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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life and family  



1.1  The Yā abāah (c. 613)  





1.2  The Surah of Abu Lahab  





1.3  Other acts of opposition (613619)  







2 Between the Boycott and Badr (619624)  





3 Death  





4 Family tree  





5 References  














Abu Lahab






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Find sources: "Abu Lahab" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR
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Abū Lahab
أبُو لَهَب

Born

c. 549CE
Mecca, Hejaz, Arabia

Died

c. 624(624-00-00) (aged 74–75)
Mecca, Hejaz, (present-day Saudi Arabia)

Known for

Opponent and Uncle of Muhammad

Spouse

Umm Jamil

Children

  • Ma’tab
  • Utaybah
  • Durrah
  • Izzah
  • Khalida
  • Parents

  • Lubnā bint Hājar (mother)
  • Relatives

    • brothers:
  • Harith
  • Abdullah
  • Zubayr
  • Abu Talib
  • Abbas
  • Hamza
    • sisters:
  • Umm Ḥakīm
  • Umaymah
  • Arwa
  • 'Atikah
  • Barrah
  • Safiyyah
  • Family

    Banu Hashim (Quraysh)

    ʿAbd al-ʿUzzā ibn ʿAbd al-Muṭṭalib (Arabic: عبد العزى ابن عبد المطلب), better known as Abū Lahab (Arabic: أبو لهب) (c. 549–624 CE) was the Islamic prophet Muhammad's half paternal uncle. He was one of the Meccan Qurayshi leaders who opposed Muhammad and was condemned in Surat Al-Masad of the Quran.

    Early life and family[edit]

    Abu Lahab was born in Mecca 549 CE, the son of Abdul Muttalib, chief of the Hashim clan, and the paternal uncle of Muhammad. He was thus a paternal half-brother of Abdullah, father of Muhammad. His mother, Lubna bint Hajar,[1] was from the Banu Khuza'ah.[2] People from the Banu Khuza'ah were the caretakers of the Kaaba for several centuries before the Quraysh took over the responsibility through their ancestor Qusayy ibn Kilab.

    Abu Lahab was also related to Muhammad as half-uncle in another way, since Muḥammad's grandmother was Fāṭimah bint ‘Amr of the Banu Makhzūm. They lived next door to Muhammad and shared walls with his house.

    His original name was 'Abd al-'Uzzā, meaning slave/devotee of the goddess al-ʿUzzā. But his father called him Abū Lahab "Father of Flame" "because of his beauty and charm"[2] due to his red (inflamed) cheeks. He is described as "an artful spruce fellow with two locks of hair, wearing an Aden cloak"[3] and as "very generous".[2]

    He married Arwā Umm Jamīl bint Harb, sister of Abu Sufyān (Sakhr), whose father Ḥarb was chief of the Banu Umayyah. Their children included Utbah,[2][4] Utaybah,[5] Muattab,[5] Durrah (Fakhita), ʿUzzā and Khālida.[6] Abu Lahab had another son, also named Durrah, who may have been born by another woman.[citation needed] He may also have been the father of Masruh, a son born to his slave Thuwaybah.[7]

    His daughter Durrah embraced Islam and became a narrator of Hadīth. One is in Ahmad’s Musnad, where she reports that a man got up and asked the Islamic prophet Muhammad, "Who is the best of the people?" He answered, "The best of the people is the most learned, the most godfearing, the most to be enjoining virtue, the most to be prohibiting vice and the most to be joining the kin."[citation needed]

    ‘Utbah also embraced Islam after the conquest of Mecca and pledged allegiance to Muḥammad.[8]

    The Yā Ṣabāḥah (c. 613)[edit]

    When Muhammad announced that he had been instructed by Allah to spread the message of Islam openly, the Quran told him to warn his kinsfolk about divine punishment. He therefore climbed Mount Ṣafā and shouted:『Yā ṣabāḥah!』which means, "O [calamity of] the morning!". In Arabia, this alarm was traditionally raised by any person who noticed an enemy tribe advancing against his own tribe at dawn.

    On hearing this, the inhabitants of Mecca assembled at the mountain. Muhammad then addressed the clans by name.『O Banū Hāshim, O Banū 'Abd al-Muṭallib ... [and so on], if I were to tell you that behind this hill there is an enemy about to attack you, would you believe me?』The people responded that they would, since Muhammad was known to be very honest and was also given the title of Al Amin. He continued saying: "Then I warn you that you are heading for a torment."

