Family Tree Of Prophet Muhammad Pdf Download

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Vannessa Rataj

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Aug 4, 2024, 5:05:09 PM8/4/24
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Hereceived his first revelation from Allah when he was 40 years old and spent the rest of his life preaching the message of God. He built and led the largest community of Muslims and unified the majority of the Arabian Peninsula under Islam. In addition to being a community leader and statesman, prophet Muhammad (PBUH) was also known for being a family man.

Muhammad lost his mother when he was 6 years old, after which he was passed into the care of Abd al-Muttalib, his paternal grandfather. Then, his grandfather died when the Prophet was 8 years old. And, he was raised by Abu Talib, his paternal uncle and the new leader of the Banu Hashim clan.


In March 632, Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) took his last pilgrimage to Makkah and delivered his last sermon at Mount Arafat. Later, he returned to his wife`s home in Madinah, where he fell ill for several days. On June 8, 632, he died at the age of 62. He was buried at al-Masjid an-Nabawi, which was one of the first mosques he had built in Madinah.


In his teens, Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) used to work in a camel caravan and gained experience in commercial trade while travelling to Syria and between the Mediterranean Sea and the Indian Ocean. He was also a deeply spiritual man and spent lots of time meditating on Mount Hira.


Dr. Omar Ayoub is a tech enthusiast and a part time researcher and accounts authorship of several international publications. He holds a PhD in Computer Science from USA and has an experience of more than 10 years in Saudi Arabia working in tourism, hospitality, education, technology and retail sector. His interests include traveling, writing, and exploring trending technologies.


Description: This chart shows the family tree of all 25 Islamic Prophets from Adam (AS) to Prophet Muhammad ﷺ with newly commissioned calligraphy and lots of bonus information like names of Prophets whose prophethood is disputed among Muslim scholars, names of places where each prophet was sent, how many times they are mentioned by name in the Quran, who were the Prophets (Nabi) and Messengers (Rasool), and the biblical names of Islamic prophets and much more information.


In case you receive a damaged or broken product, don't worry we will refund 100% money within 3-5 business days or send you another product, as per your request. Please inform us within 14 days after you have received your order.


2- Sawda bint Zama: Sawdah and her first husband were among the early Muslims; her husband died, leaving her alone with young children. The prophet then married her after obtaining the agreement of her non-Muslim parents. She was a lovely, charitable, and cheerful lady.


When Aishah and the prophet married, they were quite close. He adored her, and she went on to become an accomplished Islamic scholar. Aisha narrated almost 2000 ahadith; she was noted for her acute intelligence and immaculate judgment.


After all of their hardship, umm Habibah and her husband joined the exodus to Abyssinia. But then her husband died, leaving her in a foreign nation with little assistance and a young daughter. When the prophet learned of this, he proposed marriage to her, which she accepted; four years later, the prophet died.


Their marriage enabled her clan to convert to Islam with dignity rather than defeat. Following the announcement of the marriage, all hostages were released, and the war loot was restored to the Banu Mustaliq tribe. She was married to the prophet for six years and lived for 39 years after his death.


8- Maymunah bint Al Harith: among the family tree of the prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) is his wife Maymunah bint Al Harith. Maymunah proposed marriage to the prophet, who accepted. She married the prophet for more than three years before he died. Her nephew, Ibn Abbas, went on to become the greatest Quran scholar, and he benefited much from her knowledge.


9- Safiyya bint Huyayy: She was born in Madinah, the daughter of Huyayy ibn Akhtab, leader of the Jewish clan Banu Nadir. Banu Nadir was kicked out of Madinah and relocated to Khaybar. Safiyya was seized when the Muslims beat them in the Battle of Khaybar. When the prophet offered her the chance to convert to Islam, she accepted. The prophet was then wedded to her.


Umm Salamah and her husband were among the first persons to abandon Mecca and migrate to Abyssinia. Her life demonstrates her forbearance in any situation. She was forced to separate from her husband, and her son was kidnapped.


There is no evidence that Queen Elizabeth II was a descendant of the Prophet Muhammad or his Hashemite clan in the Arabian peninsula, contrary to reports and social media posts that made the claim after the queen's death last week, a historian and a British genealogical publisher told Middle East Eye.


The findings, which have been shared by British media outlets since 2018 and resurfaced after the queen's death, were attributed to Burke's Peerage, a British genealogical publisher and an authority on the ancestry of the royal family since 1847.


