk brother and an early convert. He died of an injury he
received in one of the early Muslim raids; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, E, 335.
785. Ibn Sa'd, VIE, 60-61.
786. A place in the territory of the bedouin tribe Banu Asad; see Landau-
Tasseron, "Asad," 8-11.
787. Al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1460.
176
Biographies
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Kathir b. Zayd—al-Mutta-
lib b. 'Abdallah b. Hantab: The Widow of the Arabs went in to the
Lord of the Muslims as a bride early in the evening and got up at
the end of the night to mill.
He meant Umm Salamah. 788
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ma'mar [b. Rashid]—[Ibn
Shihab] al-Zuhri—Hind bt. al-Harith al-Firasiyyah: The Prophet
said "'A’ishah has a part in me occupied by no one else." When he
married Umm Salamah the Prophet was asked "O Messenger of
God, what about that part?" The Prophet remained silent, and it
was known that Umm Salamah occupied [a place in] his [heart]. 789
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: Umm Salamah died in
Shawwal 59/July-August 679.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Nafi'—his
father: Abu Hurayrah said the prayer over Umm Salamah's bier in
al-Baqf. The governor [of Medina] was al-Walld b. 'Utbah b. Abi
Sufyan, 790 [but] he had gone on business to al-Ghabah 791 and ap¬
pointed Abu Hurayrah to lead the prayers, so the latter [also]
prayed over Umm Salamah's bier. [The narrator] said: He went
away only because she had requested that the governor would not
say the prayer over her bier, and he did not want to be present
while someone else performed the service, so he left on purpose,
appointing Abu Hurayrah [to replace him].
According to al-Harith [b. Muhammad]—Ibn Sa'd, in another
place 792 —al-Waqidl: Umm Salamah died at the beginning of the
year 59/678, during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah. Her brother's son
'Abdallah b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Umayyah said the prayer over her
bier.
According to al-Harith—Muhammad b. Suhayl—Abu 'Ubay-
[2444] dah Ma'mar b. al-Muthanna: The Prophet married Umm Sala¬
mah, that is, Hind bt. Abi Umayyah b. al-Mughirah b. 'Abdallah b.
788. Ibn Sa'd, VIII, 64.
789. Ibn Sa'd, Vin, 66.
790. Cousin of the caliph Mu'awiyah. He served in administrative posts, as did
his father before him. See Ibn Qudamah, 207-8; al-Zubayri, 132-33.
791. A well-watered area north of Medina. Residents of the town had cultivated
plots of lands there. See Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, III, 767; al-Samhudl, 1275-76.
792. Ibn Sa'd, Vin, 67. The version here is different from al-Tabari's.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 177
'Umar b. Makhzum, in Medina in the year 2 of the [Muslim] era/
624, before the battle of Badr.
According to Abu Ma'shar [Najih b. 'Abd al-Rahman]: Zaynab
was the first of the Prophet's wives to die, and Umm Salamah was
the last.
Umm Habibah, whose [real] name was Ramlah bt. Abi Sufyan b.
Harb. 793
Her mother was Safiyyah bt. Abi al-'As b. Umayyah b. 'Abd
Shams, 'Uthman b. 'Affan's paternal aunt.
'Ubaydallah b. Jahsh b. Ri’ab, Harb b. Umayyah's ally ( halif), 794
had married Umm Habibah. She bore him Hablbah, after whom
she was named. Habibah was [later] married to Da’ud b. 'Ufwah b.
Mas'ud al-Thaqafi. 795
'Ubaydallah b. Jahsh emigrated to Abyssinia in the second emi¬
gration, taking Umm Habibah with him. He apostatized and con¬
verted to Christianity, then died in Abyssinia, whereas Umm
Habibah remained faithful to her religion, Islam, and to her [sta¬
tus] as an Emigrant.
Umm Habibah had taken her daughter Habibah bt. 'Ubaydallah
when emigrating to Abyssinia, then brought her back with her to
Mecca.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Ja'far—
'Uthman b. Muhammad al-Akhnasi: Umm Habibah bt. Abi Suf¬
yan had given birth to Habibah, her daughter from 'Ubaydallah b.
Jahsh, in Mecca, before she emigrated to Abyssinia.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Abu Bakr b. Isma'il b.
Muhammad b. Sa'd—his father: Umm Habibah had left Mecca
while pregnant and bore her daughter in Abyssinia.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—/Abdallah b. 'Amr b.
Zuhayr— Isma'il b. 'Amr b. Sa'id b. al-'As— Umm Habibah: I
dreamed that 'Ubaydallah b. Jahsh, my husband, was in the worst
and most deformed shape. I was frightened and said [to myself]
793. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’zlkh, 41,• al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 200, 438-39, 440;
Ibn Qudamah, 80-82; Ibn Ishaq, Siyai, 259.
794. See note 116, above.
795. Son of 'Urwah b. Mas'ud, an outstanding leader of the Thaqlf, who was
assassinated because of his conversion to Islam; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 478, H,
477-78.
i 7 8
Biographies
"By God, he has changed." And, lo and behold, when he got up in
the morning he said: "O Umm Habibah, I have contemplated the
[2445 ] [matter] of religion, and I see no religion better than Christianity. I
had professed it [before], then embraced Muhammad's religion,
and now I am going back to Christianity." I said "By God, you
have not been blessed," and I told him about my dream about him,
but he paid no attention to it and went on drinking wine until he
died. 796 Afterward I dreamed that someone came to me and said
"O Mother of the Faithful." 797 I was frightened and interpreted it
[as a sign] that the Prophet would marry me. And, indeed, the
moment my legal waiting period (' iddah ) elapsed, before I knew
[anything], a messenger from the negus 798 was at my door, asking
permission to come in. It was a slave girl of his, called Abrahah,
whose task was to look after his clothes and balm. She came in
and said "The king sends a message to you: 'The Prophet wrote to
me, asking to give you to him in marriage.' " 799 I said "May God
send glad tidings to you." She went on "The king says to you
'Appoint someone to give you in marriage.'" Umm Habibah sent
for Khali d b. Said b. al-'As 800 and appointed him [for the task]. She
gave Abrahah two silver bracelets and two anklets she had worn
on her feet and silver rings she had had on her toes, out of joy at the
tidings the girl had brought her. In the evening the negus re¬
quested [the presence of] Ja'far b. Abi Talib and the other Muslims
who were there, so they came before him. The negus delivered a
speech, saying: 801 "God be praised, the King, the Holy, the Perfect,
the Faithful to His promises, the Watcher, the Almighty, the
Forceful. I testify that there is no God but Allah and Muhammad
is His servant and messenger and the [prophet] whose [coming]
796. Drinking wine is here used to indicate the difference between Muslims and
Christians. It is also related to the dream, in which Umm Habibah saw her hus¬
band deformed. Cf. Qur’an 5:59-61.
797. A designation of the wives of the Prophet.
798. That is, the Abyssinian ruler.
799. As the Muslims who emigrated to Abyssinia were supposed to he under the
negus’ protection, the story makes the Prophet address him in the matter of the
marriage. See also below, and al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 1570-71.
800. A relative of hers, one of the very few early Umayyad converts. See Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, I, 406-7; ibn Qudamah, 187-90.
801. Cf. Qur’an 59:23.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 179
was prophesied by Jesus, son of Mary. 802 Now, the Messenger of
God wrote to me, asking that I give him Umm Hablbah bt. Abi
Sufyan in marriage. I comply with the Prophet's wish and give 400
dinars for her bridal gift ( sadaq )." He then poured the dinars in
front of the people. Khalid b. Sa'Id then spoke and said: "God be
praised; I praise Him and ask His help and assistance and testify [2446]
that there is no God but Allah and Muhammad is His servant and
messenger. 'He it is who hath sent His messenger with the guid¬
ance and the religion of truth in order that He may set it above all
(other) religion, though averse are the polytheists.' 803 Now I com¬
ply with the Prophet's wish and give him Umm Hablbah bt. Abi
Sufyan in marriage; may God bless His messenger." The negus
gave Khalid b. Sa'Id the dinars, and he took them. The people then
wanted to go away, but the negus said "Sit down, for the prophets'
custom ( sunnah ) when marrying is to serve food on the occasion
of the marriage." So he ordered that food be brought, and they ate
and then dispersed.
Umm Hablbah narrated: When the money reached me I sent to
Abrahah, who had brought me the news, and said to her: "On that
day I gave you what I did because I had no money with me. Here
are fifty gold coins ( mithqals ); take them and benefit from them."
She took out a box containing everything I had given her and gave
it back to me, saying: "The king asked me not to take anything
from you, being [his servant] who looks after his clothes and balm.
I have followed the religion of the Prophet and submitted to God.
The king has ordered his wives to send to you all the perfumes
they have." The next day Abrahah brought me a great quantity of
aloes, saffron, ambergris, and civet perfume. I [later] took all this
with me to the Prophet, and he used to see me wearing and having
it and never disaproved. 804 Then Abrahah said "The favor I ask
from you is that you greet the Prophet with peace on my behalf
and tell him that I have followed his religion." She was very gentle
with me; she was the one who prepared me [for the journey], and
whenever she came in she said "Do not forget the favor I asked
802. The negus in fact embraces Islam by uttering these words. On the negus
legend in Islamic tradition, see Raven; Wansbrough, 38-41.
803. Qur’an 9:33, 62:9; trans. Bell, I, r77.
804. The permissibility of perfume, as well as other luxuries, was much debated
among Muslim scholars.
i8o Biographies
from you." When we came to the Prophet I told him about the
[2447] betrothal [ceremony] and about Abrahah and her conduct with
me, and he smiled. I greeted him on her behalf, and he said "Peace
be with her, too, and God's mercy."
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ishaq b. Muhammad—
Ja'far b. Muhammad—his father: The Prophet sent 'Amr b. Um-
ayyah al-Damri 805 to the negus, asking him to give him in mar¬
riage Umm Habibah bt. Abi Sufyan, who had been married to
'Ubaydallah b. Jahsh. The negus gave her to him in marriage and
contributed a bridal gift of 400 dinars from his own [pocket], on
behalf of the Prophet.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Muhammad b. Salih—
'Asim b. 'Umar b. Qatadah, and also [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—'Abd
al-Rahman b. 'Abd al-'Aziz—'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr b. Hazm: The
man who gave Umm Habibah in marriage and from whom the
negus asked her was Khalid b. Sa'Id b. al-'As,- this occurred in the
year 7/628-29. She was thirty-odd years old when she was brought
to Medina.
Umm Habibah died in the year 44/April 4, 664-March 24, 665,
during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah.
Zaynab bt. Jahsh b. Ri’ab, sister of 'Abd al-Rahman b. Jahsh. 806
Her mother was Umaymah bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim. 807
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Umar b. 'Uthman al-
Jahshi—his father: Zaynab bt. Jahsh, who was a beautiful woman,
was among those who emigrated [to Medina] with the Prophet.
When the Prophet arrived at Medina he asked that she be given to
[his adopted son] Zayd b. Harithah in marriage, but she said "O
Messenger of God, I cannot give my consent, for I am the widow of
the Quraysh. " 808 The Prophet replied "But I give my consent that
you should [marry him]." So Zayd b. Harithah married her.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. 'Amir al-As-
lami—Muhammad b. Yahya b. Habban: The Prophet came to
805. A famous warrior and Companion, of the Kinanah tribe; see Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, II, 524.
806. Of the Jahsh family, see p. 168, above; "Zainab bint Jahsh," El 1 , IV, 1199 (V.
Vacca); Khallfahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 122; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 433—37; Ansari.
807. That is, the Prophet's paternal aunt.
808. Perhaps she considers herself unworthy, having been married before, or
Zayd, a former slave, is unworthy of her. See note 853, below.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 181
Zayd b. Harithah's house looking for him. Zayd was [at that time]
called only Zayd b. Muhammad, and the Prophet sometimes [2448]
would miss him [after] a time and would say "Where is Zayd?"
[Once] he went to Zayd's house but did not find him [there].
Zaynab rose toward him and said "Come here, O Messenger of
God," but he turned away, muttering something unintelligible,
except the words "Praised be God the Great, praised be God, who
turns the hearts." When Zayd came home his wife told him that
the Prophet had come to his house. Zayd asked "Didn't you ask
him to come in?" She said "I proposed it to him but he declined."
Zayd asked "Didyou hear him say anything?" She said: "When he
turned away I heard him say something I did not understand, and I
heard him say 'Praised be God the Great, praised be God who turns
the hearts.'" Zayd left [his house] and went to the Prophet. He
said: "O Messenger of God, I heard that you came to my house.
Why didn't you come in? O Messenger of God, may my father and
mother be your ransom! Perhaps [the problem is] that you like
Zaynab? In that case, I shall divorce her." The Prophet said "Keep
your wife." [But] Zayd could not touch her [after that]. He would
come to the Prophet and tell him [about it], and the latter would
say "Keep your wife," and Zayd would say "O Messenger of God, I
shall divorce her," and the Prophet would say "Keep your wife."
Zayd divorced her [all the same] and abstained from her, and she
became lawful [for remarriage]. [One day], while talking to
'A’ishah, the Prophet fainted. On regaining consciousness he
smiled and said "Who will go to Zaynab to bring her the glad
tidings that God from above gave her to me in marriage?" The
Prophet [then] recited "(Recall) when thou wert saying to him
upon whom Allah bestowed favor and upon whom thou didst
bestow favor." 809 'A’ishah narrated: I was upset by both near and
remote troubles, having heard of Zaynab's beauty. What was
more, the greatest and noblest of all things happened to her, as
God from heaven gave her in marriage. I said [to myself] "She is
going to boast of it to us." Salma, the Prophet's servant, then went
quickly and told [Zaynab] about it. [Zaynab] gave her silver oma- [2449]
ments for this [service]. 810
809. Qur’an 33:37; trans. Bell, II, 415.
810. Or ; "ornaments she had worn" (' alayha ).
182
Biographies
According to 'Umar b. 'Uthman b. 'Abdallah al-Jahshi—his fa¬
ther: The Prophet married Zaynab bt. Jahsh on the first of Dhu al-
Qa'dah 5/April 24, 627.
According to 'Umar b. 'Uthman al-Jahshi—his father: Zaynab
bt. Jahsh did not leave behind [when she died even] a dinar or a
dirham, for she used to give [to the needy] everything she could
and to give hospitality to the poor. She left [only] her house, which
was [later] sold to al-Walid b. 'Abd al-Malik, 811 when he pulled the
mosque down, for 50,000 dirhams.
According to 'Umar b. 'Uthman al-Jahshi—Ibrahim b. 'Abdallah
b. Muhammad—his father: 'Ukashah b. Mihsan's mother was
asked how old Zaynab bt. Jahsh was when she died, to which she
replied "She was thirty-odd years old when we emigrated to Me¬
dina, and she died in the year 20/December 21,640-December 9,
641.
According to 'Umar b. 'Uthman—his father: Zaynab bt. Jahsh
died at the age of fifty-three.
According to al-Harith: I was present in the circle [of people
around] 'All b. 'Asim, who was relating traditions (hadlths ). 812 He
related on the authority of Da’ud b. Abi Hind—'Amir [b. Shurahbil
al-Sha'bi]: Zaynab used to say to the Prophet "I have the greatest
claim on you from among your wives, for I am the best of them in
respect of the way I was married [to you], the noblest lady, 813 and
the closest [to you] in terms of kinship." She would say "I was
given to you in marriage by the Merciful from above His throne,
and [the angel] Jibril was the go-between in this matter; I am the
daughter of your paternal aunt, and you have no kin among your
wives but me."
Juwayriyyah bt. al-Harith b. Abi Dirar b. Habib b. A’idh b.
Malik b. Jadhlmah al-Mustaliq, of the Khuza'ah. 814
811. The sixth Umayyad caliph, reigned 86-96/705-15.
812. A famous scholar of Tradition from Wasit (d. 200/815-16), often accused of
making mistakes and even telling lies,- see Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, VII, 302-5.
813. Akiamuhunna sitran-, see Kazimirski, s.v. sti.
814. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 42, 212; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, III, 66; al-
Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 341, 441-42; al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, I, 1516-17, 1772; Ibn Ishaq,
Siyar, 263.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 183
Juwayriyyah had been married to Musafi' b. Safwan Dhu al- [2450]
Shufr b. Abi Sarh b. Malik b. Jadhlmah, who was killed in the
battle of al-Muraysi'.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Yazid b. 'Abdallah b.
Qusayt—his father—Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Rahman b.
Thawban—'A’ishah: The Prophet took prisoner some women of
the Banu al-Mustaliq. He set aside the legal fifth [of the booty]
[ khums ) and divided [the rest] among the people, giving the
cavalrymen two shares and the footsoldiers one share [each],
Juwayriyyah bt. al-Harith b. Abi Dirar fell in the lot of Thabit b.
Qays b. Shammas al-Ansari. She had been married to a cousin of
hers named Safwan b. Malik b. Jadhlmah Dhu al-Shufr, who was
killed, leaving her a widow. Thabit made a contract with her to
free her against the sum of nine ounces [of gold]. She was a sweet
woman; everyone who just saw her fell for her. Now, the Prophet
was staying with me when Juwayriyyah came in, asking his help
in that contract of freedom. By God, the moment I saw her I
resented her entering upon the Prophet, knowing that he would
see in her the same as I did. She said: "O Messenger of God, I am
Juwayriyyah, daughter of al-Harith, chief of his clan. You know
what I have been going through; I fell in the lot of Thabit b. Qays,
and he made a contract to free me against the sum of nine ounces
[of gold]. Help me to free myself." The Prophet said "How about a
better arrangement?" She asked "What is it?" He said "I will pay
your contract on your behalf, then marry you." She said "Yes, O
Messenger of God, I accept this." The news spread among the
people, and they said "Shall the Prophet's brothers-in-law be en¬
slaved?" So they set free the prisoners they held of the Banu al-
Mustaliq. A hundred men, women, and children were freed on the
occasion of the Prophet's marriage to Juwayriyyah, and I know no [2451]
woman who was more helpful to her people than she. All this took
place on the Prophet's return from the battle of Muraysi'.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Abdallah b. Abi al-Abyad,
Juwayriyyah's client—his father. The Prophet took [some of the]
Banu al-Mustaliq prisoner. Juwayriyyah was among them, and her
father came [to Medina] and ransomed her. He gave her to the
Prophet in marriage at a later stage.
According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidl]—Ishaq b. Yahya b. Tal-
hah—[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri—Malik b. Aws—'Umar: The Prophet
Biographies
184
obligated Juwayriyyah to veil herself and allotted to her the same
[sums and goods] as to his [other] wives. 815
According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. ‘Abd al-Rah-
man—Zayd b. Abi 'Attab—Muhammad b. 'Amr—'Ata’—Zaynab
bt. Abi Salamah—Juwayriyyah bt. al-Harith: Juwayriyyah's name
had been Barrah, and the Prophet changed it to Juwayriyyah, for he
resented that people would say "He came out of Barrah's
place." 815
According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—'Abdallah b. Abi al-Ab-
yad—his father: Juwayriyyah bt. al-Harith, the Prophet's wife,
died in RabF I 56/January-February 676, during the caliphate of
Mu'awiyah b. Abi Sufyan. Marwan b. al-Hakam, then governor of
Medina, said the prayer over her bier.
According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—Muhammad b. Yazid—his
grandmother, who was a client of Juwayriyyah bt. al-Harith—
Juwayriyyah: I was twenty years old when the Prophet married
me.
[According to Juwayriyah's client]: Juwayriyyah died in the year
50/December 21, 670-December 17, 671, at the age of sixty-five,-
Marwan b. al-Hakam said the ritual prayer over her bier.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Hizam b. Hisham—his
[2452] father—Juwayriyyah: Three days before the Prophet arrived I
dreamed that the moon came from Yathrib and fell in my bosom. I
hated to tell anybody about it; then the Prophet arrived. When we
were taken prisoner I feared the dream, and when he freed and
married me, and, by God, I did not speak with him about my
people, but the Muslims freed them [of their own volition]; before
I knew anything, a girl of my relatives came to inform me about it.
Then I praised God.
Safiyyah bt. Huyayy b. Akhtab b. Sa'yah b. 'Amir b. 'Ubayd b.
Ka'b b. Abi al-Khazraj b. Abi Habib b. al-Nadir b. al-Nahham b.
815. The veil, hijab, was obligatory only on the Prophet's wives. See Qur’an
33:53; al-Wahidi, 241-43; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, Ta'rikh, 87; "Hidjab," El 2 , HI,
359-61 (J. Chelhod). The point of discussion here is whether Juwayriyyah was the
Prophet's wife or concubine.
816. See note 234, above. According to Lane's lexicon, Barrah as a proper name
means "obedience."
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 185
Tanhum, of the Children of Israel, one of the tribe of Harun b.
'Imran. 817
Her mother was Barrah bt. Samaw’al, sister of Rifa'ah b. Sa-
maw’al, of the Banu Qurayzah, brother tribe of al-Nadir.
Safiyyah had been married to Sallam b. Mishkam al-Qurazi,
who divorced her, whereupon she was married to Kinanah b. al-
Rabi' b. Abi al-Huqayq al-Nadari. The latter was killed in the
battle of Khaybar, leaving her a widow.
Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Kathir b. Zayd—al-Walid b. Rabah—
Abu Hurayrah: While the Prophet was lying with Safiyyah Abu
Ayyub stayed the night at his door. When he saw the Prophet in
the morning he said "God is the Greatest." He had a sword with
him; he said to the Prophet "O Messenger of God, this young
woman had just been married, and you killed her father, her
brother and her husband, so I did not trust her [not to harm] you."
The Prophet laughed and said "Good."
According to Muhammad b. Musa—'Umarah b. al-Muhajir—
Aminah bt. Abi Qays al-Ghifariyyah: I was one of the women who [2453]
led Safiyyah as a bride to the Prophet. I heard her say: I was not
even seventeen, or I was just seventeen, the night I entered the
Prophet's [rooml-
Safiyyah died in the year 52/January 8, 672-December 26, 672,
during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah, and was buried in al-Baqi'.
Maymunah bt. al-Harith b. Hazn al-Hilali. 818
Her mother was Hind bt. 'Awf b. Zuhayr b. al-Harith b.
Hamatah b. Jurash.
In pre-Islamic times Maymunah had been married to Mas'ud b.
'Amr b. 'Umayr al-Thaqafi. He divorced her, and she was married
to Abu Ruhm b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Abi Qays, of the Banu Malik b.
Hisl b. 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. He died, leaving her a widow, and the
Prophet married her. It was al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib who gave
her in marriage, [because] he was her guardian, as she was the full
817. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 49; idem, fabaqat, 343; al-Baladhurl, Ansab,
I, 442-44; Ibn Ishaq, Siyai, 264-65.
818. Of the Hilal, a clan of the Banu 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 49; idem, Tabaqat, 338; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 444-47; Ibn Ishaq, Siyai,
266-67.
i86
Biographies
sister of his concubine [umm walad ) [Lubabah al-Kubra] bt. al-
Harith al-Hilaliyyah, the mother of his son al-Fadl.
The Prophet married Maymunah in Sarif, [a place] ten miles
from Mecca. 819 She was the last woman he married, in the year
7/628, during the lesser pilgrimage of the Consummation ('umiat
al-qadiyyah ).
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—['Abd al-Malik b. 'Abd
al-'Aziz] Ibn Jurayj—Abu al-Zubayr—'Ikrimah: Maymunah bt. al-
Harith gave herself to the Prophet.
According to [Ibn 'Umar al-Waqidi]—Musa b. Muhammad b.
'Abd al-Rahman—his father: 'Amrah [bt. 'Abd al-Rahman], when
told that Maymunah gave herself to the Prophet, [denied it, say¬
ing]: The Prophet married her for 500 dirhams paid as bridal
gift; 820 al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib was in charge of giving her in
marriage to the Prophet.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Maymunah died in the year
6r/October 1, 680-September 19, 68r, during the caliphate of
[2454] Yazid b. Mu'awiyah. She was the last of the Prophet's wives to die,
and her age was then eighty or eighty-one. She had been [a] strong
[woman].
Al-Kilabiyyah, 821 about whose name opinions differ.
Some [scholars] say that she was Fatimah bt. al-Dahhak b. Suf-
yan al-Kilabi. Others, that she was 'Aliyah bt. Zabyan b. 'Amr b.
'Awf b. Ka'b b. 'Abd b. Abi Bakr b. Kilab, and yet another opinion is
that she was Sana bt. Sufyan b. 'Awf b. Ka'b b. 'Abd b. Abi Bakr b.
Kilab. [Furthermore], some hold that there was only one woman of
the Kilab [married to the Prophet], about whose name opinions
differ, whereas others believe that all of the [aforementioned] were
[wives of the Prophet], each having her own story.
Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Muhammad b. 'Abdallah—[Ibn Shihab]
al-Zuhrl—'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr]—'A’ishah: The Prophet married
a Kilabi woman, and when she entered his [room] and he ap-
819. Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, III, 77.
820. Mahi, identical with sadaq according to Spies. See note 738, above, and
note 830 below.
821. That is, of the Kilab, a clan of the 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah. See Ibn Hazm, Jam-
haiat, 282-84; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, i686 ; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 454-55; Khalifah
b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 56.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 187
proached her she said "I seek God's protection against you," 822
whereupon the Prophet said "You have asked the protection of a
mighty one; go [back] to your family."
According to 'Abdallah b. Ja'far—'Abd al-Wahid b. Abl 'Awn—
Ibn Mannah: She uttered the formula "I seek God's protection"
(, a'udhu bi-Allah) against the Prophet, for she had been dumb¬
founded and had lost her mind. [Later], whenever she asked per¬
mission to enter and see the Prophet's wives, she would say "I am
the miserable one" and "I have been cheated."
According to Muhammad b. 'Abdallah—[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri:
It was Fatimah bt. al-Dahhak b. Sufyan, who uttered the formula [2455]
"I seek God's protection" against the Prophet, and he divorced
her. [Afterward], she used to collect camel dung and say "I am the
miserable one."
The Prophet had married [the Kilabiyyah] in Dhu al-Qa'dah
8/February-March 630. She died in the year 60/October 13, 679-
September 30, 680.
According to 'Abdallah b. Sulayman—'Amr b. Shu'ayb—his
father—his grandfather: The Prophet had already consummated
his marriage with her, but when he gave his wives the option [to
leave him] 823 she opted for her clan, so he divorced her. [After¬
ward], she used to collect camel dung and say "I am the miserable
one."
According to 'Abdallah b. Ja'far—Musa b. Sa'Id and Ibn Abi
'Awn: The Prophet divorced her only because she had leprosy. 824
According to 'Abdallah b. Ja'far, Ibn Abi Sabrah, and 'Abd
al-'Aziz b. Muhammad—[Yazid] Ibn al-Had—Tha'labah b. Abi
Malik—Husayn b. 'Ali: The Prophet married a woman of the Banu
'Amir who would peep at the people in the mosque 825 whenever
he went out. The Prophet's wives informed him about it, and he
said "You lie about her," but they said "We will show her to you
while she is peeping." He said "Agreed." They showed her to him
while she was peeping, and he divorced her. Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]
said: I told this story to 'Ubaydallah b. Sa'Id b. Abi Hind, and he
822. See p. 165, above.
823. Cf. Qur’an, 33:28-29.
824. Cf. Ibn Ishaq, Siyai, 268.
825. See p. 172, above.
i88
Biographies
told me on the authority of his father: She uttered the formula "I
seek God's protection against you/' so he returned her [to her
family).
The Prophet married no other woman of the Banu 'Amir; also he
never married anyone of the Kindah, except the Jawniyyah.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Ibrahim b. Wathimah—
Abu Wajzah [Yazid b. 'Ubaydj: The Prophet married her in Dhu al-
Qa'dah 8/February-March 630, on returning from al-Ji'ranah.
According to Abu Mus'ab Isma'il b. Mus'ab—an old man from
her clan: She died in the year 60/679-80.
[2,456] According to Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbi]—al-'Arzaml—
Nafi' [client of 'Abdallah b. 'Umar]—['Abdallah] Ibn 'Umar:
Among the Prophet's wives was one Sana bt. Sufyan b. 'Awf b.
Ka'b b. Abi Bakr b. Kilab. 826
[Hisham b. Muhammad citing 'Abdallah] Ibn 'Umar: The
Prophet sent Abu Usayd [Malik b. Rabi'ah] al-Sa'idi 827 to ask a
woman of the Banu 'Amir in marriage on his behalf. Her name was
'Amrah bt. Yazid b. 'Ubayd b. Ruwas b. Kilab. The Prophet mar¬
ried her; then it came to his knowledge that she had leprosy, so he
divorced her.
Hisham [b. Muhammad]—a man of the Banu Abi Bakr b. Kilab:
The Prophet married al-'Aliyah bt. Zabyan b. 'Amr b. 'Awf b. Ka'b
b. 'Abd b. Abi Bakr b. Kilab. She stayed with him for a while; then
he divorced her.
Asma’ bt. al-Nu'man b. Abi al-Jawn al-Aswad b. al-Harith b.
Sharahil b. al-Jawn b. Akil al-Murar al-Kindi. 828
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Muhammad b. Ya'qub b.
'Utbah—'Abd al-Wahid b. Abi 'Awn al-DawsI: Al-Nu'man b. Abi
al-Jawn al-Kindi used to dwell with his clan in Najd, near al-
Sharabbah. 829 When he came to the Prophet to declare his conver¬
sion to Islam he said to him: "O Messnger of God, shall I give you
in marriage the most beautiful among the Arab widows? She had
826. See al-Salihi, 246, 250, 254, 255.
827. An Ansar! of the Khazraji clan Banu Sa'idah, who was the standard bearer of
his clan on the day of the conquest of Mecca; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, III, 344.
828. Of the noble Kindah tribe, see al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 456-58.
829. A region in Najd (central part of the Arabian Peninsula); see Yaqut, Mu'jam
al-buldan, m, 272.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 189
been married to a relative of hers, but he died, and she lost her
way. Her heart inclines to you, and she wants [to marry] you." The
Prophet [agreed to] marry her [and pay] twelve and a half ounces [of
gold]. Al-Nu'man said "O Messenger of God, do not show con¬
tempt for her by [being stingy] with the bridal gift." The Prophet
said "I never gave more than that as bridal gift for any of my wives, [2,45 7]
and I never give any of my daughters more than that as dowry." 830
Al-Nu'man said: "It is you who set the example,- O Messenger of
God, send for your wife! I shall go with your messenger and send
your wife [to you] with him." The Prophet sent Abu Usayd al-
Sa'idl [with al-Nu'man]. When they came to her she was sitting in
her tent and gave him permission 831 to come in. Abu Usayd then
said "The Prophet's wives should not be seen by men." Abu Usayd
[later] related "This was after the verse of the Veil ( hijab ) was
revealed." 832 She sent to Abu Usayd a message, saying "Show me
the right thing to do." He said "[Put] a veil between yourself and
the men you talk with, except those who are your close rela¬
tives." 833 She did that. Abu Usayd related: I stayed there for three
days, then left carrying a woman in a litter on a camel. I brought
her to Medina and lodged her with the Banu Sa'idah. The women
of the clan, glad about her [coming], went in to greet her. They
came out talking about her beauty, and the news of her arrival
spread in Medina. I went to the Prophet, who was staying with the
Banu 'Amr b. 'Awf, and told him [about it]. [Meanwhile], a woman
came in to see her, having heard [from the other women] about her
beauty, of which they knew. She was one of the most beautiful of
all women. [That] woman said to her "You are of royal blood, 834
and, if you want to gain favor with the Prophet, utter the formula
'I seek God's protection from you'; in this way you will gain his
favor, and he will like you." 835
830. The term used in both cases is sadaq. Obviously there is no distinction
here between bridal gift paid by the groom and the dowry given to the bride by her
family. See pp. 164, 186, and notes 738, 820, above.
831. The text shifts to the singular because the following issue, that of the
Prophet's women talking to strangers, obviously does not concern al-Nu'man, the
woman's father.
832. Qur’an 33:53; see note 813, above.
833. That is, those unattainable to you in marriage.
834. The Al al-Jawn were the kings of Kindah.
835. Seep. 165, above.
190
Biographies
According to 'Abdallah b. Ja'far—['Abd al-Wahid] Ibn Abi 'Awn:
[2458] The Prophet married the Kindi woman in Rabf I 7/July-August
628.
According to 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi al-Zinad—Hisham b.
'Urwah—his father ['Urwah b. al-Zubayr], who told him that [the
caliph] al-Walid b. 'Abd al-Malik wrote to him, asking whether or
not the Prophet had married al-Ash'ath b. Qays's sister. He was
asked this question and replied: "The Prophet never married her
or any other Kindi woman, except the one of the Banu al-Jawn. She
was his wife, but when she arrived at Medina and was brought
before him [for the first time] he looked at her and divorced her
without consummating the marriage."
According to Ma'mar [b. Rashid]—[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhrl: The
Prophet never married a Kindi woman, except the one of the Banu
al-Jawn, but he divorced her before consummating the marriage.
According to Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbi]—Ibn al-
Ghusayyil—Hamzah b. Abi Usayd al-Sa'idl—his father, who was
one of the participants in [the battle of] Badr: The Prophet married
Asma’ bt. al-Nu'man al-Jawniyyah and sent me [to fetch her].
When I brought her Hafsah [the Prophet's wife] said to 'A’ishah
[the Prophet's wife] or vice versa "Put the dye on her, and I shall
comb her hair." So they did; then one of them said to her "The
Prophet likes a woman brought before him to say 'I seek God's
protection from you.'" So, when she entered his [room] and he
locked the door, let down the curtain, and reached out to her, she
said "I seek God's protection from you." He held his sleeve to his
face, covering himself with it, and said "You indeed have sought
protection." He said this three times. Abu Usayd related: The
Prophet then came out and said to me "O Abu Usayd, give her two
white garments, that is, of cotton, and take her to her clan." [Af¬
terward] she used to say "Call me the wretched one."
According to Hisham—Zuhayr b. Mu'awiyah al-Ju'fl: She died
of sorrow.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Sulayman b. al-Harith—
'Abbas b. Sahl—Abu Usayd al-Sa'idl: When I arrived at the camp
with her the [people] shouted to one another and said [to her]:
[2459] "You are not blessed! What came over you?" She said "I was
beguiled; they told me such-and-so," and [she told them] what was
said to her. The members of her clan said "You have made us
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 191
notorious among the Arabs." She called Abu Usayd and said
"What happened happened; what shall I do now?" He answered:
"Stay in your home and keep yourself veiled, except in the pres¬
ence of your close relatives. No one should want [to marry] you
after the Prophet, for you are one of the Mothers of the Faithful."
She stayed [like that], no one wishing [to marry] her and no one
seeing her except her close relatives, until she died at her family's
place in Najd, during the caliphate of 'Uthman b. 'Affan.
According to Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbi]—Zuhayr b. Mu-
'awiyah al-Ju'fi: She died of sorrow.
According to al-Harith—Muhammad b. Suhayl—Abu 'Ubaydah
Ma'mar b. al-Muthanna: The Prophet married a Yemeni woman by
the name of Asma’ bt. al-Nu'man b. al-Jawn b. Sharahll b. al-
Nu'man, of the Kindah. When he went to see her and invited her [to
approach] him she said "[No], you approach me!" She refused to
approach him, so he divorced her.
According to others: She was the most beautiful of all women,
and the Prophet's wives were afraid that she would gain prece¬
dence with him over them, so they told her "We think that, when
he approaches you, you should say 'I seek God's protection from
you.'" So when he approached her she said "I seek the Merciful's
protection from you, if you are God fearing." He said "You sought
protection in a [good] Protector; anyone who seeks God's protec¬
tion should be granted it, and God indeed protects you from me."
So he divorced her and ordered al-Saqit b. 'Amr al-Ansari to equip
her ; then he sent her to her clan. She used to call herself "the
wretched one."
Biographies of the Women Whose Death Dates Are
Known, of the Emigrants, Ansar, and Others Who
Were the Prophet’s Contemporaries, Believed in Him,
and Followed Him
Umm Ayman, the Prophet's client and nurse. 836
Her name was Barakah.
836. A black slave girl who took care of the Prophet as a child. See Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 331; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 471-72, 476.
[2460]
192.
Biographies
It was reported that the Prophet bequeathed to Umm Ayman
five camels and a herd of sheep. He had freed her when he married
Khadljah, whereupon she was married to 'Ubayd b. Zayd, of the
Banu al-Harith b. al-Khazraj, and bore him Ayman, who was [later]
killed as a shahid in the battle of Hunayn.
Zayd b. Harithah had belonged to Khadljah, and she gave him to
the Prophet. The latter freed him and gave him Umm Ayman in
marriage. This was after the [beginning of] the prophethood.
Umm Ayman bore Zayd Usamah b. Zayd.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Yahya b. Sa'id
b. Dinar—an old man of the Banu Sa'd b. Bakr: 837 The Prophet
used to call Umm Ayman "mother" and when looking at her he
would say "She is the remainder of my family."
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Umm Ayman died at the
beginning of the caliphate of 'Uthman b. 'Affan.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Ibn Abl al-Furat, Usamah b.
Zayd's client, quarreled with al-Hasan b. Usamah b. Zayd. Ibn Abl
al-Furat said during his discourse "O Ibn Barakah," meaning
Umm Ayman. Al-Hasan said [to the people present] "Be my wit¬
ness." He brought the case to Abu Bakr b. Muhammad b. 'Amr b.
Hazm, 838 then judge of Medina, or 'Umar b. 'Abd al-'Aziz, gover¬
nor of Medina, and told him the story. Abd Bakr asked Ibn Abl al-
Furat "What did you mean when you said to him 'O Ibn Bar-
akah?'" He replied "I called her by her name." [Abd Bakr] said:
"Nay, indeed you wanted to belittle her by this, while her stand¬
ing in Islam is what it is. The Prophet used to call her 'mother' and
'Umm Ayman.' May God not forgive me if I forgive you"; so he
flogged him seventy times.
Arwa bt. Kurayz b. Rabi'ah b. Habib b. 'Abd Shams. 839
She embraced Islam, emigrated to Medina, and died during the
caliphate of 'Uthman.
837. The clan of the Prophet's milk mother, of the Hawazin confederation,- see
Ibn Hazm, famhaiat, 265.
838. A descendant of the eminent Ansari 'Amr b. Hazm; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah,
H, 532. His son Muhammad b. Abi Bakr was also judge in Medina; see Waki', I,
135-48, 175-78. The family is associated with transmission of historical tradi¬
tions and legal material; see F. Sezgin, I, 284.
839. Of the Qurashi clan the Banu 'Abd Shams. She was 'Uthman b. 'Affan's
mother; see Ibn Qudamah, 227.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 193
Asma’ bt. Abl Bakr. 840
Her mother was Qutaylah bt. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. 'Abd As'ad b. Jabir
b. Malik b. Hisl b. 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. She was a full sister of 'Abdal¬
lah b. Abi Bakr.
Asma’ embraced Islam in Mecca at an early stage and gave the
Prophet the oath of allegiance. She was married to al-Zubayr b.
al-'Awwam and bore him 'Abdallah, 'Urwah, 'Asim, al-Muhajir,
Khadijah al-Kubra, Umm al-Hasan, and 'A’ishah, children of al-
Zubayr.
According to al-Harith—Da’ud b. al-Muhabbar—Hammad b.
Salamah—Hisham b. 'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr]—Asma’ bt. Abi Bakr,
who related that during the govemorate of Sa'id b. al-'As [in Me¬
dina], while the internal war ( fitnah ) was on, 841 she took a dagger
and put it under her pillow. She was asked what she intended to do
with it, and replied "If a brigand breaks into my [place] I will rip up
his belly." [The narrator] added that she was blind.
Asma’ died a few days after her son 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr, on
Tuesday, 17 Jumada I 73/October 6, 692. 842
Mariyah, the Prophet's concubine and the mother of his son,
Ibrahim.
Al-Muqawqas, 843 lord of Alexandria, gave her with her sister
Sirin and other things as present to the Prophet.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Ya'qub b. Muhammad b.
Abi §a'sa'ah—'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Sa'sa'ah: 844 In
the year 7/May n, 628-April 30, 629, al-Muqawqas, lord of Alex¬
andria, sent to the Prophet Mariyah, her sister Sirin, a thousand
gold coins, twenty fine robes, his mule Duldul, and his donkey
'Ufayr, or Ya'fur. With them was Mariyah's brother, a very old
840. An early convert, daughter of the Prophet's closest Companion. See Ibn
Qudamah, 316; "Asma’ bint Abi Bakr," EP, I, 713-14 (H. A. R. Gibb).
84r. That is, the first so-called civil war, in the aftermath of 'Uthman's murder
(36/656). Sa'id (b. al-'As b. Sa'id b. al-'As b. Umayyah) was a member of the Um-
ayyad family who served 'Uthman and Mu'awiyah as governor of al-Kufah and
Medina, respectively. He died during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah. "Sa'id b. al-'As,"
EP, Vin, 853 (C. E. Bosworth); al-Zubayri, 176-78; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 47-48.
842. October 6 was a Sunday, according to Cattenoz’ tables.
843. The Arabic name given to the patriarch of Alexandria,- see "al-Muqawqas,"
EP, ID, 511-13 (K. Ohrenberg).
844. Al-Tabari, Ta’iikh, I, 1591; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 448-51.
[2461]
194
Biographies
[2462] eunuch called Mabur. Al-Muqawqas sent all this [to the Prophet]
with Hatib b. Abi Balta'ah. The latter suggested to Mariyah that
she embrace Islam and made her wish to do so ; thus she and her
sister were converted, whereas the eunuch adhered to his religion
until he was [also] converted later in Medina, while the Prophet
was [still] alive.
The Prophet admired Umm Ibrahim, who was fair-skinned and
beautiful. He lodged her in al-'Aliyah, at the property nowadays
called the mashiabah of Umm Ibrahim. He used to visit her there
and ordered her to veil herself, [but] he had intercourse with her by
virtue of her being his property. 845 When she became pregnant
[and her time was due] she gave birth there, the midwife being
Salma, the Prophet's client. Abu Rafi', Salma's husband, brought
the Prophet the news of Ibrahim's [birth], and the Prophet gave
him a slave as a present. This occurred in Dhu al-Hijjah 8/March-
April 630.
The Ansar argued among themselves about who would [mind]
Ibrahim, because they wanted Mariyah to have her hands free for
the Prophet, knowing how he loved her.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Mariyah was from Hafn,
from the Ansina district. 846
According to Usamah b. Zayd al-Laythi—al-Mundhir b.
'Ubayd—'Abd al-Rahman b. Hassan b. Thabit—his mother Sirin,
Mariyah's sister, whom the Prophet had given to Hassan b.
Thabit, and she bore him 'Abd al-Rahman. She said: "I saw the
Prophet when Ibrahim died. I was crying loudly and my sister
[too], and he never forbade us to cry loudly. 847 Al-Fadl b. al-'Abbas
washed Ibrahim's body while the Prophet and al-'Abbas were
seated. I then saw the Prophet at the grave's edge, al-'Abbas [stand-
[2463] ing] beside him. Al-Fadl and Usamah b. Zayd [b. Harithah] des¬
cended into the grave. 848 The sun was eclipsed that day, and peo¬
ple said "The sun is eclipsed because of Ibrahim's death," but the
845. That is, Mariyah was ordered to veil herself as did the Prophet's wives, but
he did not marry her. Cf. p. 184, above.
846. In Upper Egypt, see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, I, 381.
847. The issue alluded to here is mourning customs, debated in the Muslim
community. See p. 156 and note 179, above.
848. Seep, ir, above.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 195
Prophet said "The sun will not be eclipsed for anyone's death or
life."
The Prophet saw an opening in the grave and ordered that it be
stopped up. He was asked about it and said: "It does neither harm
nor good, but the living are pleased [when it is done]. When a man
does something, God prefers that he do it properly."
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—Musa b. Muhammad b.
'Abd al-Rahman—his father: Abu Bakr supported Mariyah until
his death; then 'Umar during his caliphate did the same until she
died. 849
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: Mariyah, mother of
Ibrahim, son of the Prophet, died in Muharram 16/February 637.
'Umar was seen assembling people to attend her [funeral]; then he
said the prayer over her bier. Her grave is in al-Baqi'.
Names of the Hashimi Women Believers Who Out¬
lived the Prophet, Transmitted Traditions from Him,
and Had [Their] Knowledge Transmitted from Them
Fatimah, daughter of the Prophet.
She outlived [her father], and traditions were transmitted from
her, among them the following. According to 'Imran b. Musa—
'Abd al-Warith—Layth—'Abdallah b. al-Hasan—his mother Fa¬
timah—his grandmother Fatimah al-Kubra (senior): The Prophet
used to enter the mosque and utter the formula "May God bless
the Prophet," 850 then say "God, forgive me my sins and open the
doors of Your benevolence for me."
According to Muhammad b. 'Ubayd al-Muharibl—al-Muttalib
b. Ziyad—Layth—'Abdallah b. al-Hasan—Fatimah al-Sughra
(junior)—Fatimah al-Kubra (senior): The Prophet used to enter the [2464]
mosque and say "In the name of God, O God, bless Muhammad
and his family, forgive my sins, and open the doors of Your mercy
for me." Going out he used to say "In the name of God, forgive my
sins, and open the doors of Your benevolence for me."
849. The Prophet's wives were entitled to regular pensions, but not Mariyah,
who was not married to him.
850. Idha dakhala al-masjid salla 'ala al-nabiyy. See note 379, above.
196
Biographies
According to Ya'qub b. Ibrahim and al-Fadl b. al-Sabbah—
Isma'Il b. 'Ulayyah—Layth—'Abdallah b. Hasan b. Hasan—his
mother, Fatimah bt. al-Husayn—her grandmother Fatimah
daughter of the Prophet: The Prophet used to enter the mosque
and utter the formula "May God bless Muhammad and give him
peace," then say "O God, forgive my sins and open the doors of
Your mercy for me." On going out he used to utter the formula
"May God bless Muhammad and give him peace," then say "O
God, forgive my sins, and open the doors of Your benevolence for
me."
According to al-Rabi' b. Sulayman—Asad [b. Musa]—Qays b. al-
Rabl'—'Abdallah b. al-Hasan—Fatimah bt. al-Husayn—Fatimah
al-Kubra (senior): The Prophet used to enter the mosque and say
"O God, bless Muhammad, and give him peace,- O God, forgive my
sins, and open the doors of Your mercy for me." On going out of
the mosque he used to say "O God, bless Muhammad, and give
him peace; O God, forgive my sins, and open the doors of Your
benevolence for me."
Umm Hani’ bt. Abi Talib b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. 'Abd
Manaf. 851
Her name was Fakhitah, but, according to Hisham b. al-Kalbi, it
was Hind. Her mother was Fatimah bt. Asad b. Hashim b. 'Abd
Manaf.
It was reported that before he was inspired the Prophet had
asked Abu Talib to give her to him in marriage, and the same was
[2465] done by Hubayrah b. Abi Wahb b. 'Amr b. 'A’idh b. 'Imran b.
Makhzum. 852 Abu Talib gave her to Hubayrah, and the Prophet
said "O Uncle, you gave her in marriage to Hubayrah and left me
out," to which Abu Talib replied "O Nephew, we became related
to them [by marriage] because [of the principle that] the noble is
another noble's equal." 853
851. Sister of 'All and cousin of the Prophet. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
330; Ibn Qudamah, 138; al-Baladhurf, Ansab, I, 459.
852. A poet and warrior who never embraced Islam but ran away when Mecca
was conquered and died in Najran as an infidel. See Ibn Qudamah, 397; Muham¬
mad Ibn Habib, Munammaq, 419.
853. The principle of marrying someone of the same social status, wealth, and
the like [kafa’ah] was maintained in pre-Islamic times and continued afterward as
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 197
Umm Hani’ later embraced Islam, a fact that separated her from
Hubayrah. 854 The Prophet asked her to marry him, but she said
"By God, I used to love you in the Jahiliyyah, so I certainly do so in
Islam, but I have young children, and I hate to [see them] bothering
you." The Prophet said: "The best women ever to have ridden
camels are the women of the Quraysh. They are the most affec¬
tionate toward their small children and the most excellent in
doing good to their husbands when they [the women] are
wealthy." 855
Umm Hani’ outlived the Prophet and transmitted traditions
from him, among them the following. According to Abu Kurayb
[Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—'Ubaydallah—Isra’il—al-Suddi [Isma'Il
b. 'Abd al-Rahman]—Abu Salih [Badham]—Umm Hani’: The
Prophet asked me to marry him, but I excused myself, and he
accepted my excuse. God later revealed the verse "We have made
allowable for thee thy wives to whom thou hast given their hires
. . . those who have emigrated with thee," 856 so I became unlaw¬
ful to him because I did not emigrate with him. I was one of those
who were converted to Islam against their will ( tulaqa’). 857
Duba'ah bt. al-Zubayr b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim. 858
The Prophet gave this [woman], Duba'ah bt. al-Zubayr, to al-
Miqdad b. 'Amr in marriage, and she bore him 'Abdallah and Ka-
rimah. 'Abdallah was killed in the battle of the Camel [fighting on
the side of] 'A’ishah. 'All [b. Abi Talib] passed by his body and said
"What an evil sister's son this is!" 859
Duba'ah transmitted traditions from the Prophet.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Bashshar—'Abd al-Samad b.
well. See "Kafa'ah," EP-, IV, 404 (Y. Linant de Bellefonds); Shukri, 34-42.
854. See p. 15, above.
855. Cf. p. 171, above.
856. See Qur’an 33:49; trans. Bell, II, 416.
857 - Tulaqa’ is a designation of the Meccans who were converted after the
conquest of the town, having opposed the Prophet until then; see Kister, "On
Strangers and Allies," 153. Umm Hani's statement is inconsistent with the former
story, in which the Prophet asked for her in marriage after she had embraced Islam
and left her pagan husband.
858. Paternal cousin of the Prophet. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 331; Ibn
Qudamah, 141.
859. Duba'ah was not in fact 'All's sister but a cousin.
198
Biographies
'Abd al-Warith—Hammam b. Yahya—Qatadah [b. Di'amah]—
Ishaq b. 'Abdallah b. al-Harith—his grandmother Umm al-Ha-
kam—her sister Duba'ah bt. al-Zubayr, who related that she had
brought the Prophet [a piece of] meat and he nibbled at it, then
prayed without performing ablution.
[2466] Umm al-Hakam bt. al-Zubayr b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim. 860
She was married to Rabi'ah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib and
bore him Muhammad, 'Abbas, 'Abd Shams, 'Abd al-Muttalib,
Umayyah, and Arwa al-Kubra (senior).
Umm al-Hakam transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Bashshar—Mu'adh b. Hisham—
his father—Qatadah—Ishaq b. 'Abdallah b. Nawfal—Umm al-
Hakam bt. al-Zubayr, who reported that she had handed the
Prophet a [piece] of shoulder meat; he ate some of it, then prayed.
Umm Hakim bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib. 861
She is the one called al-Bayda’ (the white one). She did not live to
see Islam.
Umm Hakim was 'Amir b. Kurayz's mother and 'Uthman b.
'Affan's maternal grandmother.
Kurayz b. Rabi'ah had married Umm Hakim al-Bayda’, who bore
him 'Amir, Arwa, Talhah, and Umm Talhah. 'Affan b. Abi al-'As
b. Umayyah b. 'Abd Shams b. 'Abd Manaf married Arwa bt.
Kurayz, who bore him 'Uthman b. 'Affan. She later married 'Uq-
bah b. Abi Mu'ayt and bore him al-Walid, Khalid, and Umm
Kulthum, children of 'Uqbah b. Abi Mu'ayt. 862
Safiyyah bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim.
Her mother was Halah bt. Wuhayb b. 'Abd Manaf b. Zuhrah b.
Kilab.
Safiyyah was a half-sister of Hamzah b. 'Abd al-Muttalib, on
860. Sometimes called Umm Hakim. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 331;
Ibn Qudamah, 141; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 442-43.
861. Twin sister of 'Abdallah, the Prophet's father. See al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I,
88, HI (Duri), 3ri ; Ibn Qudamah, 173.
862. A member of the Umayyad family and an enemy of the Prophet. He was
one of the two Qurashi captives who were executed by Muhammad after the battle
of Badr ; see Ibn Qudamah, 210.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 199
their mother's side. In pre-Islamic times she had been married to
al-Harith b. Harb b. Umayyah b. 'Abd Shams and bore him Sufayy.
She was later married to al-'Awwam b. Khuwaylid b. Asad and
bore him al-Zubayr, al-Sa’ib, and 'Abd al-Ka'bah.
Safiyyah embraced Islam and gave the Prophet the oath of alle¬
giance. She emigrated to Medina and lived after the Prophet's
death, to the caliphate of 'Umar b. al-Khattab.
Umamah bt. Hamzah b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim. 863 [2467]
Her mother was Salma bt. 'Umays b. Ma'd b. Taym b. Malik b.
Quhafah b. Khath'am, Asma’ bt. 'Umays' sister. [Umamah] is the
name by which Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbi] refers to her,
whereas others say that it was 'Umarah bt. Hamzah. According to
Hisham, 'Umarah was a man, a son of Hamzah, after whom he
was called.
Umamah outlived the Prophet and transmitted [traditions]
from him.
Clients [of the Banu Hashim]
Umm Ayman, the Prophet's client.
According to al-Husayn b. 'All al-Suda’I—Shababah—Abu
Malik al-Nakha'i—'Abd al-Malik b. Husayn—al-Aswad b. Qays—
Fulayh al-'Anazi—Umm Ayman: [One] night the Prophet got up
and urinated in the comer of the house into an earthenware vessel.
During the night I got up, and, being thirsty, I drank what was in
that vessel, not noticing [anything]. When the Prophet got up in
the morning he said "O Umm Ayman, take that earthenware ves¬
sel and pour away its content." I said "By God, I drank what was in
it." The Prophet laughed until his molar teeth showed, then said
"After this you will never have a bellyache."
Salma, the Prophet's client. 864
She outlived the Prophet and transmitted traditions from him.
According to 'All b. Shu'ayb al-Simsar—Ma'n b. 'Isa—Fa’id, the
client of 'Ubaydallah b. 'All b. Abi Rafi'—'Ubaydallah b. 'All b.
863. Ibn Qudamah, 148; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 235-36.
864. Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 332; al-Baladhurf, Ansab, I, 485.
200
Biographies
Abi Rafi'—his grandmother Salma: The Prophet used to apply
henna to wounds and the like.
[2468] Maymunah bt. Sa'd, the Prophet's client. 865
She transmitted [traditions] from him.
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—
'Ubaydallah—Isra’il—Zayd b. Jubayr—Abu Zayd al-Dabbi—
Maymunah bt. Sa'd: The Prophet was asked about a child born of
adultery and replied "A pair of shoes I wear while exerting myself
in the path of God is preferable to me than the freeing of a child
bom of adultery."
Umaymah, the Prophet's client. 866
She transmitted [traditions] from him.
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—Yunus b.
Bukayr—Yazid b. Sinan Abu Farwah al-Ruhawi—Abu Yahya al-
Kala'I—Jubayr b. Nufayr: I came to see Umaymah, the Prophet's
client, and asked her "Tell me something you heard from the
Prophet." She said: "One day I was pouring [water] on his hands
for his ablution, when a man came in and said 'O Messenger of
God, I want to go back to my family, so instruct me with some¬
thing I shall remember.' The Prophet said: 'Never attribute a part¬
ner to God, even if your [limbs] be tom and you be burned in fire.
Never disobey your parents,- even if they tell you to give up your
family and [everything pertaining to] this world, do it. Never
deliberately neglect to perform the prayer, for whoever
deliberately neglects to perform one, forfeits the protection of God
and His messenger. Never drink wine, for it is the mother of all
sins. Do not expand beyond the boundaries of [your] land, lest you
come on the Day of Judgment with the equivalent of seven [tracts]
of land tied to your neck. Never run away on a battle day, for
whoever runs away on a battle day arouses the wrath of God, and
hell would be his shelter,- what a wretched end this is! 867 Spend on
your family from your wealth, but do not lift your rod off them.
Make them fear God.'"
865. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 331; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 485.
866. Ignored in most of the sources I have used. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 243,
records the same tradition as here, referring it to several sources.
867. Cf. Qur’an 8:16.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 201
Arab Women [Married into the Quraysh] 868 Who [2469]
Outlived the Prophet and Transmitted [Traditions] from
Him, Having Given Him the Oath of Allegiance and
Embraced Islam during His Lifetime
Umm al-Fadl, that is, Lubabah al-Kubra (senior) bt. al-Harith b.
VLazn b. Bujayr b. al-Huzam b. Ruwaybah b. 'Abdallah b. Hilal b.
'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah b. Mu'awiyah b. Bakr b. Hawazin b. Mansur b.
'Ikrimah b. Khasafah b. Qays b. 'Aylan b. Mudar. 869
Her mother was Hind, that is Khawlah bt. 'Awf b. Zuhayr b. al-
Harith b. Hamatah b. Jurash, who belonged to Himyar.
It was reported that Umm al-Fadl was the first woman to em¬
brace Islam in Mecca after Khadljah bt. Khuwaylid. The Prophet
used to visit her and take siestas in her house.
Umm al-FadTs sisters were Maymunah, the Prophet's wife, her
full sister, Lubabah al-Sughra (junior), that is, al-'Asma’ bt. al-
Harith b. Hazn, her half-sister, from her father; Huzaylah bt. al-
Harith b. Hazn, also a half-sister, from her father,- and 'Azzah, her
[half ]-sister from her father.
Her brothers and sisters from her mother were Mahmiyah b. Jaz’
al-Zubaydl, 'Awn, Asma’, and Salma, children of 'Umays b. Ma'd
b. al-Harith, of the Khath'am. 870
Al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib married Umm al-Fadl bt. al-
Harith, and she bore him al-Fadl, 'Abdallah, 'Ubaydallah, Ma'bad,
Qutham, 'Abd al-Rahman, and Umm Habib.
'Abdallah b. Yazld al-Hilall said: 871
Never has a Bactrian she-camel borne a stallion
the like of the six coming from Umm al-Fadl's womb.
What a noble woman she is, and he [what a noble] man!
868. Wa-min ghara'ib nisa' al-'aiab. Ghaiibah, literally, "stranger," is a woman
who enters the clan by exogamic marriage. That the Quraysh are meant here is
clear from the following biographical details.
869. A member of the 'Amiri clan the Banu Hilal. See al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I,
447 / HI (Dun), i-2 ; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqdt, 338 (who seems to confuse her
with her sister); Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbar, 107, 455.
870. A tribe believed by some to be of northern, by others of southern, descent.
See "Khath'am," EP-, IV, 1105-6 (G. Levi Della Vida); Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma’add,
356-61; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 390-92.
871. Ibn Sa'd, IV/1, 2, Vm, 203 .1 found a few persons with the name of 'Abdallah
b. Yazld, but none seemed to me to fit the present context. The only "al-Hilali"
was a rather obscure governor of Armenia,- see Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi, II, 468.
202
Biographies
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Umm al-Fadl bt. al-Harith
emigrated to Medina after al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib's conver¬
sion to Islam.
[2470] Lubabah al-Sughra (junior), that is, al-'Asma’ bt. al-Harith. 872
Her mother was Fakhitah bt. 'Amir b. Mu'attib b. Malik al-
Thaqafi.
Lubabah had been married to al-Walid b. al-Mughirah b. 'Abdal¬
lah b. 'Umar b. Makhzum in Mecca and bore him Khalid b. al-
Walid. She embraced Islam after the Emigration and gave the
Prophet the oath of allegiace.
Asma’ bt. 'Umays b. Ma'd. 873
Her mother was Hind, that is, Khawlah bt. 'Awf b. Zuhayr b.
Jurash.
According to al-Harith—Khalid b. Khidash—Hammad b.
Zayd—Ayyub—Muhammad: Asma’ bore Ja'far [b. Abi Talib] [his
son] Muhammad, and she bore Abu Bakr [his son] Muhammad. 874
Asma’'s full sister was Salma bt. 'Umays, an early convert to
Islam. She was married to Hamzah b. 'Abd al-Muttalib 875 and bore
him his daughter 'Umarah. Hamzah was killed in the battle of
Uhud and Salma bt. 'Umays became a widow. Shaddad b. [Usamah
b. 'Amr, that is,] al-Had al-Laythi then married her, and she bore
him 'Abdallah b. Shaddad, a half-brother of Hamzah's daughter
['Umarah], from her mother. He is [also] a maternal cousin of
al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib's children and of Khalid b. al-Walid
b. al-Mughirah. 876
Asma’ bt. 'Umays outlived the Prophet for a while and transmit¬
ted traditions from him.
872. Sister of the aforementioned Lubabah al-Kubra. See al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I,
447-48,- Ibn Hajar, Isabah, TV, 398-99.
873. Of the Khath'am tribe. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 342; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 447-48.
874. According to Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 231, she was also married to 'All b. Abi
Talib.
875. An uncle of the Prophet, an early convert, and a close Companion. See El 2 ,
III, 152-53 jG. M. Meredith-Owens); Ibn Qudamah, 144-47.
876. Salma was half-sister of Lubabah al-Kubra, wife of al-'Abbas, and of
Lubabah al-Sughra, mother of Khalid b. al-Walid; see p. 201, above. On Shaddad,
see al-Safadi, XVI, 124; al-MizzI, Tahdhlb, XU, 405 - 7 -
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 203
'Abdallah b. Mas'ud's mother, that is, Umm 'Abd bt. 'Abd Wadd
b. Sawa’ b. Quraym b. Sahilah b. Kahil b. al-Harith b. Tamim b.
Sa'd b. Hudhayl b. Mudrikah b. al-Yas b. Mudar. 877
Her mother was Hind bt. 'Abd b. al-Harith b. Zuhrah b. Kilab.
Umm 'Abd embraced Islam and gave the Prophet the oath of
allegiace. She transmitted from him the following [tradition]. Ac- [2471]
cording to Muhammad b. Mu'awiyah al-Anmati—'Abbad b.
al-'Awwam—Aban—Ibrahim—'Alqamah [b. Qays al-Nakha'i]—
'Abdallah [b. Mas'ud]—his mother, who related that she [once]
spent the night with them and the Prophet got up [in the night]
and prayed. She said "I saw him standing long in [that night]
prayer ( witr ) before prostrating himself."
Zaynab bt. Abi Mu'awiyah al-Thaqafiyyah, 'Abdallah b.
Mas'ud's wife. 878
Zaynab embraced Islam and gave the Prophet the oath of alle¬
giance. She transmitted traditions from him, among them the
following. According to al-Rabi' b. Sulayman—Asad b. Musa—
['Abdallah] Ibn Lahi'ah—Bukayr—Busr b. Sa'id—Zaynab, 'Abdal¬
lah's wife—the Prophet: Whoever comes to the mosque from
among you should not wear perfume.
Umm Sinan al-Aslamiyyah. 879
She transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi] 880 — 'Abdallah b.
Abi Yahya—Thubaytah bt. Hanzalah al-Aslamiyyah—her
mother, Umm Sinan al-Aslamiyyah: I came to the Prophet when
he intended to set out for Khaybar and said "O Messenger of God, I
shall set out with you in this enterprise of yours, to see about
drinking water and to take care of the sick and wounded if there
are any, and, if there are not, I shall assist the men." The Prophet
said: "Go, with God's blessing. There are [also] friends of yours,
both from your clan and others, who approached me [about this],
and I have permitted it. You can go with your clan if you like or
877. Ibn Sa'd, VIE, 212. The tribe's name is Hudhayl.
878. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 337.
879. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 462-63. Almost no biographical details are given.
880. Al-Waqidi, 685, 686-87; Wellhausen, Muhammad, 284.
204
Biographies
with us." She said 881 "With you." He said "So go with my wife
Umm Salamah." She related: So I was with Umm Salamah. 882
[2472] The daughter of Abu al-Hakam, al-Ghifariyyah. 883
She transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Muhammad b. Bashshar and Muhammad b. al-
Muthanna—Muhammad b. Abi 'Awn—Muhammad b. Ishaq—
Sulayman b. Suhaym—his mother, daughter of Abu al-Hakam, al-
Ghifariyyah—the Prophet: One may come at a cubit's distance
from paradise, 884 then say such a word as will remove him from it
to a distance farther than [that between here and] San'a’.
Umm Sharlk. 885
She transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to 'Amr b. Baydaq—Sufyan—'Abd al-Hamld b.
Jubayr b. Shaybah—Sa'Id b. al-Musayyab—Umm Sharik: The
Prophet had ordered her to kill lizards. 886
According to Yunus [b. 'Abd al-A'la]—['Abdallah] Ibn Wahb—
['Abd al-Malik] Ibn Jurayj—'Abd al-Hamld b. Jubayr b. Shaybah—
Sa'id b. al-Musayyab—Umm Sharik, a woman of the Banu 'Amir
b. Lu’ayy who related that she had asked the Prophet's opinion
about the killing of lizards, and he had ordered her to kill them.
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—'Ubay-
dallah b. Musa—['Abd al-Malik] Ibn Jurayj—'Abd al-Hamid b. Ju¬
bayr b. Shaybah—Sa'id b. al-Musayyab—Umm Sharik, who re¬
lated that the Prophet had ordered to kill lizards, saying: "They
used to blow on [the Patriarch] Ibrahim."
881. There is a shift here from the first to the third person.
882. The legal issue raised here is the permissibility of the participation of
women in war; see, e.g., al-Fazari, 299-300.
883. Aminah bt. al-Hakam or Abi al-Hakam, mentioned as a source of traditions
for her son Sulayman b. Suhaym; see Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, IV, 169. Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, IV, 224 promises to supply details on her in another place but fails to do so.
884. Qubbat dhiia'. De Goeje's manuscript had q-b-h, which he edited as qub-
bat but prefers to read as qaby. See 2472 n. b; glossarium, s.v. q-b-w. Cairo, 624,
and Dar al-Fikr, 629, also have qubbat.
885. A member of the QurashI clan 'Amir b. Lu’ayy. She was one of the women
who offered themselves to the Prophet in marriage. See Ibn Ishaq, Siyai, 269, cf.
284,- Ibn Qudamah, 489-90; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 335; al-Baladhurl, An-
sab, I, 422.
886. On the issue of killing and eating lizards, see note 587, above,- Cook, "Die¬
tary Law," 220-31; Kister, "Locust's Wing," 349.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 205
Umm Marthad. 887
She transmitted [traditions] from the Prophet.
According to Ibrahim b. Sa'id al-Jawhari—Muhammad b. Wahb [2473]
b. Abi Karimah al-Harranl—Muhammad b. Maslamah—Abu
'Abd al-Rahim b. al-'Ala’—Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Sa'sa-
'ah—his father—Umm Kharijah bt. Sa'd b. al-Rabi'—Umm Mar¬
thad, who was one of those who gave the Prophet the oath of
allegiance: We [once] went out with the Prophet, and he said "The
first to meet you [on the way] will be one of the dwellers in para¬
dise." 'All [b. Abi Talib] met us.
Umm al-Darda’. 888
She transmitted traditions from the Prophet, among them the
following. According to Sa'd b. 'Abdallah b. al-Hakam—Abu
Zur'ah [al-Dimashqi]—Abu Haywah [Shurayh b. Yazld]—Abu
Sakhr—'Isa, father of Musa, a client of Ja'far b. Kharijah al-Asadl—
Umm al-Darda’: The Prophet met her one day and asked her
"Where do you come from, O Umm al-Darda’?" She replied "From
the public bath." He said "By He Who holds my soul in His hand, a
woman who takes off her clothes anywhere but in her home
disgraces herself before God." 889
According to al-Rabi' [b. Sulayman]—Asad b. Musa—['Abdal¬
lah] Ibn Lahi'ah—Zabban b. Fa’id—Sahl b. Mu'adh—his father—
Umm al-Darda’: I came out of the public bath and met the Prophet,
who asked me "Where do you come from, O Umm al-Darda’?" I
replied "From the public bath," whereupon he said "By He Who
holds my soul in His hand, a woman who takes off her clothes
anywhere but in the house of her mother or grandmother 890 ut¬
terly disgraces herself before the Merciful."
887. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, TV, 496; hardly any details are given Cf. 446 (under Umm
Kharijah).
888. Khayrah bt. Abi Hadrad, known as a pious and wise woman, a source of
traditions for several Successors. See Ibn Ishaq, Siyar, 141, where she is depicted as
actively engaged in seeking knowledge. There is, however, a confusion between
two women of the same name. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 295; Abu Zur'ah, 378; Ibn
Manzur, Mukhtasai, VUI, 103.
889. Literally, "tears the veil separating God and herself."
890. Literally, "in the house of one of her mothers."
206
Biographies
[2474] Umm al-Mundhir bt. Qays b. 'Amr b. 'Ubayd b. ’Amir b. 'Adi b.
'Amir b. Ghanm b. 'Adi b. Ghanm b. al-Najjar. 891
She was a full sister of Salit b. Qays, who had participated in the
battle of Badr and was later killed as a shahid in the battle of the
Bridge, commanded by Abu 'Ubayd. 892
Umm al-Mundhir gave the Prophet the oath of allegiance. She
transmitted from him the following [tradition]. According to Abu
Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—Zayd b. Hubab al-'Ukli—Fulayh
b. Sulayman al-Madanl—Ayyub b. 'Abd al-Rahman al-Ansarl—
Ya'qub b. Abi Ya'qub—Umm al-Mundhir al-Ansariyyah, who was
one of the Prophet's maternal aunts: The Prophet came [to visit]
me together with 'All, who was recovering from an illness. There
were dates in the house, hung up [somewhere], and the Prophet ate
from them while standing, and so did 'All. The Prophet said "This
is not good for you," so he stopped [eating]. I cooked some beets
and barley for the Prophet and served them to him, and he said "O
'All, eat from this; it is better for you."
The Death Dates of Successors and People of the
Following Generations, of [Our] Deceased Forefathers
Who Had Been Scholars and Transmitters of
Traditions
Successors Who Died in the Year 32 (August 12, 652 -
August 1, 653)
Ka'b al-Ahbar b. Mati'. 893
His kunyah was Abu Ishaq. He belonged to the Himyar, to the
family of Dhu Ru'ayn. 894
Ka'b al-Ahbar lived in Hims, where he died in the year 32/652-
53, during the caliphate of 'Uthman b. 'Affan.
891. Her name was Salma; she was an Ansari of the Banu 'Adi b. al-Najjar
(Khazraj). See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 335; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 332.
892. A battle during the conquest of Iraq, near al-Hirah, in 13/634, where the
Muslims suffered a sound defeat; see Donner, Early Islamic Conquests, 174-75.
893. A famous Jewish convert to Islam, the oldest authority on Judeo-Islamic
traditions. See "Ka'b al-Ahbar," El 2 , IV, 316-17 (M. Schmitz); Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 308; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 190; al-DIba', 59-60; Ibn Manzur,
Mukhtasar, XXI, 180-88; Ben Ze’ev.
894. A large Himyarl tribe with a royal tradition. See Caskel, II, 67, 237; al-
Himyarl, 169, i8o ; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 433; Ibn Sa'id, 93.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 207
According to al-'Ala’i—[Yahya] Ibn Ma'in: [His pedigree was]
Ka'b b. Mati' b. Dhi Hajan al-Himyari. [2475]
According to al-'Abbas—Yahya: Ka'b al-Ahbar died during the
caliphate of 'Uthman in the year 34/July 22, 654-July 10, 655, a
year before 'Uthman's murder.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn al-Muthanna—Ahmad b.
Musa—Da’ud—a paternal cousin of Ka'b: Ka'b learned the Surah
of the Cow from one of the Prophet's Companions. When they
reached the words "Then if ye slip after that the evidences have
come to you, know that Allah is sublime, wise," 895 Ka'b said "I do
not know of such a thing in any of God's books, that He should
prohibit sinning and at the same time promise to forgive it." The
man refused to take back his words, and Ka'b refused to learn [the
verse]. One of the Prophet's Companions then passed by them,
and [Ka'b's teacher] asked him "Do you know [by heart] the Surah
of the Cow?" The man answered in the affirmative. [Ka'b and his
teacher] began to recite "Then if ye slip after that the evidences
have come to you," and the man continued "know that Allah is
sublime, wise." He said "Yes, this is how it should be."
Uways b. al-Khulays al-Qaranl. 896
So it was mentioned by Damrah b. Rabi'ah—'Uthman b. 'Ata’
al-Khurasani—his father [who said]: I was telling [Uways'] story
when I heard a man of my clan, that is, Uways' clan, [asking] "O
Abu 'Uthman, do you know the name of Uways' father?" I said
"No." He said "Uways b. al-Khulays." However, according to
Yahya b. Sa'id al-Qattan—Yazid b. 'Ata’—'Alqamah b. Marthad, [2476]
[the name was] Uways b. Unays al-Qaranl.
Opinions differ as regards the time of his death. Some say that
he was killed [fighting] on 'All's side at Siffin.
According to Muhammad b. Abi Mansur—al-Himmani—
Sharik—Yazid b. Abi Ziyad—'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Layla: On
895. Qur’an 2:205; trans. Bell I, 29.
896. A famous Successor, known as one of the first ascetics and a close compa¬
nion of 'All; he never met the Prophet, but the latter had foreknowledge of him. See
Abu Nu'aym, II, 162; al-Kashshl, 91-93; al-Quhpa’i, I, 241-43, n, 249; al-Amln,
Xm, 106-31; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 146; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, i6i ;
Uways al-Qaiani. His father's name is usually said to be 'Amir or 'Amr, notwith¬
standing the versions here. His clan, the Qaran, belonged to the southern tribe
Murad,- see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 407.