    At this point, Abu Lahab interrupted: "Woe be on you the rest of the day! Is that what you summoned us for?"[9] Another tradition recalls Abū Lahab picking up a stone to throw at his nephew.[citation needed].

    Abu Lahab rejected the claims of Muhammad and said: "Muhammad promises me things which I do not see. He alleges that they will happen after my death; what has he put in my hands after that?" Then he blew on his hands and said, "May you perish. I can see nothing in you of the things that Muhammad says."[10]

    The Surah of Abu Lahab[edit]

    As a direct result of this incident, a chapter of the Quran, Al-Masad ("The Palm Fibre", surah 111), was revealed about him.[9] Its English translation by Sahih International reads:[11][12][13]

    1. Perish the two hands of Abu Lahab, and perish he,
    2. His wealth will not avail him or that which he gained,
    3. He will [enter to] burn in a Fire of [blazing] flame,
    4. His wife (Umm Jamil) [as well] – the carrier of firewood (thorns of Satan which she used to put on the way of the Prophet).
    5. Around her neck is a rope of twisted fiber (masadd).[14]

    Umm Jamil is called "the bearer of the wood" because she is said to have carried thorns and cast them in Muhammad's pathway.[15][16]

    Abu Lahab had married two of his sons to the daughters of Muḥammad, 'Utbah to Ruqayyah and Utaybah to Umm Kulthum. However, the marriages were never completed.[17] After the announcement of Al-Masadd, Abu Lahab told his sons: "My head is unlawful to your head if you do not divorce Muhammad's daughters." They therefore divorced them.[18][17] Abu Lahab's daughter Durrah was at some stage married to Zayd ibn Haritha al-Kalbi, who was at that time regarded as Muhammad's son, and they were later divorced; but the timing of this marriage and divorce is not known.[19] Later, she married Ḥārith ibn Naufal of Banu Hāshim; and after his death, she married Dihya ibn Khalifa.[20]

    Other acts of opposition (613–619)[edit]

    When the Quraysh began to torture the Muslims, Abu Lahab's brother Abu Talib ibn Abd al-Muttalib called upon the Hashim and al-Muttalib clans to stand with him in protecting his nephew. It was a custom among the Arabs to staunchly support their own clan. Despite the dissension between Muḥammad and some members of Banu Hashim & Banu Muṭṭalib, most of them stood by him in his predicaments and provided him protection and security except Abu Lahab.[21]

    While Muhammad was praying near the Kaaba, Amr ibn Hisham once threw the entrails of a sacrificed camel over him.[22] Muhammad later told Aisha: "I was between two bad neighbours, Abu Lahab and Uqba ibn Abu Mu'ayt. They brought excrements and threw them before my door and they brought offensive material and threw it before my door." Muhammad said he came out of his house, saying: "O sons of Abdumanaf! Is it the behaviour of a neighbour?" and threw the rubbish away.[23]

    On the 7th year of preaching Islam, the Quraysh imposed boycott on Banu Hāshim & Banu Muṭṭalib and forced them to live in a mountain gorge outside the city. Most of the members of Banu Hāshim had not accepted Islam at that time. Yet they stood by Muḥammad and suffered as much as he did. Abu Lahab was the only member of Banu Hāshim who supported the boycott and did not join his clan. Through a deep sense of animosity, Abu Lahab violated this ‘Arab tradition and took the side of non-Muslim Quraysh clans. Abu Lahab renounced his affiliation with the Hashim clan and remained in Mecca. Soon afterwards, he met his sister-in-law, Hind bint Utbah, and said to her, "Haven’t I helped Al-Lat and Al-Uzza, and haven’t I abandoned those who have abandoned them and assisted their opponents?" She replied, "Yes, and may god reward you well, O Abu Utba."[24]

    Between the Boycott and Badr (619–624)[edit]

    After the boycott was lifted, another nephew, Abu Salama, came to Abu Talib asking for protection. When the Makhzum clan protested about this, Abu Lahab supported his brother. He told the Makhzumites: "O Quraysh, you have continually attacked this shaykh for giving his protection among his own people. By God, you must either stop this or we will stand in with him until he gains his object." The Makhzumites wanted to keep Abu Lahab's support, and therefore they agreed not to annoy Abu Salama.[5]