Newspaper reports quoted Burke's Peerage as the source of the family tree, which connects Queen Elizabeth to the Prophet after a historian wrote an article for a Moroccan news outlet affirming the findings.


However, Burke's Peerage told Middle East Eye in an email that "unfortunately, we have no genealogical information relating to this. We were not the original source, even though that has been incorrectly repeated over the years."


Gomaa claimed that the British monarch's "grandfather" was a Muslim who was forced to become a Christian "during the Inquisition period", before he arrived in England. Elizabeth's actual grandfather, King George V, ruled between 1910 and 1936.


There is also a press release from October 1986 signed by a group called Moslems in Buckingham Palace and syndicated by United Press International (UPI), quoting a letter allegedly written by Harold Brooks-Baker, the director of publishing at Burke's Peerage, to former prime minister Margaret Thatcher, breaking the news to her about the Queen's Muslim ancestry.


Asked about this letter, Burke's told MEE: "Unfortunately, it is not something that we are aware of, and we have no record of it, if it even existed. Perhaps the subject will be investigated by historical researchers to provide a primary answer."


Zaida is depicted as a Muslim refugee who fled Seville, converted to Christianity, and became known as Isabella. Thought by some to be the daughter of Seville's ruler Al-Mutamid Ibn Abbad, purportedly a descendant of the Hashemite clan, she became a mistress of King Alfonso VI of Castile, the archenemy of her father.


"One of the stories is that Alfonso VI 'won' Zaida in a chess match against al-Mutamid, the Muslim king of Seville, who was her father. This is a legend that attempts to equate women and land and to justify that Alfonso had not won any land against al-Mutamid, but he had won the daughter," Grieve explained.


Middle East Eye could not find a trace of the Moslems in the Buckingham Palace group. MEE has contacted the Moroccan news outlet, Al-Ousboue, to confirm the details of their findings, but no response was received by the time of publication.


Islam is the religion founded by the Prophet Muhammad (570-632), who is believed by followers to be the final prophet. The word "Islam" means "submission." Muslims follow the sacred text of the Koran, stress the oneness of God, and practice the Five Pillars: praying, fasting during Ramadan, almsgiving, pilgrimage, and a testimony of faith. The two main branches of Islam are Sunni and Shi'ite. This split occurred in 632 due to different opinions on leadership succession.


The image below is dynamic. You can move groups around and see group descriptions by hovering over a group. To zoom use the "+" and "-" keys. Use the "DEL" key to remove a group and its connections. The buttons in the upper right can be used to export an image file and add notes to the tree.


"It is little known by the British people that the blood of Mohammed flows in the veins of the queen," Harold Brooks-Baker, an authority on the British monarchy and the publisher of the royal genealogical guide, wrote to Britain's then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1986.


The claim gained little attention in the West over the subsequent decades. But Assahifa Al-Ousbouia, a weekly Arabic-language newspaper in Morocco, called attention to the theory again this week by publishing a family tree that claimed to trace the Queen's lineage from Abu al-Qasim Muhammad ibn Abbad, the first independent ruler of Seville in what was then the territory of Al-Andalus in Spain.


According to the chart published in Morocco and translated by the British press, Muhammad ibn Abbad is a great-grandchild of the Prophet Muhammad, who died in 632 in what is now Saudi Arabia. The line between the Prophet Mohammad, ibn Abbad and Elizabeth II thus links the current monarch with the founder of one of the three monotheistic religions, according to the newspaper.


Historians have suggested that the connection is possible but not entirely irrefutable. Marriages between Spanish and British royals have been common throughout the centuries, and both the British and Spanish royal families descend from Queen Victoria. Brooks-Baker appears to have connected the Queen to the prophet through a princess named Zaida, a grandchild of ibn Abbad who converted to Christianity and became the concubine of King Alfonso VI of Castile.


But some historians suggest that the connection between Zaida and the prophet is murky and unverified. And Brooks-Baker was himself a controversial figure known for making contentious statements that were often refuted by the British monarchy.


"Regularly quoted by reporters, Mr. Brooks-Baker's opinions on the British monarchy were characteristically American in their no-holds-barred approach," his obituary published in the New York Times read.


"An adroit publicist, Mr. Brooks-Baker often beat the reporters to the punch, issuing a public statement in response to the slightest royal transgression. This kept him extremely busy," the obituary continued.

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