208
Biographies
the Day of Siffln 'All's herald called out "Look for Uways al-
Qaranl among the dead." They looked and found him. [This is the
report] or some other version of the same meaning.
Those Who Died in the Year 81
(February 26, joo-February 14, 7 01)
Suwayd b. Ghafalah. 897
Muhammad b. 'Ali al-Akbar b. Abi Talib. 898
His mother was the Hanafiyyah, 899 Khawlah bt. Ja'far b. Qays b.
Maslamah b. Tha'labah b. Yarbu' b. Tha'labah b. al-Dul b. Hanifah
b. Lujaym b. Sa'b b. 'All b. Bakr b. Wa’il. It was reported that she
had been one of the prisoners [taken by the Muslims] in the battle
of Yamamah and was given to 'Ali.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi] 900 —'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi
al-Zinad—Hisham b. 'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr]—Fatimah bt. al-Mun-
dhir—Asma’ bt. Abi Bakr: I saw Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyyah's
mother, who was a black woman from Sind. She was not des¬
cended from the Banu Hanifah but was a slave among them. Kha-
lid b. al-Walid's treaty with the Banu Hanifah applied only to the
slaves, not to tribesmen of pure descent. 901
Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyyah's kunyah was Abu al-Qasim. He
was virtuous, religious, God fearing, and erudite.
897. A Kufan jurist and a hafiz (expert on tradition), a companion of 'Ali, of the
southern tribe Ju'fi. See al-Amin, XXXV, 419-20; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
147; Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 3x5; al-Quhpa’i, IE, 176; al-Sayrawan, 99-100.
898. Son of 'Ali by a wife other than Fatimah, daughter of the Prophet. While he
stayed in the Hijaz a revolt was led on his behalf in al-Kufah by al-Mukhtar b. Abi
'Ubayd, in the years 685-87. "Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyya," El 2 , VE, 402-3 (F.
Buhlj; Sharon, Black Banners, 104-9, 112-19 and passim; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr,
103; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, IE (Duri), 53-54, (Mahmud!) 276-96.
899. That is, of the Banu Hanifah tribe, dwellers in al-Yamamah, in the central
eastern part of the Arabian Peninsula.
900. Ibn Sa'd, V, 66.
901. There is nothing to support this claim in the version of the treaty recorded
by al-Tabari himself, where the Muslims received as booty "half the prisoners"
(obviously releasing the other half), regardless of their origin; see al-Tabari, Ta’r-
ikh, I, 1954. Needless to say, the woman's pedigree as recorded here does not
support this claim either.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 209
We have related the account of [what happened with] him and
Ibn al-Zubayr during the time of al-Mukhtar b. Abi 'Ubayd in our
book entitled The Supplemented ( al-Mudhayyal ). 902
Those Who Died in the Year 83 [2477]
(February 4, 702-January 23, 703)
Abu al-Bakhtari al-Ta’i, a client of the Banu Nabhan of Tayyi’. 903
There are different versions of his name. According to Ibn al-
Madyani it was Sa'id b. Abi 'Imran, whereas Yahya b. Ma'in holds
that it was Sa'id b. Jubayr and that Jubayr's kunyah was Abu
'Imran. Still others say that [the name] was Sa'id b. 'Imran.
Abu al-Bakhtari was a Shi'i.
'Abdallah b. Nawfal b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib b. Ha-
shim. 904
'Abdallah was bom during the Prophet's lifetime, and it was
said that he resembled him.
According to 'Ali b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]: 'Abdallah b.
Nawfal b. al-Harith died in the year 84/January 24, 703-January
13, 704-
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abd al-'Aziz
b. Muhammad and Abu Bakr b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Sabrah—
'Uthman b. 'Umar—Abu al-Ghayth: When Marwan b. al-Hakam
became governor of Medina on behalf of Mu'awiyah b. Abi Sufyan
for the first time, in the year 42/April 26, 662-April 14, 663, he
appointed 'Abdallah b. Nawfal b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib a
judge in Medina. I heard Abu Hurayrah say "This is the first judge
I saw in Islam." 905
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Sa'd 906 —Muhammad b. 'Umar
[al-Waqidi]: Our authorities are unanimous that 'Abdallah b.
902. Al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, n, 693-95.
903. One of the active participants in the revolt of Ibn al-Ash'ath (see note 990,
below). He was killed in the battle of Maskan, fought between the governor al-
Hajjaj and the rebels; see al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, n, 1088-1100. See also al-Diilabi, I,
12,5-26; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 204-5.
904. Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 114; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, in (Duri), 297-99; Ibn
Qudamah, 102; al-'Askarl, 243.
905. Al-Suyuti, Wasa’il, 117.
906. Ibn Sa'd, V, 13.
210
Biographies
Nawfal b. al-Harith was the first judge in Medina, on behalf of
Marwan b. al-Hakam. His family, however, deny this; they deny
that either he or anyone of the Banu Hashim [ever] held the office
of judge in Medina. 907 They [also] say that he died during the
caliphate of Mu'awiyah, but we hold that he outlived Mu'awiyah
[2478] for a while and died in the year 84/703, during the caliphate of
'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan.
Sa'id b. Wahb al-Hamdani, of the Banu Yahmid b. Muhib b.
Sadiq b. Yana' b. Duman; these are the Yana'un of Hamdan. 908
Sa'id obtained knowledge from Mu'adh b. Jabal 909 in the Yemen
before emigrating [to Medina] during the Prophet's lifetime. He
was one of 'All b. Abi Talib's close companions, whence his nick¬
name the Tick ( al-quiad ). He lived in al-Kufah.
No one doubts Sa'Id's truthfulness and faithfulness in the tradi¬
tions he reported and transmitted.
He died in the year 86/January 2, 705-December 22, 705, during
the caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik. Al-Tabari remarks: His name was
mentioned with those who died in the year 76/April 21, 695-April
9, 696 and repeated here, because of the disagreement over his
death date.
'Ali b. al-Husayn b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 910
907. In view of the enmity between the HashimI and the Umayyad clans, it is
conceivable that the descendants of 'Abdallah denied that he held office on behalf
of the Umayyads.
908. Appointed over the Hamdan on behalf of 'All. See Nasr b. Muzahim, 105;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 166; idem, Thiqat, IV, 291; al-Amln, XXXV, 122-23; Ibn
Sa'd, VI, 118. I could not find his clan in any of the genealogical and historical
sources (including the Yemeni ones); except for Ibn Sa'd, and al-Zabidi, Taj
al-'arus, V, 566, all the sources trace him to Khaywan, a known tribe of the Ham¬
dan (read Khaywan for Khayran, as erroneously recorded in several sources). See
also pp. 151, above, 237, below.
909. A much-admired member of the Khazraj (Ansar) and a close Companion of
the Prophet, who sent him as his representative to the Yemen. Vast knowledge of
religious law is imputed to him ; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, III, 427.
910. The fourth Shi'i Imam, Zayn al-'Abidin, who survived the massacre of
Karbala’ and fathered the next generations of the imams. He was nevertheless on
good terms with the Umayyad al-Walld b. 'Abd al-Malik. See Jafri, 242-47,- al-
Tabataba’i, 75, 201-2; Ibn Qudamah, 131-33; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 238-
39; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 104,- al-Baladhurl, Ansab, HI (Mahmudl), 146-47, 273
and passim; Ibn Sa'd, V, 156-64.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented
211
His mother was Ghazalah, who was a concubine (umm walad).
After Husayn's [death] Zubayd, his client, took Ghazalah, and she
bore him 'Abdallah b. Zubayd, half-brother of 'All b. al-Husayn.
This 'All b. al-Husayn is the progenitor of the descendants in
[the line of] al-Husayn [b. 'All]. This is 'All al-Asghar (junior) b.
Husayn. [His brother] 'All al-Akbar (senior) b. al-Husayn was
killed with his father at the canal 911 of Karbala’, having had no
offspring.
'All al-Asghar b. al-Husayn participated with his father in the
event of Karbala’. He was then twenty-three years old. [As] he was
ill, he was sleeping on a mat, and when al-Husayn was killed
Shamir b. Dhi al-Jawshan 912 said "Kill this one [too]." One of his
companions then said to him "God be praised, should we kill a
young man who is ill and did not take part in the fighting?" 'Umar [2479]
b. Sa'd [b. Abi Waqqas] 913 then came and said: "Do not harm these
women or this sick man."
'All related: When I was brought before ['Ubaydallah] Ibn Ziyad
he asked "What is your name?" I said "'All b. Husayn." He said
"Has God not killed 'All?" I said "I had an elder brother called 'All,
who was killed by [your] people." Ibn Ziyad said "Nay, it was God
who killed him." I said "God [does not kill but] takes the souls
when [people] die." 914 Ibn Ziyad ordered that 'All be killed, where¬
upon Zaynab bt. 'All cried "O Ibn Ziyad, you had enough of our
blood. I beseech you in the name of God, if you kill him, kill me
together with him." So Ibn Ziyad left him alone.
'All b. al-Husayn's kunyah was Abu al-Husayn.
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’inl]—Sa'id b.
Khalid—[Sa'id b. Abi Sa'id] al-Maqbari: Al-Mukhtar b. Abi 'Ubayd
911. Or, "stream."
912. He was notorious for his role in killing al-Husayn b. 'All at Karbala’, yet he
was considered a Successor, and traditions were transmitted from him. See Ibn
Manzur, Mukhtasai, X, 331-34; al-Safadi, XVI, 180. He is also included in the list
of "the noble tribal leaders wbo were infected by leprosy"; see Muhammad Ibn
Habib, Muhabbai, 30 r.
913. A general under 'Ubaydallah b. Ziyad, governor of al-Kufah. ‘Umar was in
charge of the force that carried out the massacre of Karbala’ and was later killed by
al-Mukhtar b. Abi 'Ubayd in retaliation. See Ibn Sa'd, V, 125; Ibn Manzur,
Mukhtasai, XI, 60-68; al-Dhahabl, Siyai, IV, 349-50; al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh, II, 308-
12.
914. Qur’an 39:42. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta'iikh, n, 372 - 73 ; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III
(Mahmudi), 207.
212
Biographies
sent 'All b. al-Husayn 100,000 [dirhams]. He hated to accept it but
was afraid to send it back, so he kept it. When al-Mukhtar was
killed 'All b. al-Husayn wrote to 'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan [the
following]: "Al-Mukhtar had sent me 100,000 which I did not
want to return or take, so it is with me. Send someone to collect
it." 'Abd al-Malik wrote back to him "O cousin, take it, for I have
made it lawful to you."
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]—Yazid b. 'Iyad:
[Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri had killed someone unintentionally, so he
left his family, went out, and pitched a tent, saying "No roof of a
house should provide shade for me." 'All b. al-Husayn passed by
and said: "O Ibn Shihab, your despairing is worse than your sin.
Fear God, ask His forgiveness, send the blood money to the
deceased's family, and go back to your family." [Later], al-Zuhri
[2480] used to say "Among all the people 'All b. al-Husayn did me the
greatest favor."
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]—'Ali b. Muja-
hid—Hisham b. 'Urwah [b. al-Zubayr]: 'Ali b. al-Husayn used to go
to Mecca and back on his riding beast, without [ever] beating it.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Sa'd 915 —Malik b. Isma'll—Sahl
b. Shu'ayb al-Nihml, who was living among the [Nihm], acting as
their leader in prayer—his father—al-Minhal, that is, Ibn 'Amr: I
came to 'All b. al-Husayn and asked him: "How are you? May God
keep you in good state." Whereupon he said:
I never thought that a city notable like you would ignore
our condition. Since you do not realize it or know, I shall
tell you. We became among our people like the Children
of Israel among the people of Pharaoh, as the latter used to
kill the sons of the former and let their women live. It has
become so that favor is curried with our enemy by cursing
or swearing at our leader and master on the pulpits. 916 The
Quraysh have come to think that they are superior to the
[rest of the] Arabs because Muhammad descends from
915. Ibn Sa'd, V, 162-63.
916. During Umayyad times the governors used to curse the 'Alids at the Friday
sermon, a practice temporarily stopped by the caliph 'Umar b. 'Abd al-'AzIz.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 213
them; it is only because of him that they impute merit to
themselves, and the [rest of the] Arabs have come to ac¬
knowledge it. The Arabs have come to think that they are
superior to the non-Arabs because Muhammad belongs to
them,- it is only because of him that they impute merit to
themselves, and the non-Arabs have come to acknowl¬
edge it. If the Arabs are right that they are superior to the
non-Arabs and if the Quraysh are right that they are supe¬
rior to the [rest of the] Arabs because Muhammad des¬
cends from them, then we, the members of [the Prophet's]
family [ahl al-bayt ), are superior to the [rest of the]
Quraysh, because Muhammad descends from us. [But]
they have usurped our right and deny us all rights. This is
how we are, if you do not know.
Al-Minhal related: I thought that he wanted those present in the
house to hear [this].
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi] 917 —Ibn Abi
Sabrah—Salim, Abu Ja'far's client: Hisham b. Isma'il 918 used to
taunt 'All b. al-Husayn and his family, making speeches to this
effect on the pulpit and insulting 'All [b. Abi Talib]. When al-
Walid b. 'Abd al-Malik ascended the throne he removed Hisham
from office and ordered that he be stationed in a public place [to be
abused by those previously abused by him]. Hisham [later] related:
"Nay, by God, no one worried me more than 'All b. al-Husayn. I
thought that he was an important man, 919 one to whom people
listen." So [Hisham b. Isma'Il] was exposed [to the people] in a
public place. [But] 'All b. Husayn gathered his offspring and friends
and forbade them to abuse Hisham. 'All b. Husayn passed by [him]
in the morning on his way to some business and did not chastise
him. Hisham b. Isma'il called out to him saying "God knows best
where to place His missions." 920
917. Ibn Sa'd, V, 163. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, n, 1184.
918. 'Abd al-Malik's governor of Medina in 83-86/702-705; see al-Tabari, Ta’r¬
ikh, II, 1085, 1127, 1182.
919. Rajul salih. See glossarium, s.v. slh.
920. Cf. Qur’an 2:12.
[2481]
Biographies
2,14
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar 921 —'Abd al-Haklm b. 'Abd¬
allah b. Abi Farwah: 'All b. al-Husayn died in Medina and was
buried in al-Baqi' in the year 94/October 7, 712-September 25,
713. This year is called "the Year of the Jurists" because of the
great number of jurists who died then.
According to Ibn Sa'd 922 —'Abd al-Rahman b. Yunus—Sufyan—
Ja'far b. Muhammad: 'All b. al-Husayn died at the age of fifty -
eight. This proves that 'All b. Husayn was with his father 923 at the
age of twenty-three or twenty-four and was not a small boy whose
[2482] pubic hair had not yet grown, as [some] say. It is because he was ill
that day that he did not fight. How could he have been [a boy]
whose pubic hair had not yet grown, when he had already fathered
Abu Ja'far Muhammad b. 'All, and had met Jabir b. 'Abdallah and
transmitted [traditions] from him? [It should be noted that] Jabir
died in the year 78/March 30, 697-March 19, 698.
According to Ishaq b. Abi Isra’Il—Jarir—Shaybah b. Na'amah:
'All b. Husayn was considered miserly. When he died the fact
came to light that he had secretly supported 100 families in
Medina.
Among [those who died in the year 83/702-703 was], according
to 'Amr b. 'All, Abu 'Uthman al-Nahdi.
His name was 'Abd al-Rahman b. Mall b. 'Amr b. 'Adi b. Wahb b.
Rabi'ah b. Sa'd b. Jadhimah b. Ka'b b. Rifa'ah b. Malik b. Nahd b.
Zayd b. Layth b. Sud b. Aslum b. al-Haf b. Quda'ah. 924
According to al-'Abbas b. Muhammad—al-Fadl b. Dukayn—
Abu Talib 'Abd al-Salam b. Shaddad: I saw Abu 'Uthman, [in his
capacity as] a member of the police guard, come and take mush¬
rooms from a mushroom seller. 925
921. Ibn Sa'd, V, 163-64.
922. Ibid., 164.
923. That is, at Karbala’.
924. His clan's name is Nahd b. Zayd, of the Quda'ah confederation; see Ibn
Hazm, famharat, 446-47. He lived in pre-Islamic times and embraced Islam only
in 'Umar's time. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 205; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr,
159; idem, Thiqat, V, 75.
925. Ya’khudhu min sahib al-kama'ah al-kama'ah. Cf. Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 70:
Ya’khudhu min sahib al-kumah, which is probably erroneous, kumah signifying
"brave people." I am not sure about the meaning of this in either version.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 215
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Sa'd 926 —Abu Ghassan Malik b.
Ismail al-Nahdl: Abu 'Uthman al-Nahdi lived in al-Kufah, where
he had a place among the Banu Nahd. When al-Husayn was killed
he moved to al-Basrah, saying "I shall not live in a town where the
son of the Prophet's daughter was killed."
Khalid b. Ma'dan al-Kala'L 927
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Sa'd: 928 [The scholars] are unan¬
imous that Khalid b. Ma'dan died in the year 103/July 1, 721-June
20, 722, during the caliphate of Yazid b. 'Abd al-Malik.
According to 'Abd al-Quddus b. al-Hajjaj—Safwan b. 'Amr— [2483]
Khalid b. Ma'dan: I was contemporaneous with seventy of the
Prophet's Companions.
According to al-Harith—al-Hajjaj—Abu Ja'far al-Huddani—
Muhammad b. Da’ud—'Isa b. Yunus: Khalid b. Ma'dan was in
charge of the shurtah of [the caliph] Yazid b. Mu'awiyah. 929
Khalid was not suspected [of fraud] concerning the religious
traditions he transmitted and related.
It was reported that he died while fasting. He had lived in Syria,
where he [also] died.
Those Who Died in the Year 105
(June 10, 723-May 28, 7 24)
'Ikrimah, the client of 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib. 930
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Sa'd 931 —'Amir b. Sa'id Abu
926. Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 70.
927. A famous Syrian jurist of Himyari (southern) origin. See Ibn al-Kalbl,
Nasab ma'add, 540; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 310; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir,
183; Abu Zur'ah, 243, 350-51 ; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, VII, 394-97. Donner,
"Problem," 7-9; 'Atwan, 97-98; al-Sayrawan, 83-84.
928. Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 162.
929. Donner, however, doubts that Khalid ever occupied this post; "The Shur-
t a >" 2 53 - The shurtah, usually translated as "police," was a special elite unit some
of whose tasks resembled those of modem police forces. See Donner, "The Shur-
ta"; Lecker, “Shurtat al-khamls," 276-80.
930. One of the main transmitters from 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas, highly appreciated
by some but accused of lies by others. See "'Ikrima," EP, n, 1081-82 (J. Schacht);
Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 134; al-Sayrawan 128-29.
931. Ibn Sa'd, V, 212.
216
Biographies
Ja'far—Hisham b. Yusuf, the judge of San'a’—Muhammad b.
Rashid: 'Ikrimah was still a slave when Ibn 'Abbas died. Khalid b.
Yazid b. Mu'awiyah 932 bought him from 'All b. 'Abdallah b.
al-'Abbas for 4,000 dinars. On hearing of this 'Ikrimah went to 'All
and asked "Did you sell me for 4,000 dinars?" He replied affir¬
matively, whereupon 'Ikrimah said "Indeed, you did not profit [by
this, for] you have sold your father's knowledge for 4,000 dinars."
'Ali went to Khalid and asked him to cancel the transaction, and
Khalid agreed, whereupon 'All set 'Ikrimah free.
No one who knew 'Ikrimah denied his erudition in religious
law, the Qur’an and its interpretation, as well as his numerous
transmissions of traditions.
According to al-Sarrar b. Muhammad b. Isma'll—Isma'Il—
Ibrahim b. Sa'd—his father: Sa'id b. al-Musayyab used to say to his
[2484] client Burd "O Burd, do not lie about me, as did 'Ikrimah about Ibn
'Abbas." 933 [To other people he used to say] "Any tradition Burd
transmits to you from me, and you do not recognize it nor does
anyone else transmit it but he, is a lie."
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Jarir [b. 'Abd al-
Hamld]—Yazid b. Abl Ziyad: I went into 'All b. 'Abdallah b.
'Abbas' place, and there was 'Ikrimah, tied to the door of the privy.
I asked "What is the matter with this one?" He said "He lied about
my father."
According to Yahya b. Ma'In—someone—Hammad b. Zayd: I
heard Ayyub [al-Sakhtiyani] say, when asked about 'Ikrimah "Had
I not considered him reliable ( thiqah ) I would not have written
down traditions transmitted by him." 934 Others think that a tradi¬
tion transmitted by 'Ikrimah should not be adduced as proof in
legal matters. However, they make the following observation:
"We object not to the traditions transmitted by 'Ikrimah but to his
932. Grandson of the caliph Mu'awiyah and brother of Mu'awiyah II. When the
latter died Khalid was considered too young to rule, and Marwan b. al-Hakam
headed the clan and ascended the throne; see "Khalid b. Yazid," EP-, IV, 929-30 (M.
Ullmann).
933. That is, by falsely ascribing traditions to him.
934. The permissibility of writing down the Prophetic Tradition was debated
among Muslim scholars. See Goldziher, Muslim Studies , II, 181-88; Sprenger; and
cf. p. 256, below.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 217
creed." They said that he adhered to the Sufriyyah, a KharijI
sect. 935 It was reported that he imputed this conviction to Ibn
'Abbas, and this was his lie about him.
According to Mus'ab al-Zubayrl: 'Ikrimah adhered to the beliefs
of the Khawarij. The governor of Medina sought him out, so he hid
at Da’ud b. al-Husayn's place, where he died. 936
According to Yahya b. Ma'in: Malik b. Anas did not quote
'Ikrimah only because the latter adhered to the beliefs of the
Sufriyyah.
There is disagreement over 'Ikrimah's time of death. Some say
that it occurred in the year 105. According to Muhammad b.
'Umar [al-Waqidl] 937 —'Ikrimah's daughter: 'Ikrimah died in the
year 105 at the age of eighty.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl] 938 —Khalid b. al-Qasim al-
Bayadl: 'Ikrimah and the poet Kuthayyir 'Azzah 939 died on the
same day in the year 105.1 saw both their funeral services held at
the same place, that is, the funeral place, in the afternoon. People [2485]
said "The best expert on religious law and the best poet died
today."
People other than Khalid b. al-Qasim said: People wondered at
the fact that 'Ikrimah and Kuthayyir met in death, whereas [in life]
their views were [so] different. 940 'Ikrimah was thought to believe
in the KharijI creed and to consider the delaying of judgment 941 as
935. A KharijI sect that differed from the rest of the Khawarij in that they
rejected execution of the women and children of sinners; see al-Baghdadi, Farq, 54.
936. Ibn Sa'd, V, 216.
937. Ibid.
938. Ibid.
939. A Hijazi bedouin classical poet, whose poetry was mainly dedicated to his
love for 'Azzah, on one hand, and to his Shi'i convictions, on the other,- see
"Kuthayyir b. 'Abd al-Rahman," El 2 , V, 551-53 (I. 'Abbas).
940. The only point of this sentence is the play on words contained in it. The
Arabic word for "met" also means "agreed," so that "met" and "were different" are
in fact antonyms ( ijtima ' and ikhtilaf ).
941. Nazrah. The reference is to the theological discussion of sin. The Khawarij
saw it as their duty to fight and kill sinners, whereas others held that judgment
should be postponed to Judgment Day. The latter are better known as Murji’ah. See
Madelung, "The Early Murji’a"; Givon, "The Murji’a"; 'Athaminah, "The Early
Murji’a"; Cook, Early Dogma, 23-47,- Lambton, 21-27, 32-35.
2 l8
Biographies
unbelief, whereas Kuthayyir was a Shi'i, who believed in the re¬
turn [of the imam in hiding]. 942
According to Yahya b. 'Uthman b. Salih al-Sahmi—[Yunus] Ibn
Bukayr—['Abd al-'Aziz b. Muhammad] al-Durawardl: 'Ikrimah
and the poet Kuthayyir 'Azzah died in Medina on the same day.
Their biers were carried only by blacks.
According to Abu Nu'aym al-Fadl b. Dukayn: 'Ikrimah died in
the year 107/May 19, 72 5-May 7, 726.
According to Yahya b. Ma'in: 'Ikrimah died in the year
115/February 21, 733-February 9, 734.
'Ikrimah used to travel much around the countries [of Islam]. 943
He went to al-Basrah, where the people learned [traditions] from
him, and to al-Kufah, where many people studied with him. He
went to the Yemen, where many wrote down [the traditions] he
dictated, and to the Maghrib, where some heard [traditions] from
him. He [also] went to the eastern [centers], where he dictated
[traditions].
According to Yahya b. 'Uthman b. Salih—Nu'aym b. Ham-
mad—'Abd al-Mu’min b. Khalid al-Hanafi: 'Ikrimah came to us in
Khurasan, and I asked him "Why did you come to our country?"
He replied "I came to take from the dinars and dirhams of your
governors." But, according to Abu Tumaylah—'Abd al-'Aziz b.
Abi Rawwad: I said to 'Ikrimah "You have left the two holy cities
[Mecca and Medina] to come to Khurasan?" He said "To earn a
living for my daughters." 'Ikrimah, however, died in [Medina], the
city of the Prophet.
According to Ibrahim b. Khalid—Umayyah b. Shibl—Ma'mar—
Ayyub: 'Ikrimah came to us, and people gathered around him
until he was forced to climb to the roof of a house. 944
[2486] 'Amir b. Sharahll b. 'Abd al-Sha'bl. 945
942. Raj'ah. On this creed, see Sachedina, 151, 166-73 .1 thank my colleague,
Dr. Meir Bar-Asher, for this reference.
943. Traveling around the centers of scholarship ( al-iihlah fi talab al-'ilm) was
very common among medieval Muslim scholars; see Eickelman and Piscatori. The
purpose was usually to study with famous teachers, but here the emphasis is on
Ikrimah's teaching, not learning.
944. Ibn Sa'd, V, 213.
945. A famous Kufan jurist and traditionist. See Schacht, Origins, 230-31 and
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 219
According to Ibn Sa'd: 946 He belonged to the Himyar but was
registered as one of the Hamdan. 947
According to [Ibn Sa'd]—'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. Murrah al-
Sha'banl—old men of the Sha'ban, among them Muhammad b.
Abi Umayyah, who was a knowledgeable man: [Once a lot of] rain
fell in the Yemen, and the stream hollowed out a vault, which had
a stone door. People broke the lock and went in to find a great
spacious [room] with a golden bed placed in it; there lay a man on
it. [The narrator] said: We measured him, and he was twelve
shibrs. 948 He was wearing a silk gown embroidered with gold; a
golden staff was at his side and a red ruby on his head. There he
was, a white-headed and white-bearded man, wearing two plaits.
At his side lay a tablet inscribed in Himyaritic: "In your name, O
God, Lord of Himyar. I am Hassan b. 'Amr, the king; indeed, there
is no king but God. I had lived in hope and died in due course,
during the Time of the Fearful Plague. 949 Twelve thousand kings
had died then, and I was the last of them. I had come to the
mountain of Dhu Sha'bayn to seek protection from death, but it
betrayed me." 950 At the man's side a sword was placed, inscribed
in Himyaritic "I am a gravedigger; by me is blood revenge taken."
According to 'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. Murrah al-Sha'banl:
This was Hassan b. 'Amr b. Qays b. Mu'awiyah b. Jusham b. 'Abd
Shams b. Wa’il b. Ghawth b. Qatan b. 'Arib b. Zuhayr b. Ayman b.
al-Hamaysa' b. Himyar, that is, Hassan Dhu al-Sha'bayn. 951 Dhu
al-Sha'bayn is a mountain in the Yemen where Hassan and his
passim; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 157; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 163; al-
Sayrawan, 105-6; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, XI, 249-64.
946. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 171-78.
947. See note 444, above.
948. A measure of length, about 8 inches.
949. Vocalized ayyam wakhzahid, which I suggest should be read as ayyama
wakhzi haydin "the time of the fearful plague." Wakhz means plague, and the root
h-y-d denotes great fear. Ibn Durayd, 524, explains that "hayd was a plague which
occurred in ancient times," in which case the rendering will be "the plague of
Hayd." See Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma'add, 5 37 n. 4, cf. Ibn Manzur, Lisan, m, 442, s.v.
h-y-d. The variants adduced by de Goeje, in Tabart, Ta’rikh, 2486 n. c, suggest that
the expression was not very well understood. Note especially Ibn Sa'd's wa-ma
wakhzahid "what is wakhzahid anyway?" apparently an addition by a transmitter
or a scribe.
950. Cf. Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma’add, 536-37.
951. Cf. al-Himyari, 165, where the genealogy varies.
220
Biographies
offspring dwelled and where Hassan was buried. He and his off-
[2487] spring were called after this mountain, and those [of them] who
lived in al-Kufah were called Sha'biyyun, among them 'Amir al-
Sha'bl. Those [of them] who lived in Syria were called Sha-
'baniyyun, whereas those who remained in the Yemen were called
Al Dhi Sha'bayn. [Still others] lived in Egypt and the Maghrib, and
they were called al-Ash'ub. These are all the offspring of Hassan b.
'Amr Dhu al-Sha'bayn. 952
The clan of 'Amir b. Sharahll b. 'Abd al-Sha'bi was the Banu 'All
b. Hassan b. 'Amr. They had joined the Ahmur of the Hamdan in
the Yemen and were registered as part of them. 953 The Ahmur 954
included the Kharif, al-Sa'idiyyun, Al Dhi Bariq, al-Sabi', Al Dhi
Juddan, Al Dhi Radwan, Al Dhi La'wah, Al Dhi Marran, and the
bedouin of the Hamdan, that is, 'Udhar, Yam, Nihm, Shakir, and
Arhab.
Many tribal groups of the Himyar joined the Hamdan, among
them the offspring of Dhi Hawal, who had been the commander of
Tubba"s military vanguard. 955 To this clan belongs Ya'fur b. al-
Sabbah, the present lord of San'a’'s provinces. 956
Al-Sha'bi's kunyah was Abu 'Amr; he was a thin, lean person.
He was skilled in Muslim law and knowledgeable [in general], a
transmitter of poetry, traditions, and accounts of battles.
Tawus b. Kaysan. 957
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman.
952. See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 433.
953. "Joined," dakhalu fi, is a term reflecting the fluctuating structure of the
Arab tribal system. Often a group left its own tribe and joined another. Only when
such groups retained their original genealogy and identity could this term be used.
See also note 444, above.
954. De Goeje has doubts about the vocalization of the name. According to
Hamdam, Iklil II (ed. Muhammad al-Akwa'), 247 (as quoted by al-Akwa', "Al-
af'ul," 322) the name is Akhmur, and the confederation ceased to exist at some
point. This confederation is not recorded by Ibn al-Kalbi or by Ibn Hazm and other
later genealogists, although they mention some of the constituent groups.
955. Tubba' was the name of the Himyaritic kings.
956. "Present" applies not to al-Tabari's time but to that of Ibn Sa'd (d. 230/845);
see Ibn Sa'd, VI, 172. The reference is to Ya'fur b. 'Abd al-Rahman, founder of the
local Yemeni Ya’furid dynasty in the time of the caliph al-Mu'tasim (218-27/833-
42); see Kay, 141, 185, 223-26.
957. An early Qur’an reader and authority on exegesis. See al-Sayrawan, 104; Ibn
al-Jazari, 341; al-Razi, 318-59, 562, and passim; al-Amin, XXXVI, 325.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 221
Tawus was skilled in Muslim law and knowledgeable [in gen¬
eral], pious, God fearing, and meritorious.
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—Yahya [b.
Sa'id al-Qattan]—Zuhayr—Layth—Tawus: Seventy shaykhs from [2488]
the Prophet's Companions were still alive in my lifetime. 958
According to Yahya b. Ma'In—al-Mu'tamir b. Sulayman: My
father said "Why doesn't Khalid al-Hadhdha’ 959 do like Tawus?"
[I] asked "And what did Tawus do?" He said "He used to sit, and, if
someone brought him something, he would accept it; if not, he
would keep silent." Yahya said "I say Tawus was appointed over
the tithe, and so was Khalid al-Hadhdha’."
According to 'All b. al-Madyani—Yahya b. Sa'id—Sufyan b.
Sa'id: Tawus was a Shi'i.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Sayf b. Sulayman: Tawus
died in Mecca one day before the Tarwiyah. 960 Hisham b. 'Abd al-
Malik, then caliph, performed the pilgrimage that year, that is,
106/May 29, 724-May 18, 725, so he said the prayer over Tawus'
bier. He was seventy-odd years old when he died.
According to al-Harith—Surayj b. Yunus—Yahya b. Sulayman:
It came to my knowledge that Tawus had said to Mujahid 961 "If
your shortness had been applied to my tallness and my tallness to
your shortness, we would have made two middle-sized men."
According to Zayd b. Hubab—Ibrahim b. Nafi': Tawus died in
the year 106/May 29, 724-May 18, 725.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Tawus was a client of Bahir
b. Raysan al-Himyari and lived in al-Janad. 962
Al-Hasan b. Abi al-Hasan. 963
958. Cf. p. 215, above.
959. Khalid b. Mihran, a Basran traditionist of the early second century, who
was also appointed to collect the tithe; see Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, HI, 105.
960. That is, the Day of Providing Water, the eighth of Dhu al-Hijjah, when the
pilgrims in Mecca prepare for the journey to Mina.
961. A famous traditionist, jurist, and Qur’an interpreter of the first century. See
a very detailed biography in Mujahid, 39-53.
962. A town and a large province in the Yemen. See Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan,
II, 127-29. Kay, 354.
963. One of the earliest theologians and a highly esteemed traditionist. See
"Hasan al-Basri," El 2 , HI, 247-49 (H. Ritter); Ibn Sa'd, Vn/i, 114-29; al-Sayrawan,
74 -
222
Biographies
The name of Abu al-Hasan [al-Hasan's father] was Yasar. It is
related that he was taken prisoner [by the Muslims] at Maysan, 964
brought to Medina, and bought by al-Rubayyi' bt. al-Nadir, Anas
b. Malik's paternal aunt.
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’inl]: The father of al-
Hasan b. Abi al-Hasan al-Basrl was one of the prisoners of Maysan.
[2489] His mother was a servant of Umm Salamah, the Prophet's wife.
According to al-Asma'i—Hammad b. Salamah—'All b. Zayd b.
Jud'an, who knew al-Hasan better than anyone: Al-Hasan was
born a slave.
According to Yahya b. Ma'in: Al-Hasan b. Abi al-Hasan's
mother was called Khayrah.
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’inl]—Salamah b.
'Uthman—['Abdallah] Ibn 'Awn—al-Hasan: I was fourteen years
old when [the caliph] 'Uthman was killed.
Al-Hasan was knowledgeable, skilled in Islamic law, virtuous,
and an expert on the readings of the Qur’an ( qari ’). No one doubts
his truthfulness in the matter of [the traditions] he related and
transmitted, but he transmitted many traditions in which the
chain of authority (isnad) did not reach up to the Prophet. 965 He
[also] transmitted many [traditions] from unknown people, as well
as from written records ( suhuf) that came to his hands. These
records reached him either directly [from the compilers] or
through transmitters. 966
According to Muhammad b. Harun al-Harbl—Nu'aym—
Sufyan—Musawir al-Warraq: I asked al-Hasan al-Basri "From
whom do you transmit these traditions?" He said "From a written
record ( kitab ) that I have,-1 have heard it from someone." 967
964. Ibn Sa‘d, VII/1, 114. Maysan is a town in southern Iraq taken by the Mus¬
lims during the conquests; see Donner, Early Islamic Conquests, 213-14.
965. Marasil, sing, mursal. Such a tradition was considered inferior to one with
a full chain of transmission.
966. Akhadhaha minhum wa-'anhum, literally, "that he received from them
and on their authority." As a rule, the earlier Muslim scholars preferred direct
personal contact between master and pupil and were suspicious of those who cited
written records; see Schoeler.
967. That is, he wrote it down from dictation, a procedure that made the use of
written records acceptable. The kitab of this period is not "a book" in the modem
sense of the word but any written record.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 223
According to 'Amr b. 'All—'Affan—Wuhayb—Ayyub: Al-
Hasan did not learn traditions [directly] from Abu Hurayrah.
According to 'Amr b. 'All—Abu Qutaybah—Shu'bah: I asked
Yunus "Did al-Hasan hear [traditions] from Abu Hurayrah?" He
said "No, not one word."
According to Ibn Sa'd 968 —Yahya b. Sa'id al-Qattan, concerning
the traditions of Samurah [b. Jundab] which al-Hasan transmitted:
They were taken from written records.
Some people impute to al-Hasan Qadari convictions, 969
whereas others deny this.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Jarir [b. 'Abd al-Ha-
mid]—Mughirah [b. Miqsam]: The most knowledgeable in mat¬
ters of blood money, judiciary, and battles was ['Amir b. Sharahll] [2490]
al-Sha'bl. The best expert on prayer, legal alms, and lawful and
unlawful practices was Ibrahim al-Nakha'i. 970 The best expert in
matters of rites was ‘Ata’ b. Abi Rabah. The most knowledgeable
in the field of Qur’an interpretation was Sa'id b. Jubayr. 971 The
best expert in matters of trade and money was Ibn Sirin. But al-
Hasan al-Basri was the master of them all.
According to Ibn Sa'd 972 —Musa b. Isma'il—Hammad b. Zayd—
'Amr b. 'Ubayd: We learned from al-Hasan only in times of
anger. 973
According to 'All b. Sahl—al-Walld [b. Muslim]—Khulayd:
Someone asked al-Hasan about a certain issue. Al-Hasan
discussed it, and the man said "O Abu Sa'id, the scholars disagree
with you." Al-Hasan said: "May your mother be bereft of you!
[Where] did you see a scholar? By God, the scholars of all the cities
are gone. The last of them to have died were Jabir b. 'Abdallah in
Medina and 'Abdallah b. 'Umar, or 'Amr, in Mecca. Al-Tabari re-
968. Ibn Sa'd, vn/i, 115.
969. Belief in the freedom of the human will as opposed to belief in predestina¬
tion. See "Kadariyya," EP, V, 370. (J. van Ess); Lambton, 33-36; Obermann; Alavi;
Cook, Early Muslim Dogma Watt, Free Will-, note 981, below.
970. A famous Kufan Successor. See Schacht, Origins, 233-37 and passim; al-
MizzI, Tahdhib, II, 233-40; Ibn Hibban, Mashahxr, 163; al-Sayrawan, 49.
971. A famous Kufan Successor. See al-Mizzi, Tahdhib-, X, 358-76; al-Sayrawan,
95 -
972. Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 124.
973. The meaning of this is not clear to me. The parallel in Ibn Sa'd, VII/1,124, is
identical; the dictionaries, and glossarium provide no clue.
224
Biographies
marks: The doubt is mine. In my notes I have Ibn 'Umar. [The last
scholar to have died] in al-Basrah was Anas b. Malik, in al-Kufah
'Abdallah b. Abi Awfa, and in Damascus Abu Umamah [al-Bahili,
Sudayy b. 'Ajlan]."
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’im]—Abu Ishaq—al-
Hasan: I went to see al-Hajjaj, and he said: "O Hasan, what makes
you so impertinent to me? In addition [to everything else] you sit
in our mosque to give legal opinions!" I said "The covenant by
which God pledged mankind." Al-Hajjaj then said "And what do
you think about Abu Turab?" meaning 'All b. Abi Talib. I said
"What can I say, except what God says?" He retorted "And what
does God say?" I answered: "'We appointed the qiblah, which
thou hast been observing, only that We might know those who
would follow the messenger from those who would turn on their
heels, though it was a big thing except to those whom Allah
guided' 974 and 'All was one of those directed by God to the right
[2491] way." Al-Hajjaj raged and bent down, striking the ground. I went
out, and no one stood in my way. Then I went into hiding until he
died.
Al-Hasan was in hiding nine years.
According to al-Harith—Da ud b. al-Muhabbar—al-Rabi' b.
Subayh—al-Hasan: The [interdiction] of slander does not apply in
cases of transgressors openly declaring their transgression or peo¬
ple following devious doctrines 975 or unjust rulers.
According to al-Harith—al-'Abbas b. al-Fadl al-'Abdl—[Sufyan]
Ibn 'Uyaynah—Abu Musa: When al-Hasan left al-Hajjaj he said: "I
come from a little squinting man, a short [person] wagging the few
hairs he has and pointing at me with short fingers that rarely knew
[the touch of] reins [of the horses led to] holy war. By God, even
though they ride non-Arabian horses 976 and climb the pulpits, the
dishonor of sin is pendant from their necks. God refuses to do
anything but disgrace those who disobey Him; He will not cease
974. Qur’an 2:138; trans. Bell, I, 20.
975. Ahl al-ahwa' wa-l-bida' "the people of passions/[evil] inclinations and in¬
novations" is the name commonly used by Orthodox Islam to depict the sects.
976. Bazadhln, sing, birdhawn. According to Lane, these are horses of mean
breed. Notwithstanding, they appear to have been a status symbol. Among other
things, they are counted among the luxuries 'Umar refused to use,- see Ibn al-Jawzi,
Ta’rikh, iro.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 225
to teach them lessons [by afflicting] their persons and to use them
as examples for the believers. O God, kill him as he killed Your
sunnah ." 977
According to al-Harith—Khalid b. Khidash—'Umarah b.
Zadhan al-Saydalanl: I saw al-Hasan wearing an 'AdanI garment,
streaky and marked with crosses, with an Egyptian shirt from
Shatah and sandals like those used by people belonging to the
futuwwah orders. 978
According to al-Harith—'All b. Muhammad—'Abdallah b.
Muslim: Some sweetmeat was brought to al-Hasan, and he said to
his son Sa'id "Come, my son, eat from it." Sa'id said "I am afraid of
the consequences," whereupon al-Hasan replied "O my son, [this
is] the best wheat [mixed] with bees' honey and pure butter; no bad
consequence can ever result from this," or [perhaps] he said "no
evil can ever result from this."
According to Yunus—Musa—Sahl b. Husayn b. Muslim al- [2492]
Bahill: I sent [a message] to 'Abdallah b. al-Hasan b. Abi al-Hasan,
saying: "Send me the writings of your father." He sent me [a reply]
saying: "When al-Hasan had fallen ill he told me 'Collect [my
writings] for me.' I did this, not knowing what he would do with
them, and brought them to him. He then told the maid to kindle
the oven and ordered [the writings] to be burned, except one note¬
book." ['Abdallah b. al-Hasan] sent me that [notebook]. 979 I later
met him, and he told me personally the same [story] the mes¬
senger had conveyed to me on his behalf.
According to 'All b. Sahl—Damrah b. Rabi'ah—Ibn Shawdhab:
Al-Hasan died in the year 110/April 16, 728-April 4, 729, whereas
Ibn Sirin died a hundred days later.
977. On the "killing" of the Sunna, i.e., the customs and practices of the Proph¬
et, see Goldziher, Muslim Studies, II, 31-37.
978. Cf. Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 126. Hadhw al-fityan could also mean "sandals like
those used by young people." For the orders, widespread in medieval Muslim urban
communities, see “Futuwwah," EP, II, 961-65 (C. Cahen).
979. "Notebook" is my rendering of sahifah, whereas "writings" is my transla¬
tion of kutub (sing, kitab), normally rendered as "books"; see note 965, above. This
passage, like many others describing the burning or effacing of early writings, is
pertinent to the discussion about the existence of early writings,- see Landau-
Tasseron, "Reconstruction" and the bibliography there; and on sahifah, Goldziher,
Mushm Studies, n, 22-24; Ahmad, 256-69, 318-26; "Sahlfa," EP, Vm, 834-35 (A.
Ghedira).
226
Biographies
According to Abu al-Sa’ib—Ibn Idris—Shu'bah: Al-Hasan died
in the year no; there were a hundred days between his and Ibn
Sirin's death, and al-Hasan died first.
According to Ibn Sa'd 980 —Mu'adh b. Mu'adh: Al-Hasan was ten
years older than Muhammad b. Sirin.
According to 'Ali b. Muslim al-TusI—Sa'id b. 'Amir: Al-Hasan
was bom in the year 21/December 10, 641-November 29, 642, and
died in the year 110. A Syrian by the name of al-Nadr b. 'Amr ; who
was in charge of the prayers, said the prayer over his bier. He
reached the age of eighty-nine years.
According to [Sufyan] Ibn Waki'—his father—Hammad b.
Zayd—Ayyub: I quarreled with al-Hasan about predestination [al-
qadai) to the point that I threatened to [denounce] him to the
authorities.
According to Abu 'Uthman al-Muqaddaml—al-FarawI: I heard
Malik say: "We hold Ibn Sirin in higher esteem than al-Hasan." I
asked: "O Abu 'Abdallah, for what reason?" He said: "Al-Hasan
was led astray by the doctrine of [free will held by the]
Qadariyyah." 981
[2493] According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—al-Hakam b. Bashir—
Zakariyya’ b. Sallam: Someone came to al-Hasan and told him
that he had divorced his wife [by uttering the formula "you are
divorced"] three times. Al-Hasan said "You have disobeyed your
Lord and alienated your wife." The man said "God had decreed
this for me." Al-Hasan, who was eloquent, said "God had not
decreed [qada]," that is, "God had not ordered [this]," whereupon
he recited the following verse: "Your Lord had ordered [qada) that
you worship no one but Him." 982
According to Isma'Il b. Mas'ud al-Jahdari—al-Mu'tamir b.
Sulayman—Qurrah b. Khalid—Abu Rabah b. 'Abidah: As far as I
980. Ibn Sa'd, VII/1, 129.
981. The term Qadariyyah, derived from qadar "predestination ," was applied by
the holders of the determinist view to their opponents, i.e., the supporters of the
doctrine of free will, among whom al-Hasan al-Basrl was counted. Nondetermi-
nists applied the term to determinists. Eventually the term came to refer to the
doctrine of free will. It is commonly assumed that the doctrine favored by the
authorities of the time, the Umayyads, was that of the Muiji’ah, hence the threat
to denounce al-Hasan to the authorities. See Cook, Early Dogma , 107-52; note
969, above.
982. Qur’an 17:24. The verb qada means both "to decree" and "to order."
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 227
am concerned, the most worrying thing about al-Hasan is his view
about predestination, by which he brings discord among the
people.
Muhammad b. Sirin. 983
His kunyah was Abu Bakr, and he was a client of Anas b. Malik.
It was reported that he was deaf.
According to Ibn Sa'd 984 —Khalid b. Khidash—Hammad b.
Zayd—Anas b. Sirin: Muhammad b. Sirin was bom two years
before the end of 'Uthman's caliphate, whereas I was born one year
later.
According to Bakkar b. Muhammad: Muhammad b. Sirin fa¬
thered thirty children, all of them from the same woman, but
none survived except 'Abdallah b. Muhammad.
Wahb b. Munabbih b. Kamil b. Sayj. 985
He was a descendant of [one of] the Persians who had been
dispatched by Khusraw to the Yemen to fight the Abyssinians
who ruled there ( al-abna ’). [These Persians] ousted the Abyssi¬
nians and governed the Yemen and its provinces.
Wahb's kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah. He was one of those who
read the books of the prophets and knew the history of the
ancients.
Wahb lived in San'a’, as did also his brothers. 986 [2494]
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi] and 'Abd al-
Mun'im b. Idris: 987 Wahb died in San'a’ in the year 110/April 16,
983. "Ibn Sinn," EP, HI, 947-48 (T. Fahd); Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rlkh, 354;
idem, Tabaqat, 210; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 143.
984. Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 140.
985. Of Persian-Yemeni origin, one of the earliest storytellers and historians
whose writings have come down to us, author of a biography of the Prophet preced¬
ing that of Ihn Ishaq. He is said to have met many Companions and to have been
closely associated with 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas for many years. See Khoury, Wahb, I,
189-316; Krenkow, "The Two Oldest Books," 230-34; Duri, Rise of Historical
Writing, 122-35 and passim; al-Razi, 367-68, 372-411, 609; al-Ja'di, 57;
Nuwayhid, n, 721.
986. Wahb had several brothers, the most famous being Hammam b. Munabbih.
Also known to the Yemeni biographer al-Razi are Ma'qil the jurist and Ghaylan;
see al-Razi, 370-71, 415-17, 421, 5 8 5, 601, 607; Duri, Rise of Historical Writing,
134; P- 312., below.
987. A descendant of Wahb and transmitter of his material; see Khoury, Wahb, I,
T84-88, 291-92 and passim.
228
Biographies
728-April 4, 729, at the beginning of the caliphate of Hisham b.
'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan. According to others he died in the year
114/March 3, 732-February 20, 733.
Those Who Died in the Year 111
(April 5, 7 29-March 25, 730/
'Atiyyah b. Sa'd b. Junadah al-'Awfi, of the Jadilah of Qays. 988
His kunyah was Abu al-Hasan.
According to Ibn Sa'd 989 —Sa'id b. Muhammad b. al-Hasan b.
'Atiyyah: Sa'd b. Junadah came to 'All b. Abi Talib in al-Ktifah and
said [to him] "O Commander of the Faithful, a son was bom to me;
[please] give him a name." 'All said "This is God's gift," so the boy
was called 'Atiyyah (that is, "a gift").
His mother was Greek.
'Atiyyah participated in the revolt of Ibn al-Ash'ath 990 then fled
to Fars. Al-Hajjaj wrote to Muhammad b. al-Qasim al-Thaqafi 991
[the following instructions]: "Send for 'Atiyyah; if he curses 'All b.
Abi Talib, [fine]; 992 if not, flog him 400 times and shave his head
and beard." Muhammad b. al-Qasim sent for 'Atiyyah and read al-
Hajjaj's letter to him. 'Atiyyah refused to do [as requested], so
Muhammad had him flogged 400 times and had his head and beard
shaven.
When Qutaybah b. Muslim 993 became governor of Khurasan
'Atiyyah went to him and stayed in Khurasan until 'Umar b.
988. Mentioned as a Shi'i transmitter, al-Quhpa’i, IV, 141, and a Qur’an inter¬
preter; Nuwayhid, I, 347; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh , 366. Jadilah was the name
of several tribal groups, one of them belonging to the northern confederation of
Qays 'Aylan; see Caskel, II, 252, and p. 276, below.
989. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 212-13.
990. A grandson of the Kindi chief al-Ash'ath b. Qays. 'Abd al-Rahman b.
Muhammad b. al-Ash'ath was one of the tribal nobles ( askraf ), governor of Sistan,
and an army general. He led a revolt against the Umayyads during the years 700-3.
See Hawting, First Dynasty, 67-70; Crone, Slaves, 110-11, no. 21; "Ibn al-
Ash'ath," EP, III, 715-19 |L. Veccia-Vaglieri); Sayed.
991. One of al-Hajjaj's relatives, appointed by him as a military commander and
governor of Sind. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, n, 1200, 1257, 1271, 1275; Crone, Slaves,
135 no. 25.
992. See p. 212, above. Here the curse is used as a test of loyalty to the
Umayyads.
993. A Syrian of northern descent, appointed governor of Rayy and later of
Khurasan, by al-Hajjaj b. Yusuf. He was killed in an attempt to rebel against the
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 229
Hubayrah 994 was appointed governor of Iraq. 'Atiyyah then wrote
to 'Umar, asking permission to return, and was granted it.
'Atiyyah went to al-Kufah, where he remained until his death in
the year hi.
'Atiyyah transmitted many traditions; he was reliable, if God so
wills.
Those Who Died in the Year 112
(March 26, 730-March 14, 731)
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abl Sa'id al-Khudri. 995
Abu Sa'id's name was Sa'd b. Malik b. Sinan.
There is disagreement over 'Abd al-Rahman ; s kunyah. Accord¬
ing to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi], it was Abu Muhammad. [2495]
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Sa'id
died in Medina in the year 112, at the age of seventy-seven. He had
transmitted [traditions] from his father.
Abu Ja'far Muhammad b. 'All b. Husayn b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 996
His mother was Umm 'Abdallah bt. Hasan b. 'Ali b. Abi Talib.
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abd
al-'AzIz—Hakim b. Hakim b. 'Abbad b. Hunayf: I saw Abu Ja'far
leaning on a folded Persian mantle in the mosque. 997 Ibn 'Umar
[al-Waqidi] said: The noble and virtuous among us, who frequent
the mosque, still practice this. They lean on folded Persian man¬
tles other than the mantles and cloaks they wear.
According to 'Abd al-Rahman b. Yunus—Sufyan b. 'Uyaynah—
Ja'far b. Muhammad: I heard Muhammad b. 'Ali mention to
Umayyad caliph Sulayman. See Crone, Slaves, 136-38 no. 33; "Kutayba b. Mus¬
lim," EP, V, 541-42 (C. E. Bosworth).
994. Of the northern tribe of Fazarah, a branch of the confederation of Ghatafan.
See "Fazara," EP, n, 873 (W. M. Watt); Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 255-59. He was an
army general and governor of Iraq and Khurasan under the Marwanids; see Crone,
Slaves, 107.
995. Son of the eminent Ansari Abu Said al-Khudri. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 357; idem, Tabaqat, 253; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 117.
996. That is, Muhammad al-Baqir, the fifth imam according to the Imami and
Isma'ili Shi'ah. See "Muhammad b. 'All al-Baqir," EP, VII, 397-400 (E. Kohlberg);
Jafri, 248-55; Tabataba’i, 202-3; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 103.
997. On the importance of the mantle, taylasan, see al-Suyuti, al-Ahadith al-
hisan.
230
Biographies
Fatimah, daughter of Husayn, some [property] of the Prophet's
bequest, 998 saying "This one yields for me fifty-eight [ . . . ]" 999
According to Ibn 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: According to our version,
he died in the year 117/January 31, 73 5-January 19, 736, at the age
of seventy-three.
According to Muhammad b. Isma'il—Abu Nu'aym [al-Fadl b.
Dukayn]: Muhammad b. 'All Abu Ja'far died in the year 1x4/
March 3, 732-February 20, 733.
According to 'All b. Muhammad al-Mada’ini: Abu Ja'far Mu¬
hammad b. 'All b. Husayn died in the year 117 at the age of sixty-
three.
[2496] According to Yahya b. Ma'in: Abu Ja'far Muhammad b. 'All b.
Husayn died in the year 118/January 20, 736-January 7, 737.
According to Muhammad b. 'Abdallah al-Hadrami—Suwayd b.
Sa'Id—Mufaddal b. 'Abdallah—Aban b. Taghlib—Abu Ja'far [Mu¬
hammad b. 'All]: Jabir b. 'Abdallah came to me at school and told
me "Uncover your belly." I uncovered my belly, and he kissed it,
saying "The Prophet told me to convey his greetings to you."
Al-Hakam b. 'Utaybah. 1000
Opinions about his kunyah differ. Some say it is Abu Muham¬
mad. However, according to Ibn Sa'd 1001 —al-Fadl b. Dukayn—
Abu Isra’il: Al-Hakam b. 'Utaybah's kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
There is also disagreement over [the tribe] to which he was
affiliated [as client]. According to Ibn Sa'd he was a client of the
Kindah. 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini] said: Al-Hakam b.
998. Sadaqat al-nabl. The status of the property left behind by the Prophet was
disputed. Whereas his family demanded that it should be considered as inheri¬
tance, the rulers insisted that prophets do not leave inheritance and that their
property should become waqf or sadaqah to be used for charitable purposes. The
discussion had political implications for authority after the Prophet's death; see
Goldziher, Muslim Studies, II, 102.
999. Hadhihi tuwaffi li thamaniyan (sic) wa-khamsin wa-mata laha. The text
(also Dar al-Fikr, 648, Cairo, 641) is obviously garbled, as are the variants in Ibn
Sa'd, V, 238, and Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, IX, 312. In the latter this confusion led to a
further misunderstanding. Perhaps the text should read wa-ma talaha "and what
follows," in the sense of "and more." Such a copyist's error is possible if the alif
was at some point written above, rather than after, the lam (as in the word hadha).
1000. Not to be confused with the judge al-Hakam b. ‘Uyaynah. See Ibn Hajar,
Tahdhib, II, 372; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 162.
1001. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 231.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 2,31
'Utaybah was a Kindi, but some say he was an Asadi, that is, a
client of that tribe.
Al-Hakam b. 'Utaybah was erudite [especially in] religious law
and transmitted many traditions.
According to 'Abd al-Rahman b. Salih—Nuh b. Darraj—Ibn Abi
Layla: I was visiting al-Hakam when Da’ud al-Awdi came to him
and said "People allege that you denigrate Abu Bakr and 'Umar."
He retorted "I do not, but I contend that 'All is better than they
are ."1002
According to Abu al-Sa’ib—['Abd al-Mun'im] Ibn Idris—
Shu'bah [b. al-Hajiaj]: Al-Hakam b. 'Utaybah died in the year
115/February 21, 733-February 9, 734.
According to Muhammad b. Isma'il—Abu Nu'aym al-Fadl b.
Dukayn: Al-Hakam b. 'Utaybah died in the year 115.
Sa'id b. Yasar Abu al-Hubab. 1003
He was a client of al-Hasan b. 'Ali. He lived in Medina and died
there in the year 117/January 31, 735-January 19, 736.
Muhammad b. Ka'b b. Hayyan b. Salim b. Asad al-Qurazi. 1004
He was an ally of the Aws. His kunyah was Abu Hamzah. [2497]
Opinions differ as to the time of his death. According to
Muhammad b. Isma'il—Abu Nu'aym al-Fadl b. Dukayn: He died
in the year 108/May 8, 726-April 27, 727.
[Muhammad b. Ka'b] was knowledgeable, virtuous, and accept¬
able. He transmitted many [traditions].
Qatadah b. Di'amah al-Sadusi. 1005
1002. The evaluation of the first two caliphs, Abu Bakr and 'Umar, versus the
fourth caliph, the Prophet's cousin 'All b. Abi Talib, played a crucial role in the
debate between Sunnis and Shi'is around the legitimacy of rulers in Islam. Cf. al-
Tabari, Sarih al-suimah, 23-24; al-Lalika’i, VII, 1363-72; al-Ash'ari, Maqalat, 74-
75; al-Khallal, al-Sunnah, 371-410.
1003. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 363; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 118.
1004. A convert of a Medinan Jewish tribe annihilated by the Prophet, the Banu
Qurayzah. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 363; idem, Tabaqat, 264; Ibn Hibban,
Mashahii, 107,- F. Sezgin, I, 32.
1005. A Basran of the Sadus, a branch of the Shayban tribe; see Ibn Hazm,
Jamhaiat, 317-18. He was considered an expert on religious law and the Qur’an.
See "Katada b. Di'ama," EP, IV, 748 (C. Pellat); Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 363;
idem, Tabaqat, 213; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 154; al-Sayrawan, 266; Ibn al-Jazari, n,
25.
232 Biographies
His kunyah was Abu al-Khattab. He was blind.
Qatadah was a hafiz 1006 and a clever person.
According to Ibn Ma'in: Qatadah died in the year 117/January
31, 735“February 19, 736.
'All b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib. 1007
His mother was Zur'ah bt. Mishrah b. Ma'di-Karib b. Wali'ah b.
Shurahbll b. Mu'awiyah b. Hujr al-Qird b. al-Harith al-Walladah b.
' Amr b. Mu'awiyah b. al-Harith b. Mu'awiyah b. Thawr b. Muratti'
b. Thawr, that is, Kindabi. 1008
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
It was reported that he was born the night 'All b. Abi Talib, the
Commander of the Faithful, was killed, in Ramadan 40/February
661. He therefore was given both the name and the kunyah of ['All
b. Abi Talib], that is, Abu al-Hasan. 'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan said
to him: "By God, I shall not tolerate it that you would use both the
name and the kunyah [of 'All b. Abi Talib]." So he changed his
kunyah and made it Abu Muhammad. 1009
This 'All b. 'Abdallah was the youngest of his father's sons. It
was reported that he was the most comely and handsome man in
the Quraysh. He was [also] the one most dedicated to prayer
among them and was nicknamed al-Sajjad (the habitual prostrator
or the worshiper) because of his piety.
Opinions differ as to the time of his death. According to
Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: 'All b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas died
in the year 118/January 20, 736-January 7, 737.
1006. A technical term denoting a high degree of knowledge in the prophetic
tradition. Definitions of the term vary,- see al-Sayrawan, 37-38.
1007. Head of the 'Abbasid movement in his time and ancestor of the 'Abbasid
caliphs. See Sharon, Black Banners, 86-87,159-61; Khallfahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
239; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 107; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III (Dun), 70-71; Ibn
Qudamah, i6o ; Akhbar al-dawlah, 134-48.
1008. The text (as well as Ibn Sa'd, V, 229) has wa-huwa kindI, but the reading
must be wa-huwa kindah, because Thawr, the tribe's eponym, was nicknamed
Kindah; see Ibn Hazm, famharat, 425.
1009. Al-Tabari, Ta'rlkh, II, 1592. And see note 113, above. The matter of
genealogy and family relations within the Quraysh was of crucial importance in
Umayyad propaganda, which is reflected in the stance taken by 'Abd al-Malik; see
Sharon, "The Umayyads."
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 233
Hammad b. Abi Sulayman. 1010
His kunyah was Abu Isma'Il.
Hammad was a client of Ibrahim b. Abi Musa al-Ash'ari. He was [2498]
one of the people sent by Mu'awiyah to Abu Musa at Dumat al-
Jandal. 1011
Hammad was an expert on religious law.
According to Abu al-Sa’ib—['Abd al-Mun'im] Ibn Idris—
Shu'bah [b. al-Hajjaj]: Hammad b. Abi Sulayman died in the year
120/December 29, 737-December 17, 738.
Zayd b. 'All b. al-Husayn b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 1012
Zayd's mother was a concubine [umm walad).
I have told the story of Zayd's death in my book entitled the
Supplemented ( al-Mudhayyal ).
According to al-Harith [b. Muhammad]—Muhammad b.
Sa'd 1013 —Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]—'Abdaliah b. Ja'far:
Zayd b. 'Ali came to Hisham b. 'Abd al-Malik 1014 and brought
forward the matter of his many debts, as well as [other] needs.
Hisham did not fulfill any of his needs. [Moreover], he was sulky
with him and spoke harsh words to him. 'Abdallah b. Ja'far related:
Salim, Hisham's client and chamberlain, told me that Zayd b. 'Ali
came out of Hisham's presence twisting his moustache with his
hand, and saying "No one ever loved [this] life without having to
be humiliated [for it]." He then departed, heading for al-Kufah,
where he rose in rebellion. Yusuf b. 'Umar al-Thaqafi 1015 was at
that time governor of Iraq on behalf of Hisham b. 'Abd al-Malik.
1010. Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 365; idem, Tabaqat, 162-, Ibn Hibban, Mask¬
able, 178.
ion. The reference is to the arbitration following the battle of Siffln between
'Ali and Mu'awiyah, in the year 36/657.
1012. The fifth imam according to the Zaydi Shi'ah and the eponym of the sect.
See van Arendonck, 28-33 and passim; Jafri, 247-48, 251-54; Tabataba'i, 76-77;
al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, n, 1668-88, 1698-1715; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlz, 104-5,- al-
Amin, XXXHI, 37-132; Hasan.
1013. Ibn Sa'd, V, 239.
1014. The tenth Umayyad caliph (105-25/724-43); seeHawting, First Dynasty,
81.
1015. Governor of Iraq under the Marwanids. He was a relative (not “a parent,"
as stated by Zettersteen) of the famous general and statesman al-Hajjaj b. Yusuf.
See "Yusuf b. 'Omar," El 1 , IV, 1177-78 (K. V. Zettersteen); al-Dhahabi, Siyar, V,
442-44.
234
Biographies
Yusuf sent troops to fight Zayd b. 'All, and those who had rebelled
in support of Zayd deserted him during the fighting. Zayd was
killed and crucified.
Salim reported: I later told Hisham about Zayd's statement the
day he had come out of his presence, and Hisham said: "May your
mother be bereft of you! Why didn't you tell me this before? A
mere 500,000 dirhams would have satisfied him, and this would
have been easier for us than what became of him." 1016
[2499] According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: When the
'Abbasids came to power 'Abdallah b. 'All b. 'Abdallah b. 'A-
bbas 1017 resolved upon [doing something about] Hisham b. 'Abd
al-Malik. He gave the order, and Hisham was dug out of his grave.
'Abdallah had him crucified and said "This is [done] in retaliation
for what he did to Zayd b. 'All." 1018
Zayd was killed on Monday, 2 Safar 120/January 29, 738 or
122/740, at the age of forty-two, as was reported. He had lived in
Medina and was killed in al-Kufah.
Salamah b. Kuhayl al-Hadrami. 1019
Salamah was an inhabitant of al-Kufah, where he died on the
last day of the year 121/December 6, 739. Some say that he died in
the year 122, when 'All b. Zayd was killed. 1020
Muhammad b. Muslim b. 'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah al-Asghar b.
Shihab b. 'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. Zuhrah b. Kilab b. Murrah. 1021
1016. The report has an obvious anti-Zaydi bias. Zayd, who was out to fight the
oppressors (i.e., the Umayyads) and retrieve the rights of the family of the Prophet,
is here portrayed as a wordly, venal figure.
1017. Uncle of the first and second Abbasid caliphs and commander of the
'Abbasid army. He rose in rebellion against his nephew al-Mansur, claiming the
caliphate for himself, but was defeated; see Sharon, Revolt, 2,35-38, 280, 287-88.
1018. On the 'Abbasids as patrons of the 'Alids, see Sharon, Revolt, 135-37 and
passim,- note 113, above.
1019. Of the southern group, the Hadramawt. See Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
r63; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 77.
1020. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 221.
1021. Known as Ibn Shihab al-Zuhri (died ^4/742), an early Medinan scholar
and transmitter of prophetic tradition and historical reports, mainly about the
Prophet. See Horovitz, 1928, 33-50; Duri, "al-Zuhri"; idem, Rise of Historical
Writing, 95-i2t ; Abdur Rahman; al-Dari; Lecker, "Biographical Notes"; Mustafa,
I, 157-58.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 235
His mother was ‘A’ishah bt. 'Abdallah al-Akbar b. Shihab, and
his kunyah was Abu Bakr.
Muhammad b. Muslim al-Zuhrl was an expert on the cam¬
paigns ( maghazi ) of the Prophet and the history of the Quraysh
and the Ansar. He was a transmitter ( lawiyah ) of traditions from
the Prophet and his Companions. 1022
Muhammad b. 'All b. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib. 1023
His mother was al-'Aliyah bt. 'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas b. 'Abd
al-Muttalib.
The offspring of Muhammad b. 'All are the following: 'Abdallah
al-Asghar, that is, Abu al-'Abbas, the [first] 'Abbasid caliph; 1024
Da’ud b. Muhammad; 'Ubaydallah; and Raytah, who died without
having been married. 1025 Their mother was Raytah bt.
'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-Madan b. al-Dayyan, of the [2500]
Banu al-Harith b. Ka'b. 1026
[Muhammad b. 'All's children from other women are] (1) 'Abdal¬
lah al-Akbar, that is, Abu Ja'far al-Mansur, who ascended the
caliphate after his brother Abu al-'Abbas 1027 and whose mother
was a concubine; (2) Ibrahim b. Muhammad, that is, al-Imam,
whom the members of the 'Abbasid movement used to frequent
and whose instructions they used to follow, 1028 his mother was a
concubine; (3) Yahya b. Muhammad and (4) al-'Aliyah bt. Muham¬
mad, whose mother was Umm al-Hakam bt. 'Abdallah b. al-
Harith b. Nawfal b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib; (5) Musa b.
1022. Or, "A transmitter of accounts of the life of the Prophet and his
Companions."
1023. The initiator of the 'Abbasid movement and founder of the dynasty. See
Sharon, Black Banners, 123-28, 134 and passim,- Ibn Qudamah, 160-61, al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, IH (Duri), 71-72, 80-87; Ibn Hibban, Mashdhir, 207; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 372; idem, Tabaqat, 312.
1024. Named al-Saffah, reigned between 132-36/749-54. See "Abu al-'Abbas,"
EP, I, 103 (S. M. Moscati); Kennedy, 128.
1025. See glossahium, s.v. b-r-z.
1026. A large confederation of Yemeni tribes, prominent in the 'Abbasid revolu¬
tion in al-Kufah; see Sharon, Black Banners, ^2-43.
1027. Considered the real founder of the 'Abbasid state, reigned 36—58/754—75;
see "Al-Mansur," EP, VI, 427-28 (H. Kennedy).
1028. See Sharon, Black Banners, 86, 174, and passim,- idem, Revolt, 52, 140,
225, and passim.
Biographies
236
Muhammad, whose mother was a concubine; (6) al-'Abbas b.
Muhammad, whose mother was a concubine; (7) Isma'il; (8) Ya¬
'qub, that is, Abu al-Asbat; and (9) Lubabah bt. Muhammad, who
was married to Ja'far b. Sulayman b. 'All and died without chil¬
dren. All these were born to various mothers.
According to al-'Abbas b. Muhammad: Muhammad b. 'All b.
['Abdallaha b.] al-'Abbas died in al-Sharat 1029 in Syria in the year
125/November 4, 742-October 24, 743, during the caliphate of al-
Walid b. Yazid b. 'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan, 1030 at the age of sixty.
Abu Hashim 'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyyah had
chosen Muhammad b. 'All as his heir and handed his books over to
him, so that Muhammad b. 'All was Abu Hashim's heir ( wasiyy ).
Abu Hashim said to him: "This matter [of the caliphate] will
remain among your descendants only." Consequently, the Shi'ah
who used to frequent Abu Hashim and attend his presence trans¬
ferred [their allegiance] to Muhammad b. 'All. 1031
Thabit al-Bunani b. Aslam. 1032
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad, and he belonged to the Sa'd b.
Lu’ayy b. Ghalib. According to Hisham [Ibn al-Kalbi]—his father:
Bunanah was the clan's ancestress. 1033
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]: Thabit al-Bunani
died in the year 127/October 13, 744-October 2, 745. He had lived
in al-Basrah, where he [also] died. He was reliable ( thiqah ) and
transmitted many traditions.
1029. The mountainous area south of the Dead Sea, where the 'Abbasid family
settled toward the end of the eighth century. From their dwelling place in the
village of Humaymah they conducted the 'Abbasid movement; see Sharon, Black
Banners, 120.
1030. The eleventh Umayyad caliph, 125-26/743-44; see Hawting, First
Dynasty, 90-94.
1031. Abu Hashim was the leader of the Hashimiyyah movement after the
death of his father Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyyah. This account served as the basis
of the 'Abbasid claim to rule, see Sharon, Black Banners, 82-98, 121-40. The
books mentioned here apparently symbolize the knowledge that, according to the
Shi'ah, 'All inherited from the Prophet and that now lawfully passes into the hands
of the 'Abbasids. Alternatively the word could be read kitab (assuming a pendant
alif above the ta'), referring to Abu Hashim's testament.
1032. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 214; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 45. He was
considered an expert on tradition [hafiz]-, see al-Sayrawan, 69.
1033. Sa'd b. Lu’ayy was a clan attributed, though hesitantly, to the Quraysh.
See Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 172-73; Ibn Qudamah, 492.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 237
'Abdallah b. Dinar. 1034
He was a client of 'Abdallah b. 'Umar b. al-Khattab.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman. He died in the year 127. [2501]
He had lived in Medina, where he [also] died. He transmitted
many traditions and was reliable ( thiqah ).
Wahb b. Kaysan. 1035
His kunyah was Abu Nu'aym. He was a client of 'Abdallah b. al-
Zubayr b. al-'Awwam. He died in the year 127.
Bukayr b. 'Abdallah b. al-Ashajj. 1036
He was a client of al-Miswar b. Makhramah al-Zuhrl. 1037 His
kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah. He died in the year 127 in Medina.
Malik b. Dinar. 1038
His kunyah was Abu Yahya. He was a client of a woman of the
Banu Samah b. Lu’ayy. 1039
According to Ibn 'A’ishah: Malik b. Dinar's origins were in Ka¬
bul. 1040 He was a pious man, an expert on the prophetic tradition
(hafiz), and a Qur’an reader. He used to make Qur’an copies [for a
living].
Jabir b. Yazid al-Ju'fi. 1041
He had Shi'i inclinations. He lived in al-Kufah, where he died in
the year 128/October 3, 745-September 21, 746. 1042
1034. Considered a hafiz (an expert on the prophetic tradition). See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 263; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 129; al-Sayrawan, 116.
1035. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 398; idem, Tabaqat, 260; Ibn Hibban, Mash¬
ahii, 130.
1036. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'iikh, 369, 403; idem, Tabaqat, 263; Ibn Hibban,
Mashahii, 299.
1037. Perhaps he was rather a client of the family, not of al-Miswar himself,
who died in 64/683.
1038. "Malikb. Dinar," EP, VI, 266-67 (C. Pellat); Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’iikh,
418; idem, Tabaqat, 216; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 147,- Ibn al-fazari, H, 36.
1039. A clan said to be of Qurashi origin; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 172-74.
1040. The region in eastern Afghanistan. Malik's father came from there as a
prisoner; see Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, X, 13.
1041. The tribe Ju'fiyy belonged to the southern confederation Sa'd al-'Ashirah;
see Ibn Hazm, famhaiat, 409. Jabir was a traditionist accused by Shi'is and Sunnis
alike of telling lies. See Ibn Hazm, 410; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 398; idem,
Tabaqat, 163; al-Quhpa’I, n, 7-11 ; al-Kashshi, 169-74.