    Abu Talib died in 620,[25] From this time, Muhammad went around the trade fairs and markets to tell the Arab tribes that he was a prophet and call them to worship Allah. Abu Lahab used to follow him around the fairs, saying, "This fellow wishes only to get you to strip off Al-Lat and Al-Uzza from your necks and your allies of the Malik ibn Uqaysh tribe for the misleading innovation he has brought. Don’t obey him and take no notice of him."[26]

    Someone reported: "Before my own Islam I used to see the Prophet in markets outside Makkah calling out: ‘People, say there is no deity but Allah and you will prosper.’ People would gather around him but a man, bright faced, intelligent looking, with two locks of hair (hanging down), would appear from the rear and say: ‘This man has renounced the religion (of his forefathers). He is a liar.’ He followed the Prophet wherever he went. The people would enquire who he was to learn that it was his (the Prophet's) uncle."[27]

    Muhammad and most of the Muslims left Mecca in 622, and Abu Lahab had no further direct interaction with his nephew.

    Death[edit]

    As per Islamic sources, when the rest of the Quraysh went to Badr to protect the merchant-caravan carrying their property from an expected attack, Abu Lahab remained in Mecca, sending in his place Amr Bin Hisham's brother al-‘Āṣ ibn Hishām who owed him four thousand dirhams that he could not pay. So he hired him with them on the condition that he should be cleared off his debt.[28]

    The first people to reach Mecca with the news of the Quraysh defeat in the Battle of Badr were al-Haysuman and 'Abdullāh ibn al-Khuzā'ī, who bewailed the fact that so many of their chieftains had fallen on the battlefield. Abu Lahab went to the large tent of Zamzam, "his face as black as thunder". Before long, his nephew Abu Sufyan ibn al-Harith arrived, so he called him over for news. A small crowd gathered around the two as Abū Sufyān told his uncle, "The facts are the Quraysh met our enemy and turned their backs. They [the Muslims] put us to flight, taking prisoners as they pleased. I cannot blame our tribesmen because they faced not only them but men wearing white robes riding piebald horses, who were between heaven and earth. They spared nothing, and no one had a chance." (A.Guillaume, Life of Muhammad, 2007, p 310)

    At the other end of the tent, a Muslim freedman named Abu Rafi' and Abbas's wife Lubaba sat sharpening arrows. When they heard the news of the men in white riding between heaven and earth, they could no longer contain their happiness, and Abu Rafi' exclaimed: "They were angels!" Abu Lahab was so furious that he forced the frail Abu Rafi' to the ground and beat him up. Lubaba grabbed a nearby tent pole and hit her brother-in-law over the head, crying: "Do you think that you can abuse him just because Abbas is away?"

    According to Islamic sources, Lubaba wounded Abu Lahab so severely that his head was split open, laying bare part of his skull. The wound turned septic, and his entire body erupted into open pustules. He died a week later. This would have been in late March 624. The smell from Abu Lahab's wound was so repulsive that nobody could come near him. His family left his decaying body decomposing in his home for two or three nights until a neighbour rebuked them. "It is disgraceful. You should be ashamed of leaving your father to rot in his house and not bury him from the sight of men!" They then sent in slaves to remove his body. It was watered from a distance, then pushed with poles into a grave outside Mecca, and stones were thrown over it.[29]

    A Muslim narration says that after Abu Lahab's death, some of his relatives had a dream in which they saw him suffering in Hell. He told them that he had experienced no comfort in the Afterlife, but that his sufferings had been remitted "this much" (indicating the space between his thumb and index finger) because of his one virtuous deed of manumitting his slave Thuwayba, who had briefly nursed Muhammad as foster-mother.[30]

    Family tree[edit]


    Kilab ibn Murrah

    Fatimah bint Sa'd

    Zuhrah ibn Kilab
    (progenitor of Banu Zuhrah)
    maternal great-great-grandfather

    Qusai ibn Kilab
    paternal great-great-great-grandfather

    Hubba bint Hulail
    paternal great-great-great-grandmother

    `Abd Manaf ibn Zuhrah
    maternal great-grandfather

    `Abd Manaf ibn Qusai
    paternal great-great-grandfather

    Atikah bint Murrah
    paternal great-great-grandmother

    Wahb ibn `Abd Manaf
    maternal grandfather

    Hashim ibn 'Abd Manaf
    (progenitor of Banu Hashim)
    paternal great-grandfather

