Zainab bint Muhammad () (598/599–629
CE) was the eldest daughter of the
Islamic prophet
Prophets in Islam () are individuals in Islam who are believed to spread God's message on Earth and serve as models of ideal human behaviour. Some prophets are categorized as messengers (; sing. , ), those who transmit divine revelation, mos ...
Muhammad
Muhammad (8 June 632 CE) was an Arab religious and political leader and the founder of Islam. Muhammad in Islam, According to Islam, he was a prophet who was divinely inspired to preach and confirm the tawhid, monotheistic teachings of A ...
by his first wife
Khadijah.
Marriage
She married her maternal cousin,
Abu al-As ibn al-Rabi'
Abū al-ʿĀṣ ibn al-Rabīʿ (, died in February, AD 634), was a son-in-law and Companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. His original name was said to have been Hushaym or Yasser.
Family
He was the son of Hala bint Khuwaylid.Muhammad ibn ...
, before December 610,
and Khadija gave her a wedding present of an onyx necklace.
[ They had two children, son Ali, who died in childhood, and daughter Umama, who would bear children, including Hilal or Muhammad al-Awsat.] Zainab became a Muslim
Muslims () are people who adhere to Islam, a Monotheism, monotheistic religion belonging to the Abrahamic religions, Abrahamic tradition. They consider the Quran, the foundational religious text of Islam, to be the verbatim word of the God ...
soon after Muhammad first declared himself a prophet. The Quraysh pressured Abu al-As to divorce Zainab, saying they would give him any woman he liked in exchange, but Abu al-As said that he did not want any other woman, a stance for which Muhammad commended him. Muhammad had no jurisdiction over Mecca
Mecca, officially Makkah al-Mukarramah, is the capital of Mecca Province in the Hejaz region of western Saudi Arabia; it is the Holiest sites in Islam, holiest city in Islam. It is inland from Jeddah on the Red Sea, in a narrow valley above ...
and therefore could not force them to separate, so they continued to live together despite Abu al-As's refusal to convert to Islam. Zainab remained in Mecca when the other Muslims following Muhammad migrated to Medina.
Emigration to Medina
Abu al-As was one of the polytheists who was captured at the Battle of Badr. Zainab sent the money for his ransom, including the onyx necklace. When Muhammad saw the necklace, he refused to accept any cash ransom for his son-in-law. He sent Abu al-As home, and Abu al-As promised to send Zainab to Medina.[
Zainab accepted this instruction. About a month after the battle, Zainab's adopted brother, Zayd, arrived in Mecca to escort her to Medina. She entered a '' hawdaj'' and her brother-in-law, Kinana, led the camel to Zayd in broad daylight. The Quraysh perceived this as an unnecessary flaunting of Muhammad's triumph at Badr. A group of them pursued Zainab and overtook her at Dhu Tuwa. A man named Habbar ibn Al-Aswad threatened her with his lance][ and pushed her. She fell out of the hawdaj onto a rock.][ Kinana showed the arrows in his quiver and threatened to kill anyone who came any closer. Then Abu Sufyan arrived, telling Kinana to put away his bow so that they could discuss it rationally. He said that they had no intention of keeping a woman from her father in revenge for Badr, but that it was wrong of Kinana to humiliate the Quraysh further by parading her removal in public; he must do it quietly, when the "chatter" had died down. Kinana took Zainab home again. There she suffered a miscarriage, losing a great deal of blood, which she attributed to having been assaulted by Habbar.][
A few nights later, Kinana took her quietly to meet Zayd, and he escorted her to Medina.][ Anas ibn Malik recalled seeing Zainab in Medina wearing a striped silk cloak.][
]
Reunion with Abu al-As
Zainab did not see her husband again until September or October 627,[ when he entered her house in Medina by night, asking for protection. Muslim raiders had stolen some merchandise that he was keeping in trust for other Quraysh, and he wanted to try to recover it.][ The next morning, Zainab sat among the women at dawn prayers and shouted: "I have given protection to Abu al-As ibn al-Rabi!" As soon as prayers were over, Muhammad confirmed that he had not known anything about it, but "We protect whomever she protects."][ He told Zainab to treat Abu al-As like a guest. Then he arranged for the Quraysh merchandise to be returned, and Abu al-As took it to its owners in Mecca.][
Abu al-As then converted to Islam and returned to Medina. Muhammad restored his marriage to Zainab, and they resumed their married life.][
]
Death
Their reconciliation was short-lived, for Zainab died in May or June 629. Her death was attributed to complications from the miscarriage that she had suffered in 624.[ The women who washed her dead body included Umm Ayman, Sawdah and Umm Salama.][
They have said about the cause of her death: when she was coming from Mecca to Medina, men from Quraysh chased her, and two men named "Habar bin Aswad" and "Nafi bin Abdul Qais" reached her and attacked her. As they said, she was pregnant and miscarried her child. As a result of this incident, she fell ill and did not recover until she died in 8 AH.
]
See also
*Muhammad in Islam
In Islam, Muhammad () is venerated as the Seal of the Prophets who transmitted the Quran, eternal word of God () from the Angels in Islam, angel Gabriel () to humans and jinn. Muslims believe that the Quran, the central religious text of Isl ...
*Children of Muhammad
The common view is that the Prophets and messengers in Islam, Islamic prophet Muhammad had three sons, named Abd Allah ibn Muhammad, Abd Allah, Ibrahim ibn Muhammad, Ibrahim, and Qasim ibn Muhammad, Qasim, and four daughters, named Fatima, Ruqayy ...
* Genealogy of Khadijah's daughters
* Sahabah
References
External links
Qurayshi family tree
{{authority control
599 births
629 deaths
6th-century Arab people
6th-century women
7th-century women
Women companions of the Prophet
Children of Muhammad
Burials at Jannat al-Baqī