1042. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 240.
238
Biographies
According to Sa'id b. 'Uthman al-Tanukhi—Ibrahim b. Mahdi
al-Massisi—Isma'il b. 'Ulayyah—Shu'bah: Jabir and Muhammad
b. Ishaq were most reliable ( saduq ). 1043
According to 'Abd al-Rahman b. Bishr al-Naysaburi—Sufyan b.
'Uyaynah: Jabir al-Ju'fl believed in the Return [of the hidden
Imam] [raj'ah).
According to Yahya b. Ma'in: Jabir al-Ju'fl died in the year
132/August 20, 749-August 8, 750.
According to al-'Abbas al-Durl—Abu Yahya al-Himmanl 'Abd
al-Hamld b. Bashmir 1044 —Abu Hanifah al-Nu'man b. Thabit: I
never saw a greater liar than Jabir al-Ju'fl.
According to al-'Abbas—Yahya b. Ya'la al-Muharibi—Za’idah:
Jabir al-Ju'fi was a liar who believed in the Return.
[2502] 'Asim b. Abi al-Najud al-Asadi, that is, 'Asim b. Bahdalah. 1045
He was a client of the Banu Jadhlmah b. Malik b. Nasr b. Qu'ayn
b. Asad. 1046
According to Abu Nu'aym al-Fadl b. Dukayn—Abu al-Ahwas:
his kunyah was Abu Bakr. 1047
'Asim was the Qur’an teacher of al-Kufah after Yahya b.
Waththab.
He was a reliable [transmitter] ( thiqah ), but he erred a lot. 1048
He lived in al-Kufah where he died in the year 128/October 3,
745-September 21, 746.
Abu Ishaq al-Sabi'i. 1049
1043. Ibn Ishaq's reliability was a matter of dispute. See Landau-Tasseron,
"Sayf," 8, and p. 252, below.
1044. The Dar al-Fikr edition, 653, has "Bashir"; see also de Goeje, p. 2501 n. d.
ro45. Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 398; idem, Tabaqat, 159; Ibn Hibban, Mash-
ahli, 261.
1046. A tribe of northern origin. See 'All; Landau-Tasseron, "Asad."
1047. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 224.
1048. That is, he did not intend to lie, which is enough to classify him as a
reliable transmitter [thiqah).
1049. A famous Kufan jurist of the southern tribe al-Sabi', a branch of the Ham-
dan confederation. See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 395; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
162; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 178; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 602; F. Sezgin, I, 283.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 239
His name was 'Amr b. 'Abdallah b. 'All b. Ahmad b. Dhi Yah-
mad b. al-Sabi' b. Sabu' b. Sa'b b. Mu'awiyah b. Kathir b. Malik b.
Jusham b. Hashid b. Jusham b. Khaywan b. Nawf b. Hamdan. 1050
According to al-Aswad b. 'Amir—Sharik: Abu Ishaq al-Sabi'i
was bom during the caliphate of 'Uthman. Sharik may have said:
Three years before its end. Abu Ishaq transmitted many traditions
and was most reliable ( saduq ). He was [also] a Qur’an reader.
According to Abu Nu'aym: Abu Ishaq reached the age of ninety-
eight or ninety-nine and died in the year 128.
Abu Ishaq al-Shaybani. 1051
His name was Sulayman b. Abx Sulayman, a client of the Banu
Shayban.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: 1052 He lived in
al-Kufah, where he died in the year 129/September 22, 746-
September io ; 747.
Matar b. Tahman al-Warraq. 1053
He was from Khurasan, a client of 'Ilba’ al-Sulami. 1054
Some hold that he was a weak [transmitter]. His kunyah was
Abu Raja’.
According to Ja'far b. Sulayman: Matar b. Tahman died in the
year 125/November 4, 742-October 24, 743.
Yahya b. Abi Kathir al-Ta’I. 1055
His kunyah was Abu Nasr.
1050. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 219, has Khayran, but the correct form is Khaywan, as indi¬
cated by an anonymous hand on the manuscript (see de Goeje, 2502 n. b) and
recorded in many other sources,- see Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 514; the manu¬
scripts of Ibn Hazm (erroneously corrected by the editor; see 392, n. 7); al-Sam'ani,
II, 433. See also p. 25 r and note 908, above.
105 r. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 445; idem, Tabaqat, 165; Ibn Hibban, Mash-
aba, 278. Shayban was a name of several branches of the large northern confedera¬
tion of Bakr b. Wa’il (Rabi'ah), see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 327, 321.
1052. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 241.
1053. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 411; idem, Tabaqat, 215,- Ibn Hibban, Mush-
ahli, 153.
1054. Much effort was spent in tracing this individual but to no avail.
1055. A Basran traditionist of the southern tribe Tayyi’, who settled in al-
Yamamah. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 215; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 304.
[2503]
240
Biographies
According to 'All b. al-Madyanl—Yahya b. Sa'id [al-Qattan]—
Shu'bah [b. al-Hajjaj]: The traditions [transmitted by] Yahya b. Abi
Kathir are better than those [transmitted by Ibn Shihab] al-Zuhri.
According to 'Abd al-Razzaq—Ma'mar [b. Rashid]: Yahya b. Abi
Kathir was requested to swear allegiance to the Umayyad caliph
[of the time], but he refused, whereupon he was whipped and
treated like Sa'id b. al-Musayyab.
Yahya b. Abi Kathir made extensive use of tadlls. 1056
It was reported that Yahya b. Abi Kathir died in the year
129/September 22, 746-September 10, 747. He had lived in al-
Yamamah, where he [also] died.
Muhammad b. al-Munkadir b. 'Abdallah b. al-Hudayr b. 'Abd
al-'Uzza b. 'Amir b. Harithah b. Sa'd b. Taym b. Murrah. 1057
His mother was a concubine, and his kunyah was Abu
'Abdallah.
Muhammad b. al-Munkadir fathered 'Umar, 'Abd al-Malik, al-
Munkadir, 'Abdallah, Yusuf, Ibrahim, and Da’ud, whose mother
was a concubine.
Some trace Muhammad's genealogy as follows: Muhammad b.
al-Munkadir b. 'Abdallah b. al-Hudayr b. Muhriz b. 'Abd al-'Uzza.
It was reported that Muhammad b. al-Munkadir died in Medina,
where he had lived, in the year 130/September 11, 747-August 30,
748 or 131/August 31, 748-August 19, 749.
Abu al-Huwayrith. 1058
His name was 'Abd al-Rahman b. Mu'awiyah. [Sufyan] Ibn
'Uyaynah transmitted [traditions] from him.
According to Yahya: He was a Medinan and a reliable transmit¬
ter ( thiqah ).
According to Muhammad b. Bakkar—Abu Ma'shar [Najlh b.
'Abd al-Rahman]—Abu al-Huwayrith 'Abd al-Rahman b. Mu'awi-
1056. A term referring to various kinds of tampering with the chains of trans¬
mission ( isnad) of traditions, e.g., hiding the name of one's source, citing someone
without having directly heard him, or changing the name of a source in the chain;
see al-Hakim al-Naysaburi, 103-12.
1057. Of the Qurash! clan the Banu Taym, known for both piety and generosity.
See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 418; idem, Tabaqat, 268; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii,
107; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, 161-62.
1058. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 422; al-Dulabi, I, 160-61.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 241
yah: God spoke to Moses within the measure that was endurable
to him. Had God spoken all His words, Moses would not have
endured it. Moses stayed forty nights; no one saw him but was
struck dead by the light of the Lord of the Universe. 1059
Abu al-Huwayrith lived in Medina, where he died in the year
130.
Yazid b. Ruman. 1060
He was a client of al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam's family.
Yazid was knowledgeable on the campaigns ( maghazl ) of the
Prophet and a reliable transmitter ( thiqah ). He was an inhabitant
of Medina, where he died in the year 130.
Shu'ayb b. al-Habhab. 1061
He was an inhabitant of al-Basrah, where he died in the year 130.
His kunyah was Abu Salih. He was one of the clients of the Banu
Rafid, a clan of the Ma'awil who belonged to the Azd [confed¬
eration]. 1062
Mansur b. Zadhan. 1063
He lived in al-Mubarak, [a place] situated nine farsakhs 1064
away from Wasit.
Mansur used to read fast and could not slow down, [even when]
he wanted to do so.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: Mansur b.
Zadhan died in the year 129/September 22, 746-September 10,
747, [but] according to Yahya b. Ma'in it was in the year
127/October 13, 744-October 2, 745.
1059. In Muslim tradition Moses is said to have been the only prophet to whom
God spoke directly, because of which he was nicknamed kalim allah "the one
spoken to by God." See "Musa," EP, VII, 638-40 (D. B. MacDonald).
ro6o. A traditionist and Qur’an reader. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’ilkh, 418;
idem, Tabaqat, 260,• Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 216; Ibn al-Jazarl, n, 381.
1061. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 4T8; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, t56.
ro62. Ibn Sa'd, VH/2, 18, has Zafir instead of Rafid. See al-Sam'ani, V, 335, for
the Ma'awil.
ro63. A client of a ThaqafI, known for his piety and asceticism, reportedly
mourned not only by Muslims but also by Jews, Christians, and Magians. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 217; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 279; Abu Nu'aym, IH,
57 - 62 .
1064. That is, about twenty-seven miles.
[2504]
242, Biographies
Mansur b. al-Mu'tamir al-Sulami. 1065
His kunyah was Abu 'Attab. He was a meritorious person,
godly, religious, reliable, and trustworthy.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Jarir [b. 'Abd al-
Hamld]: [Once], Mansur fasted sixty [days] and prayed the nights,
until he fell ill. 1066
According to Ibn Humayd—Jarir: Mansur used to wear shabby
clothes and skins. You could perceive the water running down
inside his chest when he was drinking during illness.
According to Ibn Humayd—Jarir: Mansur was seen [by some¬
one] in a dream after he had died. He was asked "O Abu 'Attab,
how are you?" He answered "I almost met God, for [I had] acted as
a prophet." 1067
According to Ibn Humayd—Jarir: ['Umar] Ibn Hubayrah 1068
wanted to appoint Mansur as judge, but he refused. Ibn Hubayrah
put him under arrest for two months, then released him and pre¬
sented him with a gift, which Mansur accepted. 1069
[2505] Mansur performed the pilgrimage together with his son, he and
al-Qasim.
According to al-Husayn b. 'All al-Suda’i—Khalaf b. Tamlm—
Za’idah: Mansur b. al-Mu'tamir fasted a whole year, praying the
nights and fasting the days. He used to weep in the nights, and his
mother would ask him "My son, did you murder anybody?" and
he would reply "I know better than anyone what I have myself
done." In the morning he would make up his eyes with kohl,
anoint his head, and shine his lips with oil and go out to meet
people.
Yusuf b. 'Umar, governor of al-Kufah, wanted to appoint him as
1065. A Kufan jurist, ascetic, and Qur’an reader of the northern tribe Sulaym.
See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 429,- idem, Tabaqat, 164; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr,
263; Ibn al-Jazari, n, 314-15. For the tribe, see Lecker, Banu Sulaym.
1066. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 235.
1067. Or, "I almost met God with prophetic acts [to my credit]." The question of
meeting God or seeing Him in the hereafter was debated by Muslim theologians;
see, e.g., al-Lalika’I, III, 454-523.
1068. A general and governor under the Marwanids,- see Crone, Slaves, 107.
1069. Pious men are often reported to have refused official nominations because
of the iniquity associated with government. See note 323, above. According to
another version, however, Mansur accepted the appointment but was soon
dismissed; see Wakl', III, 145-48.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 243
judge, but Mansur refused. Yusuf sent for him [someone] with
shackles, and he bound him [and brought him to Yusuf]. Someone
said to Yusuf "Even if you scatter this old man's limbs he will not
accept an office." Two litigants came, sat down, and spoke, but
Mansur never replied. At that Yusuf exempted Mansur and freed
him.
Mansur was an inhabitant of al-Kufah, where he died in the year
132/August 20, 749-August 8, 750. He was a Shi'L
Muhammad b. Abi Bakr b. Muhammad b. 'Amr b. Hazm. 1070
His mother was Fatimah bt. 'Umarah b. 'Amr b. Hazm, and his
kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Malik. He was a judge in Medina.
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Sa'd 1071 —Ma'n b. 'Isa—Sa'id b.
Muslim: I saw Muhammad b. Abi Bakr b. Muhammad b. 'Amr b.
Hazm act as judge in the mosque.
According to [Ibn Sa'd]—Mutarrif b. 'Abdallah al-Yasari—Malik
b. Anas: Muhammad b. Abi Bakr b. Muhammad b. 'Amr b. Hazm
held the office of judge in Medina. Sometimes he would issue a
verdict that contradicted [Muhammadan] tradition (hadith) and
would go home. His brother 'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr, who was a
virtuous man, 1072 would say to him "O Brother, you decreed to¬
day such-and-so in the [issue of] such-and-so." Muhammad would
say "Yes, brother." 'Abdallah would say: "Where is tradition then,
Brother? Is tradition too sparse to pass judgment according to
it?" 1073 Muhammad would retort "Yes, but what about practice?"
meaning the practice as commonly agreed upon in Medina. Ac- [2506]
cording to their opinion, the commonly accepted practice was
more valid than tradition. 1074
1070. Of an aristocratic Ansari family, the Banu Hazm, a branch of the Banu al-
Najjar. He succeeded his father as governor or judge, or both, of Medina and was
killed in the battle of al-Harrah between the Medinans and the Syrian army in the
year 64/683. See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 348; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 384, 429;
idem, Tabaqdt, 237; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 207; Waki', I, 175-78.
1071. Ibn Sa'd, al-Qism al-mutammim, 282.
1072. A traditionist, jurist, and historian. See F. Sezgin, I, 284; Horovitz, 1928,
22-31.
1073. 'Azza al-hadith an yuqda bihil Alternatively, "Is Tradition too exalted to
pass judgment according to it?"
1074. See also Waki', I, 176. This tradition supports Schacht's view that in the
early period it was not prophetic tradition but rather agreed practice (the "living
244
Biographies
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]: Muhammad b.
Abi Bakr b. Muhammad b. 'Amr b. Hazm died in the year 132, at
the beginning of the 'Abbasid regime, at the age of seventy-two.
Safwan b. Sulaym. 1075
He was a client of Humayd b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf al-
Zuhri, 1076 and his kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah. Originally he be¬
longed to the 'Ibad, 1077 [but] he lived in Medina, where he died in
the year 132. He was a reliable [transmitter of traditions] ( thiqah ),
if God so wills.
'Abdallah b. Abi Najih. 1078
His kunyah was Abu Yasar, and he was a client of the Thaqif
tribe. He lived in Mecca, where he [also] died. There is disagree¬
ment over the time of his death. According to Muhammad b.
'Umar [al-Waqidi], he died in Mecca in the year 132, whereas,
according to 'Abd al-Rahman b. Yunus—Sufyan, Ibn Abi Najih
died before the plague; the plague was in the year 131/August 31,
748-August 19, 749. 1079
According to 'Ali b. al-Madyani-Yahya b. Sa'id: Ibn Abi Najih
was a Mu'tazili. 1080 Yahya reported that Ayyub said: "What a man
they corrupted!"
Ibn Abi Najih was the mufti in Mecca after 'Amr b. Dinar. 1081
sunna") that served as the basis for religious law. See Schacht, "A Revaluation";
idem, Origins. See also Waki', 143-44; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, 161.
1075. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 429; idem, Tabaqat, 261. He was a Qur’an
reader according to Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 216 (not recorded by Ibn al-Jazari) and
considered a hafiz by al-Suyutl; see al-Sayrawan, 103.
1076. Son of a famous Companion of the Prophet, 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf. See
al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, VII, 378-81; Ibn Sa'd, V, 114-15; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 113.
1077. The 'Ibad (whose name means "worshipers of God") were the Christian
Arabs of the kingdom of al-Hirah, which flourished between A.D. the third and
seventh centuries in southern Iraq. The Arab genealogists, however, fitted this
group into the genealogical scheme; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 422.
1078. Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 421; idem, Tabaqat, 282; Ibn Qutaybah, 206
(who adds that he was a Qadarl).
1079. Ibn Sa'd, V, 355.
ro8o. The Mu'tazilah was a theological movement founded in al-Basrah in the
second/eighth century; see "Mu'tazila," EP-, VII, 783-93 (D. Gimaret).
1081. That is, the jurist in charge of giving opinions in legal issues addressed to
him; see "Fatwa," El 2 , II, 866 (E. Tyan).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 245
Rabi'ah b. Abi 'Abd al-Rahman, nicknamed Rabi'ah of Personal
Opinion (Rabi'at al-ra'y). 108 ^
The name of his father, Abu 'Abd al-Rahman, was Farrukh.
His kunyah was Abu 'Uthman. He was a client of the family of
al-Hudayr of the Banu Taym b. Murrah.
Rabi'ah lived in Medina, where he died in the year 136/July 7,
753-June 26, 754, at the end of Abu al-'Abbas' reign. 1083
'Abdallah b. Hasan b. Hasan b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 1084
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad. He was a pious man, dig¬
nified, eloquent, and articulate, a man of distinction. The Um-
ayyad caliphs honored him and acknowledged his eminence.
When the 'Abbasids came to power he went to see Abu al-'Abbas [2,507]
[al-Saffah] in al-Anbar. 1085
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Hafs b. 'Umar:
'Abdallah b. Hasan came to Abu al-'Abbas in al-Anbar. Abu al-'Ab-
bas honored him, presented him [with gifts], and treated him as
his companion. [The caliph] behaved toward 'Abdallah as he never
did toward anyone else. He used to spend nights in pleasant con¬
versation with him. Once the caliph spent [the night] in conversa¬
tion with 'Abdallah until the middle of the night. Abu al-'Abbas
then ordered a basket full of pearls to be brought before him,
opened it, and said "O Abu Muhammad, these, by God, are the
pearls that had been the property of the Umayyads and came to my
possession." Abu al-'Abbas shared the pearls with 'Abdallah, giv¬
ing him half of them. The other half he sent to his wife Umm
Salamah with the message "I commit these to you as a trust."
1082. The nickname refers to his use of reasoning as a source of religious law ;
see p. 000, below. Rabi'ah was a Medinan hafiz and jurist, one of the teachers of
Malik b. Anas, founder of the Maliki school of law. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 4.4.1; idem, Tabaqat, 268; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, rjr-32 ; Ibn Qutaybah,
2r7; al-Sayrawan, 89; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, HI, 223-24.
1083. That is, the first 'Abbasid caliph, al-Saffah ^32-36/749-54).
1084. An eminent member of the 'Alid family in Medina, father of M uhamm ad
al-Nafs al-Zakiyyah and his brother Ibrahim, who led a Shi'i revolt against the
caliph al-Mansur in Medina and al-Kufah in the years ^4-45/761-62. See van
Arendonck, 46-50; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 448; idem, Tabaqat, 258; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahii, 205; al-Baladhuri, Ansab III (Mahmudi), 8r-9r, HI (Dtiri), 90,
rso, r6s-66, 234-35.
1085. A city in Iraq on the Euphrates, about 60 km. west of Baghdad; see "al-
Anbar," EP, I, 484-85 (M. Streck [A. A. Duri]).
246
Biographies
Then they talked again for an hour [until] Abu al-'Abbas dozed off
and then his head bobbed, whereupon 'Abdallah recited the fol¬
lowing verses: 1086
Did you not see the big-bellied one
building palaces for the benefit of Nutaylah's sons? 1087
He hopes like Noah to be given a long life,
but every night God's decree may strike.
Abu al-'Abbas woke up and grasped 'Abdallah's meaning,
whereupon he said "O Abu Muhammad, you recite such verses in
my [palace], having seen that I treated you [so well] and that I
never withheld anything from you?" 'Abdallah said: "O Com¬
mander of the Faithful, this was a lapse by which I meant no harm.
These were just verses that occurred to me, so I recited them. If
the Commander of the Faithful sees it appropriate to tolerate my
deed, let him do so." Abu al-'Abbas said "I do [forgive you]."
[2508] 'Abdallah returned to Medina. When Abu Ja'far [al-Mansur]
came to power he insisted on seeking out 'Abdallah's two sons,
Muhammad and Ibrahim. Now Abu al-'Abbas [al-Saffah] had
asked 'Abdallah about his two sons, and he had replied "They are
in the desert; [God] made them so that they like being in soli¬
tude." 1088 Abu Ja'far sought them out in the desert and was upset
by their absence. He therefore wrote to his governor of Medina,
Riyah b. 'Uthman, ordering him to detain their father, 'Abdallah b.
Hasan, and his brothers. So they were arrested and brought to al-
Hashimiyyah, 1089 where they were kept in prison. 'Abdallah b.
Hasan died in prison at the age of seventy-two in the year
145/April 1, 762-March 20, 763.
According to al-Qasim b. Dinar al-Qurashi—Ishaq b. Mansur—
Abu Bakr b. 'Ayyash—Sulayman b. Qarm: I asked 'Abdallah b. al-
1086. Al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, HI, 153.
1087. That is, the 'Abbasids. Nutaylah was the mother of al-'Abbas, the ep¬
onymous ancestor of the dynasty. See p. 24, above; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 301.
ro88. This description of the two Shi'I leaders is deliberately reminiscent of the
descriptions of the Prophet before he was endowed with the prophecy, for which
see Kister, “al-Tahannuth."
1089. The name of several places in Iraq that served the 'Abbasids as capital
before the building of Baghdad; see "al-Hashimiyyah," EP-, HI, 265-66 (J. Lassner).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 247
Hasan "Are there infidels among those who pray facing toward
Mecca?" He replied "Yes, the Rafidah." 1090
Muhammad b. al-Sa’ib b. Bishr b. 'Amr b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-
Flarith b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Imri’ al-Qays b. 'Amir b. al-Nu'man b.
'Amirb. 'AbdWaddb. 'Awf b. Kinanahb. 'Udhrahb.Zaydal-Latb.
Rufaydah b. Thawr b. Kalb. 1091
Muhammad b. al-Sa’ib's kunyah was Abu al-Nadr. His grand¬
father Bishr b. 'Amr and his sons al-Sa’ib, 'Ubayd, and 'Abd al-
Rahman [sons of Bishr] participated in the battles of the Camel
and Siffin on the side of the Commander of the Faithful, 'All b. Abi
Talib.
Al-Sa’ib b. Bishr was killed [fighting] on the side of Mu§'ab b. al-
Zubayr. 1092 He is the one about whom Ibn Warqa’ al-Nakha'i re¬
cited the following verses: 1093
Who will inform 'Ubayd in my name
that I struck his brother with a sharp Indian sword?
If you wish some knowledge of him to obtain, [2509]
he lies by the two monasteries, no pillow beneath his head.
Purposely did I strike his head with a sharp one,
making Sufyan and Muhammad bereaved.
Sufyan and Muhammad were sons of al-Sa’ib.
1090. Among Sunni Muslims it is commonly agreed that anyone praying toward
the qiblah and formally professing Islam cannot be considered an infidel, be his
opinions and conduct as they may; see Lewis, chap. 16. Not all the sects share this
attitude. The Rafidah is a term reflecting schisms within the Shi'ah; it refers either
to the early Shi'ah, the Twelver Shi'ah, or to various other Shi'I sects. See "al-
Rafida ,"EP, Vm, 386-89, (E. Kohlberg).
1091. One of the earliest Kufan historians, genealogists, and Qur’an interpret¬
ers, known as "al-Kalbi" (of the southern Kalb confederation); he was a Shi'I. See
Comad, "al-Kalbi"; Duri, Rise of Historical Writing, 51, 146; F. Sezgin, I, 34;
Mustafa, 190,• al-Sayrawan, 276.
1092. Brother of the rival caliph 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr and governor of al-Kufah
on his behalf in the years 64-7^683-91.
1093. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 249-50,- al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, n, 731. The author of the verses is
either 'Abdallah b. Warqa’ b. 'Azib, or Warqa’ himself, a Kufan who served as
commander in the Umayyad shurtah (quasi police force); see al-Tabari, II, 644,
645-46, 648.
248
Biographies
Muhammad b. al-Sa’ib participated in the battle of [Dayr] al-
Jamajim, [fighting] on the side of 'Abd al-Rahman b. Muhammad
b. al-Ash'ath. 1094
Muhammad b. al-Sa’ib was knowledgeable about Qur’an ex¬
egesis, genealogy, and Arabian tales. He died in al-Kufah, where he
had lived, in the year 146/March 21, 763-March 9, 764, during the
caliphate of Abu Ja'far [al-Mansur]. All this was reported by Ibn
Sa'd on the authority of Hisham b. Muhammad b. al-Sa’ib, who
had informed him of all this. 1095
Sulayman b. Mihran al-A'mash. 1096
He was a client of the Banu Kahil, of [the tribe of] Asad. His
kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Al-A'mash lived among the Banu 'Awf of the Banu Sa'd and used
to pray at the mosque of the Banu Haram of the Banu Sa'd. 1097
Mihran, father of al-A'mash, originated in Tabaristan. Al-
A'mash [himself] lived in al-Kufah, where he died in the year
148/February 27, 765-February 15, 766 at the age of eighty-two.
He had been bom on the day of 'Ashura' in Muharram 60/October
681, the day when al-Husayn b. 'All was killed. 1098
Ja'far b. Muhammad b. 'All b. Husayn b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 1099
His mother was Umm Farwah bt. al-Qasim b. Muhammad b.
Abi Bakr al-Siddiq.
Ja'far b. Muhammad's children were the following: Isma'il al-
A'raj; 1100 'Abdallah and Umm Farwah, whose mother was
Fatimah bt. al-Husayn al-Athram b. Hasan b. 'All b. Abi Talib;
1094. On the battle of Dayr al-Jamajim between al-Hajjaj and the rebel Ibn al-
Ash'ath, see "Dayr al-Djamadjim,” EP, II, 196-97 (Salih A. el-'AlI); al-Tabari,
Ta'rikh, II, 1070-77.
1095. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 249-50.
1096. A Kufan traditionist, a hafiz and Qur’an reader. See "al-A'mash," EP,l,
431 (C. Brockelmann [C. Pellat]); khaiifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 452; idem, Tabaqat,
164; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 179; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 315-16; al-Sayrawan, 99.
1097. That is, Sa'd h. Zayd Manah, an important lineage of the confederation of
Tamim; see Ibn Hazm, famharat, 215.
1098. That is, the massacre of Karbala’.
1099. The sixth imam according to the Isma'ili and Twelver Shi'ah. See "Dja'far
al-Sadik," EP, II, 374-75 (M. G. S. Hodgson); Tabataba’I, 203-5; Jahi, 259-60 and
passim.
1100. The seventh and last imam according to the Isma'ili Shi'ah and the ep¬
onymous founder of the sect. See Daftary, 97-99; al-Amin, XII, 299-304.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 249
Musa b. Ja'far, 1101 who was imprisoned by Harun al-Rashid 1102 in
Baghdad with al-Sindl 1103 and died in prison,- Ishaq,- Muhammad;
Fatimah, who was married to Muhammad b. Ibrahim b. Muham¬
mad b. 'All b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas 1104 and died while being married
to him (the mother of [Ishaq, Muhammad, and Fatimah] was a
concubine); Yahya b. Ja'far, al-'Abbas, Asma’, and Fatimah al-
Sughra (junior), who were bom to various mothers. [2510]
Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl] related: I heard Ja'far b.
Muhammad say to his young slave Mu'attib "Go to Malik b. Anas
and ask him about such-and-so; then come back and tell me [what
he said]."
According to Muhammad: Abu Ja'far al-Mansur seized this
Mu'attib and had him flogged a thousand lashes, until he died.
Ja'far b. Muhammad transmitted many traditions ( hadith)-, he
was a reliable [transmitter] ( thiqah ). This was, reportedly, Yahya
b. Ma'In's opinion.
It was reported that [Yahya b. Said] al-Qattan 1105 was asked
"Whom do you prefer, Mujalid b. Said or Ja'far b. Muhammad?"
Al-Qattan replied "I prefer Mujalid to Ja'far."
Ja'far lived in Medina, where he [also] died in the year
148/February 27, 765-February 15, 766, during the caliphate of
Abu Ja'far [al-Mansur], according to al-Waqidl and al-Mada’ini.
Ja'far b. Muhammad's kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Al-'Abbas b. Muhammad said: I heard Yahya say "Ja'far b.
Muhammad is a reliable transmitter."
1101. Musa al-Kazim, the seventh imam according to the Twelver Shi'ah; see
"Musa al-Kazim," EP, VII, 645-48 |E. Kohlberg).
1102. One of the most famous 'Abbasid caliphs. He ruled between 170-93/786-
809, and his reign is considered the golden era of the caliphate; see Kennedy, 141-
48.
1103. Al-Sindi b. Shahak, a client of the caliph al-Mansur, who served the
'Abbasids in several offices. Among other things he was in charge of the guard and
prison in Baghdad. See al-Sam'ani, m, 320; al-Safadl, XV, 487-88; Ibn Manzur,
Mukhtasar, X, 210.
1104. That is, the nephew of the first and second 'Abbasid caliphs. This mar¬
riage between the daughter of the sixth Shi'i imam and a member of the 'Abbasid
family points to an attempt at reconciling the Shi'is with the new regime.
1105. A highly regarded Basran traditionist and expert on rijal, i.e., the biogra¬
phies and evaluation of transmitters of tradition. He died in 198/812; see Ibn Hajar,
Tahdhlb, XI, 190-93.
250
Biographies
Those Who Died in the Year iso
(February 6, j6j-January 2s, 7 68)
Abu Hanifah al-Nu'man b. Thabit. 1106
He was a client of Taym Allah b. Tha'labah of the Bakr b. Wa’il.
According to Abu Hisham al-Rifa'i—his paternal uncle Kathir
b. Muhammad: I heard a man of the Banu Qafal, of the noblest of
the Banu Taym Allah, say to Abu Hanifah "What are you but a
client of mine?" whereupon [Abu Hanifah] retorted "I bring you
more honor than you do me."
According to al-Walid b. Shuja'—'Ali b. al-Hasan b. Shaqiq:
'Abdallah b. al-Mubarak used to say "If these two agree on some¬
thing, I adhere to that opinion," meaning [Sufyan b. Sa'id] al-
Thawri and Abu Hanifah.
According to Sulayman b. Abi Shaykh: Abu Sa'id al-Rani 1107
firmly opposed the Kufan [jurists] and supported the Medinan
[school]. 1108 One of the Kufans composed satirical verses against
him, calling him Shirshir and saying "[There is] a small dog in hell
[2511] whose name is Shirshir." 1109 [The Kufan] composed [the follow¬
ing verses]: 1110
1106. A theologian and the eponymous founder of one of the law schools, the
Hanafiyyah. See "Abu Hanlfa," EP-, I, 12,3-24 (J. Schacht); Ibn 'Abd al-Barr, al-
Intiqa ’, 122-75; al-Suyuti, Tabyld al-sahlfah ; al-Sayrawan, 82; Abu Zahrah; al-
Dhahabi, Manaqib al-Imam Abi Hanifah.
1107. Or al-Radhani, al-Walid b. Kathir, a traditonist who transmitted from
Rabi'ah al-Ra’y among others. See al-Sam'ani, HI, 21,31; Ibn al-Athir, Lubab, II, 10,
IbnHajar, Tahdhib, XI, 130; al-Dhahabl, Mushtabih, 208, 210,• al-Mizzi, Tahdhib,
XXXI, 71-73. He is recorded, usually very briefly, in many other biographical
sources. He would have been of no special interest, had my assistant, Tariq Abu
Rajab, not unearthed the following unique information: The man was "a poet, a
learned man, and practiced kalam (i.e. theological discussions) in the time of al-
Tabari. He had some original views"; see Ibn Hajar, Nuzhat, 178 (note that the text
is garbled but the meaning clear). This is the only biographical source to mention
one of the verses recorded here by al-Tabari.
1108. On the schools of law and their rivalry, see Schacht, Origins.
1109. This nickname is problematic. It is the name of a small bird; see Ibn
Khallikan, HI, 92. The verb sharshara means "to bite," and according to the lex¬
icographer al-Layth, explaining a certain verse, shirshir means a dog. The lex¬
icographer al-Azharl, however, argues that al-Layth was mistaken: shirshir is the
nam e of a certain desert shrub. I fail to see how a shrub can be confused with a dog.
See Ibn Manzur, Lisan, IV, 403.
1110. Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi, V, 303; al-Jahiz, I, 148-49 (read al-Rani for al-Ra’y; the
editor could not identify Abu Sa'id).
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 251
These are issues no Shirshir can master
or his friends, when asked [their opinion].
Only Hanafis, dwellers in al-Kufah,
do we know to grasp this religion.
Do not ask a Medinan, turning him thereby into an infidel, 1111
about anything but the cords of the lute [of a musician],
A variant is wa-al-muthanna aw al-zlr . 1112
According to Sulayman—Abu Sa'id: I wrote to Medina [inform¬
ing the people there] "You have been mocked with this and that,
so respond to it." So one of the Medinans responded:
I wonder at this erring one, though by fate he is led,
for everything that is ordained is ordained.
He says that in Medina there is nothing
but musical instruments and singing.
You lie, by God, for there you can find
the graves of the Prophet and the best of mankind.
According to Sulayman—'Amr b. Sulayman al-'Attar: I was in
al-Kufah, where I associated with Abu Hanlfah, when Zufar 1113
got married. Abu Hanlfah was present [at the wedding], and Zufar
asked him to speak. Abu Hanlfah then delivered a speech, saying
"Here is Zufar b. al-Hudhayl, one of the Muslims' [religious]
leaders and a prominent figure, a man of noble descent, dignity,
and knowledge." Some of Zufar's clan said "We are pleased that it
was Abu Hanlfah who spoke and no other," as Abu Hanlfah men¬
tioned Zufar's qualities and praised him. But other people of
Zufar's clan resented this and said to Zufar "Your relatives and the
clan's chiefs are present, and you ask Abu Hanlfah to deliver a
speech!" 1114 Zufar said "Had my father been present I would have
1111. Fa-tukfizahu (with fa ’ al-sababiyyah) is a better reading than the present
wa-tukfirahu-, see 25 x 1 n. a. The idea is that one can cause someone else to become
an infidel by asking him questions (on religious matters) to which he does not
know the answer.
1112. Instead of “wa-al-mathnah wa-al-zit," names of different strings of the
instrument.
1113. A jurist and a friend of Abu Hanlfah. See al-Safadi, XTV, 200-1; Ibn Sa'd,
VI, 270; al-Dhahabi, Mlzan, I, 348.
1114. Zufar belonged to the 'Anbar clan of the tribe of Tamlm, whereas Abu
Hanifah was a client of Taymallah of the Bakr confederation, traditional enemies
of the Tamim; see fad al-Mawla et al., 170-228.
252 Biographies
preferred Abu Hanlfah to him." Zufar b. al-Hudhayl belonged to
the Banu al-'Anbar, [a clan] of the Tamim.
According to Ibrahim b. Bashshar al-Ramadi—[Sufyan] Ibn
'Uyaynah: I never saw anyone more insolent toward God than
Abu Hanlfah. A man from Khurasan came to him with a hundred
thousand issues and said to him "I want to ask you about all this,"
whereupon Abu Hanlfah said "Ask!" Sufyan [Ibn 'Uyaynah] said:
[2512] Have you seen a greater insolence toward God?
According to 'Abdallah b. Ahmad b. Shabbawayh—his father—
'All b. al-Husayn b. Waqid—his paternal uncle al-Hakam b. Wa-
qid: I saw Abu Hanlfah [sit] to give legal opinions from early in the
day until midday. When the crowds around him decreased I ap¬
proached him and said "O Abu Hanlfah, had Abu Bakr and 'Umar
been with us in this session and had they been presented with the
same arduous issues, they would have avoided some of the an¬
swers, and they would have stopped [at some point]." Abu Hanifah
looked at me and said "Are you seized with fever?"
According to Ahmad b. Khalid al-Khallal—al-Shafi'1 1115 : Malik
[b. Anas] was once asked [to give his opinion about] al-Battl 1116
and said "He was of a middling sort." He was [also] asked about
['Abdallah] Ibn Shubrumah 1117 and said "He was of a middling
sort." "What about Abu Hanifah?" he was asked. Malik said "Had
he approached these [stone] columns of yours [in the mosque] and
argued with you on the basis of analogy ( qiyas ), he would have
made them [turn into] wood." 1118
Muhammad b. Ishaq b. Yasar. 1119
1115. Founder of one of the schools of law ( madhahib ) and systematizer of the
method of deriving the religious law from its sources. He died in 2,04/819. See
Schacht, Origins, passim; Halm,- Landau-Tasseron, "Cyclical Reform," 101, n. 96.
1116. Apparently the reference is to the Basran jurist Uthman b. Muslim al-
Batti; see al-Dhahabi, Siyar, VI, 148; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XIX, 492-94.
1117. A famous Kufan judge, who died in 144/761. See Juynboll, Muslim Tradi¬
tion, 87-88; al-Dhahabi, Siyar, VI, 347; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 265; al-Safadi, XVII,
207; Waki', passim, especially vol. IE, where there is hardly a page on which his
name is not mentioned.
1118. The use of analogy in establishing religious laws was a point of debate
between Abu Hanlfah (who supported it) and al-Shafi'i (who had reservations about
it). Here al-Shafi'i (quoting Malik) admires Abu Hanifah's method, at least as far as
it is persuasive; see Landau-Tasseron, "Cyclical Reform," 101, 106.
1119. Known as Ibn Ishaq (d. 150/767), a famous early historian and biographer
of the Prophet. The biography he wrote [sirah] was widely known and cited, and
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 253
He was a client of 'Abdallah b. Qays b. Makhramah b. al-
Muttalib b. 'Abd Manaf b. Qusayy. His kunyah was Abu
'Abdallah.
According to Muhammad b. Umar [al-Waqidl]: He was a client
of Qays b. Makhramah. His grandfather Yasar was a captive,
among others, from 'Ayn al-Tamr. 1120 These were the first cap¬
tives to arrive at Medina from Iraq.
Ibn Ishaq transmitted [traditions] from his father Ishaq b. Yasar
and from his paternal uncles Musa and 'Abd al-Rahman, sons of
Yasar. He was an expert on the campaigns of the Prophet
[maghazl), [as well as] on the battles of the Arabs, their history,
and genealogies. He was a transmitter of Arab poetry ( rawiyah ), [as
well as] many traditions. His erudition was immense; he was a
seeker of knowledge and a first-rate scholar. In all [these fields] he
was reliable. 1121
According to Sa'id b. 'Uthman al-Tanukhl—Ibrahim b. Mahdl
al-Massisi—Isma'Il b. 'Ulayyah—Shu'bah: Muhammad b. Ishaq [2513]
and Jabir [b. Yazid] al-Ju'fi are reliable.
According to Ibn Sa'd 1122 —a son of Muhammad b. Ishaq: My
father died in Baghdad in the year x 50/February 6, 767-January 25,
768 and was buried in the cemetery of al-Khayzuran.
Mis'ar b. Kidam b. Zuhayr al-Hilall, a genuine member of the
Banu Hilal. 1123
His kunyah was Abu Salamah.
According to Abu al-Sa’ib—Abu Nu'aym—Mis'ar: I came to see
Abu Ja'far [al-Mansur] and said [to him] "O Commander of the
Faithful, I am your maternal uncle." He said "Which one of them
together with the work of al-Waqidl constituted the foundation of all subsequent
research on Muhammad's life. See "Ibn Ishak," El 1 , HI, 389-90 (C. Brockelmann);
EP, HI, 810-n (J. M. B. Jones); Suhayl Zakkar, introduction to Ibn Ishaq, Siyai;
Conrad, "Ibn Ishaq"; Mustafa, I, 160-62; Duri, 33-37; al-Samuk; Hamldullah,
"Muhammad ibn Ishaq."
1120. One of the first places in Iraq to be raided by the Muslims in the year
12/63. See al-Tabari, Ta’nkh, I, 2062-69. Donner, Early Islamic Conquests, 180.
1 i2r. Al-Tabari himself drew heavily on Ibn Ishaq. Nevertheless, the latter's
reliability was not beyond dispute. See Kister, "Massacre," 74-80; Landau-
Tasseron, "Sayf," 8.
1122. Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 67 (without mention of the source).
1123. That is, not a client. The Banu Hilal were a branch of the northern great
confederation of 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah. On Mis'ar, see Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh,
455; idem, Tabaqat, r68 ; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 267.
254
Biographies
are you?" I said "I am a member of the Banu Hilal." Abu Ja'far said
"I have no ancestress I like better than the one who was a member
of your clan." 1124 I said "O Commander of the Faithful, do you
know what the poet said about us and you?" He asked "What did
he say?" whereupon I recited:
With the Quraysh we share both piety and kinship,-
this is a specific partnership 1125
Through the offspring of the women of the Banu Hilal,
as well as the women of the Banu Aban. 1126
I then said "O Commander of the Faithful, my family has sent
me to buy something with some money, then refused to accept
it." Abu Ja'far said: "What a bad treatment you received from your
family! Take these ten thousands and dole it out."
Opinions differ as to the time of Mis'ar's death. According to Ibn
Sa'd 1127 —Muhammad b. 'Abdallah al-Asadi: Mis'ar died in al-
Kufah in the year 152/January 14, 769-January 3, 770, during the
caliphate of Abu Ja'far [al-Mansur]. [But], according to Muhammad
b. Isma'll—Abu Nu'aym al-Fadl b. Dukayn, Mis'ar b. Kidam died
in the year 156/December 2, 772-November 20, 773.
Hamzah b. Habib al-Zayyat. 1128
He was a client of the Banu Taymallah. 1129
Hamzah was one of the Qur’an readers, who excelled in learning
the Qur’an by heart. He transmitted few traditions and was reli¬
able ( thiqah ).
[2514] Hamzah was an inhabitant of al-Kufah. He died in the year 156.
1124. The reference is to Umm al-Fadl, wife of al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib and
mother of 'Abdllah b. al-'Abbas, great-grandfather of al-Mansur; see Ibn Hazm,
Jamhaiat, 18. Al-Mansur's own mother was a concubine.
1125. Shirk (read shirkat ) al-'inan, a partnership in a particular thing to the
exclusion of the rest of the partners' property.
r r26. The reference is to the offspring of Aminah bt. Aban of the Banu Kulayb b.
Rabi'ah b. 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah, who was married to Umayyah b. 'Abd Shams; see Ibn
Hazm, Jamharat, 280. The verse was composed by the poet al-Nabighah al-Ja'dl.
See Ibn Manzur, Lisan, XIII, 292-93 (s.v. 'nn) ; Nallino, rr9.
ir27. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 253.
ir28. Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 266; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 26r-63; al-Sadr, 15, 20, 21; F.
Sezgin, I, 9 (erroneously attributed to the tribe of Tamim instead of the
Taymallah).
1129. Taymallah b. Tha'labah of the Rabi'ah confederation; see al-Sam'anl, I,
499 -
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 255
According to Muhammad b. Mansur al-TusI—Salih b.
Hammad—an authority whom he named—Hamzah al-Zayyat: I
saw the Prophet in a dream. I presented to him twenty traditions
[for inspection], and he recognized two of them. 1130
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Amr. 1131
His kunyah was Abu 'Amr, and he was called al-Awza'i. He was
a Saybani by virtue of his living among [that clan]. 1132 According
to Hisham b. Muhammad al-Kalbl—his father: Al-Awza'i, 'Abd al-
Rahman b. 'Amr, belonged to the Awza', [a group including] Malik
and Marthad, sons of Zayd b. Shadad b. Zur'ah. Shadad was the
husband of Bilqis, friend of King Solomon. 1133
Al-Awza'i lived in Beirut, a coastal city in Syria. He was one of
the muftis and transmitters of tradition of that locality in his time
and one of the excellent [people there].
Al-Awza'i died in Beirut in the year 157/November 21, 773-
November 10, 774, toward the end of the caliphate of Abu Ja'far
[al-Mansur], at the age of seventy. This information is given by
Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi].
Shu'bah b. al-Hajjaj b. Ward. 1134
He was from the Azd, a freed slave and client of the Ashaqir. 1135
His kunyah was Abu Bistam. He was ten years older than [Sufyan]
al-Thawri.
1130. Hamzah here refers to the procedure of the authorization and authentica¬
tion of transmitted traditions, initiated in order to prevent fabrications; see F.
Sezgin, I, 5 9. As for the role of dreams, see Kinberg, especially 230-31 (on Hamzah).
rt3i. A jurist, the main representative of the ancient Syrian school of religious
law. See "Al-Awza'i," EP, I, 772-73 (J. Schacht); F. Sezgin, I, 516-17; Khalifahb.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 315-16; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 285-86; Abu Zur'ah, 261-67
and passim.
1132. The Sayban b. al-Ghawth was a Yemeni clan. According to Ibn Hazm,
Jamhaiat, 435,437, al-Awza'i originated with this clan and was called Awza'I only
because he lived among the Awza', another Yemeni clan. According to Ibn Hibban,
however, al-Awza' was the name of a village near Damascus.
it33. Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, II, 546-47. Bilqis is the Arabic name for the
Queen of Sheba, see "Bilkis," EP, I, 1219-20 (E. Ullendorff).
1 r 34. Khalifah b. Khayyat, TaTIkh, 459; idem, Tabaqat, 222; Ibn Hibban, Mash¬
ahii, 280; al-Sam'ani, IV, 153-54; al-Sayrawan, 101.
it35. Of the group called Ghassan,- see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 381, 474.
2 s 6 Biographies
According to Ahmad b. al-Walld—al-Rabf b. Yahya: I heard
Sufyan al-Thawri say: There has remained on earth no one like
Shu'bah and Hammad b. Salamah. 1136
Al-Tabari said: I was told by Muhammad b. Ishaq al-Saghani—
Abu Qatan: Shu'bah said to me: There is nothing that makes me
more afraid of entering hell than tradition. 1137
Shu'bah was an inhabitant of al-Basrah, where he died in the
beginning of the year 160/October 19, 776-October 8, 777, at the
age of seventy-five.
[2515] Bahr b. Kaniz al-Saqqa’ al-BahilL 1138
His kunyah was Abu al-Fadl. He lived in al-Basrah, where he
died in the year 160, during the caliphate of al-Mahdi. 1139 His
transmission [of traditions] was not trustworthy.
Al-Aswadb. Shayban. 1140
An inhabitant of al-Basrah, a meritorious man and a reliable
[transmitter] ( thiqah ).
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’inl], al-Aswad died in
the year 160 in al-Basrah.
Za’idah b. Qudamah al-Thaqafl. 1141
1136. A famous Basran traditionist and jurist, client of the Tamlm. See Ibn
Hajar, Tahdhlb, III, 11-14; Ibn al-Nadlm, I, 549, n, 993.
1137. Cf. Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 38. This may be interpreted in two ways. First, pious
Muslim scholars sometimes express the fear of failing in the task of faithfully
transmitting the Prophet's traditions. Second, certain Muslim scholars of the sec¬
ond century held that writing down prophetic traditions was unlawful. See
Sprenger; Goldziher, Muslim Studies, n, 181-88. For a critique of these two schol¬
ars, see F. Sezgin, II, 53-8r.
1138. The name may be Kunayz. He was a Basran, a client of the Bahilah, not
trusted because of his bad memory and arbitrary additions to the traditions. See Ibn
Hibban, Majruhm, I, 192-94; Ibn 'Adi, II, 482-87.
1139. The third 'Abbasid caliph, 158-69/775-85; see Kennedy, 137-39.
r 140. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 221, see also 224; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VD 3 ,
129-30.
1141. He died in the year 161/777-78. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'iikh, 468;
idem, Tabaqat, 169; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 269. He cannot be identical with
Za’idah b. Qudamah al-Thaqafi, who was associated with al-Mukhtar b. Abi
'Ubayd, not only because the latter was a Shl'i whereas "our" Za’idah opposed the
Shi'ah, but also because of the time gap between the two. See, e.g., al-Tabari,
Ta’iikh, II, 605, 926.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 257
He was a genuine member of the Thaqif. 1142 His kunyah was
Abu al-Salt.
Za’idah opposed 'All b. Abl Talib. 1143
Those Who Died in the Year 161
(October 9, 777 -September 27, 77 8)
Sufyan b. Sa'id b. Masruq b. Habib b. Rafi' b. 'Abdallah b.
Mawhibah b. Ubayy b. 'Abdallah b. Munqidh b. Nasr b. al-Harith
b. Tha'labah b. 'Amir b. Milkan b. Thawr b. 'Abd Manah b. Udd b.
Tabikhah b. al-Yas b. Mudar. 1144
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: Sufyan was bom
in the year 97/September 5, 715-August 24, 716. He was learned,
knowledgeable, pious, God fearing, ascetic, a transmitter of many
traditions, reliable, and trustworthy in what he transmitted from
the Prophet and from others who transmitted [traditions] on re¬
ligious matters. 1145
According to Muhammad b. Khalaf—Ya'qub b. Ishaq al-
Hadraml—Shu'bah b. al-Hajjaj—Sufyan b. Sa'id al-Thawrl—'All
b. al-Aqmar—Abu Juhayfah—the Prophet: As for me, I do not eat
while leaning back.
According to Muhammad b. Isma'Il al-Dirari—Abu Nu'aym [al- [2516]
Fadl b. Dukayn]—Sufyan: There is no deed more frightening than
this. When I was ill I never thought of anything else, and I wished
that I was completely saved from it. He meant [the transmission
of] traditions. 1146
According to 'Abdallah b. Ahmad b. Shabbawayh—his father—
Abu 'Isa al-Zahid—Ma'dan: Sufyan al-Thawrl was my colleague.
1142. That is, not a client.
1143. That is, he opposed the Shi'ah, not 'All personally, for 'All died a hundred
years before him. Cf. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 283, where he is said to be “one of the consensus"
(sahib sunnah wa-jama'ah), i.e., "orthodox."
1144. Commonly known as Sufyan al-Thawrl, a very famous traditionist, hafiz,
and jurist; see El 1 , IV, 500-2 (M. Plessner); F. Sezgin, I, 518-19; Schacht, Origins,
242; al-Sayrawan, 96-97; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 468; idem, Tabaqat, 168;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 268; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, 177-, al-Kashshi, 336-40. The
tribe, Thawr, was a rather obscure one, see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 201.
1145. Or, "others who left their mark on the religion." This translation is possi¬
ble as far as the language is concerned but it does not seem right to me.
1146. Cf. p. 256, above.
258
Biographies
When we left al-Kufah he said to me "O Ma'dan, I did not leave
behind me anyone I trust, nor am I heading for anyone I trust." He
meant trust in religious matters.
According to Zayd b. Hubab: 'Ammar b. Ruzayq al-Dabbi, Sul-
ayman b. Qarm al-Dabbi, Ja'far b. Ziyad al-Ahmar, and Sufyan al-
Thawri were all students of tradition. They all showed a leaning
toward the Shi'ah. As for Sufyan, he left for al-Basrah, where he
met [Abdallah] Ibn 'Awn and Ayyub [al-Sakhtiyani]. 1147 He then
abandoned his Shi'i views.
Sufyan died in al-Basrah in the year 161/October 9, 777-
September 27, 778, during the caliphate of al-Mahdi.
Al-Hasan b. Salih, also called Hayy. 1148
Hasan's kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah. He was a pious, virtuous
man, skilled in religious law and inclined to love the family of the
Prophet [ahl bayt rasul Allah). He adhered to the principle that
one ought to protest against evil by all the means available to
one. 1149 He transmitted many traditions and was reliable ( thiqah ).
It was reported that al-Hasan gave his daughter in marriage to
'Isa b. Zayd b. 'All b. al-Husayn. 1150 [The caliph] al-Mahdi gave an
1147. See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, I, 348, V, 303.
1148. There is some confusion about this Hayy, a name sometimes considered
to belong to al-Hasan's grandfather, rather than being another name for his father.
In addition, Hayy had a twin brother; note the confusion in Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat,
396. Al-Hasan belonged to the southern tribe Bakll of the Hamdan confederation
and was an ascetic and an important Zaydi leader. The Zayd! schism of al-
Salihiyyah (also called Batriyyah; see note 1256, below) is attributed to him. See
Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 396; al-Shahrastanl, 120-21; van Arendonck, 83-86; Subhi,
98-100; Ibn al-Kalbl, Nasab ma'add, 523; al-Quhpa’i, II, 116; Khalifahb. Khayyat,
Ta'rikh, 470; idem, Tabaqat, 168; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 268. In spite of his politi¬
cal importance, al-Tabari never mentions him in the Annals.
1149. The precept al-ami bi-al-ma'ruf wa-al-nahy 'an al-munkai "enjoining
what is good and prohibiting (or, protesting against) what is evil," is based on
several Qur’anic verses (3:104, 3:110, 3:114, 7:157, 9:67, 9:71, 9:112, 22:41, 31:17).
It was variously interpreted and applied by diverse sects, movements, and persons,
among them indeed the Zaydis. See "Amr be-Ma'ruf," Encyclopaedia Iianica, I,
92-95 (W. Madelung); Crone and Hinds, 62; al-Khallal; Subhi, 147; Ibn al-Murtada,
V, 464-66; al-Ghazall, VII, 1186-1275.
1150. Son of the eponymous founder of the Zaydi Shi'ah. He participated in the
revolt of Muhammad b. 'Abdallah al-Nafs al-Zakiyyah against al-Mansur and con¬
tinued to be considered a menace by the next caliph, al-Mahdi. See van Arendonck,
61, 83; al-Tabari, Ta’nkh, III, 258, 448, 503.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 259
order to seek out [and arrest] both 'Isa and al-Hasan. He exerted his
efforts in pursuing them.
According to Ibn Sa'd 1151 —al-Fadl b. Dukayn: I saw al-Hasan b.
Salih attending the Friday prayer with everyone else; then he went
into hiding [the next] Sunday, [remaining thus] until his death. Al-
Mahdl could not capture him or 'Isa b. Zayd. Al-Hasan hid to¬
gether with 'Isa b. Zayd in the same place for seven years. The
latter died six months before al-Hasan.
Hasan b. Hayy was an inhabitant of al-Kufah, where he died in [2517]
the year 167/August 5, 783-July 23, 784 at the age of sixty-two or
[sixty]-three.
According to Yahya b. Ma'in: Al-Hasan b. Salih b. Hayy was
bom in the year 100/August 3, 718-July 23, 719.
According to al-'Abbas—Yahya: Al-Hasan b. Salih is Hasan b.
Salih b. Salih b. Muslim b. Hayyan. People call [him] Ibn Hayy, but
it is Ibn Hayyan.
Ja'far b. Ziyad al-Ahmar. 1152
He was the client of Muzahim b. Zufar of the Taym al-
Ribab. 1153
He was an inhabitant of al-Kufah, where he died in the year 167.
He was a Shi'i and transmitted many traditions.
'Ubaydallah b. al-Hasan b. al-Husayn b. Malik b. Malik b. al-
Khashkhash b. Hubab b. al-Harith b. Khalaf b. Mujfir b. Ka'b b.
al-'Anbar b. 'Amr b. Tamlm. 1154
He was a jurist and counts among the educated and clever peo¬
ple of al-Basrah. He was appointed judge of al-Basrah after Sawwar
b. 'Abdallah. 1155
US 1. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 261.
1152. A companion of the sixth Shi'i imam, Ja'far al-Sadiq. See al-Tusi, i6i ; Ibn
'Adi, II, 564-66.
1153. One of the tribal chiefs [ashrafl in al-Kufah, of the Taym b. 'Abd Manah,
one of the constituents of the northern confederation al-Ribab. See Ibn Hazm,
famhaiat, 199; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, X, 100-1.
1154. The tribe's name is the Banu al-'Anbar. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh,
457, 462, 470, 472-73; Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 251 ; Wakl', n, 88-123.
1155. The reference here is not to the famous judge whose biography is recorded
in Wakl', n, 57-88, and many other sources but to his grandfather who bore the
same name and was also a judge. See al-Mizzi, Tahdhlb, XII, 238; Ibn Hajar, Tah-
dhib, IV, 236-37-
Biographies
260
According to 'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’inl]: 'Ubaydallah b.
al-Hasan was bom in the year 100 or 106/May 29, 724-May 18,
725 and was appointed judge in the year 157/November 21, 773-
November io / 774.
According to Ibn Sa'd 1156 —Ahmad b. Makhlad, who heard
'Ubaydallah b. al-Hasan al-'Anbarl recite on the pulpit [in the mos¬
que] of al-Basrah:
Where are the kings, [who were] heedless of their fate
until the cup of death was given them to taste?
Our riches for inheritors we accumulate,-
our houses we build for time to lay waste.
[2518] According to Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]: 'Ubaydallah b.
al-Hasan al-'Anbarl died in Dhu al-Qa'dah 168/May-June 784.
According to Fudayl b. 'Abd al-Wahhab—Mu'adh b. Mu'adh: I
came to visit 'Ubaydallah b. al-Hasan, the judge of al-Basrah, and
said "I see that you are well today, God be praised." He replied:
In the evening [I look] healthy, but do not be deceived.
Dawn will bring death, [and I shall be deceased].
At dawn I heard the cry [announcing his death].
Hasan b. Zayd b. Hasan b. 'Ali b. Abi Talib. 1157
Al-Hasan b. Zayd's kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
He fathered [many children]: Muhammad; al-Qasim; Umm
Kulthum bt. al-Hasan, who was married to the caliph Abu
al-'Abbas [al-Saffah] and bore him two children, both of whom
died young; 'Ali; Zayd; Ibrahim; 'Isa ; Isma'il; Ishaq al-A'war (the
one-eyed); and 'Abdallah.
Hasan b. Zayd was a pious man. Abu Ja'far [al-Mansur] ap¬
pointed him governor of Medina, a position he held for five years.
Al-Mansur then found fault with [al-Hasan] and became angry
1156. Not in Sachau's edition or al-Qism al-mutammim-, cf. the short biography
of this 'Ubaydallah, in Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 42.
1157. He collaborated with the 'Abbasid caliph al-Mansur against the other
members of the HashimI family, in particular his cousins, the rebels Muhammad
al-Nafs al-Zakiyyah and Ibrahim, sons of 'Abdallah b. al-Hasan. See al-Tabari,
Ta’iikh, III, 144-45, and also 149, where he appears to be double-crossing the
caliph; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 466; idem, Tabaqat, 272; al-Baladhuri, An-
sab, m (Duri), 269.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 261
with him. He dismissed him [from office], confiscated all his prop¬
erty, and sold it, then imprisoned him. Muhammad al-Mahdl [b.
al-Mansur], who was his father's heir apparent, wrote secretly to
'Abd al-Samadb. 'All: 1158 "Beware! beware!"
Al-Hasan remained in prison until Abu Ja'far's death. Al-Mahdl
then freed al-Hasan, brought him to his [court], and returned to
him all the property he had lost. 1159 Al-Hasan remained with al-
Mahdl until the latter set out for the pilgrimage, in the year
168/July 785.
Al-Hasan b. Zayd came along with him. Water was scarce on the
way, and al-Mahdl feared thirst for his companions, so he returned
and did not perform the pilgrimage that year. Al-Hasan b. Zayd,
however, continued [the journey] in the direction of Mecca but fell
ill for a few days, then died in al-Hajir 1160 and was buried there.
This occurred in the year 168/785.
Malik b. Anas b. Malik b. Abi 'Amir b. 'Ami b. al-Harith b. [2519]
Ghayman b. Khuthayl b. 'Amr b. al-Harith, that is, Dhu Asbah of
the Himyar. 1161
As a pension recipient, he counted as one of the Taym b. Murrah
of the Quraysh; 1162 [his name was attached to that of] 'Abd al-
Rahman b. 'Uthman b. ‘Ubaydallah al-Tayml. 1163
Malik's kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah. He was the mufti and tradi-
tionist ( muhaddith ) of his town in his time. 1164
According to al-'Abbas b. al-Walld—Ibrahim b. Hammad al-
Zuhri al-Madlni—Malik: [The caliph] al-Mahdl said to me "O
Abu 'Abdallah, prepare a book [of law], and I shall make the com¬
munity adhere to it." Malik replied: "O Commander of the Faith-
1158. Al-Mansur's paternal uncle, as well as his governor in Mecca and al-Ta’if;
see al-Tabari, Ta’rlkh, HI, 359, 377.
1159. Cf. al-Tabari, IE, 377, 454 -
1160. See Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, n, 182.
1161. On the clan the Dhu Asbah, offspring of al-Harith b. Malik b. Zayd of the
Himyar; see al-Himyari, 164-65. On Malik, for whom the Malik! school of law
was named, see "Malik b. Anas," EP, VI, 262-65 (J. Schacht); Schacht, Origins,
passim,- Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 223; Ibn 'Abd al-Barr, al-Intiqa’, 9-63.
1162. Seep. 92, above.
1163. The only Qurashi bearing this name and recorded by Ibn Qudamah, 330,
died in the year 73/692. See also Ibn al-Athlr, Usd al-ghabah, HI, 308-9; al-Safadi,
xvm, 184.
1164. That is, in Medina, or, country, i.e., the Hijaz.
262
Biographies
ful, as for that quarter, I can accomplish that"; he was pointing
toward the Maghrib. "As for Syria, you know who lives among
them"; he meant al-Awza'I. "And, as for the people of Iraq, they
are the people of Iraq." 1165
As for Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi], he related this story
about Malik in a way different from the version of al-'Abbas-
Ibrahlm b. Hammad. Muhammad b. 'Umar's account runs as fol¬
lows. According to al-Harith [b. Muhammad]—Ibn Sa'd 1166 —
Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidi]—Malik b. Anas: When Abu
Ja'far al-Mansur performed the pilgrimage he summoned me. I
went in to see him and conversed with him. He was asking me
questions, and I replied. Then he said: "I have decided to take the
books you have written"—meaning the Muwatta ’—"and have
several copies made of them. I shall then send a copy to every
Islamic city and order the people to act according to what is writ¬
ten in this book, not to turn from it to any other, and to abandon
everything else of this science [of religious law], which is innova¬
tion. For I have come to realize that the authentic knowledge [of
religious law] is that possessed and transmitted by the people of
Medina." I said: "O Commander of the Faithful, do not do this, for
[various] views and traditions ( ahadith ) have already reached the
public, and people have transmitted material in various ways.
Every community adheres to those of the different opinions and
[2520] lessons that have reached it first; it follows these and holds them.
It is difficult to make people renounce their beliefs, so leave them
as they are, and let the people of every city choose for them¬
selves." Al-Mansur said "Upon my soul, had you agreed with me
in this, I would have ordered it."
According to Ibn Sa'd—Ibn Abi Uways: Malik b. Anas was ill for
a few days [before he died], I asked people of our family about what
he said on the brink of death, and they replied that he uttered the
words "There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is His Mes-
1165. That is, nothing can be done about them. This anecdote reflects the actual
[but later] distribution of certain schools of law over the Islamic provinces. The
Maliki school became prevalent in the Maghrib.
1166. Ibn Sa'd, al-Qism al-mutammim, 440-41,• cf. the short biography of Mal¬
ik in Ibn Sa'd, VH/r, 140. The next two references to Ibn Sa'd in al-Tabari's text are
in al-Qism al-mutammim, 443, 444.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 263
senger," then recited "The affair belongs to Allah before and af¬
ter." 1167 He died in the morning of Rabf I 14, 179/June 7, 795,
during the caliphate of Harun [al-Rashld]. 'Abdallah b. Muham¬
mad b. Ibrahim b. Muhammad b. 'All b. Abdallah b. al-'Abbas, son
of Zaynab bt. Sulayman b. 'All, said the prayer over his bier. [This
'Abdallah] was known by his mother's name, that is, 'Abdallah b.
Zaynab, and was governor of Medina at the time. 1168 'Abdallah
said the prayer over Malik at the funeral place; then Malik was
buried in al-Baqi'. 1169
Malik was eighty-five years old when he died.
Ibn Sa'd said: I mentioned this to Mus'ab b. 'Abdallah al-
Zubayri, and he said: "I know better than anyone else about
Malik's death. He died in Safar 179/April-May 795.
'Abdallah b. al-Mubarak. 1170
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman. He was a pursuer and
transmitter of knowledge, and his erudition in the fields of re¬
ligious law, philology, history, and poetry was great. 1171 More¬
over, he was an ascetic and a generous person.
Ibn al-Mubarak was bom in the year 118/January 20, 73 6-
January 7, 737, and lived in Khurasan. He died in Hit 1172 on his
way back from a raid against the Byzantines in the year 181 /March
5, 797-February 21, 798, at the age of sixty-three.
According to 'Abdallah b. Ahmad b. Shabbawayh—'All b. al-
Hasan—Ibn al-Mubarak: We transmit what the Jews and the
1167. Qur’an 30:3; trans. Bell, II, 393.
1168. According to al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, III, 739, he was governor of Mecca. See
also Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 31.
1169. See al-Samhudl, HI, 920, on Malik's tomb.
1170. A famous jurist and traditionist of Persian origin, a client of the northern
Tamlml tribe the Banu Hanzalah. He was a hafiz and an ascetic, known for his
enthusiasm in the matter of jihad. See F. Sezgin, I, 95; Bonner, 19-28; al-Sayrawan,
119, 243; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 323; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 309; Ibn al-
Nadlm, I, 552, n, 936.
1171. I have translated adab as philology, following Lane's lexicon, even though
Ibn al-Mubarak is not usually considered a philologist. The other possibility,
"belles lettres," seemed to me less feasible. It should also be noted that Sezgin
omits to mention his poetry, but see Ibn al-Nadim, I, 552, n, 936.
1172. A town in Iraq on the right bank of the Euphrates; see EP, HI, 510 (M.
Streck).
[2521]
264 Biographies
Christians say, but we cannot transmit what the Jahmiyyah
say. 1173
According to 'Abdallah b. Ahmad b. Shabbawayh—'All b. al-
Hasan: We asked 'Abdallah b. al-Mubarak "What do you know of
our Lord?" He said: "He is above seven heavens, on the throne,
separated from His creation by a partition. We do not believe, like
the Jahmiyyah, that He is found here"; [he said this] pointing with
his hand to the ground. 1174
Muhammad b. al-Hasan. 1175
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah, and he was a client of the
Shayban.
Muhammad's origin was in the Jazlrah. 1176 His father, who had
been enlisted in the Syrian army, came to Wasit, 1177 where
Muhammad was born in the year 132/August 20, 749-August 8,
750. He grew up in al-Kufah and became a student of tradition,
attending lectures [on the subject]. He later participated in Abu
Hanlfah's assembly and studied from him. The latter's school [of
law] became the predominant one as far as Muhammad b. al-
Hasan was concerned, and he was known as a Hanafl.
Muhammad settled in Baghdad, where people studied [tradi¬
tions] from him. He later moved to al-Raqqah 1178 when the caliph,
Harun al-Rashid, was staying there. 1179 Harun appointed him
1173. Muslim scholars debated the permissibility of transmitting from Jews as
well as Christians; see Kister, " Haddithu’ On the Jahmiyyah, an early and some¬
what obscure sect, see "Djahmiyya," El 2 , n, 388 (W. M. Watt).
1174. The theological issue here is apparently that of anthropomorphism, vehe¬
mently rejected by the Jahmiyyah in all its forms. Their argument here would be
that God is found everywhere, not seated on a throne in Heaven. See, e.g., al-
Ash'arl, Ibanah, 59-64; al-Lalika’I, I, 30-31.
1175. Known as al-Shaybanl, author of several law books, among them al-Siyai
al-kablr, dealing with the law of war and translated by Majid Khadduri as The
Islamic Law of Nations (Baltimore, 1966). See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'nkh, 494;
idem, Tabaqat, 328; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 219. Although a judge, his biography is
not recorded by Wakr.
1176. That is, Mesopotamia.
1177. A city in the center of Iraq built by the Umayyad governor al-Hajjaj b.
Yusuf, to accomodate the Syrian troops stationed in Iraq. "Wasit," El 1 , TV, 1128-32
(M. Streck).
1178. Ancient Kallinikos, a city in the Jazlrah on the left bank of the Euphrates,-
see "al-Rakka," El 2 , VIII, 410-14 (M. Meinecke).
1179. See al-Tabari, Ta'nkh, III, 1180.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 265
judge of al-Raqqah but later dismissed him, so he returned to
Baghdad. When Harun left for al-Rayy the first time 1180 he ordered
Muhammad to accompany him, which he did. Muhammad then
died in al-Rayy in the year 189/December 8, 804-November 26,
805.
Yusuf b. Ya'qub b. Ibrahim al-Qadl (the Judge). 1181
He learned tradition and studied the [method of] analogy
[ra’y ). 1182 He held the office of judge in west Baghdad while his
father was still alive and acted as the leader of prayer on Fridays in
the city of Abu Ja'far 1183 by order of Harun [al-Rashld]. He re¬
mained judge there until his death in Rajab 193/April-May 808.
Sufyan b. 'Uyaynah b. Abi 'Imran. 1184
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad; he was a client of the Banu
'Abdallah b. Ruwaybah, [a clan of] the Banu Hilal b. 'Amir b.
Sa'sa'ah.
Sufyan's father, 'Uyaynah, was a functionary of Khalid b. 'Abd¬
allah al-Qasri. 1185 When Khalid was dismissed from [his office as [2522]
governor of] Iraq and replaced by Yusuf b. 'Umar al-Thaqafl, the
latter pursued Khalid's functionaries, so they fled from him.
'Uyaynah b. Abi 'Imran went away and settled in Mecca.
According to Ibn Sa'd 1186 —Muhammad b. 'Umar [al-Waqidl]:
Sufyan b. 'Uyaynah told me that he was bom in the year 107/May
1180. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, HI, 704-5.
1181. An Arab of the tribe of Bajilah, commonly known as Yusuf b. Abi Yusuf,
his father being the famous jurist and judge Abu Yusuf, who served the caliph al-
Mahdi and his son Harun al-Rashid. See "Abu Yusuf," EP, I, 164-65 (J. Schacht);
WakT, in, 254-64. For Yusuf himself, see Waki', HI, 256, 282.
rr82. Ra’y, literally, "[personal] opinion," is a term referring to the use of hu¬
man reasoning as a source of religious law. The opponents of this method advo¬
cated the use of tradition instead; see "Ashab al-ra’y," EP, I, 692 (J. Schacht)
1183. That is, in Baghdad; cf. Waki', m, 282. The office of judge in Baghdad was
divided between two officials from the days of the fourth 'Abbasid caliph, al-Hadl,-
see Waki', ID, 254.
1184. A famous Kufan jurist, Qur’an interpreter, and hafiz. See F. Sezgin, I, 96;
Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 351, 505; idem, Tabaqat, 284; Ibn Hibban, Mashahh,
235-36; al-Quhpa’i, IE, 133-34; al-Sayrawan, 97, 234. Waki', in his Akhbar al-
qudah, records many legal decisions transmitted by him.
1185. Governor of Iraq under the Umayyad caliph Hisham. See EP, IV, 925-27
(G. Hawting); Hawting, First Dynasty, 81-88; Leder, i4r-95 (including a literary
analysis of the reports).
1186. Ibn Sa'd, V, 364, but note the difference in the text.
266
Biographies
19, 72.5-May 7, 726. He had pursued knowledge at an early [age]
and become a hafiz. He lived a long life, until his peers died and he
outlived them.
Sufyan related: I went to the Yemen in the years 150/February 6,
767-January 25, 768, and 152/January 14, 769-January 3, 770,
while Ma'mar [b. Rashid] was still alive. [Sufyan] al-Thawrl pre¬
ceded me [there] by a year.
According to Ibn Sa'd 1187 —al-Hasan b. 'Imran b. 'Uyaynah, Suf-
yan's nephew: I was with my uncle on the last pilgrimage he made
[to Mecca], in the year 197/(August) 813. When he was at Jam', 1188
having prayed, he lay on his mat and said to me: "I have arrived at
this place for seventy years, and each time I said 'O Lord, do not
make this the last time that I visit this place/ I feel embarrassed
before God about asking Him this so many times." Sufyan re¬
turned [from his pilgrimage] and died the next year, on Saturday,
the 1st of Rajab 198/February 25, 814. He was buried at al-Hajun.
He was ninety-one years old [when he died],
Uways al-Qaranl.
He was of the Murad, that is, Yuhabir b. Malik, who belonged to
the Madhhij. His [genealogy] is as follows: Uways b. 'Amir b. Jaz’
b. Malik b. 'Amr b. Sa'd b. 'Uswan b. Qaran b. Radman b. Najiyah
b. Murad; that is, Yuhabir b. Malik.
[2523] Uways was a pious, virtuous man. It was reported that he was
killed in [the battle of] Siffln.
According to [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’] Abu Kurayb—Abu Bakr—
Hisham—al-Hasan—the Prophet: [Many people, in numbers] as
many as [the whole of] Rabi'ah and Mudar, will enter paradise
thanks to the intercession of one man of my community. Accord¬
ing to Hisham—Hawshab—[al-Hasan]: 1189 That is Uways al-
Qaranl.
Hudayn b. al-Mundhir al-Raqashi. 1190
1187. Ibn Sa'd, V, 365.
1188. Another name for Muzdalifah, where certain rituals of the Pilgrimage are
held; see Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, II, 118.
T189. See Ibn Hajar, lsabah, I, 116 s.v. Uways.
1190. A minor tribal chief in al-Basrah, of the Raqashiyyun, a branch of the
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 267
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad. In battle his kunyah was
Abu Sasan.