    Salma bint `Amr
    paternal great-grandmother

    Fatimah bint `Amr
    paternal grandmother

    `Abdul-Muttalib
    paternal grandfather

    Halah bint Wuhayb
    paternal step-grandmother

    Aminah
    mother

    `Abdullah
    father

    Az-Zubayr
    paternal uncle

    Harith
    paternal half-uncle

    Hamza
    paternal half-uncle

    Thuwaybah
    first nurse

    Halimah
    second nurse

    Abu Talib
    paternal uncle

    `Abbas
    paternal half-uncle

    Abu Lahab
    paternal half-uncle

    6 other sons
    and 6 daughters

    Muhammad

    Khadija
    first wife

    `Abd Allah ibn `Abbas
    paternal cousin

    Fatimah
    daughter

    Ali
    paternal cousin and son-in-law
    family tree, descendants

    Qasim
    son

    `Abd-Allah
    son

    Zainab
    daughter

    Ruqayyah
    daughter

    Uthman
    second cousin and son-in-law
    family tree

    Umm Kulthum
    daughter

    Zayd
    adopted son

    Ali ibn Zainab
    grandson

    Umamah bint Zainab
    granddaughter

    `Abd-Allah ibn Uthman
    grandson

    Rayhana bint Zayd
    wife

    Usama ibn Zayd
    adoptive grandson

    Muhsin ibn Ali
    grandson

    Hasan ibn Ali
    grandson

    Husayn ibn Ali
    grandson
    family tree

    Umm Kulthum bint Ali
    granddaughter

    Zaynab bint Ali
    granddaughter

    Safiyya
    tenth wife

    Abu Bakr
    father-in-law
    family tree

    Sawda
    Second wife

    Umar
    father-in-law
    family tree

    Umm Salama
    sixth wife

    Juwayriya
    eighth wife

    Maymuna
    eleventh wife

    Aisha
    third wife
    Family tree

    Zaynab
    fifth wife

    Hafsa
    fourth wife

    Zaynab
    seventh wife

    Umm Habiba
    ninth wife

    Maria al-Qibtiyya
    twelfth wife

    Ibrahim
    son

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Ibn Hisham note 97. Translated by Guillaume, A. (1955). The Life of Muhammad p. 707. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • ^ a b c d "19.6/ Muhammad ibn Saad, Tabaqat vol. 1 part 1:19:6". Soebratie.nl. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  • ^ Muhammad ibn Ishaq, Sirat Rasul Allah. Translated by Guillaume, A. (1955). The Life of Muhammad, p. 195. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • ^ Muhammad ibn Saad, Tabaqat vol. 8. Translated by Bewley, A. (1995). The Women of Madina p. 24. London: Ta-Ha Publishers.
  • ^ a b c Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume p. 170.
  • ^ Ibn Saad/Bewley vol. 8 p. 37 (all three daughters are listed here, with Umm Jamil named as their mother).
  • ^ "27.4/Ibn Saad, Tabaqat vol. 1 part 1:27:4". Soebratie.nl. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  • ^ Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari. Tarikh al-Rasul wa'l-Muluk. Translated by Landau-Tasseron, E. (1998). Volume 39: Biographies of the Prophet's Companions and Their Successors, p. 64. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • ^ a b "Ibn Kathir, Tafsir on Q111:1". Qtafsir.com. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume pp. 159-160.
  • ^ "Quran > Ibn-Kathir Al-Qur'an Tafsir > Surah 111. Al-Lahab . Ayah 1". Alim. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
  • ^ "Abu Lahab - Ontology of Quranic Concepts from the Quranic Arabic Corpus". corpus.quran.com.
  • ^ ibn Nasir as-Sadi, Abdur-Rahman (7 Dec 2009). "Tafsir of Surah al Masad – Palm Fibre (Surah 111)". Islaam.net. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
  • ^ "Al-Masad, The Palm Fibre". quran.com. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume p. 161.
  • ^ "Umm Jamil - Ontology of Quranic Concepts from the Quranic Arabic Corpus". corpus.quran.com.
  • ^ a b Ibn Saad/Bewley vol. 8 p. 25.
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume p. 314.
  • ^ Muhammad ibn Saad, Tabaqat vol. 3. Translated by Bewley, A. (2013). The Companions of Badr p. 32. London: Ta-Ha Publishers.
  • ^ Ibn Saad/Bewley vol. 8 p. 37.
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq p. 120.
  • ^ Sealed Nectar Pg.52, ISBN 9781518937705
  • ^ "48.6/ Muhammad ibn Saad, Tabaqat vol. 1 part 1:48:6". Soebratie.nl. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume p. 159.
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume p. 191.
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume pp. 194-195.
  • ^ "Abū Lahab - w3we".
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume p. 291.
  • ^ Ibn Ishaq/Guillaume p. 310.
  • ^ "27.3/ Muhammad ibn Saad, Tabaqat vol. 1 part 1:27:3". Soebratie.nl. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  • People and things in the Quran