According to al-Harith—'All b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]—'All
b. Malik al-Jushami: Al-Hudayn b. al-Mundhir was mentioned in
the presence of al-Ahnaf [b. Qays], and people said "He had be¬
come a chieftain before his beard was fully grown." Al-A hna f re¬
torted "Leadership [is befitting] the blackness [of the hairj before
one becomes white haired."
Hudayn b. al-Mundhir was carrying the banner of [the con¬
federation of] Rabi'ah in the battle of Siffin. 1191
I think that 'All b. Abi Talib was referring to al-Hudayn when he
recited the following verse:
Who is he who holds the black banner, with its fluttering
shadow?
When called "Advance, Hudayn," he [bravely] does so. 1192
According to Muhammad b. Ma'mar—Rawh—'All b. Suwayd b.
Manjuf: We came to Hudayn b. al-Mundhir, Abu Sasan, and he
said "Welcome to a visitor who is not boring."
Sa'd b. al-Harith b. al-Simmah b. 'Amr b. 'Atik b. 'Amr b.
Mabdhul, that is, 'Amir b. Malik, b. al-Najjar. 1193
Sa'd b. al-Harith was killed in [the battle of] Siffin, [fighting] on
the side of 'All b. Abi Talib. 1194
Al-Harith al-A'war (the one-eyed) b. 'Abdallah b. Ka'b b. Asad b. [2524]
Yakhlud b. Huth, that is, 'Abdallah b. Sabu' b. Sa'b b. Mu'awiyah
northern Banu Shayban. He was one of 'All's commanders in the battle of Siffin and
served as governor of Istakhr. He died in the year 99/717-18. See Crone, Slaves,
113; Ibn Hazm, Jamhazat, 317; Nasr b. Muzahim, 203 and passim; Ibn Hajar,
Tahdhib, n, 340-41; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 200, 204; Ibn Hibban, Mash-
ahiz, 157; idem, Thiqat, TV, 191; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa, 22, 93.
1191. See Hinds, "Banners and Battle-Cries."
1192. A part of a poem,- see Nasr b. Muzahim, 289-90.
1193. An An§ari Companion of the Prophet and a supporter of 'All. See Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, II, 23; Ibn al-Athlr, Usd, n, 372; Ibn Sa'd, V, 59, gives only his
genealogy.
1194. Not recorded by Nasr b. Muzahim or al-Quhpa’L
268 Biographies
b. Kathlr b. Malik b. Jusham b. Hashid b. Jusham b. Khaywan b.
Nawf b. Hamdan. 1195
Huth is the brother of Sabi', Abu Ishaq al-Sabi'i's clan.
Al-Harith was one of 'All [b. Abi Talib]'s prominent compa¬
nions. He worshipped God by [studying] the religious law, the
science of the division of inheritances, 1196 and arithmetic.
According to Zakariya’ b. Yahya—Ahmad b. Yunus—Za’idah—
al-A'mash [Sulayman b. Mihran]—Ibrahim—al-Harith: I learned
reading in one year and the Revelation in three years. 1197
[Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Yahya b. Wadih—Isma'il—Makh-
lad—Abu Ishaq: Al-Hasan b. 'All [b. Abi Talib] wrote to al-Harith
[the following] "Indeed, you used to hear from 'All things I did not
hear." So [al-Harith] sent to him a camel load [of written material].
Abu al-Sa’ib—Ibn Fudayl—Mujalid [b. Sa'Id]—['Amir b. Shur-
ahbil] al-Sha'bl: I learned from al-Harith al-A'war the science of
inheritances and arithmetic. He was the best of all people at
arithmetic.
Yahya b. Ma'in claimed that al-Harith died in the year
65/August 18, 684-August 7, 685. All the historians agree that al-
Harith's death occurred during the time when 'Abdallah b. Yazid
al-Ansari acted as governor of al-Kufah on behalf of 'Abdallah b. al-
Zubayr. 'Abdallah b. Yazid said the prayer over al-Harith's bier in
his time [as governor of] al-Kufah. 1198
Al-Harith was an inhabitant of al-Kufah, where he [also] died.
He had belonged to the Shi'ah of the Commander of the Faithful
'All b. Abi Talib.
[2525] 'Amrb. Salimahb. 'Abdallahb. Salimahb. 'Amirahb. Muqatilb.
al-Harith b. Ka'b b. 'Aiwa b. 'Alyan b. Arhab b. Du'am, of the [tribe
of] Hamdan. 1199
1195. The clan's name is Huth. See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, n, 126-28; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 149-50 (only his genealogy); al-Khashshl, 81-83; al-Amin,
XVm, 293-320; Nasrb. Muzahim, 121.
1196. 'Ilm al-fara’id. See Lane, s.v. f.r.d.
1197. Ta'allamtu al-qufana fi sanatin wa-l-wahya fi thalathi sinlna. Wahya
("inspiration") must refer to the Qur’an, so the word qui’dn must be used here in
its original meaning, i.e., "reading."
1198. On 'Abdallih, see al-Baladhuri, Ansdb, V, 190, 207-9, 2 . 73 - 74 -
1199. The clan's name is Arhab. See Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 396, 476; Ibn Hibban,
Mashahlr, 165.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 269
'Amr was a tribal noble [sharif ]. 1200 Al-Hasan b. 'All sent him,
together with Muhammad b. al-Ash'ath b. Qays, [as go-between]
in the matter of the agreement between himself and Mu'awiyah
[b. Abi Sufyan]. 1201 Mu'awiyah admired 'Ann's appearance and
eloquence and asked him "Are you a Mudari?" 'Amr replied "No,"
then recited [the following verses]:
I belong to people whose glory lies in God's apostle,
[superior to] all people, both nomad and settled.
Our fathers are men of excellence, raised to glory
by the noble origins of their ancestry.
Our mothers, what women! noble [and fine];
nobility is inherited in their line.
They gathered camphor, musk, and ambergris, 1202
but you, son of Hind, are a gatherer of the gum of trees.
['Amr then said]: "I am a man of Hamdan, of the tribe of Arhab."
Abu 'Abd al-Rahman al-Sulaml. 1203
His name was 'Abdallah b. Habib.
According to Ibn Sa'd 1204 —Hajjaj b. Muhammad—Shu'bah [b.
al-Hajjaj]: Abu 'Abd al-Rahman did not hear [traditions] from
'Uthman [b. 'Affan], but he did hear from 'All [b. Abi Talib].
Abu 'Abd al-Rahman was a companion of 'Ali [b. Abi Talib] and
a resident of al-Kufah. 1205 He died there during the time when
Bishr b. Marwan was governor of Iraq. 1206
1200. Tribal nobles ( ashiaf) played a pivotal role in the politics of the Umayyad
period. They first formed a link between the government and the tribesmen, then
lost this position. Although many of them continued to serve the mlers, others
tended to initiate or join rebellions. However, they never formed a definite party,
and each acted in his own interest; see Crone, Slaves.
1201. See al-Tabari, Ta'iikh, n, 1-4; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, HI (Mahmudi), 40-43,
51-52-
1202. The reference is to Yemeni perfume production.
1203. Of the tribe of Sulaym. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 271; idem, Taba-
qat, 153; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 164. Considered a hafiz and a Qur’an reader by al-
Suyuri; al-Sayrawan, 116; Ibn al-Jazari, 1 ,413 -x4. He was a supporter of 'All accord¬
ing to al-Sadr, 24.
1204. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 119.
1205. According to a report in al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3319, Abu 'Abd al-Rahman
participated in the battle of Siffln, but cf. Nasr b. Muzahim, 288, where the phras¬
ing suggests that he was not present there.
1206. In the years 71-73 or 74/691-93 or 694; see al-Tabari, Ta’iikh, II, 816, 834,
852.
270
Biographies
According to [Muhammad] Ibn Humayd—Jarir [b. 'Abd al-
Hamid]—'Ata’ [b. al-Sa’ibj: Someone asked Abu 'Abd al-Rahman:
"I beseech you in the name of God, [tell me] when it was that you
[began] to hate 'All? Was it not when he doled out allowances in al-
Kufah and omitted to give you any or your family?" Abu 'Abd al-
Rahman replied "If you beseech me in the name of God [to tell
you], the answer is yes."
[2526] Kumayl b. Ziyad b. Nahik b. Haytham b. Sa'd b. Malik b. al-
Harith b. Suhban b. Sa'd b. Malik b. al-Nakha', of the Madhhij. 1207
Kumayl participated in [the battle of] Siffln on the side of 'All [b.
Abi Talib]. He was a tribal chief ( sharlf ), and his people obeyed
him. 1208
When al-Hajjaj [b. Yusuf] came to al-Kufah he ordered that
Kumayl be brought before him and had him executed.
According to Abu Kurayb [Muhammad b. al-'Ala’]—Abu Bakr—
al-A'mash [Sulayman b. Mihran]: Al-Hajjaj said to al-'Uryan [b. al-
Haytham b. al-Aswad]: 1209 "O 'Uryan, what became of Kumayl?
Did he not participate in the revolt against us in [the battle of] al-
Jamajim?" 1210 'Uryan replied; [al-A'mash] mentioned the ex¬
change, then [continued the story]: Al-Hajjaj waited until [one
day] Kumayl came to collect his pension (' ata ’). Al-Hajjaj seized
him and said to him "You are the one who treated [the caliph]
'Uthman in such-and-such a manner," and he said [other] things
[as well]. 1211 Kumayl retorted: "Do not put so much blame on me,
and do not pour a mountain of sand on me. 1212 It was only that the
1207. One of the tribal nobles of al-Kufah ( ashiaf ), of the Nakha'. Kumayl was
involved in the uprising against 'Uthman and even went to Medina to kill him
himself, but his plan failed, and he had only an exchange of blows with the caliph.
After the murder of 'Uthman he joined 'All's camp. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2908,
2917, 2921, 3034-35; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 148.
1208. This is especially noted because obedience to tribal leaders was not a
matter of course, nor did these leaders have any institutionalized coercive power. It
is perhaps worthy of note that he is not mentioned by Nasr b. Muzahim in Waq'at
Siffln.
1209. Of the same tribe as Kumayl, al-Nakha'. He was chief of the shurtah in the
time of Yazid II. See al-Tabari, Ta'nkh, II, 672-73, 1407, 1655; Ibn Manzur,
Mukhtasar, XVII, 31-32; Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 297.
1210. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta'nkh, n, 1076-77.
1211. Cf. al-Tabari, Ta’nkh, I, 3036, II, 1097.
1212. Cf. Qur’an 73:14.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 271
man had slapped me, then asked me to be patient, and I forgave
him, so which one of us was the evil one?" Al-Hajjaj gave the
order, and Kumayl was put to death.
Kumayl had participated in [the battle of] al-Qadisiyyah.
'Umar al-Akbar (Senior) b. 'All b. Abi Talib b. 'Abd al-Muttalib
b. Hashim. 1213
His mother was al-Sahba’, that is, Umm Habib bt. Bujayr b.
al-'Abd b. 'Alqamah b. al-Harith b. 'Utbah b. Sa'd b. Zuhayr b.
Jusham b. Bakr b. Hubayb b. 'Amr b. Ghanm b. 'Uthman b. Tag-
hlib b. Wa’il. She was a war captive, taken by Khalid b. al-Walid
during his raid on the Banu Taghlib at 'Ayn al-Tamr.
'Ubaydallah b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 1214
His mother was Layla bt. Mas'ud b. Khalid b. Malik b. Rib'i b.
Sulma b. Jandal b. Nahshal b. Darim. 1215
'Ubaydallah was killed at al-Madhar in the battle between the
followers of Mus'ab b. al-Zubayr and the followers of al-Mukhtar.
He was in Mus'ab's camp. 1216
Abu Nadrah. 1217
His name was al-Mundhir b. Malik b. Qit'ah.
He was of the 'Awaqah, a clan of the 'Abd al-Qays. 1218
According to 'Ali b. Muhammad [al-Mada’ini]: Abu Nadrah par¬
ticipated in the revolt of Ibn al-Ash'ath. He belonged to the Shi'ah
of 'Ali.
1213. A son of 'All by a Taghlib! woman, apparently more involved in family
disputes over inheritance than in politics. See al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III (Mahmud!),
230-32, 268; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3472,- Ibn Qudamah, 137; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 260,• idem, Tabaqat, 230.
1214. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iTkh, 225; Ibn Qudamah, 137.
1215. An important branch of the Tamim; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 229-33.
1216. See al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, II, 721, al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 260, 271.
1217. A Basran Successor. See Ibn al-Kalbi, Jamhaiah, 590,• Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 352; idem, Tabaqat, 209; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 155.
1218. Called 'Awq by Ibn al-Kalbi; see Jamhaiah, 590. The 'Abd al-Qays was a
large tribe of the northern confederation of Rabl'ah; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 295-
96.
[ 2 527 ]
272. Biographies
Nawf al-Bikali, that is, Nawf b. Fadalah, the son of Ka'b's wife. 1219
Nawfal b. Musahiq b. 'Abdallah b. Makhramah b. 'Abd al-'Uzza
b. Abi Qays b. 'Abd Wadd b. Nasr b. Malik b. Hisl b. 'Amir b.
Lu’ayy. 1220
Al-Ashtar. 1221
His name was Malik b. al-Harith b. 'Abd Yaghuth b. Maslamah
b. Rabi'ah b. al-Harith b. Jadhimah b. Sa'd b. Malik b. al-Nakha', of
the Madhhij.
According to Ishaq b. Ibrahim b. Habib b. al-Shahld—Abu Bakr
b, 'Ayyash—'Alqamah: 1222 I said to al-Ashtar "You had opposed
the murder of 'Uthman, so what made you go out [to fight on 'Ali's
side] in al-Basrah?" 1223 Al-Ashtar replied: "These people 1224 had
given 'All the oath of allegiance, then broke it. It was ['Abdallah] b.
al-Zubayr who incited 'A’ishah to participate in the revolt
(. khuruj). 1225 I had prayed to God that I should meet him, and
indeed we met in combat. As my arm is strong, I was not satisfied
until I raised myself in my saddle and hit him so that he fell."
['Alqamah] said: I asked "Is he the one who exclaimed 'Kill me
1219. That is, Ka'b al-Ahbar. Nawf was of the tribe of Himyar and lived in Egypt
and Damascus. He was a storyteller {qa$$, see p. 276, n. 1251, below) and a tradi-
tionist and acted as prayer leader (imam) in Damascus. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 308; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 196; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, X, 436-37; al-
Sam'ani, I, 382; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, XXVI, 220-23; Ibn Sa‘d, VII/2, 160.
1220. One of the notables of the QurashI clan 'Amir b. Lu’ayy, associated with
the Umayyad caliph al-Walid b. 'Abd al-Malik. See al-Zubayri, 427; Ibn Qudamah,
483; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 64.
1221. One of the most fervent supporters of 'All b. Abi Talib; he died on his way
to Egypt to assume the post of governor on behalf of 'All. See "al-Ashtar," EP, I,
704 (L. Veccia Vaglieri); Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 174, 177, 184, 186; idem,
Tabaqat, 148; al-Kashshi, 61-63; Nasrb. Muzahim, passim; al-Kindi, 25-28.
1222. Al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3200.
1223. The reference is to the battle of the Camel. Al-Ashtar is said to have come
to Medina with 'Uthman's opponents but to have kept himself uninvolved in the
murder of the caliph. See al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2954, 2999, but see also 'Abd al-
Malik Ibn Habib, 113.
1224. That is, Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah and al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam; see 'Abd al-
Malik Ibn Habib, 114.
1225. Khuruj is here used in both its senses simultaneously (to go out and to
rebel), referring to the revolt against 'All, and to the fact that the rebels left Medina
in order to rally support in al-Basra. On the role played by 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr,
see al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3109, 3126, 3200. The report clearly reflects an 'Alid
argument, refuting as it does the allegation that 'All's supporters were 'Uthman's
murderers.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 273
together with Malik?'" Al-Ashtar replied: "No, I left him, and I do [2,52,8]
not remember anything [of the sort]. That one was 'Abd al-Rah-
man b. 'Attab b. Asid. 1226 We met, we exchanged two blows, and
we both fell, whereupon he started calling 'Kill me together with
Malik/ but they did not know who Malik was; had they known,
they would have killed me." Abu Bakr b. 'Ayyash then said: This
is [as vivid] as though you witnessed it yourself; 1227 it was told to
me by al-Mughirah—Ibrahim—'Alqamah, [who said]: I said to al-
Ashtar [etc.].
Shabath b. Rib'i b. Husayn b. 'Uthaym b. Rabi'ah b. Zayd b.
Riyah b. Yarbu' b. Hanzalah, of the tribe of Tamlm. 1228
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Quddus.
According to Ibn Sa'd 1229 —al-Fadl b. Dukayn—Hafs b. Ghi-
yath—al-A'mash [Sulayman b. Mihran]: I was present at Shabath's
funeral. The slaves, the slave girls, the noblemen, the she camels
(. nuq )—[al-A'mash] mentioned other sorts as well—all were di¬
vided into separate respective groups. I saw them wailing for him
and beating their faces with grief. 1230
According to Ibn 'Abd al-A'la—al-Mu'tamir—his father—
Anas—Shabath: I am the first who led the Haruriyyah. 1231 Some¬
one said: "This is nothing to be proud of."
Al-Musayyab b. Najabah b. Rabi'ah b. Riyah b. 'Awf b. Hilal b.
Shamkh b. Fazarah. 1232
1226. A member of the Umayyad family, who was killed in the battle of the
Camel. See Ibn Qudamah, 199; al-Zubayrf, 193. Note the circumstances of his
death: He receives a blow aimed at 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr ; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah,
ni, 72.
r227. Hadha ka-annaka shahiduhu. The version in al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 3200,
does not make much sense.
1228. The clan's name is Banu Riyah b. Yarbu'. Shabath was a chieftain of his
clan in his time. He showed extreme fickleness in his political behavior, having
joined and deserted almost every possible camp and persuasion. See Crone, Slaves,
rr8 ; Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 153.
r229. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 150.
r230. These are in fact practices prohibited by Islam. See p. 156, above.
1231. That is, the first Khawarij. When the fourth caliph, 'All b. Abi Talib,
decided to comply with Mu'awiyah's request for arbitration, many of his support¬
ers opposed his decision and deserted his camp. They encamped at Harura’, hence
the name Haruriyyah, and this group later became the Khariji sect. See al-Tabari,
Ta’rikh, I, 3341, 3362-63; al-'Iraql, 10.
1232. Of the northern tribe Fazarah. See Ihn Hibban, Mashdhir, 174; al-
Baladhuri, Futuh (de Goeje), 247, 352.
274
Biographies
He took part in [the battle of] Qadisiyyah and fought on the side
of 'All [b. Abi Talib] in his battles.
Al-Musayyib was killed in the battle of 'Ayn al-Wardah with the
Repenters ( tawwabun ). These [people] had repented having for¬
saken al-Husayn [b. 'All]. 1233 Al-Husayn b. Numayr 1234 sent the
[detached] head of al-Musayyib b. Najabah to [the governor],
'Ubaydallah b. Ziyad, 1235 at the hand of Adham b. Muhriz al-
Bahili. 'Ubaydallah b. Ziyad sent it to [the caliph], Marwan b. al-
Hakam, and he set it up [in public] in Damascus.
[2529] Hujr b. 'Adi b. Jabalah b. 'Adi b. Rabi'ah b. Mu'awiyah al-
Akramin b. al-Harith b. Mu'awiyah b. al-Harith b. Mu'awiyah b.
Thawr b. Muratti' b. Kindiyy (sic). 1236
He is [called] Hujr al-Khayr (the good one). His father was 'Adi
al-Adbar (the sore backed), [thus nicknamed] because he had been
stabbed after having turned his back [to the enemy].
Hujr b. 'Adi lived both in pre-Islamic and Islamic times. Some
scholars mention that he came to the Prophet together with his
brother Hani’ b. 'Adi. 1237 He was the one who conquered Marj
'Adhra’. 1238
Hujr's pension was 2,500 [dirhams per year]. 1239 He was a com¬
panion of 'Ali [b. Abi Talib] and fought on his side in [the battles
of] the Camel and Siffln. 1240
1233. See pp. 50-51, above.
1234. A general of the Sufyanids. See "al-Husayn b. Numayr," EP, III, 620-21
(H. Lammens and V. Cremonesi); Crone, Slaves, 97.
1235. One of the important governors of Iraq for the Sufyanids, son of the pre¬
vious governor and adopted brother of Mu'awiyah, Ziyad b. Abihi (= b. Abi Sufyan);
see Hawting, First Dynasty, 41, 50, 53, 55.
1236. The tribe's name is Kindah, not as written here. Hujr was a Kindi leader in
al-Kufah, charged as an instigator of opposition to the Umayyads. He was executed
by Mu'awiyah in the year 51/671. See "Hudjr b. 'Adi," EP, HI, 545 (H. Lammens);
Hasson, 133-39; Hawting, First Dynasty, 41; al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, n, 112-155; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa, 211-36; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 144; al-Kashshi, 94; al-
Quhpa’i, II, 85-86; al-Dabbl, 20; al-Amin, XX, 141-227; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 151-54.
1237. This makes him a Companion [sahabl). Certain historians, however, deny
him the title,- see Lammens, "Hudjr b. 'Adi."
1238. A village 15 miles away from Damascus, conquered by Khalid b. al-Walid;
see al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2103. Hujr is not mentioned here among the conquerors,
and Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, HI, 625, treats this information cautiously. Marj
‘Adhra’ was the place where Hujr was imprisoned, executed, and buried. See Yaqut,
III, 625; al-Tabari, II, 137. The translation in Blankenship, 103, is erroneous.
1239. This was the highest pension, called sharaf al-'ata’.
1240. See, e.g., Nasr b. Muzahim, 103-4, 117, and passim.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 275
Sa'sa'ah b. Suhan. 1241
He died in al-Kufah during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah.
'Abd Khayr b. Yazid al-Khaywani, of the Hamdan.
His kunyah was Abu 'Umarah. He participated on 'All's side in
[the battle of] Siffin, where he excelled.
Al-Asbagh b. Nubatah b. al-Harith b. 'Amr b. Fatik b. 'Amir b.
Mujashi' b. Darim. 1242
He was the commander of the shurtah for 'All [b. Abi Talib].
Al-Asbagh belonged to the party ( shFah ) of 'All.
Hajjar b. Abjar b. Jabir b. Bujayr b. 'A’idh b. Shurayt b. 'Amr b.
Malik b. Rabi'ah b. 'Ijl. 1243
He was a tribal noble {sharif).
Muslim b. Nudhayr al-Sa'dl, of the Sa'd b. Zayd Manah b.
Tamim. 1244
He too belonged to the Shi'ah.
Abu 'Abdallah al-Jadall. 1245
His name was 'Abadah b. ‘Abd b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Ya'mur b.
Habib b. 'A’idh b. Malik b. Wa’ilah b. 'Amr b. Naj b. Yashkur b. [2530]
'Adwan—whose [real] name was al-Harith—b. 'Amr b. Qays b.
'Aylan b. Mudar.
'Adwan (the aggressor) was thus nicknamed because he had
acted most aggressively against his brother Fahm b. 'Amr and
killed him.
1241. Of the 'Abd al-Qays,- see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 297. He was an important
companion of 'All b. Abi Talib. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 144; al-Kashshl,
64-65; al-Quhpa’i, HI, 212-14; al-Dabbi, 29; Nasr b. Muzahim, passim.
1242. A member of the Mujashi' family, a part of the Tamim! clan Darim. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’ilkh, 184; al-Quhpa’I, I, 232-33; Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 231.
1243. The tribe is 'Ijl b. Lujaym of the Bakr b. Wa’il, and the family of Bujayr was
a leading one. Hajjar was a tribal leader in al-Kufah; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 314.
He was associated with the Umayyads, but during the second civil war he joined
the Zubayrid party; see al-Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa, 144, 22, V, 174, 225, 232, 296.
1244. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 159; Ibn IJibban, Thiqat, V, 398.
1245. A member of the Jadllah of Qays. His name is variously given as 'Abd al-
Rahman, 'Ubayd, and 'Abadah. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 259; idem, Taba¬
qat, 143; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 159; al-Kashshl, 85-87,- al-Quhpa’I, IV, 114-15.
ij6
Biographies
The mother of 'Adwan and Fahm was Jadilah bt. Murr b. Tab-
ikhah, a sister of Tamlm b. Murr, 1246 and the [members of these
tribes] were called after her.
Abu 'Abdallah al-Jadall belonged to 'All's party. He was the
commander of the 800 [troops] sent by al-Mukhtar [to the Hijaz] to
protect Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyyah from ['Abdallah] Ibn al-
Zubayr when the latter wanted to kill him. 1247
Abu al-Mutawakkil al-Naji. 1248
His name was 'All b. Du’ad.
Abu al-Siddiq al-Naji. 1249
His name was Bakr b. 'Amr. He was a reliable [transmitter]
( thiqah ).
Dharr b. 'Abdallah b. Zurarah b. Mu'awiyah b. 'Amirah b.
Munabbih b. Ghalib b. Waqsh b. Qasim b. Murhibah, of the
Hamdan. 1250
Dharr was an eminent storyteller [qass ] 1251 and a Murji’. He was
one of the Qur’an readers ( qurra ’) who participated in the revolt of
'Abd al-Rahman b. Muhammadb. al-Ash'ath against al-Hajjaj. 1252
1246. That is, the eponym of the tribal confederation of Tamlm.
1247. See Sharon, Black Banners, 112-14; al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, II, 693-95. Abu
'Abdallah also acted as imam for al-Mukhtar; see al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 267.
1248. Of the Banu Samah b. Lu’ayy, an obscure group claiming descent from the
Quraysh; part of them were called after the ancestress Najiyah. See Ibn Hazm,
Jamharat, 173; Khallfahb. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 352; idem, Tabaqat, 206; IbnHibban,
Mashahlr, 148; al-Dulabi, II, 105.
1249. A Basran hafiz of the same tribe as the previous one. See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 352; idem, Tabaqat, 206; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 150; Ibn Hajar,
Tahdhlb, I, 426. According to Ibn Sa'd, VII/1, 164, he was not a trustworthy
transmitter.
1250. A traditionist of the Murhibah, a branch of the southern Hamdan. See Ibn
Hazm, Jamharat, 396; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, HI, 189.
1251. On the storytellers and their role in spreading traditions see "Kissa," EP,
V, 185-87 (C. Pellat); Pedersen; Bosworth, Medieval, 1, 27, Juynboll, Muslim Tradi¬
tion, 11—12; Taha al-Najm ; al-Zubur ; al-Suyutl, Tahdhir al-khawass-, Ibn al-Jawzi,
al-Qussas ; Mustafa, II, 145-47.
1252! Dharr is not included in the list of the Qurra’ who supported Ibn al-
Ash'ath given in Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, I, 286. It is not certain that in the
context of Ibn al-Ash'ath's revolt qurra' meant Qur’an readers. See Shaban, 50-54,
67-68, and passim; Sayed; Juynboll, "The Qurra’."
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 277
According to Ibn Sa'd 1253 —al-Fadl b. Dukayn—Abu Isra’Il—al-
Hakam: I heard Dharr say during [the battle of] al-Jamajim "Is it
anything but the coolness of iron in the hand of an unbeliever
[who is going to be] burned [in hell]?"
Talhah b. 'Abdallah b. Khalaf b. As'ad, of the Banu Mulayh b. [2531]
'Amr b. Rabfah, of the Khuza'ah. 1254
His father, 'Abdallah b. Khalaf, was killed in the battle of the
Camel, [fighting] on the side of 'A’ishah and Talhah.
This Talhah was the one called Talhah of the Talhahs. He was
the most generous Arab of his time.
Talhah's mother was Safiyyah bt. al-Harith b. Talhah b. Abi
Taihah b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. 'Uthman b. 'Abd al-Dar b. Qusayy. His
father's mother was Humaynah bt. Abi Talhah b. 'Abd
al-'Uzza. 1255 He was called Talhah of the Talhahs because both
Talhah and Abu Talhah were [among] his ancestors.
Salim b. Abi Hafsah. 1256
His kunyah was Abu Yunus.
He was an ultra-Shi'i. When the Banu Hashim came to
power 1257 Da’ud b. 'Ali 1258 led the pilgrimage that year, that is,
the year 132/749. Salim b. Abi Hafsah performed the pilgrimage
that same year. He entered Mecca uttering the talbiyah formula
thus "Here I am at your service, O God, here I am, O Annihilator
1253. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 205.
1254. A Basran tribal noble of a leading family. He was governor of Sijistan
under the Umayyads, and his father, 'Abdallah, had run the diwan of al-Basrah for
the caliphs 'Umar and 'Uthman. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 245; Muham¬
mad Ibn Habib, Muhabbai, 156, 306, 356, 377; Ibn Qudamah, 117, 222.
1255. Both the mother and grandmother of Talhah were Qurashis of the 'Abd al-
Dar clan.
1256. He was a Kufan client of the Banu 'Ijl, said to be a Murji’ and a Zaydi of the
Batriyyah/Salihiyyah, for which see note 1148, above. See Ibn Sa'd, VI, 234; al-
Kashshl, 202-4 (read "al-Hasan b. Salih b. Hayy" instead of "al-Hasan b. Salih b.
Yahya"), 249; al-Quhpa’i, HI, 89-92; al-Amin, XXXHI, 377-8S; Ibn Hibban, Ma-
jruhm, I, 343.
1237. That is, the 'Abbasids, in the year 132/749.
1258. Son of 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas and the most respected uncle of the first
'Abbasid caliphs, al-Saffah and al-Mansur. He died in the year 133/750-51. See
Lassner, 141, 144, 146; al-Dhahabl, Siyai, V, 444-45; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, III
(Duri), 87-89; Ibn Manzur, Mnkhtasai, Vm, 149-52; Ibn al-Athlr, Kamil, V, 409-
16.
278 Biographies
of the Banu Urn ay yah." Now Salim was a loud-spoken person.
Da’ud b. 'All heard him and asked "Who is this?" Someone replied
"Salim b. Abl Hafsah." Da’ud was then informed about Salim and
his convictions. 1259
According to Ibn Sa'd 1260 —'All b. 'Abdallah—Sufyan—Salim b.
Ab! Hafsah: Whenever ['Amir b. Shurahbll] al-Sha'bi saw me he
would recite the following:
O God's police, fall down and away
like a grain of barley. 1261
Al-Khalil b. Ahmad, who founded the science of prosody, al-
Farahidi. 1262
He was of the Atik. 1263
According to Hisham b. Muhammad [al-Kalbl]—Ishaq b. Ib¬
rahim b. Habib b. al-Shahid—Quraysh b. Anas—al-Khalil b.
[2532] Ahmad, the founder of the science of grammar: When a book is
copied three times it becomes [as if it were written] in Persian.
Abu Ya'qub commented: He meant that faults proliferate in it.
QurashI [Women], [Younger] Contemporaries of
Companions of the Prophet, from Whom Knowledge
Was Transmitted
Fatimah bt. 'All b. Abi Talib. 1264
She transmitted traditions from her father, among them [the
following]. According to Muhammad b. al-Husayn—al-Fadl b.
1259. Al-Safadi, XIII, 478-79.
1260. Ibn Sa'd, VI, 234, see also al-Amln, XXXHI, 383.
1261. Al-Dhahabi, Mizan, I, 367, adds that this was said in mockery. Al-Amln,
XXXIII, 383, explains that the reference is to the forces of al-Mukhtar (supposedly
supported by Salim| ; cf. Al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 260.
2262. A Basran philologist of the Farahid, a branch of the Azd. He was the first
Arab scholar to write a dictionary and set rules for prosody. See "al-Khalil b.
Ahmad," EP, IV, 962-64 (R. Sellheim); al-Sam'ani, IV, 357; Ibn al-Nadlm, I, 93-96,
n, 2030.
1263. A branch of the southern confederation of Azd. According to Ibn Hazm,
however, al-Khalil's clan, the Farahid, belonged to a different branch within the
Azd; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 367-72, 380.
1264. Her mother was a concubine, and it was reported that she knew no tradi¬
tion from her father. According to a certain anecdote, she threw ashes in the face of
a man who glorified her father. See Ibn Sa'd, Vm, 341-42; al-Amln, XLII, 254-55.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 279
Dukayn—Ibn Abi Nu'm; that is, al-Hakam b. 'Abd al-Rahman
b. Abi Nu'm—Fatimah bt. 'All—her father—the Prophet: Who¬
ever sets free a Muslim or a believer [slave], God will protect
from hellfire every limb of his, in exchange for every limb of that
[slave],
Umm Kulthum bt. 'All b. Abi Talib. 1265
Fatimah bt. al-Husayn b. 'All b. Abi Talib.
She transmitted traditions from her father and others, among
them the following. According to Muhammad b. 'Ubayd al-
Muharibi—Salih b. Musa al-Talhi—'Abdallah b. al-Hasan—his
mother Fatimah bt. al-Husayn—her father—'Ali: The Prophet
used to say, on entering the mosque: "O God, open the gates of
Your mercy for me." Walking out he would say: "O God, open the
gates of Your livelihood for me."
Umm Kulthum bt. al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam. 1266
She transmitted the following. According to al-'Abbas b. al-
Walid—his father—al-Awza'i—Umm Kulthum bt. Asma’ bt. Abi
Bakr al-Siddiq 1267 —'A’ishah, the Prophet's wife: The Prophet was
at home when 'Ali b. Abi Talib came [one day] and entered. When [2533]
he saw the Prophet praying he stood by his side, praying [too]. A
scorpion emerged and reached the Prophet, then left him and ap¬
proached 'Ali. When 'Ali saw it he hit it with his shoe. The
Prophet did not find fault with 'All for killing it.
Umm Humayd bt. 'Abd al-Rahman. 1268
She transmitted the following. According to Sa'id b. Yahya al-
Umawi—his father—['Abd al-Malik] Ibn Jurayj—'Abd al-Malik b.
1265. Daughter of Fatimah (Muhammad's daughter) and wife of the second
caliph, 'Umar. SeelbnSa'd, Vm, 339-41; al-Zubayri, 349; IbnHazm, Jamharat, 37,
38, 152; Ibn Qudamah, 134-35.
1266. I could not trace her, not even in the works of the descendants of the
family, al-Zubayri's Nasab quiaysh and al-Zubayr b. Bakkar's Muwaffaqiyyat.
2267. That is, daughter of al-Zubayr, whose wife was Asma’.
r268. Her identity is in fact unknown. See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, XII, 492, al-
Bandari and Hasan, IV, 478. The identity of 'Abd al-Malik, son of Umm Humayd, is
not clear either,- see Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, VI, 160. There was, however, a Compa¬
nion bearing this name, wife of the Ansari Companion Abu Humayd; see Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, IV, 445.
28o
Biographies
'Abd al-Rahman—his mother Umm Humayd bt.'Abd al-Rahman:
I asked 'A’ishah about the middle prayer ( al-salah al-wusta), and
she said: During the Prophet's lifetime we used to read it in the
first mode of reading, thus: "Keep the prayers, the middle prayer
and the afternoon prayer, and stand [praying] in obedience to
God. "1269
According to 'Abbas b. Muhammad—Hajjaj [b. Muhammad]—
['Abd al-Malik b. 'Abd al-'Aziz] Ibn Jurayj—'Abd al-Malik b. 'Abd
al-Rahman—his mother, Umm Humayd bt. 'Abd al-Rahman, who
asked 'A’ishah about the middle prayer mentioned by God [in the
Qur’an], and she replied: During the Prophet's lifetime we used to
read it according to the first mode of reading, thus: "Keep the
prayers, the middle prayer and the afternoon prayer, and stand
[praying] in obedience to God."
Aminah . 1270
She transmitted the following: According to al-Rabf—Asad—
Hammadb. Salamah—'All b. Zayd—Aminah, who asked 'A’ishah
about the following verse: "Whether you reveal what is within
you or conceal it, Allah will reckon with you for it [and will
forgive whom He willeth] and punish whom He willeth." 1271
'A’ishah replied: "No one asked me about this verse since I had
asked the Prophet, who said: 'O 'A’ishah, this is how God reckons
with His servants, by striking them with fever, or misfortunes, or
[2534] pestilence. Even a piece of merchandise one puts in one's hand,
loses, worries about, then finds under one's arm, [even that is an
1269. Qur’an 2:238. The canonical reading omits the words "and the afternoon
prayer." According to 'A’ishah's reading as recorded here, the "middle prayer"
cannot be identical with the afternoon prayer. However, in the Jami', II, 555, al-
Tabari ascribes to 'A’ishah a reading that makes these two prayers identical. See
the whole discussion in al-Tabari, Jami', II, 553-68; and the various readings in
Jeffery, 30, 122, 196, 214, 232, 235, 237.
1270. Perhaps Aminah bt. 'Abdallah; see note 1271, below.
1271. Qur’an 2:285; trans. Bell, I, 41. According to al-Tabari, Jami', in, 149, 'All
b. Zayd transmitted this tradition from his mother, whose name is not mentioned.
In 'All's biography, Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, VII, 283, one Aminah bt. 'Abdallah is
mentioned as one of 'All's sources. I could not trace this Aminah. 'All b. Zayd was a
Basran, Qurashi transmitter who died in the year 127/744-45 (there are other
versions). According to al-Zubayri, 293, his mother was a concubine. See also Ibn
Hibban, Majruhln, II, 103-4.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 281
act of God]. So that the believer eventually emerges out of his sins
like red gold dust emerging from the blacksmith's bellows.'"
The Following Are Names and Kunyahs Mentioned in
the History * 272
Abu Bakr.
Opinions differ as to his name. Most of the scholars hold that it
was 'Abdallah b. Abi Quhafah. Others say that it was 'Atlq. As for
Abu Quhafah, there is no disagreement over his name. It was
'Uthman b. 'Amir b. Ka'b b. Sa'd b. Taym b. Murrah.
Abu 'Ubaydah. 1273
His name was 'Amir b. 'Abdallah b. al-Jarrah.
Abu al-Arqam. 1274
His name was 'Abd Manaf b. Asad b. 'Abdallah al-Makhzumi.
Abu Marthad al-GhanawI.
He was an ally of 'Abd al-Muttalib, 1275 and his name was Kan-
naz b. al-Husayn or Kinaz b. al-Husayn.
1272. It is not clear whether or not the title applies only to this chapter or to the
subsequent ones as well. In any case, in what follows al-Tabari records kunyahs,
nicknames, and names of people, regardless of whether or not they were already
mentioned in the Dhayl al-mudhayyal. Moreover, he sometimes mentions the
same person twice in one chapter, e.g., Tamim al-Dari (pp. 298, 302). Despite the
chapter heading, some of these people are not mentioned in the Ta’rikh, e.g., Abu
al-Arqam [Dhayl, 2534); others figure there only once, e.g., 'Abdallah b. Zayd 2539
= al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, I, 2894. Many, however, such as 'All b. Abi Talib or al-Zubayr,
occupy many pages in various places of the Ta’rlkh. I saw no point in overloading
the footnotes with references. The reader is invited to use de Goeje's index or the
indexes to the other volumes of the translation. On the other hand, I supply some
details wherever al-Tabari mentions none at all. Where no details are adduced, it
means either that the person's biography was recorded before or that I could not
trace the person.
1273. A close Companion of the Prophet and one of the army commanders
during the conquests. He died in the plague of 'Amwas in Palestine in the year
18/639. See "Abu 'Ubaydab. al-Djarrah," El 2 , 158-59 (H. A. R. Gibb); al-Baladhuri,
Ansab, I, 223-24; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 27; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 27-28,
300.
1274. Of the QurashI clan Makhzum, father of al-Arqam who gave the Prophet
shelter in the beginning of his career. According to Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 5, he was
not a Companion, having apparently died before Islam. See also Ibn Qudamah, 306,
388.
1275. That is, the Prophet's grandfather.
282
Biographies
Abu Musa al-Ash'ari.
His name was 'Abdallah b. Qays, and he was an ally of Abu
Uhayhah Sa'id b. al-'As.
Abu Mahdhurah, the muezzin.
His name was Aws b. Mi'yar or Samurah b. 'Umayr. [Yahya] Ibn
Ma'In said: It is Samurah b. Ma'in. 1276
Abu al-'As b. al-Rabi'.
[He was] the Prophet's son-in-law, [as] he was married to his
daughter Zaynab. His name was Miqsam.
[2535] Abu Dharr.
Opinions differ as to his name. All experts on genealogy hold
that it was Jundab b. Junadah, but, according to Abu Ma'shar Na-
jlh, it was Burayr b. Jundab.
Abu Umamah, Sudayy b. 'Ajlan al-Bahili.
Abu Bakrah, Nufay' b. Masruh. 1277
According to another view, his name was Masruh.
Abu Layla, Bilal b. Bulayl b. Uhayhah b. al-Julah. 1278
1276. Probably Mi'yar, not Ma'in, as in Ibn al-Athir, Usd al-ghabah (see al-
Tabari, Dhayl, 2534 n. /). The two names are very similar graphically. Cairo, 669,
and Dar al-Fikr, 679, also have Ma'in.
1277. A slave from Ta’if, freed by the Prophet upon converting to Islam. He was
half-brother of the governor of Iraq, Ziyad b. Ablhi (= b. Abl Sufyan). He lived in al-
Basrah and died in the year 54/674. His children, having attained high positions
under their uncle Ziyad, claimed descent from a respected, genuine Thaqafl. See
Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 54; al-Baladhurl, Ansab, I, 367, 489-506, IVa, 163-
65,183-84,194-95; IbnHibban ,Mashdhii, 66-67; IbnQutaybah, Ma'arif, 125-26.
1278. There are many versions of his name: Bilal, Bulayl, Yasar, Da’ud, etc.; see
p. 310, below. It is noteworthy that most, if not all, of these names are typical of
slaves or foreign clients, and the uncertainty about Abu Layla's name may arise
from the debate between his grandson Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abl Layla
and his enemies over his own Arab descent; see Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 216, and
320, below. However, it is generally accepted that Abu Layla was an Ansar! (AwsI)
Companion who settled in al-Kufah, supported 'All b. Abi Talib, and participated
in Siffin (though not recorded by Nasr b. Muzahim). He died in the year 83/702-3
during the revolt of Ibn al-Ash'ath. See Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 85,135,150;
Ibn Hazm, famharat, 335; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 82, 164; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV,
169-70; al-Dulabl, I, 51; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XXXIV, 238-39.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 283
Abu Burdah b. Niyar. 1279
He originated in the Quda'ah confederation, but he became an
ally of the Banu Harithah of the Aws.
Abu al-Darda’, 'Uwaymir b. Zayd, of the Banu al-Harith b. al-
Khazraj. 1280
Abu 'Amrah, Bashir b. 'Amr b. Mihsan.
He was the father of 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi 'Amrah.
Abu Ayyub al-Ansari, Khalid b. Zayd b. Kulayb.
Abu Qatadah. 1281
Opinions differ as to his name. According to Ibn Ishaq, it was al-
Harith b. Rib'I, whereas others maintain that it was 'Amr b. Rib'i.
According to al-Waqidl, it was al-Nu'man b. Rib'i.
Abu al-Yasar, Ka'b b. 'Amr.
Abu Hurayrah. 1282
According to Hisham [b. Muhammad al-Kalbi], his name was
'Umayr b. 'Amir b. 'Abd Dhi al-Shara, but al-Waqidl says that it
was 'Abd Shams and that he was renamed 'Abdallah [upon em¬
bracing] Islam. 1283 Yet others hold that his name was 'Abd Nuhm
or Sukayn or 'Abd Ghanm.
1279. An Ansari Companion and a supporter of All (not mentioned by Nasr b.
Muzahim) who died in Medina in the year 45/665-66. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’iikh, 190; idem, Tabaqat, 118; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 49; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV,
18-19.
1280. A Companion of the Prophet, who lived in Syria and died in the year
32/652-53. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 95; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 84; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 271; al-Shayyal, 14-31.
1281. An Ansari of the Banu Salimah (Khazraj), an eminent Companion of the
Prophet, and a horseman, who died in the year 54/674. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’iikh, 64, 70, 185, 2X1; idem, Tabaqat, 102,• Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 33-34.
1282. A close Companion of the Prophet of humble origins of the tribe of Daws,
a branch of the southern Azd ; see IbnHazm, Jamhaiat, 379. He was one of the most
prolific traditionists, thousands of traditions being connected with his name (not
all genuine, of course). See "Abu Hurayra," El 2 , I, 129 (J. Robson); luynboll, Au¬
thenticity, chap. 7; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 114; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 35;
Muhammad al-Khatib.
1283. See note 234, above.
2,84
Biographies
Abu Usayd al-Sa'idi, Malik b. Rabi'ah. 1284
Abu Hadrad al-Aslami, Salamah b. 'Umayr b. Abi Salamah. 1285
Others say: 'Abd b, 'Umayr.
[2536] Abu Sa'id al-Khudn, Sa'd b. Malik b. Sinan.
Abu Barzah al-Aslaml. 1286
According to Hisham [b. Muhammad al-Kalbl]: This is Nadlah
b. 'Abdallah. Others say Nadlah b. 'Ubayd b. al-Harith, whereas,
according to al-Waqidl, it is 'Abdallah b. Nadlah.
Abu Zayd al-Ansarl, Thabit b. Zayd b. Qays. 1287
He belonged to the Banu al-Harith b. al-Khazraj. He was one of
the six who collected the Qur’an. 1288
Abu Wada'ah al-Harith b. Dubayrah b. Su'ayd, father of al-
Muttalib b. Abi Wada'ah al-Sahmi. 1289
1284. An Ansar! Companion of the Prophet, of the Banu Sa'idah (Khazraj), who
died in the year 40/660-61. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 142, 242; idem,
Tabaqat, 97; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 44.
t285. He, his two sons, and his daughter Umm al-Darda’ were Companions of
the Prophet, of the northern Aslam, a branch of Mudar. See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat,
241-42. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, no.
1286. A Companion, of the Aslam tribe, who lived in al-Basrah and died after
the year 64/683-84 in a raid to Khurasan. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 109,
187, 322; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 68; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif 146.
1287. There are several Companions bearing this kunyah, many of them An-
saris. Oddly, the "one who collected (or, knew by heart) the Qur’an" is not better
known than the rest. See note 1288, beiow.
1288. See p. 22, above. Note that the kunyah of Sa'd al-Qari’ is also Abu Zayd.
Apparently there is a confusion among several people. According to Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, IV, 78, the "Abu Zayd who collected the Qur’an" was called Qays b. al-
Sakan, but he adduces other versions too, including "Sa'd b. 'Ubayd"; see also Ibn
Hajar, in, 250; and p. 294, below, on the famous collector of the Qur’an, Zayd b.
Thabit.
1289. A rich Meccan merchant, of the Qurashi clan the Banu Sahm, a contempo¬
rary of the Prophet who embraced Islam after the Conquest of Mecca and transmit¬
ted a few traditions. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IK, 425,- al-Tabari, Ta’nkh, 1,1343,1369;
Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 164.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 285
Abu Linah, 'Abdallah b. Abi Karib, of the Banu Mu'awiyah al-
Akramln. 1290
Abu Sabrah, Yazid b. Malik b. 'Abdallah b. Ju'fi. 1291
He was the grandfather of Khaythamah b. 'Abd al-Rahman, 1292
the companion of [Sulaynan b. Mihran] al-A'mash.
Abu al-Hamra’, Hilal b. al-Harith.
Abu Juhayfah, Wahb al-Suwa’I. 1293
Abu Jum'ah, Habib b. Siba'. 1294
Abu al-A'war al-Sulaml, 'Amr b. Sufyan. 1295
Abu 'Ayyash al-Zuraqi, Zayd b. al-Samit. 1296
1290. Mentioned as a Companion. According to Ibn Hajar his son 'Iyad was a
companion of 'All b. Abi Talib and apparently more famous than his father. Al-
Tabari, however, Ta’ilkh, n, 903,908, mentions 'Iyad as a commander in al-Hajjaj's
army; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 362.
1291. Of the southern tribe Ju'fiyy. He came to the Prophet and received from
him license to claim possession of the wadi of Ju'fiyy. See Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat,
409-10; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 32; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 399, s.v. 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi
Sabrah.
1292. A Kufan jurist of the second century. See Ibn Sa'd, VI, 200-1,- Ibn Hibban,
Mashahii, 166; al-Safadl, XIII, 443; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, IE, 154.
1293. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Suwa’ah, a branch of the northern
'Amir b. $a'sa'ah; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 273. He died in the year 74/693-94. See
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 57, 132; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 80.
1294. A Companion of the Prophet. There is disagreement both over his name
and his genealogy. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 33; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 124,
307; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 94.
129s. A member of the tribe of Sulaym, a contemporary of the Prophet, but it is
doubtful whether he was a Companion. The family was allied to the Umayyads in
pre-Islamic times. Abu al-A'war later excelled as governor and army commander in
the service of 'Umar, 'Uthman, and Mu'awiyah b. Abi Sufyan. See Lecker, Banu
Sulaym, 118, 136-40, and passim; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 263-64; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 175, 178; idem, Tabaqat, 51, 308.
1296. An An$ari (Kbazraji) Companion of the Prophet, one of the famous horse¬
men. There is, however, disagreement over his name. See Khallfah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, ioo ; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 38; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 142-43.
286
Biographies
Abu Mas'ud al-Ansari, 'Uqbah b. 'Amr. 1297
[2537] Abu Lubabah, Rifa'ah b. 'Abd al-Mundhir. 1298
Abu Humayd al-Sa'idl, 'Abd al-Rahman b. Sa'd. 1299
Abu Umamah al-Ansari, As'ad b. Zurarah. 1300
Abu Dujanah, Simak b. Kharashah. 1301
Abu al-Haytham b. al-Tayyihan, Malik b. al-Tayyihan. 1302
The Women Contemporary with the Prophet Who
Gave Him the Oath of Allegiance and Are Known by
Their Kunyahs
Umm Salamah bt. Abi Umayyah b. al-Mughlrah.
Her name was Hind bt. Suhayl b. al-Mughirah; she was [one of
the] Prophet's wives.
Umm Hani’ bt. Abi Talib b. 'Abd al-Muttalib.
1297. An Ansari (KhazrajI) Companion of the Prophet who took part in the
'Aqabah meeting. He was governor of al-Kufah for 'All and died during his, or
Mu'awiyah's, caliphate. See Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 186; idem, Tabaqat, 96;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 75; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 245; al-Quhpa’I, IV, 144.
1298. An eminent Ansari Companion of the Prophet, of the Awsi clan the Banu
'Amr b. 'Awf, said to have been one of the twelve leaders appointed by Muhammad
at the 'Aqabah meeting ( nuqaba', see note 1375, below), and the standard bearer of
his clan in the conquest of Mecca. Nevertheless, there is disagreement over his
name (Rifa'ah, Bashir, Marwan). He died after the murder of 'Uthman. See Khalifah
b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 84; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 37; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 168.
1299. An Ansari (KhazrajI) Companion of the Prophet and a Qur’an reader who
died in Medina at the end of Mu'awiyah's caliphate. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 41;
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 216.
1300. One of the twelve leaders appointed by Muhammad at the 'Aqabah meet¬
ing. He died before the Prophet arrived at Medina or shortly afterward. See Khalifah
b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 12-13;idem, Tabaqat, 90-91; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, 1 ,243,252;
al-A'zaml, Kuttab al-nabi, 32 - 33 -
1301. An eminent Ansari (KhazrajI) Companion of the Prophet, known for his
courage and horsemanship, who was killed in the battle of al-Yamamah. See Ibn
Hibban, Mashahir, 85; Ibn Sa'd, III/2, ior.
1302. An ally of the KhazrajI clan the Banu 'Abd al-Ashhal and a highly regarded
Ansari Companion who died in the year 20 or 21/642. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 122; idem, Tabaqat, 78; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 32.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 287
According to the transmitters of traditions and reports, her
name was Fakhitah, but it was reported that, according to Hisham
b. Muhammad al-Kalbl, it was Hind.
Umm Habibah bt. Abi Sufyan.
Her name was Ramlah.
Umm Sharik.
Her name was Ghaziyyah bt. Jabir b. Hakim.
Umm Ayman.
Her name was Barakah, and she was a client of the Prophet.
Umm al-Fadl, Lubabah al-Kubra bt. al-Harith b. Hazn.
She was married to al-Abbas b. Abd al-Muttalib.
Umm Ma'bad.
Her name was Atikah bt. Khalid b. Khulayf, of the Khuza'ah.
She is the one of whom it was reported that the Prophet passed by
her [place] and she gave him hospitality and described him to her
husband.
Umm al-Darda’ al-Kubra, Khayrah bt. Abi Hadrad al-Aslami. [2538]
Umm Bishr b. al-Bara’ b. Ma'rur, Khulaydah bt. Qays b.
Thabit. 1303
Umm al-Hakam bt. al-Zubayr b. Abd al-Muttalib b. Hashim.
Umm Kulthum bt. 'Uqbah b. Abi Mu'ayt. 1304
The Kunyahs of People Who Outlived the Prophet and
Were Known by Their Names , Not by Their Kunyahs
The Commander of the Faithful, 'All b. Abi Talib.
1303. Wife of the Ansari al-Bara’ b. Ma'rur, one of the twelve leaders [nuqaba’)
appointed by Muhammad at the ‘Aqabah meeting; see n. 1375 below. She herself
belonged to the Ashja', a northern tribe whose territory lay near Medina. See Ibn
Hazm, Jamharat, 249-50; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 246.
1304. An early convert of the Umayyad family. She was married to Zayd b.
Harithah and later to al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam, 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf, and 'Amr
b. al-'As. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, TV, 491; Ibn Qudamah, 212-13.
288
Biographies
His kunyah was Abu al-Hasan after his son al-Hasan.
Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad after his son Muhammad.
Al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah.
Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas.
His kunyah was Abu Ishaq after his son Ishaq.
Sa'd b. Zayd.
His kunyah was Abu al-A'war. 1305
'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas.
His kunyah was Abu al-'Abbas after his son al-'Abbas.
'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas, the latter's brother.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad after his son Muhammad.
Al-Fadl b. Al-'Abbas.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad after his son Muhammad.
Al-Husayn b. 'Ali [b. Abi Talib].
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah. The
latter was killed together with his father, al-Husayn. 1306
'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. Abi Talib.
His kunyah was [Abu Ja'far] after his son Ja'far al-Akbar (senior).
Rabi'ah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib.
His kunyah was Abu Arwa after his daughter Arwa.
'Aqil b. Abi Talib.
His kunyah was Abu Yazid after his son Yazid.
1305. The reference is to the famous Companion Sa'id b. Zayd. Read Sard for
Sa'd; Cairo, 672, and Dar al-Fikr, 682, also have Sa'd. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, IV, 9; al-
Dulabi, I, 11-12.
1306. In Karbala’, in the year 61/680. See p. 50, above.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 289
Zayd al-Hibb b. Harithah.
His kunyah was Abu Usamah after his son Usamah.
Usamah al-Hibb b. Zayd b. Harithah.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad after his son Muhammad.
Ammar b. Yasir, Abu al-Yaqzan.
'Abdallah b. Mas'ud.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman after his son 'Abd al-
Rahman.
Al-Miqdad b. al-Aswad, of the Bahra’.
His kunyah was Abu Ma'bad.
Khabbab b. al-Aratt b. Jandalah b. Sa'd b. Zayd Manah b. Tamim.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah.
Hatib b. Abi Balta'ah of the Lakhm. 1307
He was an ally of al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam. According to al-
Waqidl, his kunyah was Abu Muhammad, whereas Yahya holds
that it was Abu Yahya.
Al-Arqam b. Abi al-Arqam, of the Makhzum.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah. Abu al-Arqam's name was 'Abd
Manaf.
Ubayy b. Ka'b. 1308
His kunyah was Abu al-Mundhir.
1307. A tribe of southern origin, from which the royal clan of al-Hirah was also
descended; see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 422,-23. Hatib was an ally of a certain family
in Mecca, where he lived, and was an early convert. He died in the year 30/650-51.
See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 70,• Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 42; al-Baladhuri,
Ansab, I, 323; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 300.
1308. An Ansari Companion and secretary of the Prophet, credited with knowl¬
edge of the ancient scriptures and said to have participated in the collection of the
Qur’an; he died in Medina in the year 32/652-53. See Watt, Bell’s Introduction, 37,
45 / 49 / 55; Jeffery, 114-16; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 31; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 143;
idem, Tabaqat, 88-89; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 31; al-Sayrawan, 49; al-A'zaml,
Kuttab al nabi, 42-44.
[25393
290
Biographies
'Abdallah b. Zayd b. 'Abd Rabbihi. 1309
He was the one who was shown in a dream [how] the call to
prayer [should be performed].
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad after his son Muhammad.
Rifa'ah b. Rafi' b. Malik. 1310
His kunyah was Abu Mu'adh after his son Mu'adh.
Sa'd b. 'Ubadah b. Dulaym. 1311
His kunyah was Abu Thabit.
Buraydah b. al-Husayb b. 'Abdallah.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah. Accord¬
ing to al-'Abbas—Yahya: Buraydah al-Aslami's [kunyah] was Abu
Sahl.
Bilal b. Rabah, the muezzin. 1312
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Thabit b. al-Dahhak, Abu Zayd. 1313
1309. An Ansar! Companion of the Prophet, who died in Medina in the year
32/652-53. See Khallfahb. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 143; idem, Tabaqat, 96; Ibn Hibban,
Mashahii, 40; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 244,273. These sources call him 'Abdallah b.
Zayd h. Tha'labah b. 'Abd Rabbihi.
1310. An Ansar! Companion of the Prophet, of the Banu Zurayq (Khazraj),
whose father was one of the twelve leaders ( nuqaba') appointed at the 'Aqabah
meeting; see note 1375, below. He died in Medina during the caliphate of
Mu'awiyah. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 43; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 100, 250;
al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 245.
1311. One of the closest Ansar! Companions of the Prophet, leader of the
Khazraj and one of the twelve leaders (nuqaba’) appointed at the 'Aqabah meeting.
After the Prophet's death the Ansar attempted, but failed, to elect him leader of the
community. He died in Syria during the caliphate of Abu Bakr or 'Umar. See "Sa'd
b. ’Ubada," El 1 , IV, 30-31 (K. V. Zettersteen); Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 97
(note the difference in the kunyah ), 303; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 28-29; al-
Baladhuri, Ansab, 250, 252, 254, 580-82; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, IX, 235-46.
1312. An Abyssinan slave bought and freed by Abu Bakr to save him from the
tortures his master inflicted upon him for being a Muslim. He served as the Proph¬
et's muezzin and crier and died in Syria in the year 20 or 21/642. See "Bilal b.
Rabah," El 2 , 1 ,1215 (W. 'Arafat); al-Baladhuri, Ansab, 1 ,184-93; Ibn Hibban, Mash¬
ahii, 85; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 19, 298.
1313. There were two Ansaris bearing this name, apparently confused by Ibn
Hazm, Jamhaiat, 354; cf. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, 1 ,193-94. Here the reference apparent¬
ly is to Thabit b. al-Dahhak b. Khalifah of the 'Abd al-Ashhal, Abu Zayd, who died
in the year 45/665-66; see Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 68.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 291
'Uthman b. Hunayf.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Hassan b. Thabit.
His kunyah was Abu al-Walld.
Jabir b. 'Abdallah b. Haram.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Ka'b b. Malik, the poet. 1314
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Jubayr b. Mut'im.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah.
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Bakr. 1315
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah.
Khalid b. al-Walid b. al-Mughirah.
His kunyah was Abu Sulayman after his son Sulayman.
'Amr b. al-'As . 1316
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah.
Wathilah b. al-Asqa'. 1317
1314. An eminent Ansari (Khazraji) Companion of the Prophet, a poet, and one
of the twelve leaders ( nuqaba ’) appointed by Muhammad at the 'Aqaba meeting.
He died in the year 50/670 (there are other versions). See "Ka'b b. Malik," EP-, IV,
315-16 (W. M. Watt); Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 102-3; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir,
38; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 248.
I3T5. Son of the first caliph and brother of the Prophet's wife 'A’ishah, with
whom he participated in the battle of the Camel; he died in the year 5 8/677-7 8. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 18, 189; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 34-35.
r3r6. A Meccan Companion of the Prophet, of the Qurashi clan the Banu Sahm.
Although he was not an early convert, the Prophet entrusted him with important
tasks, and he later played a major role in the conquests in Syria and Egypt. He was
governor of Egypt until his dismissal by the third caliph, 'Uthman, then received
the post again from Mu'awiyah as a reward for his support. He died in Egypt in the
year 42 or 43/663-64. See "'Amr b. al-'As," EP-, I, 451 (A. J. Wensinck); Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 25-26; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 93; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, r68-
74; Nasr b. Muzahim, passim; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, XIX, 232-54,- al-Waqa.
r 3 r 7. A poor Companion of the Prophet, of the Kinani clan the Banu Layth, who
died in the year 83/702. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 292; idem, Tabaqat, 3r ;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 86; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 272, IVa, 61.
[2540]
292 Biographies
His kunyah was Abu Qirsafah, but some hold that it was Abu al-
Asqa', whereas Abu Qirsafah was [the kunyah of] Jandarah b.
Khayshanah. 1318
Ma'qil b. Yasar. 1319
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah. The canal Nahr Ma'qil in al-
Basrah is called after him. 1320
Qurrah b. Iyas, Abu Mu'awiyah. 1321
Safwan b. al-Mu'attal. 1322
His kunyah was Abu 'Amr.
Al-'Irbad b. Sariyah, Abu Najlh. 1323
Al-Mughirah b. Shu'bah.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
'Imran b. Husayn. 1324
1318. Of the Kinani clan the Banu Layth. He belonged to the Ahl al-Suffah, that
is, the group of poor Companions. He lived in al-Basrah and died in Syria in the year
83/702-3. See Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 292; idem, Tabaqat, 174-75; Ibn Hib¬
ban, Mashahlr, 86; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 272. See also Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 189;
al-Dulabl, I, 49; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, V, 149-50.
1319. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Muzaynah tribe. He lived in al-
Basrah, where he was associated with the governor of Iraq Ziyad b. Abihi and died
during the caliphate of Mu'awiyah. See Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 202; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 246; idem, Tabaqat, 37; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 66; Ibn
Qutaybah, Ma'drif, 129.
1320. See Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, IV, 845; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'drif, 129; al-
Baladhuri, Fu tuh (Ridwan), 352.
1321. A Companion of the Prophet, of the tribe of Muzaynah, who was killed in
al-Basrah in a battle against the Khawarij in the year 64/683-84. See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 37, 176; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 72.
1322. A Companion of the Prophet, of the tribe of Sulaym. He was accused of a
liaison with the Prophet's wife 'A’ishah, but Qur’anic verses exonerated 'A’ishah
(the hadlth al-ifk). He lived in al-Basrah and was killed in a raid in the Jazlrah in the
year 19/640. See Lecker, Banu Sulaym, 91-92; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 216;
idem, Tabaqat, 51, Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 59; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 342, 452.
1323. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Sulaym, said to have been appointed
by Muhammad as tax collector of his clan. He later lived in Syria and died in the
year 75/694-95 or before. See Lecker, Banu Sulaym, 94-98, 156; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 52; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 87.
1324. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Khuza'ah. He lived in al-Basrah and
officiated as governor there and died in the year 52/672. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’rikh, 49, 106, 128, 217; idem, Tabaqat, 106; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 66.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 293
His kunyah was Abu Nujayd.
Sulayman b. Surad.
His kunyah was Abu Mutarrif. His name had been Yasar, and
the Prophet renamed him Sulayman when he embraced Islam. 1325
Salamah b. al-Akwa'. 1326
His kunyah was Abu Iyas after his son Iyas. According to Yahya,
it was Abu Muslim.
'Abdallah b. Abi Awfa. 1327
His kunyah was Abu Mu'awiyah.
'Abdallah b. Abi Hadrad. 1328
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
'Uqbah b. 'Amir al-Juhanl. 1329 [2541]
His kunyah was Abu 'Amr, according to al-Waqidl. According
to al-'Abbas—Yahya: His kunyah was Abu Hammad, but in an¬
other place he said Abu Asad.
Zayd b. Khalid al-Juhanl. 1330
His kunyah was Abu Talhah.
1325. See n. 234, above.
1326. Or, Salamah b. 'Amr b. al-Akwa', a Companion of the Prophet, of the
Aslam, known as a brave warrior and a very swift runnerj!). He lived in Medina
where he died in the year 74 / 693 - 94 - See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 66-67; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 268; idem, Tabaqat, rn ; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 42.
1327. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Aslam. He lived in al-Kufah, where he
died in the year 86/705. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 110,• Ibn Hibban, Mash¬
ahii, 83,- al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 248.
1328. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Aslam. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’iikh, 48, 265; idem, Tabaqat, no-ii; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 49.
1329. A famous Companion of the Prophet, of the Juhaynah tribe, known as a
Qur’an reader. He is said to have had his own version of the Qur’an,- cf. Watt, Bell’s
Introduction, 45; and p. 22, above. 'Uqbah was governor of Egypt for Mu'awiyah
and died in the year 58/677-78. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 181, 2T4; idem,
Tabaqat, 221, 292; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 94,- Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 489; al-
Sayrawan, r28; al-Kindi, 35-36.
1330. An early Companion, apparently of some importance, as he was one of the
standard bearers of his tribe in the conquest of Mecca. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 5 65;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 36.
294
Biographies
Ma'bad b. Khalid, Abu Raw'ah al-Juhani. 1331
Al-Bara’b. 'Azib . 1332
His kunyah was Abu 'Umarah.
Usayd b. Zuhayr. 1333
His kunyah was Abu Thabit.
Thabit b. Wadi'ah. 1334
His kunyah was Abu Sa'd.
Khuzaymah b. Thabit.
His kunyah was Abu 'Umarah.
Zayd b. Thabit. 1335
His kunyah was Abu Said after his son Said.
'Amr b. Hazm. 1336
1331. An early Companion said, like the previous one, to have been one of the
standard bearers of the Juhaynah in the conquest of Mecca. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah,
III, 439; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 211. Note that other persons bear the same
name.
1332. An Ansari (AwsI) Companion of the Prophet and conqueror of al-Rayy. He
supported 'All b. Abl Talib in the first civil war. He lived in al-Kufah and died
during the governorship of Mus'ab b. al-Zubayr (64—72/683—91). See Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, I, 142-43; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 132, 205; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr,
76; al-Quhpa’i, I, 251-52; al-Kashshl, 45-46. But see Nasrb. Muzahim, 448, where
he is included in a group cooperating with Mu'awiyah.
1333. Counted among the Ansari Companions. Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 49, knows
of only one tradition transmitted by him.
1334. Or, Thabit b. Yazid, counted among the Ansari Companions. See Ibn
Hibban, Mashahlr, 8o ; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 196, 197.
1335. An eminent Ansari Companion (KhazrajI), one of the Prophet's scribes,
expert on the Qur’an and religious law. According to a certain tradition, he was the
first to collect the Qur’an already in Abu Bakr's lifetime. He lived in Medina,-
various versions of the year of his death are given, in the period 42-55/662-74. See
Watt, Bell’s Introduction, 40-56, and passim,- "Kur’an," El 2 , V, 404-6 (A. T. Wel¬
ch); Jeffery, 223-25; F. Sezgin, I, 401-2; al-A'zami, Kuttab al-nabi, 65-67; al-
Sayrawan, 92-93; Waki', 1 ,107-10; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, 156, i57;Ibnal-Jazari,
I, 296; Ibn al-Nadim, I, 47-48.
1336. An eminent Ansari Companion reputed to have been in possession of a
document in which the Prophet wrote the details of the legal alms, blood money,
and other precepts. He was appointed by the Prophet to administer Najran and died
during 'Umar's caliphate or after the year 50/670. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 5 32; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahlr, 45; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 529; Mustafa, I, 155.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 295
His kunyah was Abu al-Dahhak.
Shaddad b. Aws b. Thabit. 1337
His kunyah was Abu Ya'la after his son Ya'la.
Mu'adh. b. al-Harith, of the Banu al-Najjar of the Ansar. 1338
He was called "the Reader." His kunyah was Abu al-Harith.
Anas b. Malik. 1339
His kunyah was Abu Hamzah.
Zayd b. Arqam. 1340
His kunyah was Abu Sa'd, according to al-Waqidi, whereas oth¬
ers hold that it was Abu Unaysah.
Al-Nu'man b. Bashir. 1341
1337. An Ansari (KhazrajI) Companion, nephew of the Prophet's poet Hassanb.
Thabit. He lived in Filastln; versions of his death date vary between 41/661-62 and
64/683-84(1). See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 140; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 216;
idem, Tabaqat, 88; Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 85.
1338. There were at least three Ansaris bearing this name. Confusion prevails
mainly between Mu'adh b. al-Harith, whose mother was named 'Afra’, and Mu'adh
b. al-Harith b. al-Arqam, the only one of the three called "the reader" (but his
kunyah is Abu Hallmah, not as recorded by al-Tabari). See the Cairo edition, index
s.w. Mu'adh b. al-Harith, Mu'adh, b. 'Afra’, Mu'adh b. al-Harith al-Qari’ (de Goeje's
index mentions only one Mu'adh b. al-Harith); al-Tabari, Ta'iikh, I, 2182; Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, 427-28, Ibn al-Jazarl, E, 3or-2; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XXVEI, 117.
t 339 - Of the Ansar (Khazraj); his mother gave him to the Prophet as a servant,
and he became a close Companion and one of the most prolific traditionists (natu¬
rally, not all the traditions ascribed to him are authentic). He was also one of
Muhammad's scribes (not recorded by al-A'zaml). He lived in al-Basrah, where he
acted as prayer leader (imam) for 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr during the latter's rule.
Anas died in the year 93/711-12 (there are other versions). See "Anas b. Malik,"
EP, 1 ,482 (A. J. Wensinck and J. Robson); Jeffery, 214; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh,
6 4, 73, 254 - 55 , 262, 309; idem, Tabaqat, 91, Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 65.
1340. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Ansar (Khazraj), who participated in
the battle of Siffln on 'All's side and died later in al-Kufah in the year 66/685-86.
See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 560; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 94, Ibn Hibban, Mash¬
ahh, 80. But see Nasr b. Muzahim, 448, where he appears to be cooperating with
Mu'awiyah; cf. the biography of al-Bara’ b. 'Azib, above.
1341. A famous Ansari (KhazrajI) Companion of the Prophet, who was governor
for Mu'awiyah in al-Kufah, later in Hims, and a judge in Damascus. In the second
civil war he supported 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr ; Marwan b. al-Hakam fought him
and killed him, in the year 64/683-84 or 65/684-85. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’iikh, 247; idem, Tabaqat , 94; Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 87, al-Baladhurl, Ansab, V,
127-28, 132, 147; WakT, IE, 201; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, XXVI, 160-64.
296
Biographies
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah.
Sa'd b. 'Ubadah, Abu Thabit, according to Yahya.
Qays b. Sa'd b. 'Ubadah. 1342
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Malik.
Sahl b. Sa'd al-Sa'idi. 1343
His kunyah was Abu al-'Abbas after his son al-'Abbas.
[2542] 'Abdallah b. Salam. 1344
His kunyah was Abu Yusuf. His name had been al-Husayn, but
the Prophet renamed him 'Abdallah when he embraced Islam. 1345
'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam.
His kunyah was Abu Bakr after his son Bakr. According to an¬
other version, his kunyah was Abu Khubayb.
Al-Miswar b. Makhramah.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman after his son 'Abd al-
Rahman.
'Umar b. Abi Salamah b. 'Abd al-Asad.
His kunyah was Abu Hafs.
'Amr b. Hurayth.
His kunyah was Abu Sa'id.
Hatib b. Abi Balta'ah.
1342. Son of the KhazrajI leader Sa'd b. 'Ubadah, a Companion of the Prophet,
and supporter of 'All, who appointed him chief of the shuitah (quasi-police) and
governor of Egypt. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, ioi; al-Kashshi, 102-3; Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, HI, 249; Nasr b. Muzahim, passim; al-Kindl, 23-25.
1343. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Ansar (Khazraj), and the last Compa¬
nion to die in Medina, in the year 88/707 or 91/709-10. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 98; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 48.
1344. A Jewish convert and Companion of the Prophet credited with deep
knowledge of the ancient scriptures and Islamic religious law. He died in the year
43/663-64. See "'Abd Allah b. Salam," EP, I, 52 (J. Horovitz); F. Sezgin, I, 304; Ibn
al-Nadlm, I, 42, II, 937; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat , 8; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 36;
al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 266.
1345. See note 234, above.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 297
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman.
Muhammad b. Hatib. 1346
His kunyah was Abu Ibrahim.
Mu'awiyah b. Abi Sufyan. 1347
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman.
Al-Walid b. 'Uqbah b. Abi Mu'ayt. 1348
His kunyah was Abu Wahb.
Makhramah b. Nawfal.
[His kunyah was] Abu Safwan after his son Safwan.
Qabisah b. al-Mukhariq. 1349
His kunyah was Abu Bishr.
Jabir b. Samurah b. Junadah. 1350
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
'Adi b. Hatim al-Jawad (the generous), al-Ta’i.
His kunyah was Abu Tarif.
1346. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Qurashi clan the Banu Jumah, who
was a supporter of 'All and died in the year 74/693-94 in al-Kufah or in Mecca. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 25, 278; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 8i ; Ibn Qudamah,
324, 449; al-Baladhun, Ansab, V, 10.
1347. The founder of the Umayyad dynasty. See "Mu'awiya b. Abi Sufyan," EP,
VC, 263-68 (M. Hinds), El 1 , VI, 617-21 (H. Lammens); Hawting, First Dynasty, 21-
45; Hasson, Recherches-, Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 10, 139, 297-98; Ibn Hib¬
ban, Mashahii, 85-86; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa, 11-138; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai,
XXIV, 399 - 405 , XXV, 5-93; al-Munajjid, 167-74.
1:348. A Companion of the Prophet, a late convert, of the aristocratic Umayyad
family. He was governor of al-Kufah for 'Uthman but was dismissed and flogged for
drinking wine. See Ibn Qudamah, 210-H; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, n, 126,
and passim; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 78; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 29-35.
1349. A Companion of the Prophet, of the northern Hilal, apparently of a noble
family, as his son Qatan counted as a tribal noble and became governor of Sijistan
(according to Crone, Slaves, 136, of al-Basrah). See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, HI, 222;
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 56, 184; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 70.
1350. A Companion of the Prophet, originally of the northern, 'Amiri clan
Suwa’ah and an ally of the Qurashi clan Zuhrah. He lived in al-Kufah and died in
the year 74/693-94. See Ibn Hajar, Isabah, I, 212; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
56-57, 131-32; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 81.
298
Biographies
Al-Ash'ath b. Qays.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad after his son Muhammad.
Tamim al-Dari, that is, Tamim b. Aws b. Kharijah. 1351
His kunyah was Abu Ruqayyah.
'Amr b. Ma'di-karib. 1352
His kunyah was Abu Thawr.
Hani’ b. Yazid, the father of Shurayh b. Hani’. 1353
His kunyah was Abu Shurayh.
It was reported that in pre-Islamic times his kunyah was Abu al-
Hakam (father of the arbitrator), because he used to act as arbitra¬
tor among his people. When he embraced Islam the Prophet gave
him the kunyah Abu Shurayh. 1354
[2543] Jarir b. 'Abdallah al-BajalL 1355
According to al-Waqidi, His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah, but we
hold that it was Abu 'Amr. A verse attributed to him runs as
follows:
I am Jarir; my kunyah is Abu 'Amr.
1351. A Christian convert to Islam, and a famous Companion, of the southern
Banu al-Dar (a branch of the Lakhm); see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 422. He was an
ascetic and a storyteller [qass-, see note 1251, above) and so much identified with
the qasas that he was considered by some to have introduced it to Islam. He lived
in Filastln, where the Prophet (allegedly?) granted him lands. See “Tamim al-
Dari," El 1 , Vm, 646-48 (G. Levi Della Vida); Gil, 129-30,• Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta'rikh, 335; idem, Tabaqat, 70, 305; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 89; Ibn Manzur,
Mukhtasar, V, 307-23; al-Ghaytl; Ibn al-fawzi, Kitab, 77-78, 87, 107; Sharab.
1352. A famous warrior, poet, and tribal chief among the Yemeni tribe Zubayd.
He embraced Islam in the year 9/630, apostatized, returned to Islam, and died in
the battle of al-Qadisiyyah (there are other versions of his death date). See Ibn
Hazm, Jamhaiat, 411; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 74; al-RazI, 37, 583; Abu al-
Faraj al-Isfahani, XIV, 24-40; Ibn Nubatah, 306-22.
1353. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Yemeni tribe al-Harith b. Ka'b; see Ibn
Hazm, Jamhaiat, 417. His son Shurayh was a jurist and a supporter of 'All, who
entrusted him with certain offices. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 82; Ibn Hajar, Isa-
bah, HI, 597. For Shurayh, see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 166; al-Dhahabi, Siyai, IV, 107-
9; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, X, 303-4.
1354. Cf. note 234, above. The previous kunyah was perhaps improper because
al-Hakam is an epithet of God; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, HI, 597.
1355. An early convert, a tribal noble ( sharif ), unifier and leader of the Bajilah,
who died in the year 51/671. See Crone, Slaves, 114-15; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 116-17,138, 318; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 76; IbnHanbal, Fada’il, 891-93.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 299
I hit with my sword while Sa'd is in the citadel. 1356
Fayruz al-Daylami.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah after his son 'Abdallah.
Some transmitters refer to him as al-Daylami al-Himyari. This
is so because he lived [in the Yemen] among the Himyar. [Actu¬
ally] he was one of the descendants of the Persians ( abna ’) who had
been sent by the Persian ruler Khusraw to the Yemen to fight the
Abyssinians there.
Saflnah, Umm Salamah's client. 1357
According to al-'Abbas—Yahya: His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-
Rahman.
Uhban b. Sayfl. 1358
According to [al-'Abbas] (?): His kunyah was Abu Muslim.
Al-Miqdam b. Ma'di-Karib. 1359
His kunyah was Abu Karimah.
Ya'la b. Murrah. 1360
According to Yahya, his kunyah was Abu al-Marazim, but al-
Waqidi holds that Abu al-Marazim was the kunyah of Ya'la b.
Umayyah.
Labid b. Rabi'ah, the poet.
His kunyah was Abu 'Aqll.
1356. The reference is to Sa'd b. Abl Waqqas, and the occasion was the battle of
al-Qadisiyyah; see al-Tabari, Ta’ilkh, I, 2357, 2361.
1357. Or the Prophet's client; he was of Persian, or bedouin, origin. There are
twenty-one versions of his name. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 22, 190; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahii, 71; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 480; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 58.
1358. A Companion of the Prophet, of the northern tribe Ghifar, resident of al-
Basrah. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 33, 175; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 72.
1359. Counted among the Companions, although some doubted that he had
ever seen the Prophet. He was a Kindi, lived in Hint?, and died in the year 87/706
or, according to Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, during the caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik. According to
Abu Zur'ah, 237, 240, he was associated with al-Walid b. 'Abd al-Malik. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 72, 304; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 91,- Ibn Hajar, Isa¬
bah, III, 455; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, XXV, 222-24.
1360. A Companion of the Prophet, of the Thaqlf, resident of al-Basrah. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 53, 131; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 78.
300
Biographies
Qarazah b. Ka'b. 1361
His kunyah was Abu 'Amr.
Huwaytib b. 'Abd al-'Uzza b. Abi Qays.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Malik b. al-Huwayrith al-Laythi. 1362
His kunyah was Abu Sulayman.
Hudhayfah b. al-Yaman.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Those of the Prophet’s Companions Who Were Known
by [the Names of] Their Patrons or Brothers or by
Their [Own] Nicknames or by Their Grandfathers,
Instead of Their Actual Fathers
[2544] Salim b. Ma'qil, called Salim the client of Abu Hudhayfah. 1363
He was known as Abu Hudhayfah's client but was [actually] a
slave of an Awsi woman called Thubaytah bt. Ya'ar, who was
married to Abu Hudhayfah b. 'Utbah. She set Salim free/ renounc¬
ing all claim to his services. 1364 Salim then attached himself to
Abu Hudhayfah by clientage, and the latter adopted him.
Al-Miqdad b. al-Aswad.
1361. An Ansari Companion of the Prophet who lived in al-Kufah and com¬
manded the force that conquered al-Rayy (but cf. p. 294, above; al-Bara’ b. 'Azib).
He was later appointed governor of the town by 'All and died during the caliphate
of 'Ali or Mu'awiyah. See al-Tabari, Ta’zlkh, I, 2650, 3173; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 94-95; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 82.
1362. A Companion of the Prophet of the northern, Kinani clan the Banu Layth;
he lived in al-Basrah and died in the year 74/693-94. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 30; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 70.
1363. An early convert and a famous Qur’an reader reputed for his courage in the
battle of al-Yamamah against Musaylimah, where he was killed. See Jeffery, 234;
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 77; idem, Tabaqat, 12, Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 45-6;
al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 264; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 301. His patron, Abu Hudhayfah, was a
Qurashi of the Umayyad clan.
1364. That is, as opposed to freeing a slave on condition that he stays in the
household, which involved rights and obligations for both the freedman and his
patron. See Crone, Roman, Piovincial and Islamic Law, 67-68; Ibn Qutaybah,
Ma'aiif, 118-19.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 301
He was the son of 'Amr b. Bahra’ b. 'Amr b. al-Haf b. Quda'ah but
became an ally of al-Aswad b. 'Abd Yaghuth al-Zuhrl in pre-
Islamic times. Al-Aswad adopted him, so he was called al-Miqdad
b. al-Aswad. When the Qur’anic verse "Call them by their fathers 7
names" was revealed al-Miqdad was again called by the name of
his real father, 'Amr.
Dhu al-Shimalayn (the one with two left hands), sometimes
also called Dhu al-Yadayn (the one with two hands), because he
was, it was reported, ambidexterous; he could work with both his
hands.
His name was 'Umayr b. 'Abd 'Amr b. Nadlah b. 'Amr b.
Ghubshan, of the Khuza'ah. 1365 He was killed in the battle of Badr
as a shahid with the other Muslims who were killed there.
As for the second one, his name was al-Khirbaq. 1366 He outlived
the Prophet for a while and transmitted a few traditions from him.
Suhayl b. Bayda’. 1367
He is known by the name of his mother, al-Bayda’, whose name
was Da'd bt. Jahdam b. 'Amr. Suhayl was the son of Wahb b.
Rabi'ah b. Hilal, of the Banu al-Harith b. Fihr.
His brother was Safwan b. Bayda’. 1368
Hudhayfah b. al-Yaman.
He was known by the name of his great-grandfather's grand¬
father. He was [actually] the son of Husayl b. Jabir b. Rabi'ah b.
'Amr b. Jirwah b. al-Harith b. Qutay'ah b. 'Abs b. Baghld. Jirwah b.
al-Harith is the Yaman who fathered Hudhayfah. He was thus
1365. He was an ally of the Banu Zuhrah of the Quraysh. See al-Baladhuri,
Ansab, I, 295; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 140-41.
1366. His identity is uncertain, except that he was of the Sulaym, and the
identification between him and Dhu al-Yadayn is uncertain as well; see Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, 1 ,422-23; cf. Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 140-41. Note that at the beginning of
the entry al-Tabari takes Dhu al-Shimalayn and Dhu al-Yadayn to be one and the
same person.
1367. A Qurashi Companion who died in the year 9/630 (before the Prophet); see
Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 91-92.
1368. A rather obscure Companion, counted by some scholars among those
killed at Badr, according to others he died in the year 30/650-51 or 38/658-59. See
Ibn Hajar, Isabah, n, 191-92 s.v. Safwan b. Wahb ; Ibn Sa'd, III/1, 303; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Ta’ilkh, 18; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, 225.
302
Biographies
[2545] called because he had murdered someone of his own tribe, so he
fled to Medina and became an ally of the Banu 'Abd al-Ashhal. His
family was then called al-Yaman (the southerners), because they
were allied to a Yemeni clan. 1369
Ya'la b. Siyabah.
Siyabah was his mother, and his father was Murrah, so he was
[actually] Ya'la b. Murrah.
Ya'la b. Munyah.
Munyah was his mother, and his father was Umayyah, so he
was [actually] Ya'la b. Umayyah.
Nabighah of the Banu Ja'dah, the poet.
He was known by his nickname [Nabighah] (the copious), 1370
but his [real] name was Qays b. 'Abdallah b. 'Udas b. Rabi'ah b.
Ja'dah.
Al-Ash'ath b. Qays b. Ma'di-Karib.
Al-Ash'ath (the shaggy-haired one) was a nickname by which he
was known. His real name was Ma'di-Karib, but he received that
nickname because he was always shaggy-haired, or so it was
reported.
Tamim al-Dari.
He was known by the name of al-Dar b. Hani’, [a clan] of the
Lakhm. He was the son of Aws b. Kharijah al-Dari.
Al-Hulb b. Yazid al-Ta’i. 1371
He was known by his nickname [al-Hulb] (the hairy one), 1372
but his [real] name was Salamah, father of Qabisah b. Hulb. 1373 He
was thus nicknamed because he was bald, and when he came to
1369. The 'Abd al-Ashhal, a part of the Aws, originated in the southern (Yemeni)
confederation of al-Azd.
1370. The nickname is a reference to his creative poetic talent.
1371. There are various versions of his name. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
69; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, ID, 607.
1372. Hulb is in fact a noun meaning "hair" or "bristle," the adjective is halib,
and indeed some scholars vocalize the name that way; see Ibn Hajar, Isabah, 609.
1373. See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, VIII, 350-51; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 206.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 303
the Prophet and embraced Islam, as it was reported, the Prophet
stroked his head with his hand, and [Salamahj's head grew hair, so
he was called Hulb after his bristles.
The Names of the Successors Who Were Known by
Their Kunyahs
Abu Umamah b. Sahl b. Hunayf. 1374
His name was As'ad.
It was reported that the Prophet called him thus and gave him
his kunyah. This was because his mother was Hablbah, daughter
of Abl Umamah As'ad b. Zurarah b. 'Udas, the leader who was
responsible ( naqib ) for the Banu al-Naj jar. 1375 When she gave birth [2546]
to Abu Umamah he was given the name and kunyah of her father.
Abu Sa'id al-Maqbarl. 1376
This is the father of Sa'id b. Abi Sa'id al-Maqbari. 1377 His [real]
name was Kaysan, and he was a client of Banu Jundu' of the clan
Layth b. Bakr.
Abu Ja'far al-Qari’ (the reader). 1378
His name was Yazid b. al-Qa'qa', a client of ['Abdallah] Ibn
'Ayy ash. 1379
1374. An Ansari Companion, son and grandson of Companions, who died in the
year 100/718-19. See Ibn Sa'd, V, 59-60; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, I, 231; cf. Isdbah, IV,
9 -
1375. When the Medinans, at the 'Aqabah meeting, agreed to shelter the Proph¬
et and the Muslims in Medina, the Prophet appointed twelve leaders, nuqaba’, to
take charge of the Medinans' affairs. See Ibn Hisham, II, 86-89; Guillaume, 204.
On As'ad b. Zurarah, said to have been one of the earliest converts to Islam in
Medina, see Muir, 117, n. 119; Ibn Hajar, Isdbah, I, 34-35.
1376. He lived in Medina and died in the year 100/718-19. See Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 248; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 117; idem, Thiqdt, V, 340; al-
Sam'anx, V, 361-62.
1377. A transmitter who settled on the frontier (and participated in the jihad
there); he died in the year 117/735 (there are other versions). See Ibn Hajar, Tah¬
dhlb, IV, 34-35; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, X, 6-8.
1378. One of the most famous Qur’an readers and an ascetic, who died in the
year 130/747-48 or 132/749-50. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta'iikh, 429; idem,
Tabaqat, 262; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 124; Ibn al-Jazari, n, 382-84,- Ibn Qutaybah,
Ma'aiif, 230.
1379. A Qurashl Companion, of the Banu Makhzum, who lived in Medina,- see
Ibn Sa'd, V, 18.
304 Biographies
Abu Maymunah, a client of Umm Salamah, the Prophet's
wife. 1380
He was the reader of the people of Medina in his time. It was
with him that Nafi' b. Abi Nu'aym 1381 studied.
Abu Salih al-Samman, that is, al-Zayyat (the oil seller), a client
of the Ghatafan or, according to another version, of a woman of
the Qays named Juwayriyyah. 1382
He is also known as Abu Suhayl, and his name was Dhakwan.
Abu Salih Badham, a client of Umm Hani’, daughter of Abu
Talib. 13 ’ 83
Al-Kalbi and Isma'Il b. Abi Khalid transmitted from him.
Abu Salih Sumay'. 1384
He transmitted from ['Abdallah] b. 'Abbas.
Abu Salih, a client of [the caliph] al-Saffah. 1385
His name was 'Ubayd. Busr b. Sa'Id 1386 transmitted from him.
1380. Ibn Sa'd, V, 219.
1381. Of Persian origin, a client of the Kinani clan the Banu Layth. He was one
of the leading Qur’an readers in Medina, where he died in the year 169 or 170/786-
87; see Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 230. Ibn al-Jazari, II, 330-34, does not mention Abu
Maymunah, among Nafi"s teachers or otherwise.
1382. Also called al-Zayyat, which signifies the same; see al-Mizzi, Tahdhib,
VIII, 513. He lived in Medina, frequented al-Kufah, and died in the year 101/729-
20. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 332; idem, Tabaqat, 248; Ibn Hibban, Mash-
ahir, 122-23; Ibn Sa'd, V, 222. Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 210, says he died during the
caliphate of al-Mansur (136-58/754-75), but this is unlikely if he were a compa¬
nion of Abu Hurayrah (the Prophet's Companion), as stated by Abu Zur'ah, 479.
2383. He could not read the Qur’an well but engaged in exegesis, a fact that
aroused anger in some scholars. Al-Sha'bi reprimanded him, and al-Kalbl claimed
that he was a liar (yet transmitted from him). See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, I, 364-65;
Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, no-, also Abu Zur'ah, 478.
1384. A Kufan, also called al-Zayyat (the oil seller) but, oddly, he tends to be
confused, not with Abu Salih al-Samman/al-Zayyat (see above), but with Abu Salih
al-Hanafi (see below). See al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XXXIII, 417; Ibn Sa'd, V, 222; Abu
Zur'ah, 479.
1385. Ibn Sa'd, V, 223. According to Abu Zur'ah, 479, his name was Numayr.
1386. The only one I found bearing this name is a Medinan transmitter, a client
of the Hadrami family, who died in the year 100/718-19. He was thus perhaps too
old to have transmitted from a client of al-Saffah. See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, IV, 383;
Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 197; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 255.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 305
Abu Salih al-Hanafi. 1387
His name was 'Abd al-Rahman b. Qays, brother of Tulayq b.
Qays al-Hanafi. 1388 According to Yahya his name was Mahan.
Abu Salih al-Ghifari. 1389
Abu Salih Maysarah. 1390
Abu Salih from whom the people of Filastin transmitted [tra¬
ditions]. 1391
[His name was] Rudayh.
Abu Salih, the one from whom Yahya b. Abi Kathlr 1392
transmitted.
His name was Qayluh. 1393
Abu Salih. 1394
1387. Ibn Sa'd VI, 158; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 210; al-MizzI, Tahdhib, XVII,
360-63. He figures in yet other sources, but only Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 458, has
the information that he was a Kufan and a Shl'I, executed by the governor al-Hajjaj.
According to Dodge, in Ibn al-Nadim, n, 1091, he was a genealogist; Dodge refers to
Ibn al-Nadim, I, 205, but there is no way of identifying the genealogist Abu Salih
mentioned there. Abu Zayd's Tabaqat al-nassabln records no genealogist named
Abu Salih.
1388. A Kufan traditionist; see al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XE, 462-65.
1389. His name was Sa'Idb. 'Abd al-Rahman, and apparently he was a client. See
Ibn Sa'd, V, 223,- al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, X, 538.
1390. A Kufan, client of the Kindah, who was with 'All in the battle of
Nahrawan, against the Khawarij. See al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XXIX, 197-98; Ibn Sa'd, V,
223.
1 39 1 • Rudayh b. 'Atiyyah of the Quraysh, said to be the muezzin of [the mosque
in] Jerusalem ( mu’adhdhin bayt al-maqdis). See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, m, 234-35;
Abu Zur'ah, 448; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 292; Ibn Abi Hatim, I/2, 518. His kunyah
was also Abu al-Walid; cf. al-Wasitl, 14, 36, and passim.
1392. A client of the Tayyi’ who lived in al-Basrah and later in al-Yamamah and
died in the year 129/746-47; see Ibn Sa'd, V, 404.
1393. Al-Dulabl, n, 10 has Qaylubah. Ibn Sa'd, VH/i, 165, and Abu Zur'ah, 479:
Qayluyah.
I 394 - A Basran and a Shl'I, who studied Qur’an exegesis from 'Abdallah Ibn
'Abbas,- he died after the turn of the first century. See Abu Zur'ah, 479; Ibn Hibban,
Thiqat, V, 458; al-Sadr, 23.
1 ^ 547 ]
306 Biographies
Khalid al-Hadhdha’ and al-Tayml transmitted from him. 1395
[His name was] MIzan.
Abu Salih, a client of 'Uthman b. 'Affan. 1396
His name was Burkan. 1397
Abu Wa’il. 1398
His name was Shaqiq b. Salamah al-Asadi.
Abu 'Amr al-Shaybani. 1399
His name was Sa'd b. Iyas.
Abu 'Abd al-Rahman al-Sulami.
His name was 'Abdallah b. Habib.
Abu Fakhitah Sa'id b. 'Ilaqah. 1400
Abu al-Sha'tha’ al-Muharibi. 1401
His name was Sulaym b. al-Aswad.
Abu 'Abdallah al-Jadall.
1395. For Khalid, see p. 221, above. By al-Taymi Sulayman al-Taymi is meant;
see Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 458. Several traditionists bore this name, the most
famous being Sulayman b. Tarkhan, father of al-Mu‘tamir. See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib,
IV, ryo, 176, r8r, r87; al-Sam'anl, I, 498-501.
1396. Ibn Sa'd, V, 222.
r397. According to Abu Zur'ah, 478: Turkan. For the version al-Harith, see al-
Mizzi, Tahdhib, XXXIII, 420-22.
r 3 9 8. He was bom in the Prophet's lifetime but embraced Islam after the Proph¬
et's death and died in the year 83/702-3. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 155;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahlx, 159; Ibn Hajar, Isabah, II, 167-68,- Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'anf,
198.
1399 - Of the northern Shayban, a branch of the Bakr b. Wa’il. He lived in the
time of the Prophet but embraced Islam after the Prophet's death and died in the
year 101/719-20 (there are other versions). See Khalifahb. Khayyat, Tabaqat, r56;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, r6o ; Ibn Sa'd VI, 70. He should not be confused with the
philologist bearing the same kunyah.
1400. Or Sa'id b. Juhman. He was a client of Umm Hani’, sister of 'All, and a
supporter of 'All who died during the caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik or his son al-Walid.
See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, IV, 63; al-Quhpa’I, I, 302-4 (s.v. Thuwayr).
1401. A Kufan jurist of the northern Qaysi tribe Muharib; see Ibn Hazm, Jam-
haiat, 259-60. He was a supporter of 'All and died during the caliphate of 'Abd al-
Malik (there are other versions). See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, IV, 145; al-Dhahabl, Siyai,
IV, 179.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 307
His name was 'Abdah b. 'Abd b. 'Abdallah.
Abu Burdah b. Abi Musa. 1402
His name was 'Amir b. 'Abdallah b. Qays.
Abu 'Uthman al-Nahdi.
His name was 'Abd al-Rahman b. Mall.
Abu al-Aswad al-DIlI. 1403
His name was Zalim b. 'Amr.
Abu al-' Aliy ah al-Riyahi. 1404
His name was Rufay'.
Abu Umayyah, a client of 'Umar b. al-Khattab. 140S
His name was 'Abd al-Rahman; he was the grandfather of
Mubarak b. Fadalah b. Abi Umayyah. 1406
Abu Raja’ al-'Utaridi. 1407
1402. Son of the Companion Abu Musa al-Ash'ari, called after his uncle 'Amir,
cf. p. 147, above. He was a judge in al-Kufah under al-Hajjaj and died in the year
103/721-22 (there are other versions). See Ibn Sa'd, VI, 187; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib,
xn, 21-22; Wakr, n, 408-n.
1403. Read al-Du’ili, of the northern clan al-Du’il, a branch of the Kinanah; see
Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, r 84-8 5. He was a supporter of 'All and held certain offices in
his time, dying at al-Basrah in the year 69/688. He is considered to be the first Arab
philologist, but, according to Flick, this claim is unwarranted. It is also claimed
that he was the first to vocalize the Qur’anic text. See "Abu al-Aswad al-Du'ali,"
EP, 1 ,106-7 (J- W. Fuck); al-Sadr, 20,122-28; Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 184; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahii, 152; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 197.
1404. Rufay' b. Mihran. He was a client of a Riyahi woman (a family of the
Tamimi clan the Yarbu') in al-Basrah, who died in thie year 93/711-12. See Ibn
Hibban, Mashahii, 153 no. 697; cf. p. 308, below; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, VHI,
326-32; Ibn 'Adi, HI, 1022-31.
1405. A slave freed by 'Umar who lived in Iraq. It seems that his main impor¬
tance lies in the story of his release from slavery,- see Ibn Sa'd, VII/i, 85-86.
1406. A Basran traditionist, a client of 'Umar's family who died in the year
165/781-82 (there are other versions). See Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 35; Ibn Hajar, Tah dhi b,
X, 27-29; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 249; al-Dhahabi, Siyai, VII, 281-85.
1407. Of the Tamimi clan, the 'Utarid; see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 218. He was
bom in the Prophet's lifetime but embraced Islam only after the Prophet's death.
He died in al-Basrah in the year 105/723-24 (there are other versions). According to
Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 189, he died at the age of 128. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’iikh, 344; idem, Tabaqat, 196; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 142.
308 Biographies
His name was 'Imran b. Taym ; according to another version,
'Imran b. Milhan.
[2548] Abu al-Mutawakkil al-Najl.
His name was 'All b. Du’ad.
Abu al-Siddlq al-Najl.
His name was Bakr b. 'Amr.
Abu al-Zinba'. 1408
His name was Sadaqah b. Salih.
[Abu Ayyub al-'Ataki]. 1409
According to al-'Ala’i—Yahya b. Ma'in: Abu Ayyub al-'Atakl's
name was Yahya b. al-Mundhir.
Abu al-'Aliyah al-Barra’. 1410
His name was Ziyad b. Fayruz.
Abu 'Imran al-Jawnl. 1411
His name was 'Abd al-Malik b. Habib al-Azdi.
Abu Muslim al-Khawlanl. 1412
His name was 'Abdallah b. Thuwab.
1408. Al-Dulabi, I, 184; Ibn Sa’d, VI, 218, VII/1, 165, only mentions his name
among the Kufan Successors.
1409. The 'Atlk was a tribe of the southern confederation of the Azd ; see al-
Sam'ani, IV, 153. Abu Ayyub was a Basran who died after the year 80/699-700. See
Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, XII, 19; Ibn AbiHatim, IV/2,190; al-Dulabi, 1 ,102; cf. Ibn Sa'd,
VD/i, 164. There are several versions of his name and tribal affiliation, among
them Yahya b. Malik. See also p. 310, below.
1410. A client of a Riyahi woman (of the Yarbu' of the Tamim) who died in the
year 90/708-9. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 153, biography no. 698; cf. Abu
al-'Aliyah mentioned on p. 307, above.
1411. A Basran traditionist who was either a Kindi, an Azdi, or a Kinani and
supported 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr in the second civil war, dying in the year
128/745-46 (there are other versions). See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 403; idem,
Tabaqat, 2rs ; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 154-55; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, VI, 346.
1412. Khawlan was a branch of the southern Saba’ or of the Quda'ah; see al-
Sam'ani, II, 419. Abu Muslim was a Syrian ascetic and Qur’an reader who, during
the caliphate of Mu'awiyah, embraced Islam and died. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 307; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, r 81 ; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 194; Abu Zur'ah,
226, 227 (= 690); Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, XII, 55-67; Abu Nu'aym, II, 122-31.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 309
Abu al-Zahiriyyah al-Hadraml. 1413
His name was Hudayr b. Kurayb. According to another version,
he was a Himyari.
Abu Ja'far al-Mada’inl. 1414
His name was 'Abdallah b. al-Miswar b. Muhammad b. Ja'far b.
Abi Talib.
Abu Hazim, who transmitted [traditions] to Isma'll b. Abi
Khalid. 1415
[His name was] Nabtal.
Abu al-Huwayrith, 'Abd al-Rahman b. Mu'awiyah.
Abu Hazim al-Ashja'i, Salman. 1416
Abu al-Sha'tha’, Jabir b. Zayd. 1417
Abu al-Sha'tha’, who transmitted [traditions] to Humayd al-
Tawil. 1418
1413. Another version of his name is Ja'far b. Kurayb. He was a Syrian Successor
whose death date is variously given in the years 100/718-19, 127/744-45, before
86/705, and so on. Such variations between versions are unusual. See Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 311; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, I, io ; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, VI,
245-46; Abu Zur'ah, 214; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 184, 284.
1414. A Qurashi of the Hashimi clan and a descendant of the Prophet's uncle
Abu Talib, known as a weak transmitter if not an outright forger. See Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 325; al-Dhahabi, MIzdn, HI, 78; Ibn 'Adi, IV, 1483-84.
1415. According to al-Dulabi, 1 ,141, he was a client of Ibn 'Abbas. However, the
authors of the great biographical works (Ibn Hajar, al-Mizzi, Ibn Sa'd, Ibn 'Adi,
among others) do not mention him.
1416. Or Sulayman, sometimes confused with Salamah b. Dinar; see al-Dulabi,
I, 141. He was a client of an Ashja'i woman (from a branch of the northern Qays
'Aylan) and died during the caliphate of 'Umar II. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 174;
Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, IV, 123; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 205.
1417. An Azdi, resident of al-Basrah, a hafiz, and an expert on the Qur’an and
religious law who died in the year 93/711-12 (not 73 as recorded in some sources,
for he died the same week as Anas b. Malk). See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 2 io ;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 144; al-Sayrawan, 70.
1418. According to al-Dulabi, II, 5, he was a client of 'Umar b. 'Ubaydallah b.
Ma'mar, a Qurashi Medinan notable, officiating as judge in al-Basrah for Harun al-
Rashid; see Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, VII, 424 (s.v. 'Umar b. 'Uthman). Humayd al-
Tawll's name was Humayd b. Tarkhan; he was a client of Talhah al-Talhat (=
Talhah b. 'Abdallah). He died in the year 142/7 5 9-60; see Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif,
211.
3io
Biographies
[He was] the client of 'Umar b. 'Abd al-'Aziz.
[His name was] Fayruz.
[2549] Abu Jamrah, the companion of Ibn 'Abbas. 1419
[His name was] 'Imran b. c Ata\
Abu Ja'far al-Bajall, who transmitted [traditions] to Mu'tamir b.
Sulayman. 1420
[His name was] Musa b. al-Musayyib.
Abu Balj, Yahya b. Sulaym, or Yahya b. Abi Sulaym. According
to another version, Yahya b. Abi al-Aswad. 1421
Abu al-‘Udhafir, Da’ud b. Dinar. 1422
[Abu Layla]. 1423
It was reported on the authority of Ibn al-Muthanna: The name
of Abu Layla, father of 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Layla, was Da’ud.
Abu Ayyub, who transmitted [traditions] to Qatadah.
[His name was] Yahya b. Ayyub. 1424
1419. Abu Hamrah, Nasr b. 'Imran, in Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 206. He was a
Basran of the northern tribe Dubay'ah, a branch of the Rabi'ah; see Ibn Hazm,
Jamharat, 292-93; he died in the year 124/741-42. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'i-
Ikh, 372) Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 151.
1420. A Kufan of the northern Thaqif tribe. See al-Dulabi, I, 134; Ibn Hibban,
Thiqat, VII, 456; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, X, 332. Al Mu'tamir died in the year 187/803.
1421. Of the northern tribe Fazarah. He fought on 'All's side in the battle of
Nahrawan and later lived in Wasit. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 325; al-
Dulabi, I, 130; Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 60; ai-Mizzi, Tahdhlb, XXXIII, 162.
1422. In all probability the reference is to Da’ud b. Abi Hind, although this
person's kunyah is usually given as Abu Bakr or Abu Muhammad. Abu Hind's
name was Dinar b. 'Udhafir, the latter being quite a rare name. See p. 328, below.
1423. See p. 282, above. It is not clear whether there are two different Abu Laylas
or only one whose name is not certain.
1424. Al-Tabari probably made a mistake here. According to all the sources I
examined, the Abu Ayyub from whom Qatadah (b. Di'amah) transmitted was
Yahya b. Malik. There seems, however, to be a confusion between Abu Ayyub al-
Maraghi Yahya b. Malik, associated with Qatadah (al-Mizzi, Tahdhlb, XXXm, 60-
6i; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 529; al-Dulabi, I, 103), and Abu Ayyub al-'Ataki, also
called Yahya b. Malik by Ibn Ma'In (al-Dulabi, 1 ,103). The latter is called Yahya b.
al-Mundhir by al-Tabari, see p. 308, above. Al-Sam'ani, V, 245, records Abu Ayyub,
Yahya b. Malik, under al-Maraghi but no Abu Ayyub under al-'Ataki.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 311
Abu Khabtah, who transmitted [traditions] to Malik b.
Mighwal. 1425
[His name was] Hakim al-Hadhdha’.
Abu Sufyan, the companion of Jabir [b. 'Abdallah]. 1426
[His name was] Talhah b. Nafi'.
Abu Sufyan, who transmitted [traditions] to Abu Mu'awiyah
and Hafs b. Ghiyath. 1427
[His name was] Tarlf al-Sa'di.
Abu Hayyan al-Ashja'I. 1428
His name was Mundhir.
Abu Hudhayfah, Salamah b. Suhayb. 1429
'All b. al-Aqmar transmitted [traditions] from him. 1430
Abu Bistam, who transmitted [traditions] to al-Fazari. 1431
1 4 2 5 - The manuscript has Hantah; see 2,549, n - e. There seems to be no person
with the kunyah Abu Khabtah. The closest I could reach was one of Malik's
informants named al-Hakam (not Hakim) b. 'Utaybah b. al-Nahhas b. Hantab. The
last is a rather unusual name and could easily be garbled. Al-Ha kam b. 'Utaybah,
however, was a famous judge, not known as a traditionist, and, in addition, his
kunyah is usually given as Abu Muhammad and not Abu Hantab (but many people
had more than one kunyah). He died in the year 115/733-34] see Ibn Hajar, Tah-
dhlb, II, 374. For Malik b. Mighwal, a Kufan traditionist who died in the year
I 58/774—75, see Ibn Hajar, ibid., X, 20-21; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 267.
1 4 26 - A client of the Quraysh, of the second half of the first/seventh century,
resident of Wasit. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 155; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii,
175# Ibn 'Adi, IV, 1432; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, V, 24 (read Nafi' for Nafa').
1427. Abu Sufyan Tarif b. Shihab of the Tamlm, a Basran traditionist; see Ibn
Adi, IV, 1436-38; al-MizzI, Tahdhlb, XIII, 377-80. Abu Mu'awiyah mentioned
here is Muhammad b. Khazim, a Kufan client of the Tamlml group, the Banu Sa'd,
who died in the year 195/810-11. He was a hafiz but held Murji’I views; see al-
MizzI, Tahdhlb, XXV, 123-33.
1428. A companion of 'Abdallah b. Mas'ud; see al-Dulabl, I, r6r.
1429. A Kufan of the southern tribe Arhab, a branch of Hamdan, who lived in
the second half of the first/seventh century. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 176; al-
MizzI, Tahdhlb, XI, 291-95.
1430. A Kufan HamdanI traditionist. See Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, VII, 250-5 1, al-
Dhahabl, Siyai, V, 313; al-MizzI, Tahdhlb, XX, 323-25.
1431. Al-Dulabl, I, 127; al-Dhahabl, Mizan, IH, 296. Al-Fazari was the hafiz
Marwan b. Mu'awiyah, a descendant of the leading family of the Fazarah. He iived
in al-Kufah, Mecca, and Damascus and died in the year 194/809-10 (there are other
versions). See al-Sam'anl, IV, 380; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, XXTV, 224-26.
Biographies
312
[His name was] Yahya b. 'Abd al-Rahman al-Tamimi.
Abu Maryam, 'Abd al-Ghaffar b. al-Qasim. 1432
Abu al-Mu'alla al-'Attar. 1433
His name was Yahya b. Maymun.
[2550] Abu Bakr al-Hudhali, Sulma b. 'Abdallah b. Sulma. 1434
Abu Bakkar, al-Hakam b. Farrukh al-Ghazzal. 1435
Abu al-Tayyah, Yazid b. Humayd. 1436
Abu Hilal al-Rasibi, Muhammad b. Sulaym. 1437
Abu al-Mu'alla, Zayd b. Murrah. 1438
Abu Hamzah al-Sukkari, Muhammad b. Maymun. 1439
Abu Ishaq al-Sa’igh, Ibrahim b. Maymun. 1440
1432. A Kufan, of Ansar! origin. According to Ibn 'Adi, V, 1964-65, he was an
ultra-Shi'i and used to invent traditions; Shi'i sources mention him as a trustwor¬
thy transmitter and author of a book. There is, however, a confusion between him
and his brother 'Abd al-Mu’min ; see al-Quhpa’i, IV, 99, 109.
1433. A Kufan of the northern Dabbah tribe who died after the year 130/747-48.
See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 429; idem, Tabaqat, 217-, Ibn Ab! Hatim, IV/2,
188.
1434. A Basran who specialized in Qur’an interpretation and history (ayyam
"the history of battle days"). He was a companion of al-Hasan (al-Basri? d.
110/728-29). See Ibn 'Adi, HI, 1167-72; al-Dhahabi, MIzan, I, 408.
1435. A Basran traditionist who transmitted from 'Ikrimah (died 107/72-26).
See al-Dulabi, I, 124; Ibn Abl Hatim, I/2, 126; al-Mizzi, Tahdhlb, VII, 230-31.
1436. A Basran jurist of the northern Sulaym tribe who died in the year
130/747-48. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 418; idem, Tabaqat, 216; Ibn Hib¬
ban, Mashahir, 155; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 206.
1437. A Basran traditionist, a client of the (pseudo-)Qurashi clan the Banu Sa-
mah or the Banu Hayyah. He died in the year 165/782-82. See Ibn Qutaybah,
Ma'arif, 223; al-Sam'anl, HI, 25; Ibn 'Adi, VI, 2228-22; Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 36.
2438. Also called Zayd b. Abl Layla; see al-Dulabi, I, 224.
2439. A hafiz, a resident of Marw, who died in the year 267 or 268/784-85. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 324; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 322; al-Sayrawan, 269.
2440. Originally from Isfahan, he later settled in Khurasan. He was associated
with Abu Muslim, but when the latter openly spread 'Abbasid propaganda Abu
Ishaq expressed objections and was therefore executed, in the year 232/748-49. See
Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 203; al-Mizzi, Tahdhlb, II, 223-24; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 309.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 313
Abu Sinan al-Razi, Sa'Id b. Sinan. 1441
Abu Salam al-Hanafl, 'Abd al-Malik b. Salam al-Mada’inl. 1442
Abu al-Azhar al-Shaml, Farwah b. al-Mughirah. 1443
Abu Hamzah, who transmitted [traditions] to al-A'mash. 1444
[His name was] Sa'd b. 'Ubadah.
Abu Kathlr al-Zubaydl, 'Abdallah b. Malik. 1445
Abu Hilal al-Ta’I, Yahya b. Hayyan. 1446
Abu Khalid al-Walibi, Hurmuz. 1447
Abu Mu'awiyah al-Bajall, 'Ammar al-Duhni. 1448
Abu al-Mu'tamir, Yazid b. Tahman. 1449
1441. Abu Sinan al-Asghar, of the northern Shayban, a jurist of the second
century, originally a Kufan, who settled in al-Rayy. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 260;
Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 109; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, X, 492-95.
1442. According to al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XVm, 415-16, and al-Dhahabi, Mizan, E,
153: 'Abd al-Malik b. Muslim b. Salam, a Kufan transmitter of the generation of
Sufyan al-Thawri (d. 161/777-78). Some say he was a Shi'L
1443. A Syrian, counted among the Companions. According to Abu Zur'ah, 695,
his name was al-Mughirah b. Farwah. He died before the year 113/731-32. See also
Abu Zur'ah, 327; Ibn Hajar, lsabah, IV, 6.
1444. A Kufan of the northern Sulaym tribe who was a Khariji but renounced
the creed later in life. He died during the second quarter of the eighth century. See
Ibn Sa'd, VI, 208; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, X, 290-91.
1445. A Kufan Successor of the southern tribe Zubayd of whose name there are
several versions. He died during the caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik. See al-Dhahabi,
Mizan, IE, 377 (Abu Kabir); al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, X, 219-20.
1446. A transmitter of the first half of the eighth century who originated in
Khurasan and lived in al-Mada’in. See al-Dulabi, E, 154; Ibn 'Adi, VE, 2704; al-
Dhahabi, Mizan, IE, 285-86; cf. 309, where he is called Yazid b. Hayyan (read
Hayyan for Hibban).
1447. A slave, or client, of the Banu Asad in al-Kufah, who died in the year
100/718-19. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 158; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 176;
Ibn Sa'd, VI, 88.
1448. There are several versions of the name. He was a Kufan, some say, a Shl'I,
who died in the year 133/750-51- See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 163; al-Mizzi,
Tahdhib, XXXTV, 303; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, IE, 382.
1449. A Basran traditionist of the first half of the eighth century who belonged
to the Raqash, a group from the northern Qays 'Aylan. See al-Mizzi, Tahdhib,
XXXE, 166-67; al-Sam'ani, El, 81.
314
Biographies
Abu al-Hayyaj, who transmitted [traditions] to 'Amir b. Sharahll
al-Sha'bi and Sa'id b. Jubayr. 1450
[His name was] 'Amr b. Malik al-Azdi.
[2551] Abu Maryam al-Asadi, who transmitted [traditions] to Ash'ath
b. Abi al-Sha'tha’. 1451
His name was 'Abdallah b. Ziyad.
Abu Idris, who transmitted [traditions] from al-Musayyib b.
Najabah. 1452
His name was Sawad.
Abu al-Haytham, the reed seller. 1453
His name was 'Ammar.
The Kunyahs of the Successors Who Were Known by
Their Names, Rather than by Their Kunyahs
'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Harith b. Hisham. 1454
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
1450. He is not recorded in the lists of informants of al-Sha'bi and Ibn Jubayr. He
belonged to the northern Asad, not to the southern Azd as recorded here (the
southern Azd are sometimes called Asd, so that an Azdi may be called Asdi, but
not the reverse) and was among those entrusted by Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas (or 'Umar b.
al-Khattab) with the planning of al-Kufah. See Yaqut, Mu'jam al-buldan, TV, 324;
al-MizzI, Tahdhib, VII, 471-72 (his name is given as Hayyah b. al-Husayn); al-
Baladhuri, Futuh (de Goeje), 276; Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 194; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 141; al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, I, 2369, 2488, 2491.
1451. Abu Maryam was a Kufan traditionist and a companion of 'Abdallah b.
Mas'ud; see Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 58. Al-Ash'ath was the son of Sulaym b. al-
Aswad, mentioned above, a Kufan traditionist who died in the year 125/741-42.
See Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VI, 62; al-Safadi, IX, 275.
1452. A Kufan of the southern Hamdan confederation of the second half of the
seventh century; he was a Shi'I. His name was Sawwar or Musawir (b. Mus'ab?).
See al-MizzI, Tahdhib, XXXIII, 21; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, TV, 338; idem, Mairuhln, I,
356; al-Quhpa’i, III, 175.
1453. §ahib al-qasab, which can also mean "the sugarcane seller." A Kufan
transmitter. See al-Dulabl, II, 156; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VII, 660. It is recorded that
Ibrahim al-Nakha'I (d. 96/724) transmitted from him.
2454. A Medinan, one of the notables of the Quraysh, of the Makhzum clan. He
was bom in the Prophet's lifetime and died in the year 43/663-64. See Ibn Hajar,
Isabah, III, 66; Ibn Hibban, Mashahiz, 109; idem, Thiqat, HI, 253.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 315
Muhammad b. Rabl'ah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib. 1455
His kunyah was Abu Hamzah after his son Hamzah.
'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. Nawfal b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad, and his nickname was
Babbah.
Marwan b. al-Hakam. 1456
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Malik.
Muhammad b. Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah. 1457
His kunyah was Abu Sulayman after his son Sulayman.
'Abdallah b. 'Utbah b. Mas'ud. 1458
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman.
Muhammad b. al-Ash'ath b. Qays. 1459
His kunyah was Abu al-Qasim.
1455. A Qurashi of the Hashimi clan, a jurist. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
231; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, HI, (Duri), 29s.
1456. The fourth Umayyad caliph, founder of the Marwanid branch of the Um-
ayyads, reigned 64-65/684-85. See "Marwan b. al-Hakam," El 1 , VI, 621-23 (C. E.
Bosworth); Strayer, Dictionary, s.v. "Marwan (I) ibn al-Hakam" (L. Conrad); Ham-
mameh; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 125-60,• al-Munajjid, 158-59.
1457. Another version of his kunyah is Abu al-Qasim; he thus bears both the
name and kunyah of the Prophet. He was the son of the close Companion of the
Prophet Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah and known for his piety. He was killed in the battle
of the Camel on 'A’ishah's side. See Ibn Qudamah, 322-24; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 233; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 45; Ibn Sa'd, V, 37-39.
1458. Of the Hudhayl, nephew of the Companion 'Abdallah b. Mas'ud. He acted
as the leader of prayer (imam) and a judge in al-Kufah and died in the year 73/692-
93 or 74/693-94. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 266, 271; idem, Tabaqat, 141-
42; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 166; Waki', n, 402-4.
1459. A son of the Kindi prince al-Ash'ath b. Qays and father of the rebel 'Abd al-
Rahman b. Muhammad. He was a leader of the Kindah and governor of Tabaristan
for 'Ubaydallah b. Ziyad, then of Mosul for 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr. He fell in battle
against al-Mukhtar in the year 67/686-87. See Crone, Slaves, no ; "al-Ash'ath b.
Kays," EP, VII, 400-1 (G. R. Hawting). al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 241, 251-54, 259-
60; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 146; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 166. He must not be
confused with the early 'Abbasid general, Muhammad b. al-Ash'ath b. 'Uqbah al-
Khuza'I.
316 Biographies
'Umarah b. Khuzaymah b. Thabit. 1460
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Muhammad b. Ubayy b. Ka'b. 1461
His kunyah was Abu Mu'adh.
Sa'id b. al-Musayyab, Abu Muhammad. 1462
Al-Muhallab b. Abi Sufrah. 1463
His kunyah was Abu Sa'id.
Zurarah b. Awfa al-Harashi. 1464
His kunyah was Abu Hajib.
[2552] Yazid b. 'Abdallah b. al-Shikhkhlr. 1465
His kunyah was Abu al-'Ala’.
Jariyah b. Qudamah al-Sa'di, of the [Banu] Sa'd of Tamim. 1466
1460. Another version of his kunyah is Abu 'Abdallah. He was a son of the
Ansar! (Aws!) Companion Khuzaymah h. Thabit, and died in Medina in the year
105/723-24. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 344; idem, Tabaqat, 248; Ibn Hib¬
ban, Mashahir, 115.
1461. A Medinan, son of the Ansari Companion Ubayy b. Ka'b. He was bom in
the Prophet's lifetime and died in the battle of al-Harrah in the year 63/683. See Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, III, 471-72; Ibn Sa'd, V, 55; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 237-38.
1462. A famous, most highly regarded Medinan jurist, hafiz, historian, and
genealogist of the QurashI clan the Makhzum. He was put in prison for refusing to
give allegiance to al-Walid and Sulayman, sons of the caliph 'Abd al-Malik, and
died in the year 94/712-13. See F. Sezgin, I, 276; Ibn Sa'd, V, 88-106; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 244; IbnHibban, Mashahir, 105; al-Sayrawan, 96; 'Abd al-Malik
Ibn Habib, 160-61, 170; Abu Zayd, Tabaqat al-nassabln, 26.
1463. Of the southern confederation the Azd. A general and governor of
Khurasan under al-Hajjaj, founder of the Muhallab! family and the Azd! power in
Khurasan, father of the rebel Yazid b. al-Muhallab. He died in the year 83/703. See
Hawting, First Dynasty, 66,73; "al-Muhallabb. Abi Sufra," El 2 , VII, 357 (P. Crone);
Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 201; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 175.
1464. Of the clan Banu al-Harish, a branch of the northern 'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah. He
was a prayer leader (imam) and judge in al-Basrah, who died in the year 73/692-93
(there are other versions). See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 303, 306; idem, Taba¬
qat, 197; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 153-54; idem, Thiqat, IV, 266; Wak!', I, 292-97.
1465. A Basran of the Banu al-Harish (see note 1464, above). He died in the year
108/726-27 or m/729-30. Khallfahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 352; idem, Tabaqat, 208;
Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 532.
1466. A Companion, tribal leader, and supporter of 'All, which did not hinder
him from visiting Mu'awiyah at his court. He lived in al-Basrah. See Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 44; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 71; al-Dabbi, 35, 41-42; Nasr b.
Muzahim, 24-25, 205.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 317
His kunyah was Abu Ayyub.
Al-Hasan b. Abi al-Hasan al-Basri.
Abu al-Hasan's name was Yasar. [Al-Hasan's] kunyah was Abu
Said.
Jabir b. Zayd, Abu al-Sha'tha’ al-Azdi.
'Uqbah b. 'Abd al-Ghafir. 1467
His kunyah was Abu Nahar al-Azdi.
Qatadah b. Di'amah al-Sadusi.
His kunyah was Abu al-Khattab.
Thabit al-Bunani.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad and his [full] name Thabit b.
Aslam.
Ka'b b. Mati', that is, Ka'b al-Ahbar.
His kunyah was Abu Ishaq, and he belonged to Himyar.
'Ata’ b. Yasar, the client of Maymunah, the Prophet's wife. 1468
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Qablsah b. Dhu’ayb. 1469
His kunyah was Abu Ishaq or, according to another version,
Abu Said.
1467. A Basran of the Azd confederation who participated in the revolt of 'Abd
al-Rahman Ibn al-Ash'ath and was killed in battle. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’i-
Ikh, 281, 286; idem, Tabaqat, 205; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 149; idem, Thiqat, V,
224.
1468. A jurist, traditionist, storyteller (qass), and judge who lived in Medina and
Syria. (It is not certain that he was a judge: The sources sometimes confuse qddl,
with qass, the two words being graphically similar, and he was not recorded by
Waki'.) He died in Alexandria in the year 103/721-22 (there are other versions). See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 354; idem, Tabaqat, 247; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 114,
'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, 174; al-Sayrawan, 128; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, XVII, 80-
83 -
1469. Of the Khuza'ah; a jurist and traditionist, responsible for the postal (and
spying) services [band], as well as the seal ( khatam ), under the caliph 'Abd al-
Malik b. Marwan. He died in the year 86/705 (there are other versions). See Ibn
Hazm, Jamhaiat, 236; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’ilkh, 293, 302; idem, Tabaqat, 309;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 106-7; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 356; Abu Zur'ah, 405, 408;
Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, XXI, 63-64.
318 Biographies
'Urwah b. al-Zubayr. 1470
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
His hill brother, al-Mundhir b. al-Zubayr. 1471
His kunyah was Abu 'Uthman.
Mus'ab b. al-Zubayr. 1472
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Muhammad b. Jubayr b. Mut'im. 1473
His kunyah was Abu Sa'id.
'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan. 1474
His kunyah was Abu al-Walld.
1470. Son of the Companion al-Zubayr and brother of 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr. He
was one of the most highly regarded traditionists and jurists. Traditions concern¬
ing the Prophet's life were transmitted in his name, and some scholars credit him
with a book on the campaigns ( maghazi] of the Prophet. He lived in Medina and
died in the year 93/711-12 (there are other versions], SeeHorovitz, I, 542-52; Duri,
Rise of Historical Writing, 76-95; Landau-Tasseron, "Reconstruction"; al-A'zami,
Maghazi; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 105.
1471. Counted among the noble and courageous Qurashls. He was associated
with Mu'awiyah (and his governor Ziyad) but later supported his brother 'Abdallah
and was killed during the first Syrian siege of Mecca (64/683). See al-Tabari, Ta'i-
ikh, n, 132, 224, 402-3, 528; Ibn Qudamah, 266-67; al-Zubayri, 244-45.
1472. Brother of the previous two, one of the noblemen and horsemen of the
Quraysh. He governed Iraq on behalf of his brother 'Abdallah and was killed by the
Umayyad caliph 'Abd al-Malik in the year 72/691. See "Mus'ab b. al-Zubayr," EP,
VII, 649-50 (C. Pellat); Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, r 11 ; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 251-65,
278-90, 294-97, 331-51; Ibn Qudamah, 268-69 and passim.
1473. Son of the Qurashi nobleman and Companion Jubayr b. Mut'im, of the
Nawfal clan. He transmitted traditions, was an expert on Qurashi history, and
associated with the caliph Abd al-Malik. He died during the caliphate of 'Umar II
(99-101/717-20). See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 241; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii,
118; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa, 105; Ibn Qudamah, 239.
1474. One of the most important Umayyad rulers; he unified the Islamic com¬
munity after a long crisis, centralized the government while emphasizing its " Ara-
bness," and built the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, an early, magnificent
articulation of the Islamic faith. He died in the year 86/705. See "'Abd al-Malik b.
Marwan," EP, I, 76-77 (H. A. R. Gibb); Hawting, First Dynasty, 58-66; Strayer,
Dictionary, s.v. "'Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan" (L. Conrad); al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V,
passim; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasai, XV, 219-34; al-Munajjid, 112-16; al-Rayyis.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 319
'Abd al-'AzIz b. Marwan. 1475
His kunyah was Abu al-Asbagh.
Iyas b. Salamah b. al-Akwa'. 1476
His kunyah was Abu Salamah,
Rifa'ah b. Rafi' b. Khadij.
His kunyah was Abu Khadij.
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Sa'id al-Khudri.
According to al-Waqidl, his kunyah was Abu Muhammad,
whereas, according to 'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Umarah, it was
Abu Hafs.
Hamzah b. Abi Usayd al-Sa'idi. 1477 [2553]
His kunyah was Abu Malik.
Al-Mundhir b. Abi Usayd al-Sa'idi. 1478
His kunyah was Abu Sa'id.
Sa'id b. Yasar, Abu al-Hubab, the client of al-Hasan b. 'All.
Salman al-Agharr, Abu 'Abdallah. 1479
1475. Brother of the caliph 'Ahd al-Malik and father of the caliph 'Umar n. He
served his father and 'Abd al-Malik as governor of Egypt, where he died in the year
82 or 83/702-3. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 240-42; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir,
293; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 283-84; al-Kindi, 44-52.
2476. A Medinan Successor, son of the Aslami Companion Salamah b. al-
Akwa'; he died in the year 219/737. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 249,- Ibn
Hibban, Mashahir, 226; idem, Thiqat, IV, 35.
2477 - A Medinan Successor, of the Khazraj. He died during the caliphate of al-
Walld I (86-96/705-25; there are other versions). See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Taba¬
qat, 254; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 225; al-Mizzi, Tahdhlb, VH, 312-13.
1478. Brother of the just-mentioned Hamzah. He is sometimes considered a
Companion, having been bom in the Prophet's lifetime. See Khallfah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 253; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 419-20; Ibn Sa'd, V, 201.
1479. A storyteller ( qass ) who lived in Medina in the second half of the seventh
century. His origin was in Isfahan, and he was a client of the northern tribe
Juhaynah. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 265; Ibn Sa'd, V, 210; Ibn Hibban,
Thiqat, IV, 333.
320
Biographies
'Ikrimah, the client of Ibn 'Abbas.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Shu'bah, the client of 'Abdallah b. 'Abbas . 1480
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Miqsam, the client of 'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. Nawfal b. al-
Harith b. 'Abd al-Muttalib . 1481
He is considered the client of Ibn 'Abbas because he was close to
him. His kunyah was Abu al-Qasim.
Nabhan, the client of Umm Salamah . 1482
His kunyah was Abu Yahya.
Na'im b. Ujayl, the client of Umm Salamah . 1483
His kunyah was Abu Qudamah.
Suwayd b. Ghafalah, Abu Umayyah.
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Layla . 1484
His kunyah was Abu 'Isa.
Zirr b. Hubaysh . 1485
1480. Shu'bah b. Dinar; he lived in Medina and died around the year 100/718-19
(there are other versions). See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 280; Ibn Sa'd, V, 217;
al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XII, 497-500.
1481. He died in the year 101/719-20. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 332;
idem, Tabaqat, 281.
1482. A Medinan of the second half of the seventh century. See Ibn Hibban,
Thiqat, V, 486; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 246.
1483. An early Egyptian transmitter and, according to Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, X,
360, also a jurist (although faqlh may mean "intelligent"), who died in the year
80/699-700. See Ibn Sa'd, V, 219; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 485.
1484. A hafiz, a descendant of the Aws (Ansar), of some standing in al-Ktifah
(but see Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 216, where rivals of his son refute the genealogy,
and see p. 282, above). He died in the year 83/702-3, participating in the revolt of
'Abd al-Rahman b. Muhammad b. al-Ash'ath. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat,
150; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 164; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, IVa, 232; Ibn Hazm, Jam-
haiat, 335; al-Sayrawan, no.
1485. A member of the northern tribe Asad, who lived in pre-Islamic times and
embraced Islam only after the Prophet's death; he became a supporter of All b. Abi
Talib. In addition to transmitting traditions, he was an expert on the Arabic lan¬
guage. He died during the revolt of Ibn al-Ash'ath, in the year 82/701-2. See Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, I, 577; al-Kashshi, I, 241, HI, 25,- Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 140;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 161; idem, Thiqat, IV, 269.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 321
His kunyah was Abu Maryam.
Shurayh, the judge, that is, Shurayh b. al-Harith b. Qays. 1486
His kunyah was Abu Umayyah.
Al-Rabr b. Khuthaym, Abu Yazid. 1487
Silah b. Zufar al-'Abdl, Abu al-'Ala’. 1488
Shabath b. Rib'i.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Quddus.
'Abd Khayr b. Yazid al-Khaywani.
His kunyah was Abu 'Umarah.
'Ata’ b. Abi Rabah. 1489
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Raja’ b. Haywah. 1490
His kunyah was Abu Nasr.
1486. A hafiz and judge, counted as one of the Himyar. It was reported that he
was appointed judge of al-Kufah by 'Umar and held the post for seventy-five years
(!) He died in 80/699-700. See Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 191 -92; Khallfah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 14 S; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, i6oj Wakl', II, 189-398; al-Sayrawan, 101.
1487. A Kufan jurist and ascetic of the rather obscure, northern tribe Thawr,
who died in the year 63/682-83. See Ibn Hazm, famharat, 201; Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 141; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, i6o ; Abu Nu'aym, n, 105-19.
1488. A Kufan, of the northern tribe 'Abs, who died around the year 70/689-90.
See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 143; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 169.
1489. A client of a Qurashi clan. He was black, crippled, blind, and a highly
regarded hafiz and jurist. He lived in Mecca, where he died in the year 115/733-34
or 116/734-35. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 361,• idem, Tabaqat, 280; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahir, 133; al-Ja'dl, 58-59; al-Sayrawan, 127-28.
1490. A Kindi or a client of the Kindah. He was a Syrian, a highly-regarded jurist,
very influential at the Umayyad court. He died in the year 112/730-31. See
Bosworth, "Raja’ ibn Haywa." Gil, 121 (I thank Amikam El'ad for these two refer¬
ences). Hawting, First Dynasty, 72; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 3 io ; Ibn Hibban,
Mashahir, 189; Abu Zur'ah, 335, 336, 337, 370, 623, 711; Ibn 'Asakir, Ta’rikh, VI,
230-40.
[ 2554 ]
322 ,
Biographies
Maymun b. Mihran. 1491
His kunyah was Abu Ayyub.
Mishrah b. 'Ahan, Abu Mus'ab. 1492
Wahb b. Munabbih.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
His brother, Hammam b. Munabbih. 1493
His kunyah was Abu 'Utbah.
Ma'qil b. Munabbih, their brother. 1494
His kunyah was Abu 'Uqayl.
'All b. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad after his son Muhammad.
Al-Hasan b. Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyyah. 1495
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
1491. A client of the northern tribe Nasr b. Mu'awiyah of the Hawazin,- see Ibn
Hazm, Jamhaiat, 269 (there are other versions of the tribe]. He was a hafiz, a
leading jurist in the Jazlrah (Mesopotamia), and collector of the Kharaj tax for
'Umar H He died in the year 117/735 (there are other versions). See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 319; Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 190; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 198; al-
Sayrawan, 178; 'Abd al-Malik Ibn Habib, 174.
1492. The spelling in most of the sources is Ha'an. He was an early Egyptian
transmitter and a source of information for 'Abdallah b. Lahi'ah and al-Layth b.
Sa'd, among others. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 293; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V,
452; al-MizzI, Tahdhlb, XXVIII, 7-8; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, X, 141; Ibn 'Adi, VI, 2460.
1493. A famous Yemeni traditionist. He had reportedly a written collection of
traditions | sahifah ). His death date is variously given as 101/719-20, 102/720-21,
132/749-50, etc. (unusually large disparities among the versions). See Khalifah b.
Khayyat Tabaqat, 287; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 198-99; Ibn Sa'd, V, 396; al-MizzI,
Tahdhlb, XXX, 298-300; al-Ja'dl, 57. See also note 986, above.
1494. The least known of the Banu Munabbih, usually mentioned only as
"brother of Wahb and Hammam." See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 287; Ibn Sa'd,
V, 396; al-Ja'dl, 57. See also note 986, above.
1495. In spite of his ancestry, he was not a Shl'I, and perhaps this is why Sunni
sources state that he was superior to his brother Abu Hashim (leader of the
Hashimiyyah movement). He is said to have been the first to discuss Murji’I views
and to put them in writing. He lived in Medina and died in the year 99 or 100/718-
19. See F. Sezgin, I, 594-95; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, IV, 122; Ibn Sa'd, V, 241; al-
Dhahabl, Siyai, TV, 130; al-Shahrastanl, 106.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 323
Nafi', the client of ['Abdallah] Ibn 'Umar. 1496
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Al-Dahhak b. Muzahim. 1497
His kunyah was Abu al-Qasim.
Nawf al-Bikall, Nawf b. Fadalah.
His kunyah was Abu Yazid or Abu al-Rashid.
Sa'id b. Abi 'Arnbah. 1498
His kunyah was Abu al-Nadr, and the name of Abu 'Arubah was
Mihran.
Isma'il b. Ibrahim, Ibn 'Ulayyah. 1499
His kunyah was Abu Bishr.
Al-Mu'tamir b. Sulayman al-Taymi. 1500
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
1496. A famous jurist and hafiz of Persian origin who lived in Medina and died
in the year 119/737 (there are other versions). See "Nafi '," EP-, VII, 127-28 (G. H. A.
Juynboll); Khallfah b. Khayyat, TaTikh, 191; idem, Tabaqat, 256; Ibn Hibban,
Mashahu, 129; al-Sayrawan, 179.
1497. A member of the northern tribe Hilal who is variously said to have lived in
Khurasan, al-Kuf ah, and other places. He was an expert on the Qur’an and a teacher
and died in the year 105/723-24 (there are other versions). See F. Sezgin, I, 29-30;
Ibn al-Nadlm, I, 75, II, 977; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 3x1; Ibn Hibban, Mash¬
ahu, 308; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 201-2. Ibn al-Jazari, I, 337; al-Sayrawan, 239;
Nuwayhid, I, 237.
1498. A client of the northern Banu Yashkur, a branch of Bakr b. Wa’il; see Ibn
Hazm, Jamhaiat, 308. He was a Basran jurist and a Qadari and died in the year
156/772-73 (there are other versions). See Khallfah b. Khayyat, TaTikh, 457; idem,
Tabaqat, 220; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 149; al-Sayrawan, 96; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif,
222.
1499. A Baghdadi, client of the northern tribe Banu Asad. He was appointed over
the court of grievances | mazalim ) in Baghdad, and died in the year 194/809-10. See
Khallfah b. Khayyat, TaTikh, 503; idem, Tabaqat, 224, 328; Ibn Hibban, Mashahu,
255) Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 221.
1500. Son of the Basran traditionist and historian and client of the Sulaym (or
Murrah) Sulayman b. Tarkhan (or Tahman; but this version is due perhaps to a
confusion between him and another Abu al-Mu'tamir, Yazid b. Tahman, see p.
313, above). See Khallfah b. Khayyat, TaTikh, 493; idem, Tabaqat, 224-25; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahu, 253; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 209; al-Sayrawan, 175; Ibn Sa'd,
Vn/2, 45.
324 Biographies
Mu'adh b. Mu'adh. 1501
His kunyah was Abu al-Muthanna.
Hawdhah b. Khalifah. 1502
His kunyah was Abu al-Ashhab.
'Abbad b. Suhayb al-Kulaybi. 1503
His kunyah was Abu Bakr.
[2555] Musaddad b. Musarhad. 1504
His kunyah was Abu al-Hasan.
'Amr b. Murrah, Abu 'Abdallah. 1505
'Amr b. Dinar, Abu Muhammad al-Athram, the client of
Badham, or Badhan, Khusraw's governor of the Yemen. 1506
Sulayman b. Arqam, Abu Mu'adh. 1507
1501. A Basran jurist, hafiz, and judge of the Tamimi clan the Banu al-'Anbar.
See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 480, 495, 501, 503; idem, Tabaqat, 226; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahii, 253; Waki', II, 137-43.
r 502. A descendant of Abu Bakrah who lived in al-Basrah and Baghdad and died
in the year 215/830-31 or 210/825-26. See Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 226; Ibn Hibban,
Mashahii, 257.
1503. A Basran of the Tamiml clan Kulayb b. Yarbu,- see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat,
225. He held Qadari views. He died around the year 212/827-28. See al-Dhahabi,
Mlzan, II, io; Ibn 'Adi, IV, 1652-53.
1504. A Basran hafiz, of the Asad tribe, who died in the year 228/842-43. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 229; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 229; Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 57;
al-Sayrawan, 172.
1505. A Kufan jurist of the southern tribe Murad who died in the year 118/736;
see Ibn al-Kalbi, Nasab ma'add, 333.
1506. There are several persons by the name 'Amr b. Dinar. The one meant here
was a jurist and mufti in Mecca who died in the year 126/743-44. See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 281; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 137; al-Razi, 582; Ibn Sa'd, V, 353-
54; al-Ja'di, 59-60; Badham or Badhan, who had been governor of the Yemen for
Khusraw and later for the Prophet, was killed during the latter's lifetime; see Ibn
Hajar, Isabah, I, 170.
1507. A Basran of Ansari origin, apparently of the first half of the eighth century,-
see Ibn 'Adi, HI, 1100-5. Al-Dhahabi, Mlzan, I, 409, records an odd piece of infor¬
mation: "He was a client of the Qurayzah and al-Nadir"; both were Jewish Medi-
nan tribes, the former exterminated, the latter exiled from Medina by the Prophet
more than a century before Sulaymaris time. Perhaps the reference is to former
ties of his family with the Jews in Medina.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 325
Yazid b. Abi Ziyad. 1508
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Abu Ishaq al-Sabi'i.
According to Yahya [b. Ma'in], his name was 'Amr, and his
father [was] Abu 'Amr.
Al-Ma'rur b. Suwayd, Abu Umayyah. 1509
Qays b. Abi Hazim, Abu 'Abdallah. 1510
Sayyar b. Abi Sayyar, who transmitted [traditions] from Qays b.
Abi Hazim. 1511
His kunyah was Abu Hamzah.
'Ubaydallah b. al-Akhnas. 1512
His kunyah was Abu Malik.
Habib b. Abi Thabit. 1513
His kunyah was Abu Yahya.
Yazid b. Kaysan, Abu Munir. 1514
1508. A client of the Hashimi 'Abdallah b. al-Harith who lived in al-Kufah and
died in the year 136/753-54. According to al-Dhahabi, Siyai, VI, 129-33, he was a
Shl'L See also idem, Mizan, HI, 310-11; Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rlkh, 44i ; Ibn Sa'd,
VI, 237; al-Sayrawan, 189.
1509. A Kdfan Successor, of the northern Asad tribe. He is said to have been
associated with 'Umar b. al-Khattab. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 287; idem,
Tabaqat, 152; Ibn Hibban, Mashahit, 175; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 80-81.
1510. A famous Successor and a member of the Bajllah tribe who lived in al-
Kufah and died in the year 94/712-13 (there are other versions). See Khallfah b.
Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 321,• idem, Tabaqat, 151-52; Ibn Hibban, Mashahit, 164.
1511. A Kufan transmitter He is often confused with another person by the
same name whose kunyah was Abu al-Hakam. See Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VI, 421; al-
MizzI, Tahdhib, XII, 315-17.
1512. A client of the Azd (there are other versions), a Kufan of the mid-eighth
century. See Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VII, 147; Ibn Abi Hatim, n/2, 307.
1513. A client of the Banu Asad in al-Kufah who died in the year 119/737. See
Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 364; idem, Tabaqat, 159; Ibn Hibban, Mashahit, 174.
1514. Read Munayn for Munir. An alternative kunyah: Abu Isma'il. His tribal
affiliation is given as Yashkuri or Aslami, and he was a Kufan. See Ibn Hibban,
Thiqat, VII, 628; cf. 627: there is probably a confusion between two persons here.
See also Ibn 'Adi, VII, 2736-37; al-MizzI, Tahdhib, XXXII, 230-32.
326
Biographies
Jabalah b. Suhaym, Abu Suwayrah. 1515
Isma'il b. Abi Khalid, Abu 'Abdallah. 1516
Yazid al-Faqir, Abu 'Uthman. 1517
Al-Walld b. Muslim. 1518
Khalid al-Hadhdha’ transmitted [traditions] from him. [His
kunyah was] Abu Bishr.
[2556] Da’ud b. Abi Hind, Abu Bakr. 1519
Ja'far b. Maymun, Abu al-'Aw warn. 1520
'Asim al-Jahdari, Abu al-Mujashshir. 1521
Iyas b. Mu'awiyah, Abu Wathilah. 1522
1515. A client of the Shayban, a branch of the Bakr b. Wa’il. He lived in Iraq and
died during the caliphate of Hisham. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta'rikh, 386; idem,
Tabaqat, i6i ; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 170.
1516. An important traditionist, a client of the Bajilah, who died in al-Kufah in
the year 145/762-63. Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 450; idem, Tabaqat, 167; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahii, 178; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 211; al-Safadi, IX, 115.
1 517 - Yazid b. Suhayb al-Kufi. An early transmitter of the first half of the eighth
century. See Ibn Sa'd, VI, 213; al-Dulabl, n, 28; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 535.
r 5 r 8. A Basran Successor of the Tamlml clan the Banu al-'Anbar, of the first half
of the eighth century. He must not be confused with the much more famous person
of the same name, whose kunyah was Abu al-'Abbas (see Mustafa, I, 129). See Ibn
Hibban, Thiqat, VII, 554; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, IH, 276.
1519. A client of the northern Qushayr; seelbnHazm, Jamhaiat, 289. He was of
KhurasanI origin, a hafiz, Qur’an reader and commentator, and a mufti. He lived in
Sarakhs and al-Basrah and died in the year 138/755-56 (there are other versions).
See Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 20; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, HI, 177; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh,
445; idem, Tabaqat, 218; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 238; Ibn al-Nadim, I, 75, n, 979;
Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 2ir ; al-Sayrawan, 86, 229; Nuwayhid, I, 181-82.
1520. Or, Abu 'All. A Basran Tamlml transmitter of the first half of the eighth
century. See Ibn 'Adi, II, 562; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, II, 93; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VI,
t35-
1521. 'Asim b. al-'Ajjaj orb. Abi al-Sabah (there are other versions of the name); a
Basran Qur’an reader who died in the year 129/746-47. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta’iikh, 411; idem, Tabaqat, 214; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 152; al-Dhahabi, Mizan,
II, 4; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 349.
1522. Of the northern Muzaynah tribe,- see Ibn Hazm, Jamhaiat, 203. He was
judge of al-Basrah for 'Umar II and died after the year 120/738. See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 330-31; idem, Tabaqat, 212; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 241; Waki',
I, 312-74-
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 327
Abu al-Qamus, Zayd b. 'All. 1523
'Amr b. Shu'ayb. 1524
His kunyah was Abu Ibrahim.
'Ata’ b. al-Sa’ib. 1525
His kunyah was Abu Zayd.
Harun b. 'Antarah, Abu 'Amr. 1526
Mis'ar [b. Kidam], Abu Salamah.
Al-Aswad b. Qays, Abu Qays. 1527
Hafs b. Ghiyath, Abu 'Umar. 1528
'Imran b. 'Uyaynah, Abu Muhammad. 1529
Al-Nadr b. Abi Maryam, Abu Labid. 1530
1523. There are various versions of his tribal affiliation ('Abd al-Qays, Jarm, or
Kindah). He was a Successor and must not be confused with the fifth Shl'I imam.
See Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, IV, 249; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, X, 100-1.
1524. A descendant of the Qurashi Companion and statesman 'Amr b. al-'As,
who died in the year 08/736 in al-Ta’if. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 363;
idem, Tabaqat, 286; al-Zubayri, 411.
1525. His kunyah is variously given as Abu Zayd, Abu Yazid, and Abu al-Sa’ib.
Some call him a Kufan, whereas according to others he originated in Medina and
lived in Marw. He was a client of the northern tribe Thaqif, a hafiz, and a Qur’an
reader and died in the year 136/753—54. See Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VII, 251-52; al-
Dhahabi, Siyar, VI, rro-r4; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 5r3 ; al-Sayrawan, 08; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 164; Nuwayhid, I, 346.
1526. Or Abu 'Abd al-Rahman or Abu Waki'. He was a Kufan traditionist, ac¬
cused of lying and inventing traditions. See al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XXX, roo-2; al-
Dhahabi, Mizan, EH, 247.
1527. A Kufan transmitter of the first half of the eighth century. See Ibn Hibban,
Thiqat, IV, 32; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, I, 298.
1528. Of the Nakha' tribe. A hafiz and judge in al-Kufah and Baghdad who died
in the year 194/809-10 (there are other versions). See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iTkh,
5 or ; idem, Tabaqat, ijo-, Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 272; al-Sayrawan, 80; Ibn
Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 222-23; Waki', HI, r84-88.