    Non-humans

    Animals

    Related

    • The baqara (cow) of Israelites
  • The dhiʾb (wolf) that Jacob feared could attack Joseph
  • The fīl (elephant) of the Abyssinians
  • Ḥimār (Domesticated donkey)
  • The hud-hud (hoopoe) of Solomon
  • The kalb (dog) of the sleepers of the cave
  • The namlah (female ant) of Solomon
  • The nūn (fish or whale) of Jonah
  • The nāqat (she-camel) of Ṣāliḥ
  • Non-related

  • Dābbat al-Arḍ (Beast of the Earth)
  • Ḥimār (Wild ass)
  • Naḥl (Honey bee)
  • Qaswarah ('Lion', 'beast of prey' or 'hunter')
  • Malāʾikah (Angels)

  • Zabāniyah
  • Bearers of the Throne
  • Harut and Marut
  • Kirāman Kātibīn (Honourable Scribes)
  • Munkar and Nakir
  • Muqarrabun

    • Jibrīl (Gabriel, chief)
      • Ar-Rūḥ ('The Spirit')
        • Ar-Rūḥ al-Amīn ('The Trustworthy Spirit')
  • Ar-Rūḥ al-Qudus ('The Holy Spirit')
  • Angel of the Trumpet (IsrāfīlorRaphael)
  • Malakul-Mawt (Angel of Death, Azrael)
  • Mīkāil (Michael)
  • Jinn (Genies)

  • ʿIfrīt
  • Sakhr (Asmodeus)
  • Qarīn
  • Shayāṭīn (Demons)

  • Mārid ('Rebellious one')
  • Others

  • Ḥūr
  • Mentioned

  • Al-Yasaʿ (Elisha)
  • Ayyūb (Job)
  • Dāwūd (David)
  • Dhūl-Kifl (Ezekiel?)
  • Hārūn (Aaron)
  • Hūd (Eber?)
  • Idrīs (Enoch?)
  • Ilyās (Elijah)
  • ʿImrān (Joachim the father of Maryam)
  • Isḥāq (Isaac)
  • Ismāʿīl (Ishmael)
  • Lūṭ (Lot)
  • Ṣāliḥ
  • Shuʿayb (Jethro, Reuel or Hobab?)
  • Sulaymān ibn Dāwūd (Solomon son of David)
  • ʿUzair (Ezra?)
  • Yaḥyā ibn Zakariyyā (John the Baptist the son of Zechariah)
  • Yaʿqūb (Jacob)
    • Isrāʾīl (Israel)
  • Yūnus (Jonah)
    • Dhūn-Nūn ('He of the Fish (orWhale)' or 'Owner of the Fish (or Whale)')
    • Ṣāḥib al-Ḥūt ('Companion of the Whale')
  • Yūsuf ibn Ya‘qūb (Joseph son of Jacob)
  • Zakariyyā (Zechariah)
  • Ulul-ʿAzm
    ('Those of the
    Perseverance
    and Strong Will')

  • Other names and titles of Muhammad
  • ʿĪsā (Jesus)
    • Al-Masīḥ (The Messiah)
    • Ibn Maryam (Son of Mary)
  • Mūsā Kalīmullāh (Moses He who spoke to God)
  • Ibrāhīm Khalīlullāh (Abraham Friend of God)
  • Nūḥ (Noah)
  • Debatable ones

  • Luqmān
  • Maryam (Mary)
  • Ṭālūt (SaulorGideon?)
  • Implied

  • Ṣamūʾīl (Samuel)
  • Yūshaʿ ibn Nūn (Joshua, companion and successor of Moses)
  • People of Prophets

    Good ones

  • Wife
  • Believer of Ya-Sin
  • Family of Noah
  • Luqman's son
  • People of Abraham
  • People of Jesus
  • People of Solomon
  • Zayd (Muhammad's adopted son)
  • People of
    Joseph