1529. A Kufan of the middle or late eighth century, brother of the famous tradi¬
tionist Sufyan b. 'Uyaynah, of the northern Hilal tribe. See Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VII,
240, Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib, VUE, 120-2T; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, II, 278 (read 'Uyaynah
for 'Ayyah).
r530. Read Llnah for Labid. He apparently lived in the first half of the eighth
century; see Ibn Abi Hatim, IV/i, 476.
328 Biographies
[He was] a Kufan, and the name of his father, Abu Maryam, was
Tahman.
'Ubayd b. Nudaylah, Abu Mu'awiyah. 1531
Da’ud b. Abi Hind.
His kunyah was Abu Bakr, and the name of his father, Abu
Hind, was Dinar.
'Asim b. Sulayman al-Ahwal. 1532
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Rahman, and he was a client of the
Banu Tamim.
Al-Nahhas b. Qahm. 1533
His kunyah was Abu al-Khattab.
[2557] Haywah b. Shurayh. 1534
His kunyah was Abu Yazid al-Tujibi.
Thawr b. Yazid. 1535
His kunyah was Abu Khalid.
1531. Orb. Nadlah. He was a Kufan Qur’an reader of the Khuza'ah who died in
the year 74/693-94. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 17i; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh,
271; idem, Tabaqat, 150; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 498.
1532. A client of the Tamim, a hafiz, who was overseer of measures and scales
(muhtasib ) in al-Kufah for the caliph al-Mansur, then a judge in al-Mada’in. He
died in the year 141 or 142/759-60. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 218, 325; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahir, 57; Waki', HI, 132; al-Sayrawan, 105; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif,
222.
1533. A Basran transmitter and storyteller [qass], of the mid-eighth century. See
Ibn 'Adi, VII, 2522-23; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, III, 243.
1534. An Egyptian hafiz, of the Kindi group Tujib (called after the ancestress),
see Ibn Hazm, Jamharat, 429-30. He died in the year 158/774-75 (there are other
versions). See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 296; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 298; al-
Sayrawan, 82. His kunyah is given in all these sources as Abu Zur'ah.
1535. A Himyari (Kala'I) who lived in Hims. He was considered trustworthy by
some, but others accused him of being a Qadarl, and there is a report that he was
driven out of Hims. He died in Jerusalem in the year 153/770. See Abu Zur'ah, 359—
60, 398, 712-13; Khallfah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 315; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 220-
21. He must not be confused with Thawr b. Zayd; see al-Tabari, Ta’nkh, 1 ,1329, n.
d.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 32,9
Al-Layth b. Sa'd. 1536
His kunyah was Abu al-Harith.
Rishdln b. Sa'd. 1537
His kunyah was Abu al-Hajjaj.
'Isa b. Yunus b. Abi Ishaq al-Sabi'L 1538
His kunyah was Abu 'Amr.
Muhammad b. Yusuf al-Firyabi. 1539
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Adam b. Abi Iyas. 1540
His kunyah was Abu al-Hasan.
'Abd al-Majld b. 'Abd al-'Aziz b. Abi Rawwad. 1541
His kunyah was Abu 'Abd al-Hamld.
Sufyan b. 'Uyaynah.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
1536. A client of the rather insignificant northern tribe Fahm ; see Ibn Hazm,
Jamhaiat, 243. He was one of the leading jurists in Egypt and died in the year
I 7s/79 I ~92. SeeKhoury, "al-Laythb. Sa'd"; idem, 'Abd Allah Ibn LahTa, 173-77;
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 296; Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 303; al-Sayrawan, 145;
Shihatah.
1537. An Egyptian transmitter, of the Quda'ah confederation, also known as
Abu al-Hajjaj al-Misri, who died in the year 188/804. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Ta'rikh, 386; idem, Tabaqat, 297; al-Dulabl, 1 ,144; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, I, 338-39.
1538. A Kufan, grandson of the famous jurist Abu Ishaq of the southern Sabi' (a
branch of the Hamdan); he died in the year 191/806-7. See Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 317-18; Ibn Hibban, Mashahh, 295.
1539. A client of the Dabbah who originated in Firyab, a village near Balkh and
moved to Caesarea in Palestine, where he died in the year 212/827-28. He was
associated with Sufyan al-Thawri. See al-Sam'ani, IV, 376; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, III,
151; Abu Zur'ah, 26, 280; Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasar, XXIII, 371-74.
1540. A client of the Tamim who originated in Khurasan then settled in
Baghdad, later in Palestine, and died in the year 220/835. See Ibn Hibban, Thiqat,
VUI, 134; Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 186.
1541. A client of the Azd (or of the Azdi chief al-Muhallab b. Abi Sufrah), who
lived in Mecca and died in the year 206/821-22. He is said to have been a Murji’ and
a forger of Prophetic traditions. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 284; Ibn Sa'd, V,
367; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, II, 145-47; idem, Siyar, IX, 434-36.
330
Biographies
Al-Fudayl b. 'Iyad. 1542
His kunyah was Abu 'All.
'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Miswar b.
Makhramah. 1543
His kunyah was Abu Ja'far.
Husayn b. Zayd b. 'All b. Husayn b. 'All b. Abi Talib. 1544
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Hilal b. Khabbab. 1545
His kunyah was Abu al-'Ala’.
Al-Hasan b. Qutaybah, Abu 'All. 1546
[2558] 'Abbadb. 'Abbad al-Muhallabi. 1547
His kunyah was Abu Mu'awiyah.
1542. Of the Tamlml clan Yarbu', an ascetic and hafiz. He originated in Samar-
qand and lived in al-Kufah and later in Mecca, where he died in the year 187/803.
His tomb became a place of pilgrimage. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 493;
idem, Tabaqat, 284; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 235; Ibn Sa'd, V, 366; Abu Nu'aym,
Vm, 84-140; al-Sayrawan, 139-40.
1543. A descendant of the Qurashi Companion al-Miswar. He was a jurist,
mufti, and expert on the campaigns of Muhammad ( maghazi ). Al-Waqidi obtained
information from him; see al-Waqidi, 1. He lived in Medina, participated in the
revolt of Muhammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyyah in the year 145/762, and died in the year
170/786-87. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 275; al-Dhahabl, Mizan, II, 28;
idem, Siyai, VII, 328-30.
1544. Son of the fifth Shi'I imam (according to the Zaydiyyah), who lived in
Medina and apparently later in al-Kufah. He participated in the revolt of Muham¬
mad al-Nafs al-Zakiyyah but, it seems, was reconciled with the 'Abbasids, judging
by the fact that his daughter was married to the caliph al-Mahdi (d. 169/785). See
van Arendonck, 61 n. 4; al-Tabari, Ta'rikh, IE, 258; al-Amin, XXVI, 81-91; al-
Safadi, XII, 367.
1545. A client of Zayd b. Suhan, who was a Companion of the Prophet from the
'Abd al-Qays tribe. Hilal was a Kufan or Basran but settled in al-Mada’in, where he
died in the year 144/761-62. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 325; al-Dhahabl,
Mizan, III, 259-60; Ibn 'Adi, VTI, 2580-81.
1546. A transmitter from al-Mada’in, of the second half of the eighth century.
See Ibn Abi Hatim, I/2, 33-34; Ibn 'Adi, II, 739.
1547. A grandson of al-Muhallab b. Abi Sufrah, the Azdi leader. He originated in
al-Basrah, settled in Baghdad, and died in the year 177/793-94 (there are other
versions). See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 254; idem, Thiqat, VII, i6i> Ibn Hajar, Tah-
dhib, V, 84; al-Dhahabl, Siyai, VUI, 294-96. According to Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 71, he
practiced medicine.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 331
Faraj b. Fadalah. 1548
His kunyah was Abu Fadalah.
Ismail b. Ja'far b. Abi Kathir al-Madanl. 1549
His kunyah was Abu Ibrahim.
Muhammad b. al-Hasan, the companion of Abu Hanlfah.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
'All b. al-Ja'd! 550
His kunyah was Abu al-Hasan.
Surayj b. al-Nu'man, the pearl trader. 1551
His kunyah was Abu al-Husayn.
Bishr b. al-Harith al-'Abid (the ascetic). 1552
His kunyah was Abu Nasr.
Al-Haytham b. Kharijah. 1553
His kunyah was Abu Ahmad.
Yahya b. Yusuf al-Zimmi. 1554
1548. A Himsi traditionist, who was appointed head of the treasury (bayt al¬
ma 1 ) during al-Mahdi's caliphate and died in the year 176/792-93. See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta’ilkh, 474; idem, Tabaqat, 316; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XXXin, 155-64,- Ibn
Man?ur, Mukhtasar, XX, 263-64. See also El'ad, n. 152.
1549. A hafiz and Qur'an reader of Ansar! descent who died in the year 108/726-
27. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 327; Ibn Hibban, Mashahli, 224; al-
Sayrawan, 65.
1550. A client of the Banu Hashim or of the caliph Abu al-'Abbas' wife, Umm
Salamah. He was a hafiz and died in Baghdad in the year 230/844-45. See Khalifah
b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 329; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 229; al-Sayrawan, 131.
1551. A Khurasan! who lived in Baghdad and died in the year 217/832-33. See
Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VIII, 306-7,- al-Dhahabl, Mizan, I, 270; idem, Siyai, X, 219-20.
1552. A famous Baghdadi ascetic, also known as Bishr al-Hafi (the barefooted),
who died in the year 227/841-42. SeelbnSa'd, VII/2, 83; al-Qumml, E, 152-55,- al-
Dhahabi, Siyaz, X, 469-77; Abu Nu'aym, VIE, 336-60.
1553. He originated in Khurasan, then lived in Baghdad and in Syria, and died in
the year 227/841-42. See Ibn Sa'd, VE, 83; al-Khatib al-Baghdadi, XTV, 58-59.
1554. He originated in Zimm, a village in Khurasan, and lived in Baghdad, where
he died in the year 225/839-40 (there are other versions). See Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 87
(read al-Zimmi for al-Raqqi)> al-Khatib al-Baghdadi, XIV, 166-67; al-Mizzi, Tah¬
dhib, XXXE, 60-62.
332, Biographies
His kunyah was Abu Zakariya’.
Khalaf b. Hisham. 1555
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Sulayman b. Mihran al-A'mash.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Isma'Il b. Abi Khalid.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Mujalid b. Sa'Id. 1556
His kunyah was Abu 'Uthman.
Layth b. Abi Sulaym. 1557
His kunyah was Abu Bakr.
[2559] The Kunyahs of People of Subsequent Generations
Who Were Known by Their Names, Rather than by
Their Kunyahs
'Umar b. 'Abd al-'Aziz b. Marwan b. al-Hakam. 1558
His kunyah was Abu Hafs.
1555. A transmitter and one of the ten most famous Qur’an readers. He lived in
Baghdad and died in the year 229/843-44, reportedly while in hiding from the
Jahmi sect. See Ibn Sa'd, VII/2, 87; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 272-74; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma’arif,
231; al-Sayrawan, 228 (read Hisham for Hashim].
1556. A transmitter of traditions, historical reports, and genealogies who died in
the year 143 or 144/761-62. See Khalifahb. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 447; idem, Tabaqat,
166; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 243; Abu Zayd, 31.
1557. A client of [the family of] Mu'awiyah's brother 'Anbasah who lived in al-
Kufah and died in the year 143/760-61. See Khallfah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 447;
idem, Tabaqat, 166-67; Ibn Sa'd, VI, 243; Ibn 'Adi, VI, 2105-8.
1558. The eighth Umayyad caliph (99-101/717-20), reputed for his piety and
just reforms, the only Umayyad recognized as rashid, i.e., a just ruler following in
the footsteps of the four first caliphs. See Hawting, Frist Dynasty, 76-81. "'Omar b.
'Abd al-'Aziz," EI l , VI, 977-79 (K. V. Zettersteen); Gibb, "Fiscal Rescript"; Ibn
Hibban, Mashahri, 283; al-Ajurri; Ibn al-fawzl, Sri at-, Ibn Manzur, Mukhtasaz, XIX,
98-128.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 333
Hamzah b. 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr. 1559
His kunyah was Abu 'Umarah after his son 'Umarah.
'Amir b. 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr. 1560
His kunyah was Abu al-Harith.
Muhammad b. Ka'b al-Qurazi.
His kunyah was Abu Hamzah.
Ya'qub b. Abi Salamah, the client of the family of al-Munkadir,
of the [Qurashi clan] Taym b. Murrah. 1561
His kunyah was Abu Yusuf. He is the [one called] al-Majishun,
and his brother and offspring were thus called after him. The name
of his father, Abu Salamah, was Dinar.
Muhammad b. Muslim b. 'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah b. Shi-
hab. 1562
His kunyah was Abu Bakr.
His brother 'Abdallah b. Muslim. 1563
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Muhammad b. al-Munkadir.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
15 59 - Renowned for his generosity but also for his weakness and stupidity. His
father, the rival caliph 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr, appointed him governor of al-Basrah
but dismissed him after a short while. See al-Zubayrl, 240; Muhammad Ibn Habib,
Munammaq, 381; al-Baladhuri, Ansab, V, 256-58 and passim; Ibn Hibban, Mash-
ahii, 119.
1560. Another son of 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr, known for his piety, generosity,
and knowledge of tradition and religious law, who lived in Medina and died in the
year 121/739. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, no ; Ibn Qudamah, 260; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 368; idem, Tabaqat, 258.
1561. A famous jurist who lived in Baghdad and died in the year 164/780-8 1, the
caliph al-Mahdi himself said the ritual prayer over his bier. See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 268; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 130; Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'arif, 203.
1562. That is, al-Zuhri.
1563. He lived in Medina and died before the year 124/741-42. See Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Tabaqat, 261; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 59-60; al-MizzI, Tahdhib, XVI,
129-30.
334
Biographies
Isma'il b. 'Amr b. Sa'id b. al-'As. 1564
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
'Abdallah b. 'Urwahb. al-Zubayrb. al-'Awwam. 1565
His kunyah was Abu Bakr.
Yahya b. 'Urwah b. al-Zubayr. 1566
His kunyah was Abu 'Urwah.
Hisham b. 'Urwah b. al-Zubayr. 1567
His kunyah was Abu al-Mundhir.
'Abdallah b. Hasan b. Hasan b. 'All b. Abi Talib.
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Aqll b. Abi Talib. 1568
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
'Abayah b. Rifa'ah b. Rafi' b. Khadij. 1569
His kunyah was Abu Rifa'ah.
1564. Of the Umayyad family, son of 'Amr b. Sa'id al-Ashdaq, who rebelled
against and was killed by the caliph 'Abd al-Malik; see al-Tabari, Ta’rikh, II, 783-
89. Isma'il participated in that event, then lived in Medina, shunning politics, and
died at the beginning of the 'Abbasid caliphate. See Ibn Qudamah, 196-97; Ibn
Manzur, Mukhtasai, TV, 373-74.
1565. A grandson of the close Companion of the Prophet al-Zubayr b.
al-'Awwam. 'Abdallah lived in Medina and died toward the end of the Umayyad
caliphate. He was reputed for feeding the poor during years of drought. See Khalifah
b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 267; Ibn Qudamah, 264-65; al-MizzI, Tahdhib, XV, 294-95.
1566. Brother of the aforementioned 'Abdallah and one of the most
distinguished among ‘Urwah's sons. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 267; Ibn
Qudamah, 265; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, VII, 593; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib, XXXI, 466-71.
1567. Brother of the aforementioned Yahya and 'Abdallah, a jurist and hafiz, one
of the leading religious figures in Medina. He moved to Baghdad, where he died in
the year 146/763-64; the caliph al-Mansur himself said the ritual prayer over his
bier. See F. Sezgin, I, 88-89; Ibn al-Nadim, II, 1005; Ibn Qudamah, 265; Khalifah b.
Khayyat, Ta'nkh, 365,451 ; idem, Tabaqat, 267; Ibn I.Iibban, Mashdhh, 130-31 ; al-
Sayrawan, 182.
1568. A member of the Hashimi family, he lived in Medina and died after the
year 140/757-58, or before 145/762. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 258; al-
Dhahabi, Mizdn, II, 68; Ibn 'Adi, IV, 1466-68.
1569. A grandson of the Ansar! Companion, Rafi', who lived in Medina. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 258; Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 281; al-Mizzi, Tahdhib,
XIV, 268-69.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 335
Bukayr b. 'Abdallah b. al-Ashajj, the client of al-Miswar b.
Makhramah.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
His brother Ya'qub b. 'Abdallah b. al-Ashajj. 1570
His kunyah was Abu Yusuf.
Wahb b. Kaysan.
His kunyah was Abu Nu'aym ; he was the client of 'Abdallah b.
al-Zubayr.
Zayd b. Aslam. 1571
His kunyah was Abu Usamah.
His brother Khalid b. Aslam. 1572
His kunyah was Abu Thawr.
Da’ud b. al-Husayn, the client of 'Amr b. 'Uthman b. 'Affan. 1573
His kunyah was Abu Sulayman.
Rabi'ah b. Abi 'Abd al-Rahman.
The name of his father, Abu 'Abd al-Rahman, was Farrukh. The
kunyah of Rabi'ah was Abu 'Uthman.
Safwan b. Sulaym.
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
1570. A client of the QurashI clan Makhzum (or of the Ashja'), who lived in
Medina and Egypt and died in a maritime raid in the year 122/740. Al-Dhahabl,
Siyai, VIII, 174, says he was a jurist. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 298; idem, Thiqat,
VII, 641; Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, XI, 342.
1571. A client of [the family of j 'Umarb. al-Khattab, a Qur’an reader, and inter¬
preter, said to have used his personal judgment ( la’y ) in his interpretations. He died
in the year 136/753-54. He must not be confused with the Companion of the
Prophet of the same name. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 230; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, I,
361; Ibn al-Jazari, I, 29 6; al-Sayrawan, 232.
1572. Also a client of [the family of] 'Umar b. al-Khattab who lived in Medina
and transmitted to Ibn Shihab al-Zuhri (d. 124/741-42), among others. See Ibn
Hibban, Thiqat, IV, 198; al-Mizzi, Tahdhlb, VIE, 28-29.
1573. A jurist who lived in Medina and died in the year 235/752-53. He was
suspected of holding KharijI or Qadari views. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 437;
idem, Tabaqat, 259; Ibn Hibban, Mashahir, 215; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, I, 317; idem,
Siyar, VI, 106.
[2-560]
336
Biographies
Salih b. Kaysan. 1574
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Muhammad b. Abi Harmalah. 1575
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah; he was a client of the Banu
'Amir b. Lu’ayy.
Yahya b. Sa'id al-AnsarL 1576
His kunyah was Abu Yazid.
Musab. 'Uqbah. 1577
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
Asid b. Abi Asid, the client of Abu Qatadah al-Ansarl. 1578
His kunyah was Abu Ibrahim.
Salih b. Muhammad b. Za’idah al-Laythi, a genuine member of
the Layth. 1579
His kunyah was Abu Waqid.
1574. A client of the northern Banu 'Amir (there are other versions) and an
important Medinan jurist. He served as instructor to Umayyad princes and died
after the year 140/757-58. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 216; Khalifah b. Khayyat,
Tabaqat, 263; Muhammad Ibn Habib, Muhabbar, 477; al-Sayrawan, 103.
1575. A client of the Qurashi family of Huwaytib b. 'Abd al-'Uzza who lived in
Medina and died after the year 130/747-48. See Ibn Hibban, Thiqat, V, 365; al-
MizzI, Tahdhlb, XXV, 47-48.
1576. Many people bore this name, but only one Ansari. His kunyah was, how¬
ever, Abu Sa'id (none of these people bore the kunyah Abu Yazid; see al-Bandari
and Hasan, IV, 208-9). He was a mufti and judge in Medina for the Umayyads, then
in al-Hashimiyyah for the second 'Abbasid caliph, al-Mansur. He died in the year
144/761-62. See al-Khatib al-Baghdadi, XIV, 101-7; al-Dhahabi, Siyar, V, 468-81.
1577. A client of the Zubayr family, a hdfiz, and one of the earliest historians.
He lived in Medina and died in the year 141/758-59 (there are other versions). See
F. Sezgin, I, 286-87; Duri, Rise of Historical Writing, 32-33 (and n. /); Krenkow,
"Note"; Mustafa, I, 158-59; al-Sayrawah, 177; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 267;
Ibn Hibban, Mashahlr, 131.
1578. According to Ibn Hajar, Tahdhlb, I, 300, his kunyah was Abu Ayyub, and
he died during the caliphate of al-Mansur (136-58/754-75). There is a confusion
between him and another man of the same name, nicknamed al-Barrad; see also
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 253.
1579. That is, not a client or a confederate. He was a Medinan, also known as
Abu Waqid al-Laythi, who took part in the jihad in Syria (against the Byzantines)
and died after the year 145/762-63. See al-Dhahabi, Mlzan, I, 459; Ibn Manzur,
Mukhtasar, XI, 38.
Excerpts from The Supplement to the Supplemented 337
'Abd al-Rahman b. Harmalah al-Aslaml. 1580
His kunyah was Abu Harmalah.
Ishaq b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Farwah. 1581
His kunyah was Abu Sulayman. It was reported that the name
of this Abu Farwah was Aswad b. 'Ami.
His brother 'Abd al-Haklm b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Farwah. 1582
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
'Amr b. Abi 'Amr, the client of al-Muttalib b. 'Abdallah [b. al-
Muttalib] b. Hantab al-Makhzumi. 1583
His kunyah was Abu 'Uthman, and the name of his father, Abu
'Amr, was Maysarah.
Al-Muhajir b. Yazid, a client of the family of Abu Dhi’b al- [2561]
'Amiri. 1584
His kunyah was Abu 'Abdallah.
Bukayr b. Mismar. 1585
His kunyah was Abu Muhammad.
'Abdallah b. Yazid b. Qantash al-HudhalL 1586
1580. A Medinan scholar of the northern tribe Aslam who died in the year
145/762-63. See Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 218; Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 270.
1581. A client of [the family of] 'Uthman b. 'Affan or al-Zubayr who lived in
Medina and died in the year 144/76r-62. See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’iikh, 448;
idem, Tabaqat, 266; Ibn Hibban, Majiuhin, I, 131-32.
1582. A client of [the family of] 'Uthman who died in the year 156/772-73. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’rikh, 457; idem, Tabaqat, 272 ; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, nz.
1583. A Medinan transmitter who died during the caliphate of al-Mansur
(136-58/754-75). See Khalifah b. Khayyat, Tabaqat, 266; Ibn 'Adi, V, r768-69; Ibn
Hajar, Tahdhib, VUI, 723. Hantab was one of the leading noble QurashI families in
Medina; see Ibn Qudamah, 390.
r 5 84. I could not trace this person. The family of Abu Dhi’b was Qurashi, of the
clan 'Amir b. Lu’ayy,- see Ibn Qutaybah, Ma'aiif, 213.
1585. A client of (the family of) Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas, a Medinan transmitter who
died in the year 133/770. He is confused with a person of the same name. See
Khalifah b. Khayyat, Ta’nkh, 455; idem, Tabaqat, 270; Ibn Hibban, Mashahii, 210;
idem, Thiqat, VI, 105; idem, Majruhin, I, 108, 194; al-Dhahabi, Mizan, I, 163.
1586. A Medinan accused of unbelief (zandaqah), see al-Dhahabi, Mizan, II, 88.
Ibn 'Adi, IV, T550 has Qantas.
338
Biographies
His kunyah was Abu Yazid. He transmitted [traditions] from
Anas b. Malik and [Sa'id] b. al-Musayyab.
End of the excerpts from the book The Supplement to
the Supplemented, Praise be to God, Lord of the
Heavens and the Earth, may He bless His Messenger,
our master Muhammad, and his family
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3S»
Ad al-'Az[z
Abd al- Aziz
358
Abd al-Hamid b. Jabayr
Abd al-Hamid b. Jubayr
359
Abd al-Raman b. Abdallah
Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abdallah
359
Abd al-Raman b. Abi
Abd al-Rahman b. Abi
359
Awf
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf
360
Abdallah b. Ahamad
Abdallah b. Ahmad
360
'All 195 ,
Ali * 19 s,
362
Abu Bakr b. Abd al-Raman
Abu Bakr b. Abd al-Rahman
362
Abu Burdah, rother
Abu Burdah, brother
363
Abu Mabad
Abu Ma'bad
364
Abu Maryam al-Filastini
Abu Maryam al-Filasfini *
364
Abu Ma'attib
Abu Mu attib
364
Abu Muslim al-Khurasanmi
Abu Muslim al-Khurasani
364
Abu Na'aym
Abu Nu'aym
364
Abu al-Sal ib
Abu al-Sa’ib
364
Abu Sali
Abu Salih
364
Abu Salih, Sumay’
Abu Salih, Sumay'
364
Abu ai-Sha'tha
Abu al-Sha'tha’
36S
Abu Abaydah
Abu Ubaydah
365
Abu Uthman
Abu 'Uthman
365
Abu Yahyaa
Abu Yahya
365
'Abi
'Adi
366
a'ldn
a'lam
367
All b. Zayd b. Ju an
All b. Zayd b. Jud an
367
Alqamah b. Qays al-Nakhai
Alqamah b. Qays al-Nakha i
367
'Ammar b. Zurayq
Ammar b. Ruzayq
367
Amr b. All
’Amr b. "Ali
368
Anbash
Anbasah
368
Aqil
Aqil
369
'Atikah
Atikah
370
Aws b. Miy'ar
Aws b. Mi yar
370
Bahr b. Kaniz al-Sqaa’
Bahr b. Kaniz al-Saqqa’
370
al-Baqarhi, Abi 'All, Makhlad b. Ja'far xviii
al-Baqarhi, Abu ’Ali, Makhlad b. Ja'
371
Bilal b. Rabahh
Bilal b. Rabah
371
blood revente
blood revenge
372
clients, clients
client, clients
372
Jadam. See
Jahdam. See
373
al-Muabbar
al-Muhabbar
373
duel 33
duel 23 n. 104 , 33
375
badith al-kisa'
hadith al-kisa'
375
50 k
SO
375
Hammad 97
Hammam 97
376
Harithah b. al-Harirh
Harithah b. al-Harith
376
Harithah
Harithah
378
al-Hurr b. al-Sayyah
al-Hurr b. al-Sayyah
378
al-Husayn b. 'Abdallah
al-Husayn b. Abdallah
378
al-Husayn b. Abi al-Husayn
al-Husayn b. Abi al-Husayn
378
al-Husayn b. All
al-Husayn b. Ali
378
al-Husayn b. Zayd
al-Husayn b. Zayd
378
al-Husayn b. Mu allim
al-Husayn b. Mu'allim
379
Mamud
Mahmud
380
'ihram
ihram
380
Ibrahim,!
Ibrahim
381
Iyad
Iyad
381
Ja'far b. Abi Sufyamn
Ja'far b. Abi Sufyan
381
Mahmud b. Muhammad
Ja'far b. Mahmud b. Muhammad
381
Jamil b. Marty had
Jamil b. Marthad
381
Jebril
Jibril
382
Khalid b. Sa'id b. al- As
Khalid b. Sa'id b. al-'As
385
Malik b. A'sur
Malik b. A'sur
T-
i °5
385
385
386
386
387
387
387
387
388
388
389
389
389
389
390
39 °
390
39 °
39 °
39 °
39 °
39 1
391
393, line 3
393
393
393
393
394
394
394
394
394
395
396
396
397
398
398
398
400
400
400
401
402
402
402
4°3
4°3
404
4°4
404
404
405
405
406
386
402
ivi uiai
Mawsu'at atraf al-traf
Maymunah bt. al-arith
Miqsam, client of abdallah
Mua'dh
Mubarak b. Faalah
al-Mughirah b. Abd a 1 -Raman
Muhammad b. Abdallah b. Abdallah
Muhammad b. Amr b. Abd al-Raman
Muhammad b. Isaq
Muhammad b. Jubayr b. Mu'im
Muhammad b. Mujammi'k
Muhammad b. Mulayh
Mulaykan
al-Mundhir b. Abi Usayd al-Saa'idi
Murji'ah
Murrah Murrah
Musa b. Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Raman
Musa b. Aqbah
Mu%FFs'ab
Mu'ab
Mutarrif b. Abdallah al-Yasaarl
nawh
Filastin
2:23
al-Qurtubl, 'Arib b. Sad
Quess
al-Rabi' b. Khataym
'Abd al-Raman
Rubayyi' bt. al-Nadtr
Ruqayyah bt. Abi Safiyyah
Sadaqah b. Khalid
sadaq
Sa'd b. Lu’ayy b. Ghalib
sahabah
Salim b. Abi Hafsah
Sarrar b. Muhammad b. Ismail
Sufyan
sannah
sunnah
tabaqat
Tujib
Ubaydah bt. Nabil
Ukashah’s
Umm 'Anmar
Umm Ishaq bt. Talhan
Umm al-Masakin
Uqayl
Wahb. b. Rabim ah
al-Walid II
Yahya b. Abi KathI
Ibn Ma'I
Yahya b. Ya'la al-Muaribi
Ya'Qub
Yunus b. Abd al-A la
Zaynab bt. Abi
Zur'ah bt. Mishrah
Mawsu'at a\iaf
Maymunah bt. al-Harith
Miqsam, client of Abdallah
Mu'adh
Mubarak b. Fadalah
al-Mughlrah b. Abd al-Rahman
Muhammad b. Abdallah
Muhammad b. Amr b. 'Abd al-Rahman
Muhammad b. Ishaq
Muhammad b. Jubayr b. Mut'im
Mujammi'
Mulayh
Mulaykah
al-Mundhir b. Abi Usayd al-Sa'idi
Murji’ah
Murrah
Musa b. Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Rahman
Musa b. 'Uqbah
Musab
Musab
Mutarrif b. 'Abdallah al-Yasari
nawh
Filastin
2:238
al-Qurtubl, Arib b. Sa'd
Quss
al-Rabr b. Khuthaym
'Abd al-Rahman
Rubayyi' bt. al-Nadir
Ruqayqah bt. Abi Sayfiyy
Sadaqah b. Khalid
$addq
Sa d b. Lu’ayy b. Ghalib
sahabah
Salim b. Abi Hafsah
Sarrar b. Muhammad b. Isma il
Sufyan
sunnah
sunnah
tabaqat
Tujib (tribal group)
Ubaydah bt. Nabil
Ukashah
Umm Anmar
Umm Ishaq bt. Jalhah
Umm al-Masakin
'Uqayl
Wahb b. Rabl'ah
al-Walid II
Yahya b. Abi Kathlr
Ibn Ma in
Yahya b. Ya'la al-Muharibl
Ya'qub
Yunus b. Abd al-A'la *
Zaynab bt. Abi
Zur'ah bt. Mishrah
Omissions
Mu'adh b. Abdallah’s paternal uncle rs3
Umm Kulthum bt. Asma' bt. Abi Bakr * 279
Index
$
The index includes all names of persons, places, and groups, as well as
technical terms, legal issues, and titles of books mentioned in the text.
Genealogical chains are not included.
Bold numbers indicate the places of the main entries, or definitions, of
the terms. Where a name or topic occurs in both the text and footnotes on
the same page, only the page number is given. An asterisk (*) indicates a
figure who is mentioned in the text only as a transmitter.
The definite article (al-, the) and the abbreviations b bt. (son of,
daughter of) are disregarded for the purpose and of alphabetization.
A
Aban * 203
Aban (tribal group) 254
Aban b. $alih * 146
Aban b. Taghlib * 230
Aban b. 'Uthman 59
Aban b. 'Uthman * 60
'Abayah b. Rifa’ah b. Rafi' 334
'Abbad b. 'Abbad al-Muhallabi 330
'Abbadb. 'Abdallah * 13
'Abbad b. al-'Awwam * 203
'Abbad b. Suhayb al-Kulaybl 324
'Abbadb. Tamlm * 132
al-'Abbas * 259, 293, 299
al-'Abbas b. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas 54
al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib 19, 20,
21, 24-25, 60, 62, 66, 95, 97, 98,
99 , hi, I 5S, 167, 185, 186, 194,
201, 202, 246 n. 1087, 254 n.
1124, 287
al-'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib * 64
al-'Abbas b. Abl Talib * 128, 131
al-'Abbas b. al-Fadl al-'Abdi * 224
al-'Abbas b. Ja'far b. Muhammad 249
al-'Abbas b. Mirdas 82
al-'Abbas b. Muhammad * 214, 236,
249, 280
al-'Abbas b. Muhammad b. 'All 236
al-'Abbas b. Rab'Iah b. al-Harith 198
al-'Abbas b. Sahl * 190
al-'Abbas b. al-Walid * 160, 261, 279
al-'Abbas b. al-Walid al-Bayruti * 132,
148
al-'Abbas al-Duri * 238
'Abbasid army 234 n. 1017
'Abbasid movement 232 n. 1007, 235
nn. 1023, 1026, 236 n. 1029
358
Index
'Abbasid period xvi
'Abbasid propaganda 234 n. 1018, 236
n. 1031, 312 n. 1440
'Abbasids, 'Abbasid dynasty 24 n. 106,
25 n. ri3, 54 n. 242, 56 n. 241, 74,
98 n. 468, 155 n. 697, 234, 235,
236 n. 1031, 245, 246 nn. 1087,
1089, 249 nn. 1103, 1104, 277 n.
1257 , 330 n. 1544, 334 n. 1564
'Abd al-Akram * 138
'Abd al-A'Ia b. Mushir. See Abu
Mushir. See Abu Mushir
'Abd al-A'Ia b. Wasil *155
'Abd al-Ashhal (a clan of the Aws) 30
n. t38, 133, 136, 286 n. r302, 290
n. 2313, 302
'Abd al-'AzIz b. Abi Hazim * 160
'Abd al-'AzIz b. Abi Rawwad * 2r8
'Abd al-'Aziz b. al-funda'i * 165
'Ad al-'Aziz b. Marwan 319
'Abd al-'Aziz b. Muhammad * 187,
209
'Abd al-'Aziz b. Muhammad. See al-
Durawardi
'Abd al-'Aziz b. 'Ubaydallah * 133
'Abd al-'Aziz b. 'Uqbah * 58
'Abd al-Dar b. Qu'sayy (a clan of the
Quraysh) 67 n. 309, 79, 95 n. 461,
106, 168, 277 n. 1255
'Abd al-Hakim b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Far-
wah * 214
'Abd al-Hamid b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Far-
wah 337
'Abd al-Hamid b. Bahram * 170
'Abd al-Hamid b. Bashmir * 238
'Abd al-Hamid b. Bayan al-Qannad *
114
'Abd al-Hamid b. Imran *116
'Abd al-Hamid b. Jabayr b. Shaybah *
204
'Abd al-Harith b. Zuhrah, (a family of
the Quraysh) no
'Abd al-Ka'bah b. al-'Awwam r69,
199
'Abd Khayr b. Yazid al-Khaywani 151,
275, 321
'Abd al-Majid b. 'Abd al-'Aziz 329
'Abd al-Malik b. 'Abd al-'Aziz. See Ibn
Jurayj
'Abd al-Malik b. Abd al-Rahman *
279, 280
'Abd al-Malik b. Abi Bashir * 152
'Abd Malik b. Abi Mahdhurah 48
'Abd al-Malik b. al-Husayn * 199
'Abd al-Malik b. Marwan, the caliph
51 n. 227, 59 n. 263, 60, 95, 105 n.
499/ n3/ 2,10, 212, 213 n. 918,
232, 299 n. 1359, 306 nn. 1400,
1401, 313 n. 1445, 317 n. 1469,
318, 319 n. 1475, 334 n. 1564
'Abd al-Malik b. Muslim 313 n. 1442
'Abd al-Malik b. Muhammad b. al-
Munkadir 240
Abd al-Malik b. Sal' *151
'Abd al-Malik b. 'Ubayd * 175
'Abd al-Malik b. ‘Umayr * 108, ir4,
157
'Abd al-Malik b. Wahb al-Madhhiji *
152
'Abd al-Malik b. Zayd * 38
'Abd Manaf (a clan of the Quraysh) 78
'Abd al-Mu’min b. Khalid al-Hanafi *
2r8
'Abd al-Mu’min b. al-Qasim 312 n.
1432
'Abd al-Mun'im * 94
'Abd al-Mun'im b. Idris * 226, 227,
231 / 233
'Abd al-Muttalib 25, 41, 106, 137, 281
'Abd al-Muttalib (a clan of the
Quraysh) 95
'Abd al-Muttalib b. Rabi'ah b.
al-Harith 63, 97, 198
'Abd Nuhm (tribal group) 92, 93 n.
449
'Abd Qays (tribe) 271, 275 n. 1241, 327
n. 1523, 330 n. t545
'Abd al-Quddus b. al-Hajjaj * 2r5
'Abd al-Rahman * r25
'Abd al-Rahman b. al-'Abbas 201
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abd al-'Aziz * 4,
36/ r67, 173, 180, 229
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abd
al-Hakam *131
Index
359
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Abdallah b.
Muhayrlz * 118
'Abd al-Raman b. 'Abdallah b.
'Uthman. See Ibn Umm al-Hakam
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi 'Amrah 35,
283
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Bakr 291
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Layla 310, 320
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Layla * 207
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi al-Muwall 168
'Abd al-Raman b. Abi Sa'id al-Khudri
229, 319
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Sa'id al-Khudri
* 57
'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi Shumaylah *
157
Abd al-Rahman b. Abi al-Zinad. See
Ibn Abi al-Zinad
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'A’ish al-Hadraml
148
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'A’ish al-Hadraml *
148
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Amr. See al-
Awza'I
'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Aswad 67 n. 308
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Attab b. Asid 273
'Awf 42, 51, 107, 244 n. 1076, 287 n.
1304
'Abd al-Rahman b. Azhar 108
'Abd al-Rahman b. Azhar * 108
'Abd al-Rahman b. Bishr 247
'Abd al-Rahman b. Bishr al-Naysaburi
* 238
'Abd al-Rahman b. Ghanm al-Ash'arl
* 147
'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Harith b. His-
ham 314
'Abd al-Rahman b. Harmalah al-
Aslaml 337
Abd al-Rahman b. Hassan b. Thabit *
194
'Abd al-Rahman b. Ishaq * 134
'Abd al-Rahman b. Khanbash 159
'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Mahdi * 101,
124, 146, 149
'Abd al-Rahman b. Mall. See Abu
'Uthman al-Nahdl
'Abd al-Rahman b. Mu'awiyah * 134
'Abd al-Rahman b. Muhammad b. al-
Ash'ath. See Ibn al-Ash'ath
'Abd al-Rahman b. Salih *231
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Ubaydallah b.
al-'Abbas 74
'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Uthman 261
'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Walld * 149
'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Walld al-Jurjanl
* 122
'Abd al-Rahman b. Yasar 253
'Abd al-Rahman b. Yazld * 101
'Abd al-Rahman b. Yunus * 214, 229,
244
'Abd al-Razzaq b. Hammam * 1x2,
240
‘Abd al-Samad b. 'Abd al-Warith * 197
'Abd al-Samad b. 'All 261
'Abd Shams (a clan of the Quraysh) 13
n. 50, 23 n. 104, 76 nn. 362-63,
192 n. 839
'Abd Shams b. al-Harith 19
'Abd Shams b. Rabl'ah b. al-Harith
198
'Abd Shams b. Sulay' 93
'Abd al-Wahhab b. 'Abd al-Majld al-
Thaqafl * 103, 114, 121
'Abd al-Wahid b. Abi Awn. See Ibn
Abi 'Awn
’Abd al-Wahid b. Wasil * 124
'Abd al-Warith * 195
'Abd al-Warith b. Sa'id * 69
'Abdah b. Hazn X22 n. 563
'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas. See Ibn 'Abbas
'Abdallah b. 'Abd Asad. See Abu
Salamah
'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-Muttalib, father
of the Prophet 41, 106, 198 n. 861
'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-Rahman * 184
'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi
Sa'sa'ah * 193
'Abdallah b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Um-
ayyah 176
'Abdallah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar 175
'Abdallah b. Abi al-Abyad * 183, 184
'Abdallah b. Abi Awfa 224, 293
'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr 172, 193
360
Index
'Abdallah b. Abl Bakr * 15
'Abdallah b. Abl Bakr b. Hazm. See
'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr b.
Muhammad
'Abdallah b. Abl Bakr b. Muhammad
M 3
'Abdallah b. Abi Bakr b. Muhammad *
163, 167, 173, 180
'Abdallah b. Abi Hadrad 293
'Abdallah b. Abi Mulaykah * 103
'Abdallah b. Abi Najih 244
'Abdallah b. Abi Rabi'ah 114
'Abdallah b. Abi Sa'sa'ah * 205
'Abdallah b. Abi Sulayman * 153
'Abdallah b. Abi 'Ubaydah b.
Muhammad * 31, 33
'Abdallah b. Abi Umayyah 112
'Abdallah b. Abi Yahya * 203
'Abdallah b. 'Adi b. Hamra’ 109
'Abdallah b. 'Adi b. Hamra’ * 109
'Abdallah b. Ahamad b. Shabbuyah (or
Shabbawayh) * 159, 252, 257, 263,
264
'Abdallah b. 'Ali b. 'Abdallah b.
al-'Abbas 234
'Abdallah b. 'Alqamah. See Abu
Nabiqah
'Abdallah b. 'Amir al-Aslami * 180
'Abdallah b. 'Amir b. Kurayz 63, 76
'Abdallah b. 'Amir, Abu Ma'mar * 69
'Abdallah b. 'Amr b. Zuhayr * 92, 277
'Abdallah b. al-Arqam 109
'Abdallah b. al-Arqam * 209
'Abdallah b. 'Awn. See Ibn 'Awn
'Abdallah b. Aws 73
'Abdallah b. 'Ayyash ir2, 303
'Abdallah b. Budayl b. Warqa’ 34
'Abdallah b. Dinar 237
'Abdallah b. Dumayrah * 100
'Abdallah b. al-Fadl b. 'Ayyash * 5 5
'Abdallah b. Fudalah * r20, 12 r
'Abdallah b. Hakim b. Hizam 4r,
106
'Abdallah b. Hanzalah al-Rahib 131
'Abdallah b. al-Harith * 12, 3r, 60, 97,
268
'Abdallah b. al-Harith al-Azdi * r49
'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib 62
'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. Nawfal 63,
96,3i5,325n.r508
'Abdallah b. al-Harith b. Nawfal * 19,
96 , 97
'Abdallah b. al-Hasan al-Basri 225
'Abdallah b. al-Hasan b. al-Hasan b.
'All 168, 245-47, 334
'Abdallah b. al-Hasan b. al-Hasan b.
'Ali 195, 196, 279
‘Abdallah b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260
'Abdallah b. Hazn al-Nasri * 122
'Abdallah b. Hilal 152
'Abdallah b. Hilal *153
'Abdallah b. al-Husayn b. ‘Ali 49
'Abdallah b. 'Imran * 225
'Abdallah b. 'Imran al-Isbahanl * 128
'Abdallah b. Ishaq al-Naqid * 151
'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. 'Abd al-Rahman
330
'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. 'Abd al-Rahman *
30, 32, 39, 43, 51, 52, 264, 168,
277, 187, 190, 233
'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. Abi Talib 59, 96,
288
'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. al-Miswar, see
also 'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. 'Abd al-
Rahman * 108
'Abdallah b. Ja'far b. Muhammad 248
'Abdallah b. Jubayr 13
Abdallah b. Junadah * 256
'Abdallah b. Khalaf 277
'Abdallah b. Khazim al-Sulaml * 166
'Abdallah b. Khubayb * 253
'Abdallah b. Lahi'ah. See Ibn Lahi'ah
'Abdallah b. Maslamah b. Qa'nab * 27
'Abdallah b. Mas'ud 27, 205, no, 239
n. 638, 289, 322 n. 1428, 324 n.
2451, 315 n. 2458
'Abdallah b. Mas'ud * 203
'Abdallah b. Mas'ud's mother. See
Umm 'Abd bt. 'Abd Wadd
'Abdallah b. Miqdad 297
'Abdallah b. al-Mubarak 250, 263-64
'Abdallah b. al-Mubarak * 202, 246,
249
Index
361
'Abdallah b. Muhammad * 5, 182
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. ‘Amr al-
GhazzI * 150
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Aqil 334
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. Ibrahim
263
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Imran *
131
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. al-
Munkadir 240
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. Murrah al-
Sha'bani * 220
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. Sirin 227
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Umar *
38
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Umar b.
'All * 167
'Abdallah b. Muhammad b. 'Umarah
3i9
'Abdallah b. Muhayriz *118
'Abdallah b. Muslim 333
'Abdallah b. Muslim * 170, 225
'Abdallah b. al-Muta' hi
‘A bdallah b. Nafi' * 30, 174, 176
'Abdallah b. Nawfal b. al-Harith 209-
210
'Abdallah b. Nufayl 149-50
'Abdallah b. Nufayl * 150
'Abdallah b. Qays b. Makhramah 77,
253
'Abdallah b. Qusayt * 183
'Abdallah b. Rabi'ah b. al-Harith * 98
'Abdallah b. Ruwaybah (tribal group)
265
'Abdallah b. Sa'd b. Abl Sarh 81
'Abdallah b. al- Sa’ib 115
'Abdallah b. Sa'id * 146
'Abdallah b. Salam 296
'Abdallah b. Salam * 149
'Abdallah b. Salim * 159
'Abdallah b. al-Samit * 122
'Abdallah b. Sarjis al-Muzani 125
'Abdallah b. Sarjis al-Muzani * 125
'Abdallah b. Shaddad b. al-Hadi 202
'Abdallah b. Shaddad b. al-Hadi *121
'Abdallah b. Shaqlq * 125
'Abdallah b. Sulaym 94
'Abdallah b. Sulayman * 146, 187
'Abdallah b. Sulayman b. Ukaymah *
120
'Abdallah b. Thabit 34
'Abdallah b. 'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas
55
'Abdallah b. 'Umar. See Ibn 'Umar
'Abdallah b. Urayqit 138, 142, 172
'Abdallah b. 'Urwah b. al-Zubayr 334
'Abdallah b. 'Utbah b. Mas'ud 315
'Abdallah b. Wahb. See Ibn Wahb
'Abdallah b. Warqa’. See Ibn Warqa’
'Abdallah b. Yasir 29
'Abdallah b. Yazld al-Ansari 268
'Abdallah b. Yazld al-Hilali 201
'Abdallah b. Yazld al-Hudhali * 81
'Abdallah b. Yazld b. Qantash 337-38
'Abdallah b. Yunus al-Jubayri * 109
'Abdallah b. Zam'ah 76
'Abdallah b. Zayd b. 'Abd Rabbihi 281
n. 1272, 290
'Abdallah b. Zayd b. Tha'labah 290 n.
1309
'Abdallah b. Zaynab. See 'Abdallah b.
Muhammad b. Ibrahim
'Abdallah b. Zubayd 211
'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr 52, 95, 105,
193, 209, 237, 247 n. 1092, 268,
272, 273 n. 1226, 276, 295 nn.
1339 , i 34 i, 3 . 96 , 308 n. 1411, 315
n. 1459, 318 nn. 1470, 1471, 1472,
333 nn. 1559, 1560, 335
'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr * 17
Abjar 57
abna’ (of the Yemen) 94, 227, 299
Abrahah, the Abyssinian 24 n. 108
Abrahah, the slave girl 178-80
Abraham, the patriarch 37 n. 171, 43
n. 195, 148, 204
'Abs (tribe) 30 n. 138, 133, 321 n. 1488
al-Arqam 281
Abu 'Ayyash al-Zuraqi, Zayd b.
al-Samit 285
Abu al-'Abbas. See al-Saffah
Abu 'Abdallah al-Jadali 275-76, 306-
307
Abu 'Abd al-Rahim b. al-'Ala’ ’ 205
362
Index
Abu 'Abd al-Rahman al-Sulaml 269-
70, 306
Abu Ahmad al-Sukkari. See Bishr b.
al-Hasan
Abu al-Ahwas * 238
Abu al-'Aliyah, al-Barra’ 308
Abu al-Aliyah al-Riyahi 307
Abu 'Amir * 70, 108, 153
Abu 'Amr al-Shaybani 306
Abu 'Amrah, Bashir b. 'Amr 35, 283
Abu al-'As b. al-Rabi' 13-17,162, 282
Abu al-Ash'ath al-San'anl * 158
Abu al-Aswad al-Dili (al-Du’ili) 307
Abu al-A'war al-Sulaml, 'Amr b. Suf-
yan 285
Abu 'Awn * 5r, S2
Abu al-'Awwam 158
Abu Ayyub al-Ansari 40,133,185,
283
Abu Ayyub al-'Ataki, Yahya b. Malik
308, 310 n. 1424
Abu Ayyub al-Azdi. See Munib al-
Azdi
Abu Ayyub al-Maraghi, Yahya b.
Malik 310 n. 1424
Abu Ayyub, Yahya b. Ayyub 310
Abu al-Azhar al-Shami 313
Abu al-Bakhtari 77
Abu al-Bakhtari *119
Abu al-Bakhtari al-Ta’i 209
Abu Bakkar, al-Hakam b. Farriikh 312
Abu Bakr * 266, 270
Abu Bakr b. 'Abdallah. See Ibn Abi
Sabrah
Abu Bakr b. 'Abd al-Raman b.
al-Harith * 120
Abu Bakr b. 'Ayyash * 246, 272, 273
Abu Bakr, the caliph 16, 19, 30 n. r39,
41, 46, 65 nn. 299, 300, 81, 82, 88,
90, hi, 128 n. 589, 138, 139 n.
638, 140 n. 641, 142, 144 n. 652,
145, 172, 173 n. 774 , 195 , 102,
231, 252, 281, 290 nn. 1311-12,
294 n. 1335
Abu Bakr al-Hudhali 312
Abu Bakr b. Isma'il b. Muhammad *
13, 177
Abu Bakr b. Kilab (tribal group! 188
Abu Bakr b. Muhammad b. 'Amr 192
Abu Bakr al-Nahshali * 149
Abu Bakrah 29, 282, 324 n. 1502
Abu Balj 310
Abu Barzah al-Aslami 284
Abu Bistam, Yahya b. 'Abd al-Rahman
311-12
Abu Buraydah 69
Abu Burdah, rother of Abu Musa al-
Ash'ari 147
Abu Burdah b. Abi Musa 307
Abu Burdah b. Niyar 283
Abu Burdah b. Niyar * 146
Abu al-Darda’ 283
Abu Da’ud * 155
Abu Dharr al-Ghifari 45-46, 69-70,
99, 282
Abu Dharr al-Ghifari * 122
Abu Dh’ib (a family of the Quraysh)
337 n. 1584
Abu Dujanah, Simak b. Kharashah
286
Abu Fadalah al-Ansari 35
Abu Fa’id * 27
Abu Fakhitah, Sa'id b. 'Ilaqah 306
Abu Fatimah 153
Abu Fatimah *153
Abu Ghadiyah 31, 33
Abu Ghassan, Malik b. Isma'il al-
Nahdi * 215
Abu al-Ghayth * 209
Abu Ghifar * 124
Abu Habibah, client of al-Zubayr b.
al-'Awwam * 17, 41, 106, 161
Abu Hadrad al-Aslami 284
Abu al-Hajjaj al-Misri, see also
Rishdin b. Sa'd 329 n. 1537
Abu al-Hakam 325 n. 1511
Abu Halah b. al-Nabbash 3, 79, 161
Abu Halah b. Zurarah. See Abu Halah
b. al-Nabbash
Abu al-Hamra’ 154, 285
Abu al-Hamra’ * 155
Abu Hamrah 310 n. 1419
Abu Hamzah, Sa'd b. 'Ubadah 313
Abu Hamzah al-Sukkari 312
Index 363
Abu Hanifah xix, 238, 250-52, 264,
33i
Abu Harb * 120, 121
Abu Hashim b. Muhammad b.
al-Hanafiyyah 236, 322 n. 1495
Abu Hashim b. 'Utbah b. Rabi'ah 76
Abu al-Haytham, 'Ammar 314
Abu al-Haytham b. al-Tayyihan,
Malik b. al-Tayyihan 286
Abu Haywah, Shurayh b. Yazid * 205
Abu al-Hayyaj, 'Amr b. Malik 314
Abu Hayyan al-Ashja'i 311
Abu Hazim, Nabtal 309
Abu Hazim * 160
Abu Hazim al-Ashja'i, Salman 309
Abu Hilal al-Rasibi 312
Abu Hilal al-Ta’I 313
Abu Hisham al-Rifa'I * 250
Abu Hisham, see also Muhammad b.
Sulayman 140
Abu Hudhayfah b. al-Mughirah 29,
117
Abu Hudhayfah, Salamah b. Suhayb
311
Abu Hudhayfah b. 'Utbah 300
Abu Humayd al-Sa'idi, 'Abd al-
Rahman b. Sa'd 279 n. 1268, 286
Abu Hurayrah 50, 70, 173, 174, 176,
209, 223, 283, 304 n. 1382
Abu Hurayrah * 185
Abu al-Husayn * 81
Abu al-Huwayrith, 'Abd al-Rahman b.
Mu'awiyah 240-41, 309
Abu al-Huwayrith, 'Abd al-Rahman b.
Mu'awiyah * 240
Abu Ibrahim al-Ansari * 136
Abu Ibrahim al-Ansari’s father 136
Abu Ibrahim al-Ansari’s father * 136
Abu Idris *101
Abu Idris, Sawad 314
Abu 'Imran al-Jawni 308
Abu 'Isa al-Zahid * 257
Abu Ishaq * 119, 122, 128, 145, 224,
268
Abu Ishaq al-Hamdani *155
Abu Ishaq al-Kufi. See Ibrahim al-
Qari’
Abu Ishaq al-Sabi'i 238-39, 325, 329
n. 1538
Abu Ishaq al-Sabi'i *115
Abu Ishaq al-Sa’igh 312
Abu Ishaq al-Shaybani 239
Abu IsraTl * 230, 277
Abu Ja'far al-Bajali 310
Abu Ja'far al-Huddani * 215
Abu Ja'far al-Mada’ini 309
Abu Ja'far, Muhammad b. 'All b.
al-Husayn 229-30
Abu Ja'far, Muhammad b. 'All b.
al-Husayn * 12, 25, 37, 39, 167,
214, 230
Abu Ja'far, Muhammad b. Jarir. See
al-Tabari
Abu Ja'far al- Qari’ 303
Abu Jahl 18 n. 70, 60, 68 n. 315, 112
Abu Jamrah 310
Abu Juhayfah, Wahb al-Suwa’I 285
Abu Juhayfah, Wahb al-Suwa’I * 257
Abu Juhaym b. al-Harith 35
Abu Jumah, Habib b. Siba' 285
Abu Jurayy. See Sulaym b. Jabir
Abu Kathir al-Zubaydi 313
Abu Khabtah 311
Abu Khahd al-Walibi 313
Abu Kurayb * 97 113, 116, 146, 154,
156, 197, 200, 204, 205, 221, 266,
270
Abu Lahab 64 n. 293
Abu Layla, Bilal b. Bulayl 282, 310
Abu LInah, 'Abdallah b. Abi Karib 285
Abu Lubabah, Rifa'ah b. 'Abd al-
Mundhir 286
Abu Mab'ad 139, 140, 143, 144
Abu Mab'ad * 142
Abu Mahdhurah 48,118,181, 282
Abu Malik al-Ash'ari 147
Abu Malik al-Ash'ari * 147
Abu Malik al-Nakha'I * 199
Abu Marthad al-Ghanawi ioo, 281
Abu Marthad al-Ghanawi * 101
Abu Marwan al-Aslami * 69, 160
Abu Maryam, 'Abd al-Ghaffar 312
Abu Maryam al-Asadi 314
Abu Maryam al-Filastini 158
3^4
Index
Abu Maryam al-Filastini 158
Abu Maryam, Malik b. Rabi'ah 128
Abu Maryam, Malik b. Rabi'ah * 128
Abu Maryam, Tahman 328
Abu Ma'shar, Najih xxiv
Abu Ma'shar, Najih * 50, 69, 165, 177,
240, 282
Abu Mas'ud al-Ansari, 'Uqbah b. 'Amr
286
Abu Maymunah 304
Abu Mikhnaf xxiv, 94
Abu Mikhnaf * 32
Abu al-Minhal * 152
Abu al-Minhal's father 152
Abu al-Minhal's father * 152
Abu al-Mu'alla * 157
Abu al-Mu'alla al-'Attar 312
Abu al-Mu'alla, Zayd b. Murrah 312
Abu al-Mu'alla's father 157
Abu al-Mu'alla's father * 157
Abu Mu'attib b. 'Amr 160
Abu Ma'attib b. 'Amr * 160
Abu Mu'awiyah al-Bajall 313
Abu Mu'awiyah, Muhammad b.
Khazim 311
Abu al-Muhazzam * 50
Abu Musa * 224
Abu Musa al-Ash'ari 69, 88, 102 n.
487, 147, 233, *82, 307 n. 1402
Abu Musa al-Thaqafi * 39
Abu Mus'ab, Isma'il b. Mus'ab * 188
Abu Mushir * 158
Abu Muslim al-Khawlani 308
Abu Muslim al-Khurasanmi 312 n.
1440
Abu al-Mu'tamir, Yazid b. Tahman
313, 323 n. 1500
Abu al-Mutawakkil al-Najl 276, 308
Abu Na'amah al-'Adawi * 104, 151
Abu Nabiqah 77
Abu Nadrah 271
Abu Nimran al-Rahabi * 159
Abu Na'aym. See al-Fadl b. Dukayn
Abu Qamus, Zayd b. 'All 327
Abu Qatadah al-Ansari 283, 336
Abu Qatan * 256
Abu Quhafah 281
Abu Qutaybah * 223
Abu Rabah b. 'Abidah * 226
Abu Rabi'ah al-Iyadi * 99
Abu Rafi' 65-66, 99, 172, 194
Abu Raja’ al-'Utaridi 307-308
Abu Ruhm b. 'Abd al-'Uzza 185
Abu al-Rum b. 'Umayr 67
Abu Sabrah, Yazid b. Malik 285
Abu al-Sal’ib * 226, 231, 233, 253, 268
Abu Said * 251
Abu Said al-Khudri 57, 229 n. 995,
284
Abu Said al-Maqbarl 303
Abu Said al-Maqbarl * 174
Abu Said al-Radhani. See Abu Said
al-Rani
Abu Said al-Rani 250
Abu Sakhr * 205
Abu Salam al-Hanafi 313
Abu Salamah * 136
Abu Salamah b. 'Abd al-Rahman * 109
Abu Salamah, 'Abdallah b. 'Abd al-
Asad 113, 175
Abu Salamah, Dinar 333
Abu Salamah al-Hadraml * 56
Abu Salamah, Sulayman b. Abi Sul-
aym * 149
Abu Salih, Badham 304
Abu Salih, Badham * 9, 170, 197
Abu Salih, Burkan 306
Abu Salih, client of al-Saffah 304
Abu Salih al-Ghifari 305
Abu Salih al-Hanafi 304 n. 1384, 305
Abu Salih, Maysarah 305
Abu Salih, Mizan 305-306
Abu Salih, Qayluh 305
Abu Salih, Rudayh 305
Abu Sali, scribe of al-Layth * 101
Abu Salih al-Samman 304
Abu Salih, Sumay’ 304
Abu Salih al-Zayyat. See Abu Salih al-
Samman
Abu al-Sanabil b. Ba'kak 107
Abu al-Sha'tha’ Fayruz 309-10
Abu al-Sha'tha’, Jabir b. Zayd 309
Abu al-Sha'tha al-Muharibl 306
Abu al-Siddlq al-Naji 276, 308
Index
Abu Sinan *119
Abu Sinan al-Razi 313
Abu Sirmah * 57
Abu Sufyan b. Harb 48-49
Abu Sufyan b. al-Harith 19, 21, 62
Abu Sufyan, Talhah b. Nafi' 311
Abu Sufyan, Tarif al-Sa‘di 311
Abu Suhayl. See Abu Salih al-Samman
Abu Talhah, Zayd b. Sahl 12, 163
Abu Talib 196, 309 n. 1414
Abu Talib, 'Abd al-Salam b. Shaddad *
214
Abu Tamlmah * 124
Abu al-Tayyah * 159
Abu al-Tayyah, Yazid b. Humayd 312
Abu Tumaylah * 5, 218
Abu Turab (nickname of 'All b. Abi
Talib 224)
Abu 'Ubayd, Sulayman's doorkeeper
1 S6
Abu 'Ubayd al-Thaqafi 205
Abu 'Abaydah b. al-Jarrah 15 n. 56,
281
Abu 'Abaydah, Ma'mar b. al-
Muthanna xxiv
Abu 'Abaydah, Ma'mar b. Muthanna *
80, 176, 191
Abu 'Abaydah b. Muhammad * 33
Abu 'Udhafir 310
Abu Udhaynah 156
Abu Udhaynah * 156
Abu Uhayhah, Sa'id b. al-'As 282
Abu Umamah al-Ansari, Asad b.
Zurarah 286
Abu Umamah al-Bahili, Sudayy b.
'Ajlan 84, 224, 282
Abu Umamah b. Sahl b. Hunayf 303
Abu Umamah b. Sahl b. Hunayf * 36
Abu Umayyah, client of 'Umar b. al-
Khattab 307
Abu Umayyah b. al-Mughlrah 80, 175
Abu Usamah al-Jushami 175
Abu Usayd al-Sa'idi 188, 189, 284
Abu Usayd al-Sa'idi * 190
Abu 'Uthman al-Muqaddami * 226
Abu 'Uthman al-Nahdi 214-215,
307
365
Abu Wada'ah, al-Harith b. Dumayrah
284
Abu Wa’il 306
Abu Wajzah, Yazid b. 'Ubayd * 188
Abu Waqid al-Laythi. See Salih b.
Muhammad b. Za’idah
Abu Yahya al-Himmani. see 'Abd
al-Hamid b. Bashmir
Abu Yahyaa al-Kala'i * 200
Abu Ya'qub * 278
Abu al-Yasar, Ka'b b. 'Amr 134, 283
Abu al-Yasar, Ka'b b. 'Amr * 134
Abu Yusuf 265 n. 1181
Abu al-Zahiriyyah al-Hadrami 309
Abu Zakariyya’ al-'Ajlani * 169
Abu Zayd al-Ansari, Thabit b. Zayd
284
Abu Zayd al-Dabbi * 200
Abu Zayd who collected the Qur’an,
see also Sa'd b. 'Ubayd 22 n. 94,
284 n. 1288
Abu al-Zinba' 308
Abu al-Zubayr * 186
Abu Zuhayr al-Anmari 127 n. 586
Abu Zuhayr al-Numayri 127
Abu Zuhayr al-Numayri * 127
Abu Zur'ah al-Dimashqi xxiv
Abu Zur'ah al-Dimashqi *131, 205
al-Abwa’ 21
Abyssinia 167, 170, 177
Abyssinia, emigration to 5, 26, 27, 30,
66, 67, 104, 105, no, 162, 169,
175 , i 77 , 178 n. 799
Abyssinians 94, 169, 227, 299
Adam 126
Adam b. Abi Iyas 329
Adam b. Abi Iyas * 156
Adam b. Rabi'ah 62
al-'Adawiyyah (tribal group) 104 n.
498
Adham b. Muhriz 53, 274
'Adi b. 'Amr (tribal group) 34 n. 151,
93
'Abi b. Hatim 86, 297
'Adi b. Ka'b (a clan of Quraysh) 37 n.
168, 95 n. 461, 117
'Abi b. Rabi'ah (tribal group) 137
366
Index
'Adrian 7 n. 25
Adul (tribal group) in
'Adwan (tribal group) 2,75
'Affan * 223
'Affan b. Abi al-'As 198
Afghanistan 237 n. 1040
al-Aghlab al-'Ijli 94
ahl al-bayt. See Family of the Prophet
ahl al-dhimmah 23 n. 99
ahl al-kitab. See Possessors of the
Scriptures
ahl al-suffah 292 n. 1318
Ahmad b. *Abd al-Rahman ahHarrani
* 109
Ahmad b. Ishkab * 155
Ahmad b. Khalid al-Khallal * 252
Ahmad b. Makhlad * 260
Ahmad b. Musa * 207
Ahmad b. Shabbuyah (or Shabbawayh)
* 252, 257
Ahmad b. 'Uthman b. Hakim *115
Ahmad b. al-Walid * 256
Ahmad b. Yunus * 268
Ahmur (tribal group) 220
al-Ahnaf b. Qays 123 n. 568, 267
al-Ahnaf b. Qays * 70
al-Ahsa’. See Hajar
'A’isha bt. 'Abdallah al-Akbar 235
'A’ishah bt Sa'd * 39
'A’ishah, wife of the Prophet 22 n. 96,
28 n. 126, 105 n. 499, 165, 170,
I7I-74, 176, 181, 190, 198, 272,
277, 280, 291 n. 1315, 292 n.
1322, 315 n. 1457
'A’ishah, wife of the Prophet * 12, 13,
167, 183, 279
'A’ishah bt. al-Zubayr 193
Ajnadayn 19
Ajyad 123
Akhmur (tribal group) 220 n. 954
al-'Ala’I * 207, 308
a'lan al-haiam, see also ansab
al-haram 93
alcohol 103, 108
Al Dhi Bariq (tribal group) 220
Al Dhi Juddan (tribal group) 220
Al Dhi La'wah (tribal group) 220
Al Dhi Marran (tribal group) 220
Al Dhi Radwan (tribal group) 220
Al Dhi Sha'bayn (tribal group) 220
Alexandria 193, 317 n. 1468
'Ali b. 'Abdallah * 278
'Ali b. ’Abdallah b. al-'Abbas 54, 74,
216, 232, 322
'Ali b. 'Abdallah b. Ja'far 54
Ali b. Abi al-'As 13, 162
'Ali b. Abi Talib 11, 13, 25, 28 n. 126,
31 n. 141, 32 n. 144, 34, 35, 36,
36-37, 38-39, 50, 51 n. 228, 53,
60, 65 nn. 299, 302, 66, 72, 74, 75,
77 n. 371, 84, 86, 87 n. 418, 88,
92, 93 n. 453, 96, 99, 104 n. 498,
105 n. 499, 107 n. 5 66 , 113, 117,
128, 138, 144 n. 652, 146, 149,
151, 155, 156, 162, 167, 168, 196
n. 851, 197 n. 859, 198, 202 n.
874, 205, 206, 207, 208, 2x0, 213,
224, 228, 231, 232, 233 n. ioii,
236 n. 1031, 247, 257, 267, 268,
269, 270, 271 n. 1213, 272, 273 n.
1231, 274, 275, 278, 279, 2.81 n.
1272, 282 n. 1278, 283 n. 1279,
285 n. 1290, 286 n. 1297, 287, 294
n. 1332, 295 n. 1340, 296 n. 1342,
297 n. 1346, 298 n. 1353, 300 n.
1361, 305 n. 1390, 306 nn. 1400,
1401, 307 n. 1403, 310 n. 1421,
316 n. 1466, 320 n. 1485
'Ali b. Abi Talib * 279
'Ali al-Aqmar 311
'Ali al-Aqmar * 257
'Ali b. 'Asim 182
'Ali b. al-Hasan * 263, 264
'All b. al-Hasan b. Shaqiq * 250
'Ali b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260
Ali b. Hassan b. 'Amr (tribal group)
220
'Ali b. al-Husayn ('Ali al-Akbar) 48,
2X1
'Ali b. Husayn ('Ali al-Asghar, Zayn
al-'Abidin) 49, 210-14
'Alib. al-Husayn * 167, 168
'Ali b. al-Husayn b. Waqid * 252
'Ali b. isa al-Nawfali * 19, 60, 63, 64
Index
367
'All b. Ja'd 331
'All b. al-Madyani * 221, 240, 244
'All b. Malik al-fushami * 267
'All b. Muhammad. See al-Mada’ini
'All b. Mujahid ‘51, 212
'All b. Musa * 101
'All b. Muslim * 174, 226
‘All b. Sahl al-Ramll * 96, 223, 225
'All b. Shuayb al-Simsar * 199
'All b. Suwayd b. Manjuf * 267
‘All b. Yahya * 134
All b. Zayd b. Juan 280 n. 1271
'All b. Zayd b. Jud'an * 222, 280
'Ali Zayn al-'Abidln, see also 'All b.
al-Husayn 54 n. 244
'Alids, 'Alid family 212 n. 916, 234 n.
1018, 24s n. 1084
al-'Aliyah (place) 194
al-'Aliyah bt. Muhammad b. 'All 235
al-'Aliyah bt. 'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas
74, 235
al-'Aliyah bt. Zabyan. See al-
Kilabiyyah
Al al-Jawn (tribal group) 189 n. 834
Alliances, allies 9 n. 30, 26, 29, 30, 79,
95, 100, ioi, 104, 105, no, in,
116, 125 n. 577, 133, 146 n. 661,
177, 199, 231, 281, 282, 283, 285
n. 1295, 286 n. 1302, 289, 297 n.
1350, 301
'Alqamah * 272, 273
'Alqamah b. Marthad * 97, 207
'Alqamah b. Qays al-Nakhal * 203
'Alqamah Jidhl al-Ti'an 175
Amanah b. Qays 89
al-A'mash. See Sulayman b. Mihran
Aminah 280
Aminah * 280
Aminah bt. Aban 254 n. 1126
Aminah bt. Abdallah 280 n. 1270
Aminah bt. Abl Murrah 48, 49
Aminah bt. Abi Qays al-Ghifariyyah *
i8 5
Aminah bt. al-Hakam. See al-
Ghifariyyah
Aminah bt. Wahb, mother of the
Prophet 152 n. 684
'Amir (tribal group) 187, 188
Amir b. 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr 333
'Amir b. Fuhayrah 138, 142
'Amir b. Kurayz 76, 198
'Amir b. Lu’ayy (a clan of the
Quraysh) 43, 44 n. 202, 68 n. 318,
81 n. 384, 95 n. 461, 118, 169 n.
759, 204, 272 n. 1220, 336
'Amir b. Malik, Mula'ib al-Asinnah 73
n. 343
Amir b. Mas'ud 119
'Amir b. Mas'ud al-Jumahl 119 n. 550
'Amir b. Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas *115
'Amir b. Sa'id, Abu Ja'far * 215
'Amir b. Sa'sa'ah (tribe) 54 n. 243, 73
n. 343, 83 n. 395, r26 n. 581, 185
n. 818, 186 n. 821, 253 n. 1123,
285 n. 1293, 316 n. 1464, 336 n.
1574
'Amir b. Sharahil see al-Sha'bi
'Amir b. al-Tufayl 73 n. 343
'Amir b. al-Dahyan 24 n. 107
'Ammar b. Ruzayq al-Dabbi 258
'Ammar b. Yasir 28-34,116, 289
‘Ammar b. Zurayq al-Dabbi * 155
al-ami bi-al-ma'iiif 258 n. 1149
'Amr * 134
'Ami, brother of Harithah 7
'Amr b. 'Abd al-Rahman *118
Amr b. Abi 'Amr 337
'Amr b. Abi Qays * 137
'Amr b. Ali * 214, 223
'Amr b. al-'As 32, 88, 287 n. 1304,
291, 327 n. 1524
'Amr b. 'Awf (tribal group) 132, 133,
189, 286 n. 1298
'Amr b. Bahra’ 301
'Amr b. Baydaq * 204
'Amr b. Dinar 244, 324
'Amr b. Dinar * r67
'Amr b. al-Hamiq 92
'Amr b. al-Harith (Bahzaj) 36
'Amrb. al-Harith * 132, 159
'Amr b. al-Harith b. Abi Shamir 30
Amr b. Hazm 192 n. 838, 294-95
'Amr b. Hurayth 59-60,113, 296
'Amr b. Hurayth * 113, 114
Index
368
'Amr b. 'Isa. See Abu Na'amah
al-'AdawI
'Amr b. Jahm 67
'Amr b. Ma'dI-karib 91, 298
'Amr b. Murrah 324
'Amr b. Murrah *119
'Amr b. al-Musabbih 86-87
'Amr b. Qays b. Za’idah. See Ibn
Umm Maktum
'Amr b. al-Rabr 13
'Amr b. Sa'id al-Ashdaq 334 n.
1564
'Amr b. Salimah 268-69
'Amr b. Sha's 146
'Amr b. Sha's * 146
'Amr b. Shu'ayb 327
'Amrb. Shu'ayb * 187
'Amr b. Sulayman al-'Attar * 251
'Amr b. Thabit * 27
'Amr b. 'Ubayd * 223
'Amr b. Udd (tribe) 125 n. 577
'Amr b. Umayyah al-Damri 180
'Amr b. 'Uthman b. 'Affan 335
'Amr b. Yahya * 154
'Amr b. Yahya al-Mazini * 133
'Amrah bt. 'Abd al-Rahman * 167,
171, 186
'Amwas 95, 281 n. 1273
Anas * 273
Anas b. Malik 224, 227, 295, 309 n.
1417, 338
Anas b. Malik * 12, 22
Anas b. Sirin * 227
al-Anbar 245
al-'Anbar (tribal group) 124 n. 574,
252, 259 n. H54 ; 324 n. 1501, 326
n. 1518
'Anbash b. Abi Sufyan 332 n. 1557
'Anbasah b. Sa'id * 128
an$ab al-haram, see also a'1dm
al-haiam 42
Ansar u, 34 n. 155, 35 n. 157, 36 n.
162, 40, 55, 58, 71 n. 331, 72 nn.
336, 339, 133 n. 616, 146 n. 661,
163, 162 n. 731, 173, 191, 194,
210 n. 909, 235, 290 n. 1311, 2,94
nn. 1333, 1334, 295 nn. 1339,
1340, 1341, 296 1343, 320 n.
1424, 33i n- 1549
Ansina 194
al-'Ansi. See al-Aswad al-'Ansi
apostasy wars 30 n. 139, 78 n. 375, 82,
85, 88, 90 n. 436, 91, hi n. 523,
133 n. 616, 160 n. 724
'Aqabah meeting 11, 40, 58, 133, 162
n. 731, 286 nn. 1297-98, 1300,
287 n. 1303, 290 nn. 1310-11, 291
n. 1314, 303 n. 1375
'Aqil b. Abi Talib 21, 60, 96, 288
'Aqil family 168
al-'Aqiq 38, 47
'aqr 5 n. 12
al-'Aqra' b. Habis 82
Arab, Arabs 3 n. 2, 5 n. 12, 6 n. 19, 13
n. 48, 29 nn. 130, 134, 30 n. 136,
37 nn. 166, 169, 73, 82, 83, 85 n.
405, 87, 90 n. 436, 129 n. 599, 138
n. 637, 148 n. 667, 156 n. 702, 171
n. 762, 175, 18, 191, 201, 212,
213, 220 n. 953, 244 n. 1077, 253,
277, 278 n. 1262, 282 n. 1278, 307
n. 1403
'Arabah b. Aws 71, 72, 73-74
Arabian Peninsula 30 n. 139, 32 n.
145, 108, 148 n. 667, 188 n. 829,
208 n. 899
'Arafat 64 n. 295, 98
arbitration 88 n. 422, 233 n. ion, 273
n. 1231
Arhab (tribal group) 220, 268, 269, 311
n. 1429
Armenia 201 n. 871
al-Arqam b. Abi al-Arqam 46-47, 289
al-Arqam b. Abi al-Arqam, house of 5,
38, 47, 118, 281 n. 1274
Arwa bt. Kurayz 192, 198
Arwa bt. Rabi'ah b. al-Harith 198
Arwa senior. See Arwa bt. Rabi'ah
al-'Arzami * 188
'asabiyyah 17 n. 68
Asad b. 'Abd al-'Uzza (a clan of
Quraysh) 3, 26 n. 122, 40 n. 185,
66 n. 305, 76 n. 360, 77 n. 371, 95
n. 461, 105
Index
369
Asad (tribe) 9 n. 30, 175 n. 786, 231,
248, 313 n. 1447, 314 n. 1450, 320
n. 1485, 323 n. 1499, 324 n. 1504,
325 nn. is09, 1513
Asad b. Musa * 196, 203, 205, 280
Asad b. Zurarah 303 n. 1375
Asbagh, client of 'Amr b. Hurayth *
H3/ ii4
al-Asbagh b. Nubatah 275
asceticism, ascetics 70 n. 323, 174 n.
779, 207 n. 896, 241 n. 1063, 242
n. 1065, 257, 258 n. 1148, 263,
298 n. 1351, 303 n. 1378, 308 n.
1412, 321 n. 1487, 330 n. 1542,
331
al-Ashaqir (tribal group) 255
al-Ash'ar (tribal group) 147
al-Ash'ath b. Abi al-Sha'tha’ 314
al-Ash'athb. Qays 87-88, 89, 90, 190,
228 n. 990, 298, 302, 314 n. 1459
Ashja' (tribe) 287 n. 1303, 335 n. 1570
ashzaf. See tribal nobles
al-Ashtar al-Nakha'I sin. 228, 272-
73
al-Ash'ub (tribal group) 220
'Ashuia' 248
Asid b. Abi Asid, al-Barrad 336 n.
1578
Asid b. Abi Asid, client of Abu
Qatadah 336
'Asim * 125
'Asim al-Aslami * 70
'Asim b. Abi al-Najud 238
'Asim b. Abi al-Najud * 51
'Asim b. Bahdalah. See 'Asim b. Abi
al-Najud
'Asim b. Hadrah 157-58
'Asim b. Hadrah * 158
'Asim al-Jahdari 326
'Asim b. Sulayman al-Ahwal 328
'Asim b. Sulayman al-Ahwal * 125
'Asim b. 'Ubaydallah * 96
'Asim b. 'Umar 175
'Asim b. 'Umar b. Qatadah * 74, 180
'Asim b. al-Zubayr 193
Aslam (tribe) 70 n. 326, 122, 146 n.
659, 160 n. 724, 284 nn. 1285,
1286, 293 nn. 1326, 1327, 1328,
325 n. 1514, 337 n. 1580
Aslum (tribe) 130
Asma’ * 134
Asma’ bt. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas 55
Asma’ bt. Abi Bakr 105, 172, 193
Asma’ bt. Abi Bakr * 208
Asma’ bt. fa'far b. Muhammad 249
Asma’ bt. Mukharribah 112
Asma’ bt. al-Nu'man 188-91
Asma’ bt. Salamah b. Mukharribah
112
Asma’bt. 'Umays 5, 59, 121, 167, 169,
199, 201, 202
al-Asma'i * 222
'Asma’. See Lubabah al-Sughra
al-Aswad b. 'Amir * 239
al-Aswadb. 'Abd Yaghuth 10, 26, no,
301
al-Aswad b. Abi al-Bakhtari 77
al-Aswad al-'Ansi 81, 91, 94
al-Aswad b. Nawfal b. Khuwaylid 66-
67
al-Aswad b. Qays 327
al-Aswad b. Qays * 199
al-Aswad b. Shayban 256
'Ata’ * 184
'Ata’ b. Abi Marwan * 69, 160
'Ata’ b. Abi Rabah 223, 321
'Ata al-Khurasani * 207
’Ata’ b. Muslim *51
'Ata’ b. al-Sa’ib 327
'Ata’ b. al-Sa’ib * 98, 128, 129, 270
'Ata’ b. Yasar 317
'Ata’ b. Yazid al-Junda'i * 165
'ata'. See pensions
'Atik (tribal group) 278, 308 n. 1409
'Atik b. 'Abid 16 r
'Atikah bt. 'Abdallah b. 'Ankathah 68
'Atikah bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib 76, 112
'Atikah bt. 'Amir 175
'Atikah bt. 'Awf 42, 51
'Atiyyah b. Sa'd b. Junadah 228
'Attaf b. Makhramah, 'Attaf al-Akbar
42
'Attaf b. Makhramah, 'Attaf al-Asghar
42
370
Index
'Awaqah (tribal group) 271
'Awf b. 'Abd 'Awf b. al-Harith no
'Awf b. 'Amr (a clan of the Aws) 36,
72 n. 336
'Awf (tribal group) 248
'Awf b. Zurarah 79
'Awn b. 'Umays 201
Aws (tribe) 34 n. 153, 36 n. 162, 71 n.
33i. 72 n. 336, 130, 133 n. 614,
231, 283, 302 n. 1369, 320 n. 1484
Aws b. Kharijah al-Darl 302
Aws b. Miy'ar, see also Abu
Mahdhurah 48
Aws b. Qayzi 71-72, 73
Aws b. Shurahbil 159
Aws b. Shurahbil * 159
Awtas, battle of 101
al-'Awwam b. Khuwaylid 169, 199
Awza' (tribal group) 255
al-Awza'i 255, 262
al-Awza'i * 132, 136, 148, 156,
279
'Ayn al-Tamr 253, 271
'Ayn al-Wardah 138, 274
'Ayyash b. Abi Rabi'ah 68, 112, 114
'Ayyash b. Abi Rabi'ah *112
'Ayyash b. Mu’nis ‘159
Ayyub * 103, 202, 218, 222, 226, 244
Ayyub b. Abd al-Rahman al-Ansari *
205
Ayyub b. Abi Tamimah *112
Ayyub b. al-Hakam b. Ayyub * 138
Ayyub b. Khut * 154
Ayyub al-Sakhtiyani 21 6 , 258
Ayyub b. Suwayd * 156
Azd (tribal group) 52 n. 233, 93 n. 453,
130 n. 600, 150, 153 n. 689, 156 n.
700, 158 n. 713, 241, 25s, 277 n.
1263, 283 n. 1282, 302 n. 1369,
308 n. 1409, 309 n. 1417, 314 n.
1450, 316 n. 1463, 317 n. 1467,
325 n. 1512, 329 n. 1541
Azhar b. 'Abd 'Awf 42
al-Azhari 250 n. 1109
al-Azraq, slave of al-Harith b. Kaladah
29
'Azzah bt. al-Harith 201
B
Babbah 96
Badham, governor of Yemen. See
Badhan
Badhan, governor of Yemen 324
Badr 10, 11, 13, i8n. 70, 19, 20, 21 n.
91, 22, 23, 24, 26, 28, 30, 35 n.
161, 36, 38, 40, 44 / 47 / 48, 57 , 58 ,
60, 62, 66, 69, 71, 73, 76 n. 361,
77, 93 n. 4SI, ror, 103, 117, 133,
134 n. 620, 135, 136, 155 n. 696,
162, 164, 167, 177, 190, 198 n.
862, 205, 301
Baghdad 246 n. 1089, 249, 253, 264,
265, 323 n. 1499, 324 n. 1502, 327
n. 1528, 329 n. 1540, 330 n. 1547,
331 nn. 1550-54, 332 n. 1555, 333
n. 1560, 334 n. 1567
Bahdalah (tribal group) 82 n. 390
Bahilah (tribe) 84 n. 403, 256 n. 1138
Bahirb. Raysan 221
Bahra’ (tribal group) 26 n. 115
Bahr b. Kaniz al-Saqaa’ 256
Bahzaj. See 'Amr b. al-Harith
Bajilah (tribe) 265 n. 1181, 298 n.
1355, 325 n. 1510, 326 n. 1516
Bakil 258 n, 1148
Bakkah 140
Bakkar b. Muhammad * 227
Bakr b. Wa'il (tribal group) 251 n.
1114, 275 n. 1243, 306 n. 1399,
323 n. 1498, 326 n. 1515
al-Baladhuri xv, xvi
al-Balat 46
baligh 57 n. 260
Balkh 329 n. 1539
al-Baqarhi, Abi 'Ali, Makhlad b. Ja'far
xviii
al-Baqi' 20, 21, 22, 25, 39, 164, 165,
168, 169, 173, 176, 185, 195, 214,
263
al-Bara’ b. 'Azib 294, 295 n. 1340, 300
n. 1361
al-Bara’ b. Ma'rur 287 n. 1303
Barakah. See Umm Ayman
band. See postal services
Index
37i
Barrah bt. Samaw’al 185
Bashir b. 'Amr. See Abu 'Amrah
Bashir b. Salman * 109
Basil b. Dabbah 94 n. 458
Basrah, Basran 63, 71, 72, 76, 80, 96,
104, 147 n. 663, 151, 159 n. 718,
160 n. 721, 215, 218, 221 n. 959,
224, 231 n. 1005, 236, 239 n.
1055, 241, 244 n. 1080, 249 n.
1105, 252 n. 1116, 256, 258, 259,
260, 266 n. 1190, 271 n. 1217,
272, 276 n. 1249, 277 n. 1254, 278
n. 1262, 280 n. 1271, 282 n. 1277,
284 n. 1286, 292, 295 n. 1339, 297
n- 1349/ 299 nn. 1358, 1360, 300
n. 1362, 305 nn. 1392, 1394 307
nn. 1403-404, 1406-407, 308 nn.
1409, 1411, 309 n. 1418, 310 n.
1419, 311 n. 1427, 312 n. 1434-
37, 3i3 n. 1449, 316 nn. 1464-66,
317 nn. 1467-68, 323 n. 1500, 324
nn. 1501-504, 1507, 326 nn.
1518-22, 328 n. 1533, 330 nn.
1545, 1547, 333 n. 1559
al-Batha’ 46
Batriyyah 258 n. 1148, 277 n. 1256
al-Battl 252
Bayadah b. 'Amir (tribal group) 135
bay'at al-nisa’ 162 n. 731
Bayd 172
al-Bayda’, mother of Suhayl 301
al-Bayda’. See Umm Hakim bt ‘Abd al-
Muttalib
Bayt fibrin 19 n. 74
bayt al-mal. See treasury
bedouin(s), 9 n. 30, n n. 41, 18 n. 69,
21 n. 90, 30 n. 138, 101 n. 482,
109 n. 517, 121 n. 558, 217 n. 939,
220, 299 n. 1357
Beirut 255
the Bible 136
Bilal b. Rabahh 44, 290
Bilal b. Yasar * 100
Bilqis 255
Bi'r Ma'unah 122 n. 559
Bishr b. Adam *152
Bishr b. 'Amr 247
Bishr b. Dihyah * 125
Bishr al-Hafi. See Bishr b. al-Harith
Bishr b. al-Harith 331
Bishr b. al-Hasan * 142
Bishr b. 'Imran * 152
Bishr b. Marwan 269
Bishr b. al-Mutaddal * 134, 136
the Black stone 64
blood money 294 n. 1336
blood revente 61
bridal gift, see also bride price 164,
173, 178, 180, 186, 189
bride price 16 n. 59
the Bridge, battle of 86 n. 409, 205
Brotherhood (mu’akhah) 20, 27, 30, 40,
105
Budayl b. Maysarah 125
Budayl b. Maysarah * 125
Bujayr family 275 n. 1243
Bukayr * 203
Bukayr b. 'Abdallah b. al-Ashajj 237,
335
Bukayr b. Mismar 337
al-Bukhari xviii n. 9
Bunanah (tribal group) 236
Burayd b. Abl Maryam * 128
Buraydah b. al-Husayb 70-71, 290
Burayr b. fundab. See Abu Dharr
Burd, client of Sa'Id b. al-Musayyab
216
Busr b. Abl Artah 74
Busr b. Sa'id 304
Busr b. Sa'id * 203
Busr b. 'Ubaydallah * 101
Buthan 134
Buwayb, battle of 86 n. 409
Byzantines 6, 40, 65 n. 300, 108, 263,
336 m 1579
C
Caesaria 329 n. 1539
the Camel, battle of 27, 28, 31, 86, 94,
105, 113, 138, 198, 247, 272 n.
1223, 273 n. 1226, 274, 277, 291
n. 1315, 315 n. 1457
372
Index
carrion meat 151
Cemetery of Khayzuran 253
Children of Israel 212
Christian Arabs 244 n. 1077
Christians, see also Possessors of the
Scriptures 23 n. 99, 129, 136, 241
n. 1063, 264
civil war, first 193, 294 n. 1332
civil war, second 52 n. 230, 77 n. 372,
95 n. 46s, 96 n. 466, 105 n. 499,
119 n. 550, 131 n. 606, 275 n.
1243, 295 n. r34i, 308 n. 1412
clients, clients 16, 25, 26, 31, 33, 66,
98, 99, no n. 520, 112, 113, 114,
155, 173 , 176, 181, 188, 194, 199,
200, 205, 209, 213, 215, 216, 221,
230, 231, 233, 237, 238, 239, 241,
244, 245, 248, 249 n. 1103, 250,
252, 254, 255, 256 n. 1136, 256 n.
1138, 259, 263 n. 1170, 264, 265,
277 n. 1256, 282 n. r278, 287,
299, 300, 303, 304, 305 nn. 1389-
90, 1392, 306, 307, 308 n. 1410,
309 nn. 1415-16, 1418, 310, 311
n. 1426, 312 n. 1437, 313 n. 1447,
317, 319, 321 nn. 1489-90, 322 n.
1491, 323 nn. 1498-500, 324, 325
nn. 1508, 1512-13, 326 nn. 1515-
16, 1519/ 327 n. 1525, 328 n.
1532, 329 nn. 1536, 1539 - 41 , 330
n. 1545, 33i n. 1550, 332 n. 1557,
333 , 335 , 336, 337
Companions of 'All b. Abi Talib, see
also shTah 31, 151, 207 n. 896,
208 n. 897, 210, 268, 269, 274,
275 n. 1241, 285 n. 1290
Companions of the Prophet xv, xviii,
10, 12 n. 45, 17, 19 n. 80, 20 n. 88,
21, 26, 27 n. 122, 28 n. 128, 29 n.
135, 30 n. 138, 31 n. 142, 32, 63 n.
286, 64, 66 n. 303, 67 n. 311, 79,
84, 85, 92, 93, 95, 10 n. 476, 105
n. 499, 107 nn. 505, 506, no n.
517, in n. 524, 115 n. 542, 118,
122 n. 559, 124 n. 574, 125 n. 577,
127, 131, 133 n. 613, 138-144,
146 n. 657, 147 n. 663, 148 n. 669,
149 n. 673, 153 nn. 690-91, 155,
158 n. 714, 159 n. 716, 160, 180 n.
805, 193 n. 840, 202 n. 875, 207,
210 n. 909, 215, 221, 227 n. 985,
235, 244 n. 1076, 267 n. 1193, 274
n. 1237, 278, 279 n. 1268, 281 nn.
1273-74, 282 n. 1278, 283 nn.
1279-82, 284 nn. 1284-87, 285
nn. 1290, 1293-96, 286 nn. 1297-
99, 1301, 1302, 28 n. 1305, 289 n.
1308, 290 nn. 1309-11, 291 nn.
1314, 1316-17, 292 nn. 1318-19,
1321-24, 293 nn. 1326-30, 294
nn. 1331-36, 295 nn. 1337-41,
296 nn. 1342-44, 297 nn. 1346,
1348-50, 298 nn. 1351, 1353, 299
nn. 1358-60, 300, 301 nn. 1367-
68, 303 nn. 1374, 1379, 313 n.
1443, 3i5 nn. 1457-58, 316 nn.
1460-61, 316 n. 1466, 319 nn.
1476, 1478, 330 n. 1545, 334 nn.
1565, 1569, 335 n. 1571
Constantinople 40
court of grievances 323 n. 1499
D
Dabbah (tribe) 94, 125, 312 n. 1433,
329 n. 1539
Da'd bt Jadam. See al-Bayda’, mother
of Suhayl
Daghsh (tribal group) 87
al-Dahhak b. Muzahim 323
al-Dahhak b. 'Uthman * 57
al-Dajjal. See the Deceiver
Dallah bt. Manjishan 85
Damascus 15 n. 56, 33 n. 147, 63, 224,
225 n. 1132, 272 n. 1219, 274, 295
n. 1341, 311 n. 1431
Damdam * 127, 153
Damdam b. Jaws *131
Damrah b. Rabl'ah * 207, 225
al-Dar b. Hani’ (tribal group) 298 n.
1351, 302
Darim (tribal group) 275 n. 1242
Da's (tribal group) 87 n. 416
Index
373
Da’ud (King David) 123
Da’ud * 207
Da’ud b. 'Abd al-Rahman al-Makk! *
133
Da’ud b. Abi Hind 310 n. 1422, 326,
328
Da’ud b. Abi Hind * 83, 120, 121, 182
Da’ud b. 'All b. 'Abdallah 277-78
Da’ud b. 'Ami al-Dabbi * 5 5
Da’ud al-Awdl 231
Da’ud b. al-Husayn 217, 33s
Da’ud b. al-Husayn * 16
Da’ud b. al-Muabbar * 170, 193, 224
Da’ud b. Muhammad b. 'All 235
Da’ud b. Muhammad b. al-Munkadir
240
Da’ud b. Sinan * 39
Da’ud b. 'Urwah b. Mas'ud 177
Daws (tribe) 283 n. 1282
Daylam 94
Day of Sacrifices 132
Dayr al-Jamajim, battle of 248, 270,
277
the Dead Sea 236 n. 1029
the Deceiver 108
al-Dhahabl xxiii, xiv
Dhakwan (tribe) 122
Dharr b. 'Abdallah b. Zurarah 276-77
Dhayl al-mudhayyal, see also Supple¬
ment to the Supplemented xv,
xvi, xvii, xviii, xix, xx, xxii, xxiii,
xxiv, xxv, xxvi, xxvii
Dhi Hawal (tribal group) 220
Dhu Asbah (tribal group) 261 n. 1160
Dhubyan (tribe) 72 n. 334
Dhu al-Kala’ 32
Dhu Ru'ayn (tribal group) 206
Dhu al-Sha'bayn 219
Dhu al-Shimalayn 301
Dhu al-Yadayn 301
Dihyah b. Khalifah, 71, r66
al-Dil (tribal groups of the Rabi'ah)
29
al-Dil (tribal group of the Kinanah).
See al-Du’il
Dinar b. 'Udhafir 3ro n. r422, 328
Dirghamah b. 'Ulaybah * 124
the Ditch, siege of 10, ri, 22, 26, 30,
36, 38, 40, 47, 57, 62, 66, 69, 73,
133
divorce, rules of 15, 16 n. 59
dlwan, see also pensions 42 n. 192,
277 n. 2254
the Dome of the Rock 3r8 n. 1474
dowry, see also bridal gift r89 n. 830
Duba'ah bt. al-Zubayr b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib 197-98
Dubay'ah (tribe) 310 n. 1419
duel 33
Duhman b. al-Harith (tribal group)
171
al-Du’il (tribal group) 72, 119 n. 552,
307 n. 1403
Dumat al-Jandal 233
Dumayrah b. Abi Dumayrah 100
Dumayrah b. Abi Dumayrah * roo
al-Durawardi, 'Abd al-'Aziz b.
Muhammad * 2r8
Durr ah b. Abi Salamah 17 s
Dustm al-munajjimin xx n. 18
E
Egypt i 2 n. 144, 149 n. 672, 220, 272
nn. 1219, 1221, 291 n. 1316, 293
n. 1329, 296 n. 1342, 319 n. 1475,
328 n. 1534, 329 nn. 1536-37, 335
n. 1570
Elephant, Year of 24, 41, ro6
Emigrants 18, sr, 69 n. 321, 105 n.
499, r9i
Emigration 3, 5, 10 n. 35, 20 n. 83, 40
n. 182, 52, 55, 56, 70, 115 n. 541,
128 n. 589, r38, 142, 153, 163,
r6r, 164, 171, 174, 175, 182, 202
Euphrates 263 n. 1172, 274 n. 1178
evil eye 134
F
Fadalah al-Laythi 120
Fadalah al-Laythi * r20, 121
374
Index
al-Fadl b. al-'Abbas n, 24, 95,167,
186, 194, 201, 288
al-Fadl b. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas 54
al-Fadl b. Dukayn * 60, 65, 70, 155,
214, 218, 230, 231, 238, 253, 254,
257, 259, 273, 277, 278
al-Fadl b. al-Sabbah * 196
al-Fadl b. Sahl al-A'raj * 157
Fahm (tribe) 275, 329 n. 1536
Fa’id, client of 'Ubaydallah b. 'All b.
Abi Rafi' * 199
Fakhitah bt. Abi Talib. See Umm
Hani’
Fakhitah bt. 'Amir 202
Fakhkh 50
Family of the Prophet 155 n. 697, 213,
234 n. 1016, 258
Farahid (tribal group) 278 n. 1263
Faraj b. Fadalah 331
al-Farawi * 226
al-Farazdaq 82, 123
Fardah 85
the Farewell Pilgrmage 19, 55, 92, 128,
149, 165
al-Farghani, Abu Ahmad xv
Pars 113, 228
fath see Mecca, conquest of
Fatimah bt. 'All b. Abi Talib 278-
79
Fatimah bt. 'Ali b. Abi Talib * 279
Fatimah bt. al-Dahhak. See al-
Kilabiyyah
Fatimah bt. al-Husayn * 195, 196
Fatimah bt. al-Husayn al-Athram b.
al-Hasan 248
Fatimah bt. al-Husayn b. 'All 49, 230,
279
Fatimah bt. al-Husayn b. 'All * 279
Fatimah bt. Ja'far b. Muhammad 249
Fatimah bt. Muhammad the Prophet
12-13, 80, 155, 162, 166-69, 172,
195-96, 208 n. 898, 279 n. 1265
Fatimah bt. Muhammad the Prophet *
195, 196
Fatimah bt. al-Mundhir * 208
Fatimah bt. 'Umarah 243
Fatimah junior (al-Sughra). See
Fatimah bt. al-Husayn
Fayruz b. al-Daylami 94, 299
Fazarah (tribe) 229 n. 994, 273 n. 1232,
310 n. 1421, 311 n. 1431
al-Fazari, Marwan b. Mu'awiyah 311
the Fijar wars 41, 73
Filastin, see also Palestine 158 n. 715,
295 n. 1337, 298 n. 1351, 305
Firas family 175
Firyab 329 n. 1539
al-Firyabi * 145
fitnah, see also civil war 102, 193
Fudayl b. ‘Abd al-Wahhab * 260
Fudayl b. 'Iyad 330
Fulayh al-'Anazi * 199
Fulayh b. Sulayman al-Madani * 205
G
genealogy, see also nasab 94 n. 459,
232 n. 1009, 244 n. 1077
al-Ghabah 176
al-Ghamim 70
Ghani (tribe) 101 n. 479, 102
Gharafah b. al-Harith 149
Gharafah b. al-Harith * 149
Ghassan 30, 255 n. 1135
Ghatafan (tribe) 229 n. 994, 304
Ghaylan b. Munabbih 227 n. 986
Ghazalah, mother of 'Ali b. al-Husayn
211
Ghifar (tribe) 69, 119 n. 552, 122, 154
n. 691, 299 n. 1358
al-Ghifariyyah bt. Abi al-Hakam 204
al-Ghifariyyah bt. Abi al-Hakam * 204
Gilan 94 n. 460
de Goeje xvi, xix, xx, xxi, xxii, xxiii,
xxvi
the Gospel 136
de Goeje xvi, xix, xx, xxi, xxii, xxiii,
xxvi
the Gospel 136
grave, descending into 11, 38, 161,
163, 164, 167, 174, 194
Greeks. See Byzantines
Index
375
H
Habbar b. al-Aswad 4, 77-79,163
Habib * 146
Habib b. Abl Thabit 325
Hablbah bt. Abl Umamah 303
Hablbah bt. 'Ubaydallah 177
Haddar 155
al- Had!, the caliph 265 n. 1183
hadlth al-ifk 292 n. 1322
hadlth al-kisa’. See Tradition of the
Covering
Hadramawt 89 n. 431, 135 n. 625, 148,
234 n. ior 9
HadramI family 304 n. T386
hafiz 232, 236 n. 1032, 237, 244 n.
1075, 245 n. 1082, 248 n. 1096,
257 n. 1144, 263 n. ri70, 265, 269
n. r203, 276 n. 1249, 309 n. 1417,
311 nn. 1427, 1432, 322 n. 2439,
326 n. 2462, 320 n. 2484, 322 nn.
2486, 2489, 322 n. 2492, 323 n.
2496, 324 n. 2502, 324 n. 2504,
326 n. 2529, 327 nn. 2525, 2528-
29, 328 nn. 2532, 2534, 330 n.
2542, 332 nn. 2549-50, 334 n.
2567, 336 n. 2577
Hafn 294
Hafs b. Ghiyath 322, 327
Hafs b. Ghiyath * 273
Hafs b. Maymun * 56
Hafs b. 'Umar * 39, 245
Hafs b. 'Umar al-Hawdl * 97
Hafs b. 'Umar al-Shanni * 200
Hafsah bt. Sirin * 225
Hafsah bt. 'Umar b. al-Khattab 274-
75 , 190
Hajar 32
al-Hajir 261
Hajj 229
al-Hajjaj * 225
al-Hajjaj b. Abl ManI' * 209
al-Hajjaj b. al-Muhajir * 254
al-Hajjaj b. Muhammad * 269, 280
al-Hajjaj b. Yusuf 51, 77 n. 367, 209 n.
903, 224, 228, 233 n. 2025, 248 n.
2094, 264 n. 2277, 270-72, 276
285 n. 2290, 305 n. 2385, 307 n.
2402, 326 n. 2463
Hajjar b. Abjar 275
hajjat al-wada'. See the Farewell
Pilgrimage
al-Hajun 4,262, 266
al-Hakam * 277
al-Hakam b. 'Abd al-Rahman * 279
al-Hakam b. 'Amr 122
al-Hakam b. Bashir * 209, 226
al-Hakam b. Mas'ud al-Najranl * 202
al-Hakam b. Sa'd al-Ashlrah (tribal
group) roo
al-Hakam b. 'Utaybah 230-31
al-Hakam b. 'Utaybah b. al-Nahhas
3 11 n. 2425
al-Hakam b. 'Uyaynah 230 n. 1000
al-Hakam b. Waqid * 252
Hakim b. Hakim b. 'Abbad * 229
Hakim b. Hizam 6, 40-42, 43, 206
Hakim b. Hizam * 206, 262
Hakkam b. Salm * 228
Halah bt Khuwaylid 23, 262
Halah bt. Wuhayb b. 'Abd Manaf 269,
298
Hallmah, the Prophet's wetnurse 21
al-Hamadhanl, Muhammad b. 'Abd al-
Malik xv
Hamdan (tribal group) 151, 220 n. 908,
229, 220, 238 n. 2049, 248 n.
2248, 268, 275, 276 n. 2250, 277,
322 n. 2429, 324 n. 2452, 329 n.
1538
Hammad b. Abl Sulayman 233
Hammad b. Salamah 50, 256
Hammad b. Salamah * 50k, 232, 293,
222
Hammad b. Zayd * 225, 202, 226, 223,
226, 227
Hammad 97
Hammam b. Munabbih 227 n. 986,
322
Hammam b. Yahya 298
Hamra al-Asad, raid of 58
Hamzah al-Isfahanl xx, xxi
Index
376
Hamzah b. 'Abd al-Muttalib 19, 101,
169, 198, 202
Hamzah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar 175
Hamzah b. 'Abdallah b. al-Zubayr 333
Hamzah b. Abl Usayd al-Sa'idl 319
Hamzah b. Abl Usayd al-Sa'idl * 190
Hamzah b. Habib al-Zayyat 254-55
Hamzah b. 'Utbah b. Ibrahim * 64
Hanafl's 251
HanafI school 250 n. rio6, 264
Hanash b. al-Harith * 51, 65
Hani’ b. 'Adi 274
Hani’ b. Yazld 298
hanif 37 n. 169
Hanlfah (tribe) 30 n. 139, 208
Hantab family 337 n. 1583
Hanzalah (tribal group) 263 n. 1170
Hanzalah b. Qays * 134
Haram (tribal group) 248
Haram b. Hubshiyyah (tribal group) 52
n. 233
Harb b. 'Ubaydallah 129
Harb b. 'Ubaydallah * r29
Harb b. Umayyah 177
al-Harish (tribal group) 316 nn. 1464-
65
al-Harith * x68, 169, X70, 176, 182,
191, 193, 202, 215, 221, 224, 225,
267, 268
Harithah (a clan of the Aws) 71m 331,
283
Harithah b. al-Harirh (a clan of the
Khazraj) 132
Harithah b. Sharahll 6, 8
Harithah b. Suraqah 90
al-Harith al-A'war b. Abdallah b. Ka'b
267-68
al-Harith b. 'Amir 29, 116
al-Harith b. Fihr (a clan of the
Quraysh) 41, 302
al-Harith b. Harb b. Umayyah 169,
199
al-Harith b. Ka'b (tribal group) 235,
298 n. 1353
al-Harith b. Kaladah 29
al-Harith b. Khazraj (a clan of the
Khazraj) 192, 283, 284
al-Harith b. Khufaf *121
al-Harith b. Malik 154
al-Harith b. Malik * 154
al-Harith b. Malik b. Zayd 261 n. n6r
al-Harith b. Muhammad * 4, 9, 27, 98,
106, 115, 176, 233, 262
al-Harith b. Nawfal b. 'Abd Manaf 105
al-Harith b. Nawfal b. al-Harith 63, 96
al-Harith b. Nawfal b. al-Harith * 96,
97
al-Harith b. Sa'id b. Qays 89
al-Harith al-Walladah (tribal group) 90
Harmalah b. 'Abdallah al-'Anbari 124-
125
Harmalah b. 'Abdallah al-'Anbari *
X24
Harmalah b. 'Imran * 149
al-Harrah, battle of 131 n. 606, 243 n.
1070, 316 n. 1461
Harun b. 'Antarah 327
Harun b, 'Imran (Aaron, son of
Amram) 185
Harun b. al-Mughlrah * 137
Harun al-Rashld, the caliph 249, 263,
264, 265, 309 n. 1418
Harura’ 273 n. t23i
Haruriyyah 273
al-Hasan * 66, 99, 123 266
al-Hasan b. 'Abdallah b. 'Ubaydallah
55
al-Hasan b. Abl al-Hasan. See
al-Hasan al-Basn
al-Hasan b. 'All b. Abl Talib 39-40/
49, 75, 80, 96, 121, 231, 268, 269,
319
al-Hasan b. 'Arafah * 133, 157
al-Hasan al-Basrl 221-27, 317, 312 n.
1434 (?)
al-Hasan al-Basrl * 158
al-Hasan b. Dinar * 160
al-Hasan b. Hayy. See al-Hasan b.
Salih
al-Hasan b. 'Imran b. 'Uyaynah * 266
al-Hasan b. Muhammad b. al-Hanafiy-
yah 322
al-Hasan b. Qaza'ah * 120
al-Hasan b. Qutaybah 330
Index
377
al-Hasan b. Salih 258-59
al-Hasan b. Sawwar *131
al-Hasan b. Usamah b. Zayd 192
al-Hasan b. Yasar. See al-Hasan al-
Basri
al-Hasan b. Zayd b. al-Hasan 260-61
Hasa. See Hajar
Hashim (the Prophet's clan) 19, 23 n.
103 / 25/ 39/ 55 n. 248, 59 n. 264,
60, 62 n. 285, 64, 95 n. 461, 98,
102 n. 488, 210, 277, 331 n. 1550
Hashim, Banu, siege of 55, 103 n. 491,
161, 199
Hashim b. 'Asim al-Aslami * 70, 71
Hashim b. 'Utbah al-Mirqal 31, 32, 35,
108
Hashimi family, see also Hashim 260
n. 1157, 309 n. 1414, 315 n. 1455,
334n. 1568
Hashimiyyah (movement) 236 n.
1031, 322 n. 1495
Hashimiyyah (place) 246, 336 n. 1576
Hassan b. 'Amr Tubba' 219-20
Hassan b. Thabit 49, 55, 72, 103, 141,
144 , 194 , 291 / 295 n. 1337
Hassan Dhu al-Sha'bayn. See Hassan
b. 'Amr
Hatib b. Abi Balta’ah r94, 289, 296-
97
Hatib b. 'Amr b. 'Abd Shams r7o
Hatim *114
Hatim b. Kurayb * 147
Hawazin (tribal group) 19, ro6, 192 n.
837, 322 n. r49i
Hawdhah b. Khalifah 324
Hawshab * 266
Hawtharah b. Muhammad al-
Minqari * 134
al-Haytham b. Kharijah 331
Haywah b. Shurayh 328
Hazawwarah 109
Hazm, family of 243 n. 1070
hijdb. See veil
Hijaz 74 n. 350, 9t, 208 n. 898, 261 n.
1164, 276
al-Hijr 9
Hi/rah. See emigration
Hilal b. al-'Ala al-Raqql * 96
Hilal b. 'Amir (tribe) 54, 96, r26 n.
584, r8s n. 8r8, 201 n. 869, 253,
254, 265, 297 n. 1349, 323 n.
1497 , 327 n. 1529
Hilal b. Khabbab 330
hilf. See Alliance
hilm 126
al-Himmani * 207
Hims 53 n. 241, roo, t45, 155 n. 698,
159 n. 716, 206, 295 n. 1341, 299
n- 1359 / 328 n. 1535 , 33 i n. 1548
Himyar (tribe) 32 n. 146, 33, 85, 94,
201, 206, 220, 261, 272 n. I2r9,
299 , 3 i 7 , 321 n. i486, 328 n. 1535
Hind bt. 'Abd b. al-Harith 203
Hind b. Abi Halah 3, 79-80, 161
Hind bt. Abi Talib. See Umm Hani’
Hind bt. Abi Umayyah. See Umm
Salamah
Hindbt. 'Awf 185, 201
Hind bt. al-Harith al-Firasiyyah * 176
Hind bt. Khadijah 161
al-Hirah 206 n. 892, 244 n. 1077, 289
n. 1307
al-Hirmas b. Ziyad al-Bahili 128-29
al-Hirmas b. Ziyad al-Bahili * 128
Hisham * 266
Hisham b. 'Abd al-Malik, the caliph
82 n. 389, 221, 228, 233, 234, 265
n. 1185, 326 n. 1515
Hisham b. al-Ghaz * 152
Hisham b. Hakim b. Hizam 41, 106
Hisham b. Hassan * 66, 98
Hisham b. Hubaysh * 138
Hisham b. Isma'il 213
Hisham b. Muhammad. See Ibn al-
Kalbi
Hisham b. 'Umarah * 79
Hisham b. 'Urwah 334
Hisham b. 'Urwah * 27, 109, 190, 193,
208, 212
Hisham b. Yusuf * 216
Hisham al-Dastawa’i ‘136
The History (by al-Tabari) xv-xxvii
Hit 263
Hizam b. Hisham * 138, 184
378
Index
Hizam b. Khuwaylid 41
Hubayrah b. Abi Wahb 196, 197
Hubayrah al-Makshuh 91
Hubaysh b. Khalid 138
Hubaysh b. Khalid * 138
Hubshi b. Junadah 84,127-28
Hubshi b. Junadah * 128
Hudaybiyyah 10, 11, 38, 44, 45 n. 203,
107
Hudayn b. al-Mundhir al-Raqashi
266-67
Hudayr b. Abi Mahdhurah 48
Hudayr family 245
Hudhayfah b. al-Yaman 30, 133, 300,
301-302
Hudhayl (tribe) 61, no, 203 n. 877,
315 n. 1458
al-Hudhayl b. Hubayrah 166 n. 748
Hujr b. 'Adi 148 n. 668, 274
al-Hulb b. Yazid al-Ta’i 302-303
Humayd b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Awf
244
Humayd b. Hilal * 70, 122
Humayd b. Mas'adah al-Sami * 134
Humayd b. Tarkhan. See Humayd
al-Tawil
Humayd b. Thawr al-Hilali 126
Humayd al-Tawil 309
Humaymah 236 n. 1029
Humaynah bt. Abi Talhah 277
Hunaydah b. Khalid al-Khuza'i 145
Hunaydah b. Khalid al-Khuza'i * 145
Hunayn 11, 20, 21, 24, 34, 43, 46, 61,
62, 64, 73, 79 n. 376, 82, ror, 105,
106, 108, 112, 115, 127, 192
Huraymilah bt. 'Abd al-Aswad 67
Hurayth b. Yasir 29
Hurayth b. Zayd al-Khayl 85
al-Hurr b. al-Sayyah al-Nakha'i * 142
Husayl b. Jabir 301
al-Husayn b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. 'Amr
* 83
al-Husayn b. 'Abdallah b. Dumayrah *
100
al-Husayn b. 'Abdallah b. 'Ubaydallah
55
al-Husayn b. Abi al-Husayn * 174
al-Husayn b. 'Ali b. Abi Talib 48-51,
53, 96, 121, 211, 215, 248, 274,
288
al-Husayn b. 'Ali b. Abi Talib * 187,
279
al-Husayn b. 'Ali b. al-Hasan 50 n. 224
al-Husayn b. 'Ali al-Suda’I * 151, 199,
242
al-Husayn b. b. al-Harith 24
al-Husayn b. Numayr 5 3 n. 240, 274
al-Hu§ayn b. 'Ubayd 137
al-Husayn b. 'Ubayd * 137
al-Husayn b. Zayd b. 'Ali b. al-Husayn
330
al-Husayn al-Mu'allim * 69
Huth 268
Huwaytib b. 'Abd al-'Uzza 42, 43-46,
300, 336 n. 1575
Huwayy al-Saksaki 33
Huzaylah bt. al-Harith 201
Hypocrites 9,132 n. 612, 156
I
'Ibad 244
Ibn al-'Abbas 25, 54 - 57 . 74 , 88, 95 ,
in, 215, 216, 217, 227 n. 985,
254 n. 1124, 277 n. 1258, 288,
304, 305 n. 1394, 309 n. 1415,
3io, 320
Ibn al-'Abbas * 9, 16, 55, 56, 64, 167,
168, 170
Ibn 'Abd al-A'la * 273
Ibn 'Abd al-Barr xxiv
Ibn Abi 'Awn * 32, 164, 187, 188, 190
Ibn Abi Dhi'b * 100, 120
Ibn Abi Fudayk * 120
Ibn Abi al-Furat 192
Ibn Abi Layla 231
Ibn Abi Nu'm. See al-Hakam b. ‘Abd
al-Rahman
Ibn Abi Qays. See 'Amr b. Abi Qays
Ibn Abi Sabrah * 17, 45, 69, 73, 80, 81,
167, 173 , 174 , 187, 209, 213
Ibn Abi Uways * 262
Ibn Abi al-Zinad * 42, 46, 55, 190, 208
Index
379
Ibn 'A'ishah * 237
Ibn al-Ash'ath 209 n. 903, 228, 248,
271, 276, 282 n. 1278, 315 n.
1459, 3i7 n. 1467, 320 nn. 1484,
1485
Ibn 'Awn 258
Ibn 'Awn * 134, 222
IbnBashshar * ioi ( 103, 104, 114,
121, 125, 146, 158, 197, 198, 204
Ibn Buraydah * 99
Ibn Fudayl * 97, 268
Ibn Ghusayyil * 190
Ibn Hibban al-Bustl xv, xvi
Ibn Humayd * 5, 13, 14, 98, 109, 119,
128, 129, 137, 146, 160, 216, 223,
226, 242, 268, 270
Ibn Ishaq xxiv, 227 n. 984, 238, 253
Ibn Ishaq * 5, 13, 14, 16, 26, 109, 146,
160, 204, 283
Ibn Jabir * 148
Ibn Jubayr. See Sa'id b. Jubayr
Ibn Ju'dubah 160
Ibn Ju'dubah * 160
Ibnjurayj * 12, 167, 173, 186, 204,
279, 280
Ibn al-Kalbi xxiv
Ibn al-Kalbi * 9, 16, 32, 68, 69, 85, 89,
90, 115, 130, 166, 170, 188, 190,
191, 196, 199, 2361, 248, 255, 278,
283, 284, 287
Ibn Khayr al-Ishblli xxiii, xiv
Ibn Lahl'ah 322 n. 1492
Ibn Lahl'ah * 203, 205
Ibn al-Madyani * 209
Ibn al-Mahdi. See 'Abd al-Rahman b.
al-Mahdl
Ibn Ma'in * 207, 209, 216, 221, 222,
230, 232, 238, 241, 249, 259, 268,
282, 289, 293, 299, 305, 208, 325
Ibn Mannah * 187
Ibn Muhayriz al-Jumahl * 57
Ibn al-Muthanna * 124, 136
Ibn Nudaylah 156
Ibn Nudaylah * 156
Ibn Numayr *113
Ibn Sa'd xviii n. 9, xxi, xxiv, xxv
Ibn Sa'd * 4, 9, 19, 23, 26, 27, 48, 60,
63, 65, 69, 70, 83, 98, 106, 115,
176, 209, 212, 214, 2x5, 219, 223,
226, 227, 228, 230, 233, 243, 248,
253, 254, 259, 260, 262, 263, 265,
266, 269, 273, 277, 278
Ibn Shawdhab * 225
Ibn Shihab. See al-Zuhri
Ibn Shubrumah 252
Ibn Sinan al-Qazzaz * 132
Ibn Sirin 223, 225, 226, 227
Ibn Sudran. See Muhammad b.
Ibrahim
Ibn 'Umar, 'Abdallah 38, 117,174,
175, 223, 237
Ibn 'Umar, 'Abdallah * 30, 57 (?), 62 (?)
174, 188
Ibn 'Umar. See al-Waqidl
Ibn Umm al-Hakam 92
Ibn Umm Maktum 68-69, 118-119
Ibn Umm Maktum * 119
Ibn Wahb * 100, 108, 132, 133, 147,
204
Ibn Waki' * 135, 136, 226
Ibn Warqa’ al-Nakha'I 247
Ibn al-Zubayr. See 'Abdallah b. al-
Zubayr
Ibrahim. See Abraham
Ibrahim * 203, 268, 273
Ibrahim b. 'Abdallah b. al-Hasan 245
n. 1084, 246, 260 n. 1157
Ibrahim b. 'Abdallah b. Muhammad *
182
Ibrahim b. Abl Musa al-Ash'ari 233
Ibrahim b. 'Amir b. Abl Sufyan * 64
Ibrahim b. Bashshar al-Ramadl * 252
Ibrahim b. Hammad al-Zuhri * 261
Ibrahim b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260
Ibrahim b. Ja'far b. Mamud * 43, 45,
58, 68
Ibrahim b. Khalid * 218
Ibrahim b. al-Mahdl al-MassIsI * 238,
253
Ibrahim b. al-Muhajir *116
Ibrahim b. Muhammad b. al-Munkadir
240
Ibrahim b. Muhammad the Prophet
22, 161, 193, 194
380
Index
Ibrahim b. Muhammad, Ibrahim al-
Imam 235
Ibrahim b. Nafi' * 221
Ibrahim al-Nakha'I 223, 314 n. 1453
Ibrahim al- Qari’ al-Kufl * 142
Ibrahim b. Qays 89
Ibrahim b. Sa'd * 23, 216
Ibrahim b. Sa'Id al-Jawhari * 205
Ibrahim b. Wathimah * r88
Ibrahim b. Yusuf *115
'Id al-Adha. See the Day of Sacrifices
'iddah 170 n. 760, 175, 178
'ihiam 103
ihtiba’ 138 n. 637
ijdzah xix
'Ijl b. Lujaym (tribe) 275, 277 n. 1256
'Ikrimah * 186
'Ikrimah b. Abi Jahl 17-19, 115
Ikrimah b. 'Ammar * 128, 131
'Ikrimah, client of Ibn 'Abbas 215-18,
320, 312 n. 1435
'Ikrimah, client of Ibn 'Abbas * 16
al-'Ilba’ al-Sulaml 239
'ilm al-iijal xvii, xx
'ilm al-fara’id 268 n. 1196
imam, return of 218
iman 154 n. 693
'Imran b. Bakkar al-Kala'I *157
'Imran b. Hind b. 'Abdallah * 47
'Imran b. al-Husayn 137, 292-93
'Imran b. al-Husayn * 137
'Imran b. Musa * 195
'Imran b. 'Uyaynah 327
Imru' al-Qays 87
Iqal b. Shabbah 82
Iram 16
Iraq 22 n. 95, 72, 86 nn. 409, 412, 88,
107 n. 506, 129 n. 595, 206 n. 892,
222 n. 964, 229, 233, 244 n. 1077,
246 n. 1089, 253, 262, 263 n.
1172, 264 n. 1177, 265, 269, 274
n. 1235, 282 n. 1277, 292 n. 1319,
307 n. 1405, 318 n. 1472, 326 n.
1515
al-'Irbad b. Sariyah 292
'Isa b. 'Abd Rahman * 92
'Isa b. 'Abdallah al-Nawfall * 19, 60
‘Isa, client of Ja'far b. Kharijah 205
'Isa b. al-Fadl b. Ma'qil * 146
'Isa b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260
'Isa b. Yunus * 215
'Isa b. Yunus al-Sabl'I 329
'Isa b. Zayd b. 'All 258, 259
'Isam b. Qudamah * 145
Isfahan 93 n. 453, 312 n. 1440, 319 n.
U 79
Ishaq b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Farwah 37,
337
Ishaq b. 'Abdallah b. al-Harith * 19,
60, 198
Ishaq b. 'Abdallah b. Nawfal * 198
Ishaq b. Abi Isra’Il * 214
Ishaq al-A'war b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260
Ishaq b. Ibrahim * 159
Ishaq b. Ibrahim b. Habib * 272, 278
Ishaq b. Ibrahim al-Ramll * 150
Ishaq b. Ibrahim al-Sawwaf * 124
Ishaq b. Ja'far b. Muhammad 249
Ishaq b. Mansur * 246
Ishaq b. Muhammad * 180
Ishaq b. Shahln al-Wasiti *121
Ishaq b. Yahya * 56
Ishaq b. Yahya b. Talhah * 183
Ishaq b. Yasar 253
Isma'il * 216, 268
Isma'il b. Aban * 101
Isma'il b. 'Abd al-Rahman. See al-
Suddl
Isma'il b. 'Abdallah b. Zurarah * 98
Isma'il b. Abi Khalid 304, 309, 326,
332
Isma'il b. Abi Khalid * 113, 114
Isma'il b. 'Amr b. Sa'Id 334
Isma'il b. 'Amr b. Sa'Id * 177
Isma'il al-A'raj b. Ja'far al-Sadiq 248
Isma'il b. 'Ayyash * 133
Isma'il b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260
Isma'il b. Ibrahim ,1 Ibn 'Ulayyah 323
Isma'il b. Ibrahim, Ibn 'Ulayyah * 196,
238, 253
Isma'il b. Ibrahim al-Makhzuml *114
Isma'il b. Ibrahim b. al-Muhajir *114
Isma'il b. Ibrahim, the patriarch 130
Isma'il b. Ja'far b. Abi Kathlr 331
Index
381
Isma'il b. Mas'ud al-Jahdari * 226
Isma'il b. Muhammad b. 'All 236
Isma'il b. Muhammad b. Sa'd * 23,
177
Isma'il b. Musa al-Suddl * 99, 128
Isma'il b. 'Ulayyah. See Isma'il b.
Ibrahim, Ibn 'Ulayyah
Isma'il b. Yahya al-Ma'afiri * 146
Isma'Iliyyah. See Shl'ah, Isma'il!
isnad xxv, xxvii
al-ls, raid of 14 n. 54
Isra'Il * 116, 119, 122, 145, 197, 200
Istakhr 267 n. 1190
'Iyad b. Abl Llnah 285 n. 1290
Iyas b. Mu'awiyah 326
Iyas b. Rabl'ah 62
Iyas b. Salamah b. al-Akwa' 319
Iyas b. Salamah b. al-Akwa' * 58
Iyas b. Zuhayr * 151
J
Jabalah (tribal group) 87 n. 418
Jabalah b. Harithah 7
Jabalah b. Suhaym 326
Jabir b. 'Abdallah 58-59, 214, 223,
230, 291, 311
Jabir b. Samurah 297
Jabir b. Samurah * 108
Jabir b. Yazld al-Ju'fl 237-38, 253
Jabir b. Zayd. See Abu al-Sha'tha’
Ja'dah (tribal group) 126
Jadhlmah b. Malik (tribal group) 238
Jadllah (tribal group) 228 n. 988, 275
n. 1245
Jadllah bt. Murr 276
Ja'far b. Abl Sufyamn b. al-Harith 21,
62-63
Ja'far b. Abl Talib 4-6, 178, 202
Ja'far b. al-Husayn b. 'All 49
Ja'far b. Kilab (tribal group) 83
Mahmud b. Muhammad * 43, 45
Ja'far b. Maymun 326
Ja'far b. Muhammad 248-49, 259 n.
1152
Ja'far b. Muhammad * 13, 60, 180,
214, 229
Ja'far al-Sadiq. See Ja'far b.
Muhammad
Ja'far b. Sulayman * 66, 98, 239
Ja'far b. Sulayman b. 'All 236
Ja'far b. Sulayman al-Duba'I * 159
Ja'far b. Ziyad al-Ahmar 258, 259
Jafshlsh 90
al-Jaful. See Malik b. Nuwayrah
Jahiliyyah 43, 72, 73, 116, 151 n. 681,
156, 197
jahl 126
Jahm b. Qays b. Shurahbll 67
Jahmiyyah 264, 332 n. 1555
Jahsh b. Ri'ab 9 n. 30
Jahsh family 168, 180 n. 806
Jalula', battle of 88
Jam' 266
Jamajim. See Dayr al-Jamajim
Jamal (tribal group) 92
Jamil b. Martyhad al-Ta’I * 9
al-Janad 221
al-jarh wa-al-ta'dil xviii
Jarir * 214
Jarir b. 'Abd al-Hamid * 98, 128, 129,
168, 216, 223, 242, 270
Jarir b. 'Abdallah al-BaJall 298-99
Jarir b. Hazim * 121, 123
Jariyah b. Qudamah 316-17
Jarm (tribal group) 327 n. 1523
Jawn (tribal group) 190
the Jawniyyah, wife of the Prophet
188
Jay da' 49
Jazirah, see also Mesopotamia 92, 264,
292 n. 1322, 322 n. 1491
Jerusalem 159, 305 n. 1391, 3x8 n.
1474, 328 n. 1535
Jesus 179
Jews, see also Possessors of the Scrip¬
tures 23 n. 99, 129, 136, 241 n.
1063, 263, 324 n. 1507
Jebril 43 n. 195, 71, 159, 182
Jidh' 11
jihad 263 n. 1170, 303 n. 1377, 336 n.
1579
382 ,
Index
Ji'ranah 79, 188
Jirwah b. al-Harith 301
jiwai. See protection
jizyah 129 n. 599
Jubayr b. Mut'im * 79
Jubayr b. Mut'im 102, 291, 318 n.
1473
Jubayr b. Nufayr * 200
Juddah 20
Ju'fiyy (tribe) 208 n. 897, 237 n. 1041,
285 n. 1291
the Juhaf, Year of 59
Juhaym b. al-Salt b. Makhramah 77
Juhaynah (tribe) 146 n. 661, 293 n.
1329, 293 n. 1331, 319 n. 1479
Julhumah (original name of the tribe
of Tayyi') 85
Jumah (a clan of the Quraysh) 48 n.
216, 95 n. 461, in n. 522, 118,
152 n. 684, 174 n. 779, 2 97 n.
1346
Junadah b. Abi Umayyah 156 n. 700
Junadah b. Malik 156
Junadah b. Malik * 156
Junaydah 31 n. 142
Jundab b. Junadah. See Abu Dharr
Jundu' (tribal group) 303
furf 26, 65, 99
Juthah b. 'Ubayd * 73
Juwayriyyah bt. al-Harith, wife of the
Prophet 182-84
K
Ka'b al-Ahbar 206-207, 272 n. 1219,
317
Ka'b b. Malik 291
Ka'b b. Mati'. See Ka'b al-Ahbar
Ka'b b. Rabi'ah (tribal group) 137, 141,
142, 145
Ka'b b. Sharahil 8
the Ka'bah 7 n. 24, 8, 9 n. 29, 37, 51,
64, 106 n. 501, 109 n. 516, 132,
135, 166, 167, 174
Kabathah b. Aws 73
Kabul 237
kafa'ah 196 n. 843
kaffaiah 148 n. 671
Kahil (tribal group) 248
Kalb b. Wabarah (tribe) 6, 7, 71 n. 330,
88 n. 424
al-Kalbl 247-48, 304
al-Kalbi * 85, 130, 170, 236, 255
Kannaz b. al-Husayn. See Abu
Marthad
Karbala' 48 n. 219, sin. 228, 53 n.
236, 210 n. 910, 211, 214 n. 923,
248 n. 1098, 288 n. 1305
Karlmah bt. al-Miqdad 26, 197
Karimah bt. al-Miqdad * 26
Kathir b. al-'Abbas 75, 96
Kathir b. Muhammad * 250
Kathir b. Murrah * 153
Kathir b. Zayd * 164, 176, 185
Khabbab b. al-Aratt no, 289
Khadljah bt. Khuwaylid, wife of the
Prophet 3-4, 6, 13, 40 n. 185, 66
n. 305, 79 , 80 n. 378, 161, 162,
163, 166, 170, 192
Khadljah bt. al-Zubayr 193
Khalaf b. Hisham 332
Khalaf b. Tamim * 242
Khalid * 154
Khalid b. 'Abdallah b. Harmalah *121
Khalid b. 'Abdallah al-Qasri 265
Khalid h. Abi 'Imran * 102
Khalid b. Aslam 335
Khalid al-Hadhdha' 221, 306, 326
Khalid b. Hakim b. Hizam 41, 106
Khalid b. Khidash * 50, 202, 225, 226
Khalid b. al-Lajlaj * 148
Khalid b. Ma'dan al-Kala'i 215
Khalid b. Ma'dan al-Kala'i * 215
Khalid b. Mihran. See Khalid
al-Hadhdha'
Khalid b. al-Qasim al-Bayadl * 25, 56,
217
Khalid b. Sa'id b. al-'As 178, 179, 180
Khalid b. 'Umayr * 104
Khalid b. al-Walid 15 n. 56, 67 n. 311,
85, 108, in, 165, 198, 202, 208,
271, 274 n. 1238, 291
Khalid b. Yazid b. Mu'awiyah 216
Index
383
Khalifah b. Farwah 166
Khalifah b. Khayyat xv, xvi, xviii n. 9
al-Khalil b. Ahmad 278
Khallad b. Rifa'ah b. Rafi' 134
Khandamah 165
al-Khandaq. See the Ditch
kharaj tax 322 n. 1491
Kharif (tribal group) 220
Kharijah b. al-Harith * 58
KharijI doctrines xix, 217, 335 n. 1573
Khath'am 201, 202 n. 873
Khatmah (a clan of the Aws) 34
Khawarij 86 n. 412, 217, 273 n. 1231,
292 n. 1321, 305 n. 1390
Khawlah bt. 'Awf. See Hind bt. 'Awf
Khawlah bt. al-Hudhayl 166
Khawlah bt. Ja'far al-Hanafiyyah 208
Khawlan (tribal group) 308 n. 1412
Khaybar 5 10, ir, 66, 160, 185, 203
Khayrah 222
Khayrah bt. Abi Hadrad. See Umm al-
Darda'
Khaythamah b. 'Abd al-Rahman 285
Khaywan (tribal group) 210 n. 908, 239
n. 2050
Khazraj (tribe) 34 n. 155, 35 n. 157, 40
n. 181, 56 n. 258, 72 n. 339, 130,
133 n. 615, 206 n. 891, 210 n. 909,
283 n. i28r, 284 n. 1284, 290
1310, 1311, 295 nn. 1339, 1340,
i 34 i, 2,96 n. 1343, 3t9 n. t477
al-Khirbaq 301
Khimiq bt. Khalifah 166
Khudrah (a clan of the Khazraj) 57
Khufaf b. Ima’ 121
Khufaf b. ima’ * i2t
Khulayd * 223
khums 75, 183
Khurasan 71, 75, 122 n. 560, 166 n.
747, 218, 228, 229 n. 994, 239,
263, 284 n. 1286, 312 n. r44o ( 313
n. 1446, 316 n. r463, 323 n. 1497,
326 n. 1519, 329 n. 1540, 331 n.
1551 , 1553 , 1 5 54
Khusraw 94, 227, 299, 324
Khuza'ah (tribal group) 52 n. 233, 70
n. 326, 92 n. 445, 93 n. 449, no,
277, 287, 292 n, 1324, 301 317 n.
1469, 328 n. 1531
Khuzaymah b. Jahm 67
Khuzaymah b. Muhammad b. 'Um-
arah * 131
Khuzaymah b. Thabit 34,131, 294,
316 n. 1460
Khuzaymah b. Thabit *131
Khuzaymah b. Thabit's brother 131
Kilab (tribal group) 83, 186 n. 821
the Kilabiyyah, wife of the Prphet
r86-88
Kinanah (tribe) 61 n. 276, 69 n. 320,
72 n. 340, 119, 165, t 8 o n. 805,
307 n. 1403
Kinanah b. al-Rabi' b. Abi al-Huqayq
185
Kindah (tribe) 33 n. T47, 54 n. 245, 87,
88, 89 n. 431, 90, in, 148 n. 667,
149, 188, 189 n. 834, 191, 230,
232, 274 n. 1236, 305 n. 1390, 315
n. 1459, 321 n. 1490, 327 n. 1523
Kufah, Kufan 22 n. 92, 36, 38 n. 176,
39, 48 n. 219, 51 nn. 227-28, 53,
60, 65 n. 302, 69, 84, 86, 87 n.
418, 88, 93, 107 n. 506, 113, 114,
119 n. 550, 129 n. 596, 138, 147 n.
663, 151 n. 679, 193 n. 841, 208
nn. 897-98, 210, 211 n. 913, 215,
218, 220, 223 nn. 970-71, 224,
228, 229, 233, 235 n. 1023, 237,
238, 239, 242, 243, 24s n. 1084,
247 nn. 1091-93, 248, 250, 251,
252 n. 1117, 254, 258, 259, 264,
265 n. 1184, 268, 269, 270, 274 n.
1236, 275, 277 n. 1256, 282 n.
1278, 285 n. 1297, 293 n. 1327,
294 n. 1332, 295 n. 1341, 297 nn.
1346, 1348, 1350, 300 n. 1361,
304 nn. 1382, 1384, 305 n. 1387-
88, 1390, 306 n. 1401, 307 n.
1402, 308 n. 1408, 310 n. 1420,
311 nn. 1425, 1427, 1429-1431,
312 nn. 1432-33, 313 nn. 1441-
42, 1444-45, 1447 - 48 , 314 n.
1450 - 53 , 3 i 5 n. 1458, 320 n.
Index
384
Kufah, Kufan (continued)
1848, 321 n. 1486-88, 323 n.
1497, 324 n. 1505, 325 nn. 1508-
14, 326 n. 1516, 327 nn. 1525-29,
328 nn. 1531-32, 329 n. 1538, 330
nn. 1542, 1544-45, 33 a n. 1557
Kulayb b. Rabi'ah (tribal group) 254 n.
1126
Kulayb b. Yarbu' (tribal group) 324 n.
1503
Kumayl b. Ziyad 270-71
kunyah 3
Kurayz b. Rabi'ah 198
Kurz b. 'Alqamah 92-93
Kuthayyir 'Azzah 217
L
Labid b. Rabi'ah 83, 299
Lakhm (tribe) 289, 302
Layla bt. Mas'ud 271
al-Layth * 97, 154, 195, 196, 221
al-Layth b. Abi Sulaym 332
al-Layth b. Bakr (tribal group) 61, 119
n. 552, 138, 160 n. 721, 165 n.
743, 291 n. 13x7, 292 n. 13x8, 300
n. 1362, 303, 304 n. 1381, 336
al-Layth b. Sa'd 322 n. 1492, 329
al-Layth b. Sa'd * 101, 156
al-Layth (lexicographer) 250 n. 1109
legal alms 82, 83, 91, 129, 223, 294 n.
1336
Lift (a wadi) 172
Living Sunnah 243 n. 1074
lizards, killing of 204
locusts, killing of 127
Lubabah bt. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas 54
Lubabah bt. al-Harith, Lubabah al-
Kubra 54, 96, 111, 186, 201-202,
254 n. 1124, 287
Lubabah bt. al-Harith, Lubabah
sl-Sughra 111, 202
Lubabah bt. Muhammad b. 'All 236
Lu'lu'ah, client of Umm al-Hakam *
3 i, 33
Lut b. Yahya. See Abu Mikhnaf
M
Ma'add 7
Ma'awil 241
Ma'bad b. al-'Abbas 75, 96, 201
Ma'bad b. Khalid 294
Mabur, brother of Mariyah 194
al-Mada’in 99, 313 n. 1446, 328 n.
1532, 330 nn. 1545, 1546
al-Mada’in, battle of 88
al-Mada’ini xxiv
al-Mada’ini * 39 / 49 / 5°, 51, 54 , 56, 57 ,
59, 75, 169, 209, 211, 212, 222,
224, 225, 230, 236, 249, 256, 260,
267, 271
Ma'dan * 257
Ma'dan b. al-Aswad 90
Madhar 271
Madhhij (tribal group) 29, 85, 91, 266,
272
maghazi 235, 241, 253, 318 n. 1470,
330 n. 1543
al-Maghrib 218, 220, 262
Magians, see also Zoroastrians 241 n.
1063
al-Mahdi, the caliph 256, 258, 260,
265 n. 1181, 330 n. 1544, 331 n.
1548, 333 n- 1560
Mahmiyyah b. Jaz’ al-Zubaydi 201
mahr. See bride price
al-Majishun. See Ya'qub b. Abi
Sal amah
Makhlad * 268
Makhlad b. Ja'far. See al-Baqarhi
Makhramah b. Bukayr * 169
Makhramah b. Nawfal 42-43, 69, 297
Makhzum (a clan of the Quraysh) 17,
29 n. 132, 47, 59 n. 267, 67 n. 311,
80 n. 380, 95 n. 461, hi, 116, 125
n. 577, 168 n. 756, 281 n. 1274,
303 n. 1379, 3 i 4 n. 1454 , 316 n.
1462, 335 n. 1570
Malik b. Abi Maryam * 147
Malik b. 'Amir 29, 116
Malik b. Anas 217, 226, 245 n. 1082,
249, 252, 261-63
Malik b. Anas * 55, 132, 243, 261
Index
385
Malik al-Ashtar. Seer al-Ashtar al-
Nakha'i
Malik b. A 'sur. See Bahilah
Malik b. Aws * 183
Malik b. Dinar 237
Malik b. al-Harith. See al-Ashtar al-
Nakha'I
Malik b. Hisl (tribal group) 185
Malik b. Huwayrith 300
Malik b. Isma'il * 2r2
Malik b. Mighwal 311
Malik b. Numayr al-Khuza'i * 145
Malik b. Nuwayrah 83
Malik b. Udad (tribal group) 29
Malik b. Zayd b. Shadad 255
Maliki school 245 n. 1082
M'mar * 218
Ma'marb. Rashid * 12, 108, 112, 167,
174, 176, 190, 240, 265
Ma'n (tribal group) 6, 87 n. 416
Ma'n b. Isa al-Qazzaz * 127, 199, 243
Mansur * 137
al-Mansur, Abu Ja'far, the caliph 234
n. 1017, 235, 245 n. 1084,246,
248, 249, 253-54, 255, 258 n.
1150, 260, 261, 262, 277 n. 1258,
304 n. 1382, 328 n. 1532, 334 n.
1567, 336 n. 1576, 337 n. 1583
Mansur b. al-Mu'tamir 242
Mansur b. Sa'd * 125
Mansur b. Zadhan 241
Ma'qil b. Munabbih 227 n. 986, 322
Ma'qil b. Yasar 292
Mariyah, wife of the Prophet 22,161,
293-95
Marj 'adhra’ 274
Marthad b. Abi Marthad al-GhanawI
101
Marthad b. Abi Marthad al-Ghanawi *
101
Marthad b. Zayd b. Shadad 255
Ma'ruf b. Kharrabudha * 16
Ma'rur b. Suwayd 325
Marw 71, 312 n. 1439, 327 n. 1525
Marwah 47 n. 213
Marwan * 157
Marwan b. al-Hakam, the caliph 28,
43 , 47 , S 3 , 93 , 174 , 184, 209, 210,
216 n. 932, 274, 295 n. 1341, 315
Marwan! faction 96
Marwanids 229 n. 994, 233 n. 1015,
242 n. 1068, 315 n. 1456
mashhad, mashahid 16 n. 60, 57, 117
Maskan, battle of 209 n. 903
Maslamah b. 'Alqamah * 120
Maslamah b. Muharib * 39
Mas'ud b. 'Amir b. 'Umayr 185
al-Mas'udi * 108
Matar b. Tahman al-Warraq 239
mawla. See client
Mawsu'at atraf al-traf al-hadlth (by
Muhammad Zaghlul) xxvi
Mawsu'at rijal al-kutub al-tis'ah (by
al-Bandari and Hasan) xxvi
Maymun b. Mihran 322
Maymun b. Mihran * 56
Maymunah bt. al-arith, wife of the
Prophet in 185-86, 201, 317
Maymunah bt. Sa'd 200
Maymunah bt. Sa'd * 200
Maysan 222
Maysarah al-Fajr 125
Maysarah al-Fajr * 125
Mazalim. See court of grievances
Mazin b. Mansur (tribal group) 104
Mecca 3, 4, 5 n. 14, 7, 8, 9 n. 30, n n.
41, 42 n. 195, 15, 16, 19 n. 75, 23
n. 104, 29, 30, 41, 42, 44, 45, 46,
47 n. 213, 48, 52 n. 232, 52, 59,
60, 61 n. 277, 64 n. 295, 65, 66,
67, 68, 70, 75, 78, 79, 81, 93, 105
n. 499 , 109, no, 112, 117, 123 n.
566, 128 n. 589, 138, 140, 142,
144, 146 n. 657, 163, 170, 172,
177, 186, 193, 196 n. 842, 201,
202, 212, 221, 223, 244, 247, 261,
263 n. 1168, 265, 266, 277, 287 n.
1307, 297 n. 1346, 311 n. 1431,
318 n. 1471, 321 n. 1489, 324 n.
1506, 329 n. 1541, 330 n. 1542
Mecca, conquest of 11,14, 17, 18 n.
68, 20, 21, 24, 34, 35, 44, 45, 61,
62, 64, 68 n. 314, 73, 76, 77, 81,
93, 98, 101, 102, 103 n. 493, 106,
Index
386
Mecca, conquest of (continued)
107, 108, 112, 114, 115, 116, 118,
165, r88 n. 827, 197 n. 857 284 n.
1289, 286 n. 1298, 293 n. 1330,
294 n. 1331
Meccans, see also Quiaysh 13, 45 n.
203
Medina 3, 4, 5, 10, 11 n. 43, 14 n. 52,
16, 18 n. 69, 20 nn. 83, 88, 21, 26,
28, 30 n. 138, 38, 40 n. 182, 42,
43, 45 n. 203, 46 n. 209, 47, 48,
59, 63, 65, 66, 68, 69, 70, 73, 74,
77, 81, 83, 88, 90 n. 436, 91, 99,
102, 105, 106, 113, 128 n. 589,
130 n. 603, 131 n. 606, 134 n. 618,
135, 138, 142, 155, 162, 163, 167,
169, 170-, 171, 172, 173, 174/ 175/
176, 177, 180, 182, 184, 189, 190,
192, 193, 194/ 199/ 201, 202, 209,
210, 213 n. 918, 214, 217, 218,
223, 229, 231, 234, 237, 240, 241,
243, 244, 245, 246, 249, 251, 253,
260, 261 n. 1164, 262, 263, 270 n.
1207, 272 nn. 1223, 1225, 283 n.
1278, 286 nn. 1299, 1300, 287 n.
1303, 289 n. 1308, 290 nn. 1309,
1310, 293 n. 1236, 294 n. 1335,
296 n. 1343, 302, 303 nn. 1376,
1379, 304, 316 n. 1460, 317 n.
1468, 318 n. 1470, 319 n. 1479,
320 n. 1480, 322 n. 1495, 323 n.
1496 324 n. 1507, 327 n. 1525,
330 nn. 1543, 1544, 333 nn. 1560,
1563, 334 nn. 1564, 1565, 1567,
1568, 1569, 335 nn. 1570, 1572,
1573 / 336 nn. 1574, 1575, 1576,
1577, 337 nn. 1580, 1581, 1583,
1585, 1586
Medinans, see also Ansar, Aws,
Khazraj 303 n. 1375
Merv. See Marw
Mesopotamia 166 n. 748
Mihran, battle of 86
Mihran, father of Sulayman 248
Mikhnaf b. Sulaym 93
Miknaf b. Zayd al-Khayl 85
Mina 221 n. 960
al-Minhalb. 'Ami * 212
al-Miqdad b. 'Amr 10, 25-27, 99, no,
197, 289, 300-301
al-Miqdad b. al-Aswad. See al-Miqdad
b. 'Amr
al-Miqdam b. Ma'dI-Karib 299
Miqsam. See Abu al-'As b. al-Rabi'
Miqsam, client of 'abdallah b.
al-Harith 320
al-Mirqal. See Hashim b. 'Utbah
Mis'ar b. Kidam 253-54, 327
Mishrah b. Aban 322
Mishrah b. Ma'di-Karib 54
al-Miswar b. Makhramah 42, 51-52,
107, 237, 296, 330 n. 1543, 335
al-Miswar b. Makhramah * 108
Mosul 92 n. 447, 315 n. 1459
Mu'adh b. 'Abdallah b. Khubayb * 153
Mu'adh b. 'Afra’ 295 n. 1338
Mu'adh b. Anas al-Juhani 146
Mu'adh b. Anas al-Juhani * 146
Mu'adh b. al-Harith 295
Mu'adh b. Hisham * 198
Mu'adh b. Jabal 153 n. 690, 210
Mu'adh b. Mua'dh 324
Mu'adh b. Mu'adh * 226, 260
mu'akhdh. See Brotherhood
al-Mu'allab. Mansur * 157
Mu’ammil b. Isma'il * 96
Mu'attib b. Abi Lahab 64
Mu'attib al-Aslaml 160 n. 725
Mu'attib, slave of Ja'far b. Muhammad
249
Mu'awiyah al-Akramin (tribal group)
285
Mu'awiyah b. Abi Sufyan, the caliph
31 n. 141, 32, 33 n. 147, 38 n. 176,
39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 46, 47, 48 n.
220, 61, 63, 65, 70 n. 325, 71/ 72,
74 nn. 350, 351, 75, 77/ 81, 88 nn.
422, 423, 92 n. 447, 93, 99, 102,
106, 107 n. 506, 122 n. 560, 148 n.
668, 158, 170, 174, 176, 180, r84,
185, 193 n. 841, 209, 210, 216 n.
932, 233, 269, 273 n. 1231, 274
nn. 1235, 1236, 275, 285 n. 1295,
286 nn. 1297, 1299, 290 n. 1310,
Index
291 n. 1316, 292 n. 1319, 293 n.
1329, 294 n. 1332, 295 nn. 1340,
i34i, 297, 300 n. 1361, 308 n.
1412, 316 n. 1466, 3x8 n. 1471
Mu'awiyah b. 'Ammar al-Duhni * 60
Mu'awiyah b. Sakhr 73
Mu'awiyah b. Salih * 147
Mu'awiyah II, the caliph 216 n. 932
Mubarak (place) 241
Mubarak b. Faalah 307
Mudar 34 n. 151, 52 n. 233, 88 n. 424,
91, 266, 284 n. 1285
al-Mudhayyal, see also the Sup¬
plemented xx, xxi, xxii, xxiii, 36,
53
al-Mufaddal b. 'Abdallah * 230
mufakharah 123 n. 564
mufti 244, 255, 261, 324 n. 1506, 326
n. 1519, 330 n. 1543, 336 n. 1576
al-Mughirah * 273
al-Mughirah b. 'Abd al-Raman 168
al-Mughirah b. Miqsam * 223
al-Mughirah b. Shu'bah 38-39, 84,
169, 174, 292
al-Muhajir b. Abi Umayyah 80-81
al-Muhajir b. Mismar * 80
al-Muhajir b. Yazid 337
al-Muhajir b. al-Zubayr 193
Muhajirun. See Emigrants
al-Muhallab b. Abi Sufrah 316, 329 n.
1541, 330 n. 1547
Muhallabi family 316 n. 1463
Muhammad * 202
Muhammad b. Aban * 152
Muhammad b. 'Abd al-'AzIz * 157
Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Rahman * 186,
195
Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. Abi
Layla 282 n. 1278
Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. al-
Aswad 67
Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Rahman b.
Thawban * 183
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah, see also Ibn
Abi Sabrah * 67, 165, 186, 187
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah al-Asadi *
27 , 2.54
387
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas
54
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abd
al-Hakam * 120, 156
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. 'Abdallah
b. Abi Sa'sa'ah * 205
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Ya¬
'qub * 121
Muhammad b. ’Abdallah b. Bazi' * 136
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah al-Hadrami *
230
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. al-Hasan.
See Muhammad al-Nafs al-
Zakiyyah
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah al-Hilali *
152
Muhammad b. 'Abdallah b. Muslim *
170
Muhammad b. Abi 'Awn * 204
Muhammad b. Abi Bakr 202
Muhammad b. Abi Bakr b.
Muhammad 243-244
Muhammad b. Abi Harmalah 336
Muhammad b. Abi Mansur * 207
Muhammad b. Abi Musa al-Thaqafi *
39
Muhammad b. Abi Umamah b. Sahl *
36, 20
Muhammad b. 'Ajlan * 157
Muhammad b. al-'Ala’. See Abu
Kurayb
Muhammad b. 'All b. 'Abdallah b.
al-'Abbas 74, 235-36
Muhammad b. 'All. See Abu Ja'far,
Muhammad b. 'All
Muhammad b. 'Ali. See Muhammad
b. al-Hanafiyyah
Muhammad b. 'Amr * 121, 184
Muhammad b. 'Amr b. 'Abd al-Raman
* 118
Muhammad b. al-Ash'ath b. Qays 269,
3 i 5
Muhammad b. al-Ash'ath b. 'Uqbah
315 n. 1459
Muhammad b. 'Awf * 153
Muhammad b. 'Awf *155
Muhammad b. 'Awf al-Ta’i * 127, 145
388
Index
Muhammad b. Bakkar * 240 Muhammad b. Mansur al-Tusi * 255
Muhammad b. Bakr * 158 Muhammad b. Maslamah * 205
Muhammad al-Baqir. See Abu Ja'far, Muhammad b. Mu'awiyah al-Anmati
Muhammad b. 'All * 203
Muhammad b. Bashshar. See Ibn Muhammad b. al-Munkadir 240, 333
Bashshar Muhammad b. al-Muntashir 33
Muhammad b. Da’ud * 215 Muhammad b. Musa * 185
Muhammad b. al-Fadl b. al-'Abbas * Muhammad b. Muslim b.
118 'Ubaydallah. See al-Zuhri
Muhammad b. al-Hanafiyyah 56, 208- Muhammad b. al-Muthanna * 204,
209, 236 n. 1031, 276 207
Muhammad b. Harun al-Harbi * 222 Muhammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyyah 245
Muhammad b. al-Hasan b. Usamah * n. 1084, 246, 248 n. 1150, 260 n.
10 1157, 330 nn. IS 43 , 1544
Muhammad b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260 Muhammad, the Prophet 3, 4, 5, 6, 8,
Muhammad b. al-Hasan al-Shaybam
264-65, 331
Muhammad b. Hatib 297
Muhammad b. Humayd. See Ibn
Humayd
Muhammad b. al-Husayn * 278
Muhammad b. Ibrahim b. Muhammad
249
Muhammad b. Ibrahim, Ibn Sudran *
146
Muhammad b. 'Imran b. Hind * 47
Muhammad b. Ishaq. See Ibn Ishaq
Muhammad b. Isaq al-Saghani * 265
Muhammad b. Isma'il * 127, 153, 230,
23 1 , 254
Muhammad h. Isma'il al-Diran * 257
Muhammad b. Isma'il al-Sulamx *131
Muhammad b. Ja'far b. Abi Talib 202
Muhammad b. Ja'far b. Muhammad
249
Muhammad b. Ja'far al-Warkam * 168
Muhammad b. Jubayr b. Mut'im 318
Muhammad b. Jubayr b. Mu'im * 79
Muhammad b. Juhadah * rs7
Muhammad b. Ka’b * 160
Muhammad b. Ka'b al-Qurazi 231, 333
Muhammad al-Kalbi * 9, 85
Muhammad b. Khalaf al-'Asqalani *
108, 145, 257
Muhammad b. Khalid * 151
Muhammad b. Makhramah 42
Muhammad b. Ma'mar * 153, 267
9, 10, n, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17,
18, 19 n. 75, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25
n. 113, 27, 29, 30, 31, 34 n. 154,
36, 37 , 38, 40, 41, 44 , 45 , 46, 47 ,
49 n. 221, 51, 53 n. 234, 54 n- M5,
55, 56, 57, 58, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64,
65, 66, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74,
75, 76 n. 361, 77 n. 366, 78, 79,
80, 81, 82, 83, 85, 87, 88, 89, 90,
91, 92, 93 n. 449, 95 , 96 97 , 98,
99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105,
106, 107, 108, 109, no, in, 112,
113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119,
120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126,
127, 128, 129, 130 n 603, 131,
132, i 33 , 134 , 135 , 136, 137 , 138,
139-145, 146, 147, 148, 149, ISO,
151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, i 57 ,
158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164,
165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171,
172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 178, 179 ,
180-81, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186,
187, 188-90, 191, 192, 193, 194,
195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201,
202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207 n.
896, 209, 210, 212, 213, 222, 225
n. 977, 227 n. 985, 230, 231 n.
1004, 234 n. 1021, 235, 236 n.
1031, 241, 246 n. 1088, 251, 252
n. 1119, 253, 255, 256 n. 1138,
257, 266, 274, 278, 279, 280, 281
n. 1274, 282, 285 n. 1291, 286,
Index
287, 289 n. 1308, 290 nn. 1310-
12, 291 nn. 1314-15, 292 n. 1323,
293, 294 nn. 1335-36, 295 n.
1339, 298, 299 n. 1359, 301, 303,
306 nn. 1398-99, 307 n. 1407, 314
n. 1454, 315 n. 1457, 316 n. 1461,
318 n. 1470, 319 n. 1478, 320 n.
1485, 324 nn. 1506, 1507
Muhammad b. al-Qasim al-Thaqafi
228
Muhammad b. Qudamah * 164
Muhammad b. Rabl'ah b. al-Harith
198, 315
Muhammad b. Rashid * 216
Muhammad b. Rifa'ah b. Tha'labah *
56
Muhammad b. Sa'd. See Ibn Sa'd
Muhammad b. Sahl b. 'Askar * 112,
158
Muhammad b. al-Sa’ib. See al-Kalbl
Muhammad b. Salih * 4, 180
Muhammad b. Sinan al-Qazzaz. See
Ibn Sinan al-Qazzaz
Muhammad b. Sirin. See Ibn Sirin
Muhammad b. Suhayl * 176, 191
Muhammad b. Sulayman b. al-Hakam
* 138
Muhammad b. Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah
28, 315
Muhammad b. Thabit b. Qays * 133
Muhammad b. 'Ubaydallah b.
al-'Abbas 74
Muhammad b. 'Ubayd al-Muharibi *
195 , 279
Muhammad b. Ubayy b. Ka'b 316
Muhammad b. 'Umarah al-Asadi *
119, 122, I 4 S
Muhammad b. 'Umarah b.
Khuzaymah * 91, 131
Muhammad b. ‘Umarb. 'Ali * 38, 167,
168
Muhammad b. 'Umar b. al-Hayyaj *
156
Muhammad b. 'Umar. See al-Waqidi
Muhammad b. 'Uqbah * 56
Muhammad b. Wahb b. Abi Karimah
al-Harrani * 205
389
Muhammad b. Yahya b. Habban * 57,
180
Muhammad b. Ya'qub b. 'Utbah * 188
Muhammad b. Yazid * 114, 184
Muhammad b. Yazid al-Adami * 127
Muhammad b. Yusuf al-Firyabi 329
Muharib (tribe) 306 n. 1401
muhtasib 328 n. 1532
Mujahid *116
Mujahid 221
Mujalid b. Sa'id 249, 332
Mujalid b. Sa'id * 268
Muhammad b. Mujammi'k, (tribal
group) 159
Mujammi' b. Jariyah 132-33
Mujammi' b. Jariyah * 133
Mu'jam rijal al-hadith (by al-Khu’I)
xxvi
Mujashi' (tribal group) 82 n. 385, 275
n. 1242
al-Mukhtalis (tribal group) 85
al-Mukhtar b. Abi 'Ubayd al-Thaqafi
86, 208 n. 898, 209, 2ix, 256 n.
1141, 271, 276, 277 n. 1261, 3115
n. 1459
Mulayh b. 'Amr (tribal group) 277
Muhammad b. Mulayh b. Rabl'ah
(tribal group) 137
Mulaykah bt Ka'b al-Laythi 165
Mulaykan bt. Malik 41
multazam 64
munafiqat. See Hypocrites
munafiqun. See Hypocrites
al-Mundhir b. 'Abdallah al-Hizami *
41, 106
al-Mundhir b. Abi Usayd al-Saa'idi
3i9
al-Mundhir b. Jahm * 45, 71
al-Mundhir b. 'Ubayd * 194
al-Mundhir b. al-Zubayr 318
Munib b. Mudrik al-Azdi 150
Munib b. Mudrik al-Azdi * 150
al-Munkadir b. Muhammad b. al-
Munkadir 240
al-Munkadir family 333
Munyah bt. Jabir 104
al-Muqawqas 193,194
39°
Index
Murad (tribe) 91, 92 n. 444, 266, 324
n. 1505
Muraysi', raid of 10, 183
Murhibah 276 n. 2250
Murji'ah, Murji’I views 217 n. 941,
226 n. 981, 276, 311 n. 1427, 322
n. 1495 , 319 n. 1541
Murrah Murrah 157
Murrah (tribe) 5
Murrah b. Sa'sa'ah (tribal group). See
Salul
mursal 222 n. 965
Musa * 225
Musa (Moses) 123, 241
Musa b. Abi Kathir * ir6
Musab. Isma'il * 100, 121, 132, 223
Musa b. Ja'far 249
Musa al-Kazim. See Musa b. Ja'far
Musa b. Maysarah * 173
Musa b. Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Raman
* 171, 186, 195
Musa b. Muhammad b. 'All 235
Musa b. Sahl * 150
Musa b. Sahl al-Ramil *118
Musa b. Sa'id * 187
Musa b. Shaybah b. 'Amr * 83
Musa b. 'Ubaydah * 69
Musa b. 'Ulayy * 156
Musa b. 'Aqbah xxiv, 336
Musa b. 'Uqbah * 17, 41, 45, 66, 69,
106, 161
Musa b. Ya'qub * 26
Musa b. Yasar 253
Mu%FFs'ab b. 'Abdallah al-Azdi * 156
Mu'ab b. Miqdam *116
Mu'ab b. 'Umayr 40, 67
Mus'ab b. al-Zubayr 246, 271, 294 n.
1332, 318
Mu'4b al-Zubayri * 217, 263
Musaddad b. Musarhad 324
Musafi' b. Safwan 183
Musawir b. al-Warraq * 222
Musaylimah 30 n. 139, 300 n. 1363
al-Musayyab b. Najabah 53, 273-74,
3 U
Mushir b. 'Abd al-Malik *151
Muslim b. Budayl *151
Muslim b. al-Hajjaj xviii n. 9
Muslim b. Ibrahim * 122
Muslim b. Nudhayr 275
Muslim b. Yasar * 158
Muslims 10 n. 37, n n. 41, 15, 18 n.
71, 19, 20, 22 n. 95, 23, 30, 44, 45
n. 203, 53, 55 n. 249, 65 nn. 299,
300, 73, 78 n. 373, 88, 89 n. 431,
127, 129, 133, 158, 161 n. 726,
164 n. 741, 166 n. 748, 176, 178,
184, 206 n. 892, 208, 222, 241 n.
1060, 251, 253 n. 1120, 301, 303
n- 1375
Musliyah 75
mustahzi'un 117
al-Mustaliq, raid of 10 n. 36, 57, 183
Mu’tah, battle of 4, 5, 6 n. 17, 60, 65
n. 300
al-Mu'tamir b. Sulayman 310, 323
al-Mu'tamir b. Sulayman * 221, 226,
2.73
Mutarrif b. 'Abdallah al-Ysaarl * 243
al-Mu'tasim, the caliph 220 n. 956
Mu'tazilah 244
Mut'im b. 'Adi 103
al-Muttalib b. 'Abdallah b. Hantab *
164, 176
al-Muttalib b. 'Abdallah b. al-Muttalib
337
al-Muttalib b. Abi Wada'ah 284
al-Muttalib (a clan of the Quraysh) 23
n. 103, 55 n. 248, 76 n. 364, 95 n.
461, 102
al-Muttalib b. Ziyad * 195
al-Muwatta' 262
Muzahim b. Zufar 259
Muzaynah (tribe) 31, 125 n. 577, 154
n. 691, 292 nn. 1319, 1321, 326 n.
1522
Muzdalifah 266 n. 1188
N
al-Nabbash b. Zurarah. See Abu Halah
b. Zurarah
Nabhan (tribal group) 85 n. 404, 209
Index
39i
Nabhan, client of Umm Salamah 320
al-Nabighah al-Ja'di 126, 254 n. 1126,
302
al-Nadir (Jewish tribe) 165, 185, 324 n.
1507
al-Nadr b. Abi Maryam 327-28
al-Nadr b. 'Amr 226
Nafi' b. 'Abd al-Harith 146
Nafi' b. 'Abd al-Harith * 146
Nafi' b. Abi Nu'aym 304
Nafi' b. 'Utbah b. Abi Waqqas 108
Nafi' b. 'Utbah b. Abi Waqqas * 108
Nafi', client of Ibn 'Umar 323
Nafi', client of Ibn 'Umar * 30, 112,
173, 176, 188
Nafisah bt. Munyah 105
Nahd (tribal group) 214, 215
al-Nahhas b. Qahm 328
Nahrawan, battle of 86, 305 n. 1390,
310 n. 1421
Nahr Ma'qil 292
Nahshal (tribal group) 112 n. 527
Najd 6 n. 20, 188, 191
Najiyah (tribal group) 276 n. 1248
al-Najjar (a clan of the Khazraj) 34, 35
n. 157, 40 n. 181, 72 n. 339, 206
n. 891, 243 n. 1070, 303
Najran 196 n. 842, 294 n. 1336
al-Nakha' (tribe) 51, 89 n. 429, 270 nn.
1207, 1209, 327 n. 1528
names, changing of 19 n. 80, 53 n.
234, 62, 90 n. 433 , 114, 137 , 184,
283, 293, 298
al-Namir b. Qasit (tribe) 24 n. 107
naqlb pi. nuqaba' 286 nn. r298, 1300,
287 n. 1303, 290 nn. 1310-ri, 29r
n. 1314, 303
nasab, see also genealogy 156 m 702
Na?r b. 'Abidah al-Nasri 122
Nasr b. 'All al-Jahdaml * 125, 138
Nasr b. Bab * 83
Na§r b. Duhman 89
Na?r b. Mu'awiyah (tribal group) 322
n. 1491
Nawfal b. 'Abd Manaf (clan of
Quraysh) 95 n. 461,102 n. 488,
104, 318 n. 1473
Nawfal b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib 19, 21, 60, 62
Nawfal b. Khuwaylid 67
Nawfal b. Mu'awiyah 72-73,119-120
Nawfal b. Mu'awiyah * 120
Nawfal b. Musahiq 272
Nawf b. Fadalah. See Nawf al-Bikali
Nawf al-Bikali 272, 323
nawh. See niyahah
Negus 178, 179, 180
Nihawand, battle of 88
Nihm (tribal group) 212, 220
niyahah 39 n. 179, 68 n. 317, 156 n.
703, 194 n. 847
Nizar 7 n. 25
Noah 246
Nu'aym * 222
Nu'aym b. 'Abdallah al-Mujmir * 69
Nu'aym b. Hammad * 218
Nu'ayman 103
Nubayh (tribal group) 168
Nuhb. Darraj * 231
Nuh b. Qays * 125
Nujayr, battle of 89
Nukhaylah, 53
Nukhaylah, battle of 86, 94
al-Nu'man b. Abi al-Jawn 188
al-Nu'man b. Bashir 295-96
Numayr (tribe) 127
Numayr al-Khuza'i 145-46
Numayr al-Khuza'i * 145
nuqaba’. See naqlb
Nutaylah bt. Janab 24, 246
P
Palestine, see also Filastin 19 n. 74, 95
n. 464, 281 n. 1273, 329 n. 1539-
40
partnership 20 n. 84
pensions, see also diwan, ‘ata’ 66, 84,
9 2 / 99, i95 n. 849, 270, 274
People of Pharaoh 212
perfumes, wearing of 179, 203
Persia 29 n. 134
Persians 22 n. 95, 108
Index
39 2
pilgrimage, lesser 129, 174
the Pilgrimage ol the Consummation
44, 186
police guard 214, 215, 247 n. 1093,
270 n. 1209, 275, 278, 296 n. 1342
Possessors of the Scriptures 23
postal services 317 n. 1469
prayer 109, 120, 121, 129, 135, 146,
198, 200, 223, 232, 247, 280, 290
prayer, evening 71, 120
prayer for rains 156 n. 701
prayer for the Prophet/prophets 80,
130 n. 602, 136, 195-96
prayer, morning 14, 113, 114, 120, 125
prayer, night 173 n. 776, 203
prayer, ritual, at burial n, 20, 21, 22,
25, 27, 26, 47, 59, 97, 136, 161,
164, 167, 168, 173, 174, 176, 184,
195, 221, 226, 263, 268, 333 n.
1560, 334 n. 1567“
the Prophet. See Muhammad
Protection [aman, jiwar ) 15, 17, 45, 49
n. 222, 103, 116
Q
Qabisah b. Dhu’ayb 317
Qabisah b. Hulb 302
Qabisah b. Mukhariq 297
Qadarl doctrines xix, 223, 324 n. 1503,
328 n. 1535, 335 n. 1573
Qadariyyah 223, 226, 323 n. 1498
Qadisiyyah, battle of 22, 69, 85, 86,
88, 271, 274, 298 n. 1352, 299 n.
1356
Qafal (tribal group) 250
Qahtan 6 , 130
Qantas 337 n. 1586
al-Qa'qa' b. Abi Hadrad 146
al-Qa'qa' b. Abi Hadrad * 146
Qarazah b. Ka'b 300
Qaribah bt. Umayyah, Qaribah al-
Kubra 76
Qarqisiya’ 138
al-Qasim, Abu 'Abd al-Rahman al-
Shami *101
al-Qasim b. Dinar al-Qurashi * 246
al-Qasim b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260
al-Qasim b. Mukhaymirah * x 5 6, 15 8
al-Qasim b. Safwan * 109
al-Qasim b. al-Walid * 156
qdss. See storytellers
Qatadah * 198
Qatadah b. Di'amah 231-32, 310,
317
Qatadah b. Di'amah * 158, 198
Qatadah b. al-Nu'man al-Zafari 57
Qatan 175
Qatan b. Qabisah 297 n. 1349
Qaylah bt. Kahil 130
al-Qayn b. fasr (tribal group) 6
Qays 'Aylan (tribal group) 88 n. 424,
104 n. 495, 228 n. 988, 309 n.
1416, 313 n. 1449
Qays b. Abdallah b. 'Udas. See al-
Nabighah al-Ja'di
Qays b. Abi Hazim 325
Qays, brother of Harithah 7
Qays b. Makhramah b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib 76,102
Qays b. al-Makshuh 91-92
Qays b. al-Rabi' * 196
Qays b. Sa'd b. 'Ubadah 296
Qays b. al-Sa’ib b. 'Uwaymir 116
Qays b. al-Sakan 284 n. 1288
Qays b. Shammas 134
qiblah 247 n. 1090
qiyas 252
Quda'ah (tribal group) 6, 26 n. 115,
214 n. 924, 283, 308 n. 1412, 329
n. 1537
Qudayd 172
Qur’an 24 n. 108, 46, 54 n. 242, no n.
517, 122, 131 n. 605, 135, 157 n.
707, 216, 221 n. 961, 223, 228 n.
988, 231 n. 1005, 237, 238, 247 n.
1091, 248, 254, 265 n. 1184, 268
n. 1197, 280, 284 n. 1287, 293 n.
1329, 294 n. 1335, 304 n. 1383,
305 n. 1394, 307 n. 1403, 309 n.
1417, 312 n. 1434, 323 n. 1497
Qur’an, collection of 22, 284, 289 n.
1308, 294 n. 1335
Index
393
Qur’anic verses: 2:12 - 213 n. 920; 2:80
- 152 n. 686; 2:138 - 224; 2:184 '
116; 2:20s - 207; 2:23 - 280; 2:285
- 280; 3:104 - 258 n. 1149; 3:114 *
258 n. 1149; 5:59-61 - 178 n. 796;
7:133 -127 n. 587; 7:i57 - 258 n.
1149; 7:200 - 159 n. 720; 8:6 - 200
n. 867; 9:7 - 152 n. 686; 9:33 - 169
n. 803; 9:67 - 258 n. 1149; 9:71 -
258 n. 1149; 9:112 - 258 n. 1149;
16:120 - 37 n. 171; 17:24 - 226;
22:41 - 258 n. 1149; 23:97 -159 n.
720; 30:3 - 263; 31:17 - 258 n.
ii49; 33-5 - 9, 26, no, 289, 301,
33:28 -187 n. 823; 33:33 - 155;
33:37 -181; 33:49 - 9, 197; 33:53 -
184 n. 815, 189; 39:42 - 211; 41:36
- 159 n. 720; 30:18 - 68; 59:23 -
178 n. 8oi; 61:9 - 179 n. 803;
73:14 - 270 n. i2i2; 81:1 - 114,
81:15 - ii3; 89:27 - 57; 99:7-8 -
123; 105 - 24 n. 108; 113 - 159 n.
720; 114 - 159 n. 720
Qur’an reciters, Qur’an readers 22 n.
93, 32 n. 144, 69, 115 n. 542, 142,
220 n. 957, 222, 237, 239, 241 n.
1060, 242 n. 1065, 244 n. 1075,
248 n. 1096, 254, 269 n. 1203,
276, 286 n. 1299, 3 93 n - I3 3 9, 300
n. 1363, 303 n. 1378, 304, 308 n.
1412, 326 n. 1519, 326 n. 1521,
327 n. 1525, 328 n. 1531, 331 n.
1549, 332 n. 1555, 335 n. 1571
Quraysh (tribe of the Prophet) 3 n. 1, 8
n. 27, 11 n. 41, 14, 15, 21, 37, 41
n. 187, 42, 44, 49, 54, 55 n. 248,
64, 66 n. 303, 68, 73, 78, 90 n.
435,91, 93 n. 451, 97, 103,115,
140, 141 n. 647, 143, 144, 166,
167, 171, 174, 180, 197, 201, 212,
213, 232, 235, 236 n. 1033, 254,
261, 276 n. 1248, 301 n. 1365, 305
n. 1391, 311 n. 1426, 314 n. 1545,
318 n. 1472
Quraysh b. Anas * 278
Qurayzah (Jewish tribe) 130, 164, 185,
231 n. 1004, 324 n. 1507
Qurrah b. Iyas 292
Qurrah b. Khalid * 124, 226
quria ’. See Qur’an readers
al-Qurtubl, 'Arib b. Sad xv
Qushayr (tribe) 326 n. 1519
Quess al-Natif 86
Qutaybah b. Muslim 228
Qutaylah bt. 'Abd al-'Uzza 193
Qutham b. al-'Abbas 25, 75, 95, 201
Qutham b. 'Ubaydalah b. al-'Abbas 74
R
Rabab * 125
Rabab bt. Imri’ al-Qays 50
al-Rabadhah 70
al-Rabl' b. Khathaym 321
al-Rabi' b. Subayh * 224
al-Rabl' b. Sulayman * 196, 203, 205,
280
al-Rabi' b. Yahya * 256
Rabl'ah b. Abi 'Abd al-Rahman 245,
250 n. 1107, 33s
Rabi'ah b. al-Harith 19, 61-62, 98,
198, 288
Rabi'ah b. al-Harith * 98
Rabi'ah (tribal group) 24 n. 107, 29 n.
133, 254 n. 1129, 266, 267, 271 n.
1218, 310 n. 1419
Rabi'at al-Ra'y. See Rabi'ah b. Abi
'Abd al-Raman
Rafi' b. 'Amr 122
Rafi' b. Khadij 334 n. 1569
Rafidah 247
Rafid (tribal group) 241
Raja b. Haywah 321
raj'ah 218 n. 942, 238
al-RajT, battle of 101
Ramlah 19 n. 74
Ramlah bt. Abi Sufyan. See Umm
Habibah
Ramlah bt. Hadath 83
Ramlah bt. al-Harith. See Ramlah bt.
Hadath
Raqash (tribal group) 313 n. 1449
Raqashiyyun (tribal group) 266 n. 1190
394
Index
al-Raqqah 264, 265
Rashid b. Hubaysh 158
Rashid b. Hubaysh * 158
Rawh * 151, 267
Rawwad b. al-Jarrah * 108
ia’y 26s, 335 n. 1571
Rayhanah bt. al-Hudhayl 166 n. 748
Rayhanah bt. Zayd 164-65
Raytah *171
Raytah bt. Muhammad b. 'Ali 235
Raytah bt. 'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah
23S
al-Rayy 228 n. 993, 265, 294 n. 1332,
300 n. 1361, 313 n. 1441
religious authority 135 n. 626
Repenters 53, 238, 274
Rib'i * 137
riddah. See Apostasy wars
Rifa'ah b. Rafi' b. Khadij 319
Rifa'ah b. Rafi' b. Malik 290
Ri'l (tribal group) 122
Rishdin b. Sa'd 329
riwayah bi-al-lafz 120 n. 554
riwayah bi-al-ma'na 120 n. 554
Riyah b. 'Uthman 246
Riyah b. Yarbu' (tribal group) 273 n.
1228
Rubayh b. 'Abd al-Rahman * 57
Rubayyi' bt. al-Nadir 222
Rukanah b. 'Abd Yazid 77, 102
Ruqayyah bt. Abi Safiyyah 42
Ruqayyah bt. Muhammad the Prophet
161-62, 163
S
sa'adah 62 n. 284
Saba’ 308 n. 1412
al-Sa'bah bt. 'Abdallah 28
al-Sabi' (tribal group) 220, 238 n. 1049,
268
sabiqah xviii, 16 n. 60, 43 n. 199
Sadaqah b. Khalid *158
sadaqah, see also legal alms 100 n.
474, 230 n. 998
sadaq. See bridal gift
Sa'd al-'Ashirah (tribal group) 237 n.
1041
Sa'd b. 'Abdallah b. al-Hakam * 205
Sa'd b. 'Abd al-Hamid *131
Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas 35, 38, 47, 88, 107,
288, 299, 314 n. 1450, 337 n. 1585
Sa'd b. Bakr (tribal group) 192
Sa'd b. al-Harith b. al-Simmah 34-35,
267
Sa'd b. Hudhaym 130
Sa'd b. Lu’ayy b. Ghalib (clan of
Quraysh) 236
Sa'd b. Mu'adh 130
Sa'd al-Qari’ (the Reciter). See Sa'd b.
'Ubayd
Sa'd b. 'Ubadah 290, 296
Sa'd b. 'Ubayd, Sa'd al-Qari’ 22, 284 n.
2288
Sa'd b. Zayd Manah (tribal group) 82,
no, 248, 31X n. r427, 3x6
Sa'd b. Zayd. See Sa'id b. Zayd
Sadus (tribal group) 231 n. 1005
$afa 47
al-Saffah, the caliph 235, 245, 246,
260, 277 n. 1258, 304
Safinah, client of Umm Salamah 299
Safiyy b. al-Harith b. Harb 169, 199
Safiyyah bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib 105, 169,
198-99
Safiyyah bt. Abi al-'As 177
Safiyyah bt. al-Harith b. Talhah 277
Safiyyah bt. Huyayy 184-85
al-§afra’ 62
Safwan b. 'Amr * 215
Safwan b. 'Assal 92
Safwan b. al-Bayda’ 301
Safwan b. 'Isa * 104, 146
Safwan b. Makhramah b. Nawfal,
Safwan al-Asghar 42
Safwan b. Makhramah b. Nawfal 42,
109
Safwan b. Malik b. Jadhimah 183
Safwan b. al-Mu‘attal 292
Safwan b. Sulaym 244, 335
Safwan b. Umayyah 17 n. 65, 81, 118
Index
395
Safwan b. Wahb 301 n. 1368
sahabah. See Companions of the
Prophet
al-Sahba’. See Umm Habib bt. Bujayr
sahlfah 255 n. 969, 222, 322 n. 1493
Sahl b. Hunayf 36
Sahl b. al-Husayn b. Muslim al-Bahili
* 225
Sahl b. Mu'adh * 205
Sahl b. Mu'adh b. Anas * 146
Sahl b. Musa al-Razi * 154
Sahl b. Sa'd al-Sa'idi 296
Sahl b. Shu'ayb al-Nihml * 2x2
Sahm (tribal group] 84, 284 n. 1289,
291 n. 1316
al-Sa’ib b. Abi al-Sa’ib 115
al-Sa’ib b. Abi al-Sa’ib *116
al-Sa’ib b. al-'Awwam 199
al-Sa’ib b. Bishr 247
al-Sa’ib al-Ta’ifi * 127
Said b. 'Abd al-Rahman b. Yarbu' *
175
Sa'id b. Abi 'Arubah 323
Sa'id b. Abi 'Arubah * 158
Sa'id b. Abi 'Imran. See Abu al-
Bakhtari al-Ta’i
Sa’id b. Abi Sa'id al-Maqbari 303
Sa'id b. Abi Sa'id al-Maqbari * 174,
211
Sa'id b. Abi Zayd * 57
Sa'id b. 'Amir * 226
Sa'id b. 'Amr al-Sakuni * 120
Sa'id b. al-'As 193
Sa'id b. Bashir * 157
Sa'id b. al-Hasan al-Basri 225
Sa'id b. Hurayth 114
Sa'id b. Hurayth *114
Sa'id b. 'Imran. See Abu al-Bakhtari
al-Ta’i
Sa'id b. Jubayr 223, 314
Sa'id b. Khalid *211
Sa'id b. Mansur * 160
Sa'id b. Muhammad b. al-Hasan * 228
Sa'id b. Muhammad b. }ubayr * 79
Sa'id b. al-Musayyab 216, 240, 316,
338
Sa'id b. al-Musayyab * 204
Sa'id b. Muslim * 243
Sa'id b. al-Rabi' al-Razi * 134
Sa'id b. al-Sa’ib al-Ta’ifi * 127
Sa'id b. Sa'id al-Taghlibi, or al-Tha'labi
* 136
Sa'id b. Sallam * 152
Sa'id b. 'Umayr al-Ansari * 136
Sa'id b. 'Uthman 75
Sa'id b. 'Uthman al-Tanukhi * 238,
253
Sa'id b. Wahb al-Hamdani 210
Sa'id b. al-Walid * 146
Sa'id b. Yahya al-UmawI * 279
Sa'id b. Yarbu' 42
Sa id b. Yasar 231, 319
Sa'id b. Zayd 37-38,117, 288
Sa'idah (a clan of the Khazraj) 188 n.
827, 189, 284 n. 1284
Sa'idiyyun (tribal group) 220
al-Sakasik (tribal group) 33
al-Sakhawi xvi, xvii
al-Sakran b. 'Amr 169, 170
Salam b. Abi al-Ja'd * 135
Salamahb. Abi Salamah 113, 175
Salamah b. al-Akwa' 293, 319 n. 1476
Salamah b. 'Amr b. al-Akwa'. See Sal¬
amah b. al-Akwa'
Salamah b. al-Azraq 30
Salamah b. Dinar 309 n. 1416
Salamah b. al-Fadl * 5, 13, 14, 146,
160
Salamah b. Hisham 68
Salamah b. Kuhayl al-Hadrami 234
Salamah b. 'Ubaydallah b. Mihsan *
157
Salamah b. Umayyah 105
Salamah b. 'Uthman * 222
Salih b. Hammad * 255
Salih b. Kaysan 336
Salih b. Kaysan * 23
Salih b. Mismar * 157
Salih b. Muhammad b. Za’idah 336
Salih b. Musa al-Talhi * 279
Salih b. Rustam * 70
Salihiyyah 258 n. 1148, 277 n. 1256
396
Index
Salimah (a clan of the Khazraj) n, 283
n. 1281
Salim b. 'Abdallah b. ‘Umar 175
Salim b. 'Abdallah b. 'Umar * 174
Salim b. Abi Hafsah 277-78
Salim, client of Abu Hudhayfah 300
Salim, client of Abu Ja'far * 213
Salim, client of Hisham b. 'Abd al-
Malik 233, 234
Salim b. Ma'qil. See Salim, client of
Abu Hudhayfah
Salim Sabalan * 173
Salit b. Qays 205
Sallam b. Mishkam 185
Salm b. Abi Bilal * 152
Salma 87
Salma, client of the Prophet 66, 99,
194, 199
Salma b. Nawfal 73
Salma bt. Qays. See Umm al-Mundhir
bt. Qays
Salma bt. 'Umays, 121, 199, 201,
202
Salman al-Agharr 319
Salman b. 'Amir al-Dabbl 125
Salman b. 'Amir al-Dabbi * 125
Salman al-Farisi 66, 98
al-Salt b. Makhramah b. Nawfal,
al-Salt al-Akbar 42
al-Salt b. Makhramah b. Nawfal,
al-Salt al-Asghar 42
al-Salt b. Makhramah b. al-Muttalib
76
Salul (tribal group) 84
Samah b. Lu’ayy (tribal group) 237,
276, 312 n. 1437
Samarqand 75, 330 n. 1542
al-Sammal (tribal group) 166 n. 746
Samurah b. Jundab 223
Samurah b. 'Umayr. See Abu
Mahdhurah
Sana bt. al-Salt 166
Sana bt. Sufyan. See al-Kilabiyyah
San'a’ 80, 81, 204, 216, 220, 227
Saq'ab b. Sulaym 94
al-Saqit b. ‘Amr al-Ansari 191
Sarakhs 326 n. T519
Sarif 186
Sarrar b. Muhammad b. Ismail * 216
Sa'sa'ah b. Mu'awiyab 123
Sa'sa'ah b. Najiyah 82, 123 n. 568
Sa'sa'ah b. Suhan 275
Sawdah bt. Zam'ah, wife of the
Prophet 169-71, 172
Sawwar b. 'Abdallah 259
Sayban (tribal group) 255
Sayf b. Qays 88-89
Sayf b. Sulayman 221
Sayyar b. Abi Sayyar 325
schools of law 250 n. 1108
scorpions, killing of 279
seal ( khatam ) 317 n. 1469
Shababah b. Sawwar * 152, T99
Sha'ban (tribal group) 219
Sha'baniyyun (tribal group) 220
Shabath b. Rib'I 273, 321
al-Sha'bi 218-20, 278, 304 n. 1383,
3i4
al-Sha'bi * 83, 92, 182, 268
Sha'biyyun (tribal group) 220
Shadad, husband of Bilqis 255
Shaddad b. Aws 295
Shaddad b. Usamah b. 'Amr al-Hadi
121, 202
Shaddad b. Usamah b. 'Amr al-Hadi *
121
al-Shafi'I * 252
Shafi'I school 251 n. 1115
shahid, 4,11, 19, 22, 154, 158, 164,
192, 205, 301
Shahr b. Hawshab * 170
Shakir 220
Shamir b. Dhi Jawshan 211
al-Shammakh b. Dirar 72, 74
al-Shamus bt. Qays 169
Sharabbah 188
sharaf al-'ata’ 274 n. 1239
al-Sharat 236
Sharik * 99, 128, 207, 134, 239
Sharlk b. Salamah al-Muradl 32
Sharqi b. al-Qutaml * 166
Shaybahb. Na'amah * 214
Shaybah b. ‘Uthman b. Abi Talhah 74,
106
Index
397
Shayban (tribal group of the Bakr b.
Wa’il) 231 n. 1005, 239, 264, 267
n. 1x90, 305 n. 1399, 3i3 n. 1441,
326 n. 1515
Shayban (tribal group of the Kindah)
89
al-Shaybani. See Muhammad b.
al-Hasan
Shi'ah 25 n. 113, 39 n. 178, 48 n. 218,
54 n. 244, 65 n. 299, 98 n. 468,
231 n. 1002, 236, 237 n. 1041, 245
n. T084, 246 n. 1087, 247 n. 1090,
249 n. 1104, 256 n. 1141, 257 n.
1143, 258, 268, 271, 275, 276
Shi'ah, ImamI 229 n. 996, 248 n. 1099,
249 n. 1101
Shi'ah, Isma'ili 229 n. 996, 248 nn.
1099, 1100
Shi'ah, Zaydi 233 n. 1012, 234 n.
1016, 258 nn. 1148, 1150, 330 n.
1544
Shi'i doctrines xix, 50 n. 226, 98 n.
468, 236 n. 1031
Shi'i propaganda and legitimation 128
nn. 598, 590, 212-213
Shirshlr 250
shiikat al-'inan. See partnership
shiikat al-mufawadah. See
partnership
Shu'ayb b. Habban 241
Shu'bah, client of Ibn 'Abbas 320
Shu'bah, client of Ibn 'Abbas * 25, 56
Shu'bah b. al-Hajjaj 255-56
Shu'bah b. al-Hajjaj ’ 138, 223, 226,
231, 233, 238, 240, 253, 257, 269
shuhada’. See shahid
Shuqayr, client of al-'Abbas *155
shura 52
Shurahbil b. Aws 159 n. 716
Shurahbil b. Hasanah 111
Shurayh * 127
Shurayh b. Hani' 298
Shurayh b. al-Harith 321
Shurayh, the judge. See Shurayh b.
al-Harith
Shurayh b. Salamah *115
Shurayhb. 'Ubayd * 153
Shurayh b. Yazid. See Abu Haywah
shurtah. See police guard
Shuways, Abu Raqad * 104
Siffin, battle of 31, 32 n. 146, 34, 35,
36, 53, 86, 88 n. 422, 93 n. 453,
117, 138, 151, 207, 208, 233 n.
ion, 247, 266, 267, 269 n. 1205,
270, 274, 275, 282 n. 1278, 295 n.
1340
Sijistan 277 n. 1254, 297 n. 1349
Silah b. Zufar al-'Abdi 321
silat al-iahim 17 n. 68
Sinan b. Anas 51
Sind 228 n. 991
al-Sindi b. Shabak 249
shah 252 n. 1119
Sirin, sister of Mariyah 193, 194
Sistan 228 n. 990
Solomon, the king 255
sorcery 134 n. 622
storytellers 227 n. 984, 272 n. 1219,
276 n. 1251, 298 n. 1351, 317 n.
1468, 319 n. 1479, 328 n. 1533
Successors xv, 20 n. 88, 151 nn. 679,
682, 158 n. 714, 160 n. 721, 205 n.
888, 206, 207 n. 896, 2ir n. 912,
223 nn. 970, 971, 271 n. 1217,
303, 308 n. 1408, 309 n. 1413, 313
n. 1445, 3x4, 315 n. 1455, 319 nn.
1476-77, 325 nn. 1509-10, 326 n.
1518, 327 n. 1523
Su'da bt. Tha'labah 6
Sudayy b. 'Ajlan. See Abu Umamah
al-Bahill
al-Suddi * 197
Sufriyyah 217
Sufyan ’ 96, 134, 204, 214, 222, 244,
278
Sufyan b. al-Sa’ib 247
Sufyan b. Sa'id al-Thawri 250, 255,
156, 2.57-58, 265, 313 n. 1442,
329 n. 1539
Sufyan b. Sa'id al-Thawri * 146, 221,
257
Sufyan al-Thawri. See Sufyan b. Sa'id
Sufyan b. 'Uyaynah 240, 265, 327 n.
1529, 329
398
Index
Sufyan b. 'Uyaynah * 27, 224, 229,
238, 252
Sufyan b. Wakr *155
Sufyanids 274 nn. 1234-35
Suhayl b. ‘Ami 44, 170
Suhayl b. al-Bayda’ 301
Suhayl b. al-Mughirah. See Abu Um-
ayyah b. al-Mughlrah
suhuf. See sahifah
Sukaynah bt. al-Husayn b. 'AH 50
Sulafah 49
Sulaym (tribe) 122 n. 559, 242 n. 1065,
269 n. 1203, 285 n. 1295, 292 nn.
1322-23, 301 n. 1366, 312 n.
1436, 313 n. 1444, 323 n. 1500
Sulaym b. al-Aswad, see also Abu al-
Sha'tha’ al-Muharibi 314 n. 1451
Sulaym b. Jabir al-Hujaymi, Abu
Jurayy 123
Sulaym b. Jabir al-Hujaymi, Abu
Jurayy * 124
Sulayman * 251
Sulayman b. 'Abd al-Jabbar * 101, 114
Sulayman b. Abd al-Malik, the caliph
156 n. 706, 229 n. 993, 316 n.
1462
Sulayman b. ‘Abd al-Rahman al-
Dimashql * 150
Sulayman b. Abl al-Shaykh * 250
Sulayman b. al-Arqam 324
Sulayman b. al-Harith * 190
Sulayman b. Mihran al-A'mash 248,
2.85, 313, 332
Sulayman b. Mihran al-A'mash * 135,
268, 270, 273
Sulayman b. al-Mughirah * 122
Sulayman b. Qarm 258
Sulayman b. Qarm * 246
Sulayman b. Suhaym * 204
Sulayman b. Surad 52-53,137-138,
293
Sulayman b. Surad ‘138
Sulayman b. Tahman 323 n. 1500
Sulayman b. Tarkhan. See Sulayman
al-Taymi
Sulayman al-Taymi 306, 323 n. 1500
Sulayman b. Ukaymah 120
Sulayman b. Ukaymah * 120
Sumayyah bt. Khabbat, mother of
'Ammar 29, 30, ir7
Sumayyah, mother of Abu Bakrah 29
n. 134
sannah 157 n. 707
sunnah, killing of the 225
Sunni's 231 n. 1002, 237 n. 1041, 247
n. 1090
the Supplemented, see also al-
Mudhayyal xx, 81, 209, 233
the Supplement to the Supplemented,
see also Dhayl al-mudhayyal xv,
xvi, xviii, xx
surat Al 'Imran 84
surat al-Baqarah 84, 207
surat Maryam 71
Surayj b. al-Nu'man 331
Surayj b. Yunus * 221
Suwa’ah (tribal group) 127 n. 588, 285
n. 1293, 297 n. 1350
Suwayd b. Ghafalah 208, 320
Suwayd b. Hubayrah 151
Suwayd b. Hubayrah *151
Suwayd b. Sa'id * 230
Syria t4, 16, 30 n. 136, 32 n. 146, 33
n. 147, 35 n. 159, 53, 62, 63, 70 n.
3^5, 76, 95, too, ri2, 150 m 677,
215, 220, 236, 255, 262, 283 n.
1280, 290 nn. 1311, 1312, 291 n.
1316, 292 nn. 1318, 1323, 317 n.
1468, 331 n. 1553, 336 m 1579
Syrian army 243 n. 1070, 264
Syrian school of law 255 n. 1131
T
Ta’abbata Sharran 73
Tabalah 19
al-Tabaqat (by al-Waqidl) xxiv, xvi
al-Tabaqat (by Ibn Sa'd) xxi, xv-xvi
al-Tabaqat (by Muslim b. al-Hajjaj)
xvi
tabaqat (categories) xviii, xxv
Tabaristan 248, 315 n. 1459
al-Tabari xv, xvi, xvii, xviii, xix,
Index
399
xx, xxi, xxii, xxiii, xxiv, xxv, xxvi,
xxvii, 3, 32, 46, 49, 50, 52, 60, 69,
70 , 75 , 78 , 136, 139 , 140, 141,
142, 143, 163, 167, 208 n. 901,
210, 220 n. 956, 223, 250 n. 1107,
253 n. 1121, 256, 258 n. 1148, 281
n. 1272, 29s n. 1338, 301 n. 1366,
310 n. 1424
Tabuk 24, 34, 105
tadlls 240
Taghlib (tribal groupl 129, 271
tahklm. See arbitration
tahnlk 63
al-Ta’if 38 n. 176, 56, 61 n. 277, 103 n.
491, 261 n. 1158, 282 n. 1277, 327
n. 1524
al-Ta’if, siege of 11, 20, 24, 29, 46, 61,
73, 105, 112
talab al-'ilm 218 n. 943
talbiyah 103,128, 277
Talhah b. 'Abdallah b. Khalaf 277, 309
n. 1418
Talhah b. Kurayz 198
Talhah b. 'Ubaydallah 27 n. 126, 28,
172, 272 n. 1224, 277, 288, 315 n.
1457
Talibi family 54 n. 246
Tamanni 172
Tamlm (tribe) 79 n. 377, 82, 104 n.
498, 112 n. 527, 123, 248 n. 1097,
254 n. 1128, 271 n. 1215, 2,76, 307
n. 1404, 308 n. 1410, 3x1 n. r427,
316, 328 n. 1532, 329 n. 1541
Tamlm b. al-Muntasir al-Wasiti * 109
Tamim al-Dari 281 n. 1272, 298, 302
Tammam b. al-'Abbas 75-76, 96
Tammam b. Rabi'ah 62
al-Ta’rikh (by Yahya b. Main) xxvi
tarwiyah 221
Tawus b. Kaysan 220-21
tawwabun. See Repenters
tax collectors 19, 80 n. 380, 83, 86 n.
410, 91, 135 n. 625, 292 n. 1323,
322 n. 1391
taylasan 229 n. 997
Taym b. 'Abd Manah. See Taym al-
Ribab
Taym Allah b. Tha'labah (tribal group)
250, 251 n. 1114, 254
Taym b. Murrah (a clan of the
Quraysh) 28 n. 128, 95 n. 461,
hi, 240 n. 1057, 245, 261, 333
al-TaymL See Sulayman al-Tayml
Taym al-Ribab (tribe) 259
Tayyi’ (tribe) 6, 85, 86 n. 411, 209,
239 n. 1055, 305 n. 1392
Thabit al-Bunani b. Aslam 236, 317
Thabit b. al-Dahhak 290
Thabit b. Jidh' 11
Thabit b. Qays b. Shammas 131, 183
Thabit b. Tha'labah b. Zayd. See
Thabit b. Jidh'
Thabit b. Wadi'ah 294
Thabit b. Yazid 294 n. 1324
Tha'labah b. Abi Malik * 39, 164,
187
Tha'labah b. 'Amir 93
Tha'labah b. Bakr (tribal group) 166 n.
748
Tha'labah b. Ka'b. See Jidh'
Thaqif (tribe) 11 n. 41, 29 n. 134, 38 n.
176, 48, 49, 129 n. 596, 244, 257,
299 n. 1360, 310 n. 1420, 327 n.
1525
Thawban b. Yuhdad, client of the
Prophet 99, 100
Thawr b. Yazid 328
Thawrb. Zayd 328 n. 1535
Thawr 232
Thawr (tribe) 257, 321 n. 1487
Thu'al (tribe) 86 nn. 410, 414
Thubaytah bt. Hanzalah * 203
Thubaytah bt. Ya'ar 300
Tihamah 17, 60
tithe, see also 'ushr 221
Tradition of the Covering 155
treasury 331 n. 1548
tribal nobles, tribal chiefs, tribal
leaders 82 nn. 385, 386, 390, 85 n.
404, 86 n. 410, 92 n. 444, 211 n.
912, 228 n. 999, 259 n. 1153, 266
n. 1190, 269, 270, 275, 277 n.
1254, 297 n. 1349, 298 n. 1352,
298 n. 1355, 316 n. 1466
400
Index
tribal system, see also genealogy 220
n. 953
Tubba' 220
al-Tufayl b. al-Harith b. 'Abd al-
Muttalib 23-24,164
Tujib 328 n. 15 34
tulaqa’ 197
Tulayhah b. Khuwaylid 78 n. 375
Tulayq b. Qays al-Hanafi 305
Twelver Shi'ah. See Shi'ah, Imami
U
'Ubadah b. al-Samit 158
'Ubayd b. Adam * 156
'Ubayd b. Bishr 247
'Ubayd b. Nudaylah 328
'Ubayd b. Rifa'ah al-Zuraqi 134
‘Ubayd b. Rifa'ah al-Zuraqi * 134
'Ubayd b. Zayd 192
'Ubaydah b. al-Aswad * 156
'Ubaydah b. al-Harith 23, 24
'Ubaydah bt. Nabil * 39
’Ubaydallah * 197, 200
'Ubaydallah b. al-'Abbas 25, 74-75,
95, 201, 288
'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas
54
'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah b. al-'Abbas *
55
'Ubaydallah b. 'Abdallah b. 'Utbah *
96
'Ubaydallah b. Abi Rafi' 66, 99
'Ubaydallah b. Abi Ziyad * 109
'Ubaydallah b. Akhnas 325
'Ubaydallah b. 'All b. Abi Rafi' * 199
'Ubaydallah b. 'All b. Abi Talib 271
'Ubaydallah b. 'Amr * 157
'Ubaydallah b. al-Arqam 47
'Ubaydallah b. al-Hasan 259-60
'Ubaydallah b. Jahsh 177, 180
'Ubaydallah b. Mihsan 157
'Ubaydallah b. Mihsan * 157
'Ubaydallah b. Muhammad b. 'Ali 235
'Ubaydallah b. Musa *119, 122, 145,
204
'Ubaydallah b. Sa'd al-Zuhri * 134
'Ubaydallah b. Sa'id, Ibn Abi Hind *
187
'Ubaydallah b. 'Umar * 159
'Ubaydallah b. Ziyad 211, 274, 315 n.
1459
Ubayy b. Ka'b 289, 316 n. 1461
'Udah b. Bada 89
'Udhar (tribal group) 220
'Udhrah (tribal group) 71, 165
Uhban b. Sayfi 299
Uhud, battle of 10, n, 19 n. 79, 22,
24, 26, 30, 36, 38, 40, 47, 57, 58,
66, 67, 69, 71, 73, 74, 118, 133,
155 n. 696, 162 n. 732, 174, 175,
202
'Ujayr b. 'Abd Yazld 77
'Ukashah's b. Mihsan's mother * 182
'Ukkaz 6
'Ulaybah b. Harmalah * 124
'Ulayy b. Rabah * 156
Umamah bt. Abi al-'As 13, 162
Umamah bt. Hamzah 199
'Umar b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Rabi'ah. See
'Umar b. Abi Rabi'ah
'Umar b. 'Abd al-'Aziz, the caliph 192,
212 n. 916, 309 n. 1416, 310, 318
n. 1473, 319 n. 1475, 322 n. 1491,
326 n. 1522, 332
'Umar b. 'Abd al-Rahman * 157
'Umar b. Abi Rabi'ah 49, 114
'Umar b. Abi Salamah 113, 175, 269
Umar b. Abi Salamah * 175
‘Umar b. Abi Talib, 'Umar al-Akbar
271
'Umar b. al-Harith al-Khawlani 32
'Umar b. Hubayrah 228-29, 242
'Umar b. Isma'il al-Hamdani * 126
'Umar b. al-Khattab, the caliph 20, 21,
22-23, 4i, 42, 46, 55/ 62, 63, 70 n.
323, 72, 83, 88, 98, 109 n. 512,
no n. 517, in n. 522, 114 n. 538,
117, 146 n. 657, 147 n. 663, 149 n.
672, 169, 195, 199, 224 n. 976,
231, 252, 277 n. 1254, 279 n.
1265, 285 n. 1295, 290 n. 1311,
294 n. 1336, 307, 31411. 1450, 321
Index
401
n. 1486, 325 n. 1509, 335 nn.
1571, 1572
'Umar b. al-Khattab, the caliph * 174,
183
'Umar b. Muhammad b. al-Munkadir
240
'Umar b. Muhammad b. 'Umar b. 'All
* 167, 168
'Umar b. Murrah * 100
'Umar b. Sa'd b. Abi Waqqas 211
'Umar b. Sa'id al-Dimashql * 149
'Umar b. 'Ubaydallah b. Ma'mar 309
n. 1418
'Umar b. 'Uqbah * 74
'Umarb. 'Uthman 309 n. 1418
'Umarb. 'Uthman * 175
'Umar b. 'Uthman b. 'Abdallah al-
Jahshi * 180, 182
'Umarah b. Khuzaymah b. Thabit *
31, 131, Ji 6
‘Umarah b. al-Muhajir * 185
'Umarah bt. Hamzah 202, see also
Umamah bt. Hamzah
'Umarah b. Zadhan al-Saydalani * 225
Umaymah bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib 9,
180
Umaymah, client of the Prophet 200
'Umayr b. 'Abd 'Amir. See Dhu al-
Shimalayn
'Umayr b. Sa'd 22 n. 92
'Umayr b. 'Uqbah al-Ansari 136
'Umayr b. Wahb 152
'Umayr b. Wahb * 152
'Umayr b. Wahb al-Jumahi 152 n. 684
Umayyad army, see also Syrian army
53 n. 241, 228 n. 990, 229 n. 994
Umayyad period xvi, 82 n. 388, 88 n.
424, 93 n. 4S3, 168 n. 756, 2212 n.
916
Umayyad propaganda 232 n. 1009
Umayyads, Umayyad dynasty, see
also Umayyah, family of 31 n.
141, 49, 59 n. 263, 63 n. 286, 178
n. 800, 226 n. 981, 228 nn. 990,
992, 234 n. 1016, 240, 245, 273 n.
1226, 274 n. 1236, 275 n. 1243,
277 n. 1254, 278, 285 n. 1295, 287
n. 1304, 297 nn. 1347-48, 300 n.
1363, 315 n. 1456, 321 n. 1490,
332 n. 1558, 334 nn. 1564-65, 336
nn- 1574 , 1576
Umayyah b. Abd Shams 9 n. 30, 254
n. 1126
Umayyah, family of 30, 198 n. 862,
210 n. 907
Umayyah b. Rabi'ah b. al-Harith 198
Umayyah b. Shibl * 218
Umayyah b. Ubayy 105
Umm 'Abdallah bt. al-Hasan b. 'All
229
Umm 'Abd bt. 'Abd Wadd 203
Umm Abiha, Fatimah bt. Muhammad
the Prophet 13
ummah 37 n. 171
Umm 'Anmar bt. Siba' no
Umm 'Atiyyah 12, 163
Umm Ayman 65, 99, 172, 191-192,
199, 287
Umm Bakr bt. al-Miswar * 39, 51, 52,
108
Umm Bishr b. al-Bara’, Khulaydah bt.
Qays 287
Umm al-Darda’ 205, 284 n. 1285, 287
Umm al-Darda’ * 205
Umm Dumayrah 100
Umm al-Fadl. See Lubabah bt.
al-Harith, Lubabah al- Kubra
Umm Farwah bt. Ja'far 248
Umm Farwah bt. al-Qasim 248
Umm Habib 201
Umm Habib bt. Bujayr 271
Umm Habibah bt. Abi Sufyan, wife of
the Prophet 177-180, 287
Umm al-Hakam bt. 'Abdallah b.
al-Harith 235
Umm al-Hakam bt. 'Ammar *31
Umm al-Hakam bt. al-Zubayr 198,
287
Umm al-Hakam bt. al-Zubayr * 198
Umm Hakim bt. 'Abd al-Muttalib
198, 76
Umm Hakim bt. al-Harith 17
Umm Hakim bt. Zuhayr b. al-Harith
106
402 ,
Index
Umm Hani’ bt. Abl Talib 196-97,
286-87, 3°4/ 306 n. 1400
Umm al-Hasan bt. al-Zubayr 193
Umm Hawshab 87
Umm Humayd bt. 'Abd al-Rahman
279-80
Umm Ibrahim. See Mariyah
Umm Ishaq bt. Talhan 49
Umm Kharijah bt. Sa‘d b. al-Rabi‘ *
205
Umm Kulthum bt 'All b. Abi Talib
279
Umm Kulthum bt. al-Hasan b. Zayd
260
Umm Kulthum bt. Muhammad the
Prophet 11-12,163,172
Umm Kulthum bt. 'Uqbah 198, 287
Umm Kulthum bt al-Zubayr b.
‘Awwam 279
Umm Ma'bad al-Khuza'iyyah 138,
139 , 141, 142/ 287
Umm Marthad 205
Umm Marthad * 205
Umm al-Masakin. See Zaynab bt.
Khuzaymah
Umm al-Mundhir bt. Qays 20s
Umm Ruman bt. 'Umayr 171, 172
Umm Salamah bt. Abl Umayyah, wife
of the Prophet 68, 80, 112, 113,
17S-76, 204, 221, 286, 299, 304,
320
Umm Salamah, wife of al-Saffah 245,
331 n. 1550
Umm Sharlk 204, 287
Umm Sharlk * 204
Umm Sinan al-Aslamiyyah 203-204
Umm Sinan al-Aslamiyyah * 203
Umm Talhah bt. Kurayz 198
'umiah. See pilgrimage, lesser
'umiat al-qadiyyah. See the Pil¬
grimage of the Consummation
Unays b. Abl Marthad * 102
Unays b. Marthad 101
Unays b. Mi'yar 48
Unays b. Zurarah 79
Uqayl (tribe) 125 n. 579
'Uqbah b. 'Abd al-Ghafir 317
'Uqbah b. Abl Mu'ayt 198
'Uqbah b. 'Amir al-Juhanl 32, 293
'Uqbah b. al-Harith b. 'Amir 103
’Uqbah b. al-Harith B. 'Amir * 103
'Uranah 64
'Urwah b. 'Amir * 134
'Urwah b. Mas'ud al-Thaqafl 177 n.
795
'Urwah b. Zayd al-Khayl 85
'Urwah b. al-Zubayr 67, 193, 318
'Urwah b. al-Zubayr * 12, 27, 28, 67,
109, 167, 186, 190
al-'Uryan b. al-Haytham 270
Usamah b. Zayd b. Aslam * 174
Usamah b. Zayd b. Harithah n, 65,
99,172, 192, 194, 289
Usamah b. Zayd al-Laythi * 108,
194
Usayd b. Zuhayr 294
'Usayyah (tribal group) 122
Usayyid (tribal group) 79 n. 377
'ushr 129 n. 599
usury 115 n. 540
'Utarid (tribal group) 307 n. 1407
'Utaybah b. Abl Lahab 163
'Utbah b. Abl Lahab 64, 1 61, 163
‘Utbah b. Ghazwan 104, 105
'Utbah b. Ghazwan * 104
'Utbah b. Hammad al-Hakami * 150
'Utbah b. Jablrah * 83
'Utbah b. Rabl'ah 23
‘Uthman b. 'Abd al-Rahman al-Jumahl
* 118
'Uthman b. 'Affan, the caliph 22 n. 94,
25, 27, 28 n. 126, 35, 43, 44, 55,
59 n. 263, 63, 66, 70, 76, 87 n.
418, 92, 95, 99, 107 n. 505, 109 n.
512, non. 517, 114 n. 538, 116,
162, 163, 191, 192, 198, 206, 207,
222, 227, 239, 269, 270, 272, 277
n. 1254, 285 n. 1295, 286 n. 1299,
291 n. 1316, 297 n. 1348, 306, 337
nn. 1581, 1582
‘Uthman b. al-Arqam 47
'Uthman b. 'Ata’ al-Khurasanl * 207
'Uthman b. Hunayf 72, 291
'Uthman b. Maz'un 175
Index
403
'Uthman b. Muhammad al-AkhnasI *
177
'Uthman b. Muslim. See al-Batti
'Uthman b. Sa'id * 154
'Uthman b. Talhah b. Abi Talhah 107
'Uthman b. 'Umar * 209
'Uwaymir b. al-Ashqar 132
'Uwaymirb. al-Ashqar * 132
Uways b. al-Khulas al-Qarani 207-
208, 266
'Uyaynah b. Abi 'Imran, father of Suf-
yan b. 'Uyaynah 265
V
veil 184 n. 815, 189, 194
vendetta. See blood revenge
W
Wabarah b. Jahdar 87
Wabarah B. Salamah 87 n. 416
Wadi al-Qura 65, 99
Wadi al-Siba' 28, 105
Wahb b. Hudhayfah 154
Wahb b. Hudhayfah * 154
Wahb b. Kaysan 237, 335
Wahb b. Munabbih 227, 322
Wahb b. Rabim'ah b. Hilal 301
Wahwah b. Thabit 34
Wa’il b. Hujr al-Hadrami 148
Waki' * 135, 136, 226
WakT b. al-Jarrah * 113
al-Walid b. 'Abd al-Malik, the caliph
182, 190, 210 n. 910, 213, 272 n.
1220, 299 n. 1359, 306 n. 1400,
316 n. 1462, 319 n. 1477
al-Walid al-Bayruti * 232
al-Walid b. al-Mughirah 202
al-Walid b. Muslim * 136, 223
al-Walid b. Muslim, Abu al-'Abbas
326 n. 1518
al-Walid b. Muslim, Abu Bishr 326
al-Walid b. Rabah * 185
al-Walid b. Salamah al-Filastinl * 120
al-Walid b. Shuja' * 250
al-Walid b. 'Uqbah 198, 297
al-Walid b. 'Utbah b. Abi Sufyan 176
al-Walid b. al-Walid b. al-Mughirah 67
al-Walid b. Yazid, al-Walid II 82 n.
389, 236
waqf 100 n. 474, 230 n. 998
Waqid b. Abi Thabit * 78
al-Waqidl xviii n. 9, xxiv, 253 n. 1219,
330 n. 1543
al-Waqidi * 4, 5, 10, 12, 17, 23, 25, 26,
30, 31, 32 , 33 , 34 , 36, 38, 39 , 4 i,
42, 43, 45, 46, 47, 49, 50, 51, 52,
56, 57, 58, 59, 62, 63, 65, 66, 67,
69, 70, 71, 73, 74, 78, 79, 80, 81,
83, 90, 91, 92, 106, 115, 116, r6r,
162, 164, 165, r66, 167, 168, 169,
170, 171, 173 , 175 , 176, 177 , 180,
283, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 190,
19a, 193, 295, 2.03, 208, 209, 213,
214, 217, 221, 227, 229, 230, 232,
233 , 234, 239, 241, 244, 245, 249,
253, 255, 257, 260, 262, 265, 283,
289, 293, 298, 299, 329
Warqa’ al-Nakha'I 247 n. 1093
Wasi' b. Habban * 154
Wasit 182 n. 812, 241, 264, 310 n.
1421, 312 n. 1426
wasiyy 236
Wathilah b. al-Asqa' 291-92
Wathilah b. al-Asqa' * 101
wine, see also alcohol 147, 178, 200,
297 n. 2348
witi. See prayer, night
Wuhayb * 223
Y
Ya'fur 220
Ya'fur b. 'Abd al-Rahman 220 n. 956
Yaf'urid dynasty 220 n. 956
Yahmid (tribal group) 210
Yahyab. 'Abbad * 5, 13
Yahya b. 'Abdallah b. Abi Qatadah *
162
Yahya b. 'Abd al-Rahman * 156
404
Index
Yahya b. Abi Kathi 239-40, 305
Yahya b. Abi Kathxr * 136
Yahya b. Ayyub * 146
Yahya b. al-Durays * 119, 128
Yahya b. Hakim b. Hizam 41, 106
Yahya b. 'Imran * 47
Yahya b. Ja'far b. Muhammad 249
Yahya (b. Ma'in) * 240
Yahya b. Ma'in ; see also Ibn Ma'i xviii
n. 9, 52
Yahya b. Muhammad b. 'All 235
Yahya b. al-Mundhir. See Abu Ayyub
al-'Ataki
Yahya b. Sa'id * ioi, 221, 244
Yahya b. Sa'id al-Ansari 336
Yahya b. Sa'id al-Ansari * 132
Yahya b. Sa'id b. Dinar * 192
Yahya b. Sa'id al-Qattan 249
Yahya b. Sa'id al-Qattan * 207, 221,
223, 240
Yahya b. Salih * 157
Yahya b. Shibl * 167
Yahya b. Sulayman * 221
Yahya b. 'Urwah b. al-Zubayr 334
Yahya b. 'Uthman b. Salih al-Sahmi *
218
Yahya b. Wadih * 268
Yahya b. Waththab 238
Yahya b. Ya'la al-Aslami * 101
Yahya b. Ya'la al-Muaribi * 155, 238
Yahya b. Yusuf al-Zimml 331-32
Ya'la b. al-Ashdaq al-'Uqayli * 126
Ya'la b. Munyah. See Ya'la b.
Umayyah
Ya'la b. Murrah 299, 302
Ya'la b. Siyabah. See Ya'la b. Murrah
Ya'la b. Umayyah 104, 302
Yam (tribal group) 220
Yamamah 239 n. 1055, 240, 305 n.
1392
Yamamah, battle of 30, 117, 133 n.
616, 208, 286 n. 1301, 300 n. 1363
Yana'un (tribal group) 210
Yanbu' 75
Ya'qub b. 'Abdallah b. al-Ashajj 335
Ya'qub b. 'Abdallah b. Sulayman ‘ 120
Ya'qub b. 'Abd al-Rahman * 160
Ya'Qub b. Abi Salamah 333
Ya'Qub b. Abi Ya'qub * 205
Ya'Qub b. Ibrahim * 196
Ya'Qub b. Ibrahim b. Jubayr al-Wasiti
* 146
Ya'Qub b. Ibrahim b. Sa'd * 23
Ya'Qub b. Ishaq al-Hadrami * 257
Ya'Qub b. Muhammad b. Abi Sa'sa'ah
* i 93
Ya'Qub b. Muhammad b. 'All 236
Ya'qub b. Mujammi' * 133
Ya'qut xix
Yarbu' (tribal group) 83, 307 n. 1404,
308 n. 1410, 330 n. 1542
Yarmuk, battle of 35
Yasar b. Zayd * 100
Yasar, grandfather of Ibn Ishaq 253
Yashkur (tribal group) 323 n. 1498,
325 n. 1514
Yasir b. 'Amir 29, 116
Yazidb. 'Abdallah b. Qusayt * 183
Yazld b. 'Abdallah b. al-Shikhkhlr 316
Yazid b. 'Abd al-Malik, the caliph 215,
270 n. 1209
Yazid b. Abi Maryam * 158
Yazid b. Abi Ziyad 325
Yazid b. Abi Ziyad * 12, 97, 168, 207,
216
Yazid b. Amanah 89
Yazid b. 'Amir al-Suwa’i 127
Yazidb. "Amiral-Suwa’i * 127
Yazid b. 'Ata * 207
Yazid al-Faqir 326
Yazidb. al-Hadi * 164, 187
Yazidb. Harun * 109, 123
Yazid b. Hayyan 313 n. 1446
Yazid b. al-Husayn b. Numayr 53, 138
Yazid b. 'Iyad, see also Ibn Ju'dubah *
212
Yazid b. Ka'b b. Sharahil 7
Yazid b. Kaysan 325
Yazid b. Mu'awiyah 40, 52, 63, 71, 73,
74, 95, 96 n. 466, 186, 215
Yazid b. al-Muhallab 316 n. 1463
Yazid b. Ruman 241
Yazid b. Ruman * 14, 78
Yazid b. Sinan, Abu Farwah * 200
Index
405
Yazld b. Tahman 313, 323 n. 1500
Yazld n. See Yazld b. 'Abd al-Malik
Yemen 17,29, 74, 94, 114 n. S38, 116,
210, 218, 219, 220, 221 n. 962,
227, 265, 299, 324
Yemen (tribal faction) 88 n. 424
Yemeni tribes 137
Yuhabir b. Malik. See Murad
Yunus * 223, 225
Yunus b. 'Abd al-A 'la 100, 108, 132,
133, i47, 204
Yunus b. Abi Ishaq * 155
Yunus b. Bukayr * 200, 2x8
Yunus b. Hammad al-Ma'ni *118
Yunus b. Yazld al-Ayll *131
Yusuf b. Abi Yusuf. See Yusuf b.
Ya'qub
Yusuf b. Muhammad b. al-Munkadir
240
Yusuf b. Muhammad b. Thabit * 133
Yusuf b. 'Umar al-Thaqafi 233, 242,
243, 26s
Yusuf b. Ya'qub b. Ibrahim 265
Yusuf b. Ya'qub al-Sadusi * 124
Z
Zabban b. Fa’id * 205
al-Zabidi * 159
Zad al-Rakb. See Abu Umayyah b. al-
Mughlrah
Zahir (tribal group) 91
Za’idah * 238, 242, 268
Za’idah b. Qudamah al-Thaqafi 256-
57
Zakariya’ b. 'Adi *114
Zakariya’ b. Sallam * 226
Zakariya’ b. Yahya b. Aban * 101, 155,
268
Zayd Abu Yasar 100
Zayd Abu Yasar * 100
Zayd al-Hibb. See Zayd b. Harithah
Zayd b. Abi 'Attab * 184
Zayd b. Abi Layla 312 n. 1438
Zayd b. 'All b. al-Husayn 233
Zayd b. 'Amr b. Nufayl 37
Zayd b. al-Arqam 295
Zayd b. Aslam * 174
Zayd b. Aslam, client of 'Umar 335
Zayd b. Aslam, Companion of the
Prophet 335 n. 2571
Zayd b. Bula. See Zayd Abu Yasar
Zayd b. Harithah 6-10, 14, 65, 162,
172, 180-81, 192, 287 n. 1304,
289
Zayd b. al-Hasan b. Zayd 260
Zaydb. al-Hubab * 152, 221, 205, 258
Zayd b. Jubayr * 200
Zayd b. Khalid al-Juhani 293
Zayd b. al-Khattab 117
Zayd b. Muhammad. See Zayd b.
Harithah
Zaydb. Rufay' * 154
Zayd b. Sahl. See Abu Talhah
Zayd b. Suhan 330 n. 1545
Zayd b. Thabit 294, 284 n. 1288
Zaydiyyah. See Shi'ah, Zaydi
Zayd al-Khayl 85
Zaynab bt. Abi Mu'awiyah 203
Zaynab bt. Abi Mu'awiyah * 203
Zaynab bt. Abi Salamah 175
Zaynab bt. Abi Salamah * 184
Zaynab bt. 'Ali 211
Zaynab bt. al-'Awwam 41
Zaynab bt Jahsh, wife of the Prophet
9, 180-82
Zaynab bt. Khuzaymah, wife of the
Prophet 163-64, 177
Zaynab bt. Maz'un 175
Zaynab bt. Muhammad the Prophet 4,
13-16, 78, '150, 162-63, 282
Zaynab bt. Sulayman b. 'Ali 263
al-Zibriqan b. Badr 82
Zimm 331 n. 1554
Zirr b. Hubaysh *51
Zirr b. Hubaysh 320-21
Ziyad b. Ablhi 148 n. 668, 274 n.
1235, 282 n. 1277, 292 n. 1319,
318 n. 1471
Ziyad b. Labid 135
Ziyad b. Labid * 135
Ziyad b. Mutarrif 155
Ziyad b. Mutarrif *155
Index
Zoroastrians, see also Magians, Pos¬
sessors of the Scriptures 23 n. 99
Zubayd (tribe) 298 n. 1352, 3113 n.
1445
Zubayd, client of al-Husayn b. 'All
211
al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam 16, 27-28, 41
n. 190, 105, 169, 172, 199, 272 n.
1224, 279 n. 1267, 281 n. 1272,
287 n. 1304, 288, 289, 318 n.
1470, 334 n. 1565, 337 n. 1581
al-Zubayr b. al-'Awwam * 78
Zubayri faction, Zubayri party 96, 275
n. 1243
Zubayri family 241, 336 n. 1577
Zufar b. al-Hudhayl 251
Zuhayr * 221
Zuhayr b. Mu'awiyah al-Ju'fiyy * 190,
191
Zuhayr b. Umayyah 116
Zuhrah (a clan of the Quraysh) 26, 35,
42, 51 n. 229, 95 n. 461, 107, no,
in, 152 n. 684, 297 n. 1350, 301
n. 1365
al-Zuhri, Ibn Shihab 212, 234-35, 240,
333, 335 n. 1572
al-Zuhri, Ibn Shihab * 12, 23, 55, 67,
108, 109, no, 131, 165, 167, 174,
176, 183, 186, 187, 190
Zur'ah bt. Mishrah 54, 232
Zurarah b. Awfa al-Harashl 316
Zurayq (a clan of the Khazraj) 290 n.
1310
Zurayq b. al-Sikht * 152