  • Egyptians
  • Malik (King Ar-Rayyān ibn Al-Walīd))
  • Wife of ʿAzīz (Zulaykhah)
  • Mother
  • People of
    Aaron and Moses

    • Egyptians
      • Believer (Hizbil or Hizqil ibn Sabura)
  • Imraʾat Firʿawn (Āsiyá bint Muzāḥim the Wife of Pharaoh, who adopted Moses)
  • Magicians of the Pharaoh
  • Wise, pious man
  • Moses' wife
  • Moses' sister-in-law
  • Mother
  • Sister
  • Evil ones

  • Firʿawn (Pharaoh of Moses' time)
  • Hāmān
  • Jālūt (Goliath)
  • Qārūn (Korah, cousin of Moses)
  • As-Sāmirī
  • Abū Lahab
  • Slayers of Ṣāliḥ's she-camel (Qaddar ibn Salif and Musda' ibn Dahr)
  • Implied or
    not specified

  • Abu Bakr
  • Bal'am/Balaam
  • Barṣīṣā
  • Caleb or Kaleb the companion of Joshua
  • Luqman's son
  • Nebuchadnezzar II
  • Nimrod
  • Rahmah the wife of Ayyub
  • Shaddad
  • Groups

    Mentioned

    • Aṣḥāb al-Jannah
      • People of Paradise
  • People of the Burnt Garden
  • Aṣḥāb as-Sabt (Companions of the Sabbath)
  • Jesus' apostles
  • Companions of Noah's Ark
  • Aṣḥāb al-Kahf war-Raqīm (Companions of the Cave and Al-Raqaim?
  • Companions of the Elephant
  • People of al-Ukhdūd
  • People of a township in Surah Ya-Sin
  • People of YathriborMedina
  • Qawm Lūṭ (People of Sodom and Gomorrah)
  • Nation of Noah
  • Tribes,
    ethnicities
    or families

  • Ar-Rūm (literally 'The Romans')
  • Banī Isrāʾīl (Children of Israel)
  • Muʾtafikāt (Sodom and Gomorrah)
  • People of Ibrahim
  • People of Ilyas
  • People of Nuh
  • People of Shuaib
  • Qawm Yūnus (People of Jonah)
  • Ya'juj and Ma'juj/Gog and Magog
  • People of Fir'aun
  • Current Ummah of Islam (Ummah of Muhammad)
  • People of Mecca
  • Children of Ayyub
  • Sons of Adam
  • Wife of Nuh
  • Wife of Lut
  • Yaʾjūj wa Maʾjūj (Gog and Magog)
  • Son of Nuh
  • Aʿrāb (Arabs
    orBedouins)

  • Companions of the Rass
  • Qawm Tubbaʿ (People of Tubba)
  • Quraysh
  • Thamūd (people of Ṣāliḥ)
    • Aṣḥāb al-Ḥijr ('Companions of the Stoneland')
  • Ahl al-Bayt
    ('People of the
    Household')

  • Lot's daughters
  • Progeny of Imran
  • Household of Moses
  • Household of Muhammad
  • Household of Salih
  • Implicitly
    mentioned

  • Ahl as-Suffa (People of the Verandah)
  • Banu Nadir
  • Banu Qaynuqa
  • Banu Qurayza
  • Iranian people
  • Umayyad Dynasty
  • Aus and Khazraj
  • People of Quba
  • Religious
    groups

  • Kāfirūn
    • disbelievers
  • Majūs Zoroastrians
  • Munāfiqūn (Hypocrites)
  • Muslims
    • Believers
  • Ahl al-Kitāb (People of the Book)
  • Polytheists
  • Locations

    Mentioned

  • Al-Jannah (Paradise, literally 'The Garden')
  • Jahannam (Hell)
  • Door of Hittah
  • Madyan (Midian)
  • Majmaʿ al-Baḥrayn
  • Miṣr (Mainland Egypt)
  • Salsabīl (A river in Paradise)
  • In the
    Arabian Peninsula
    (excluding Madyan)

  • Al-Madīnah (formerly Yathrib)
  • ʿArafāt and Al-Mashʿar Al-Ḥarām
  • Al-Ḥijr (Hegra)
  • Badr
  • Ḥunayn
  • Makkah (Mecca)
  • Sabaʾ (Sheba)
  • Rass
  • Sinai Region
    or Tīh Desert

  • Mount SinaiorMount Tabor
  • InMesopotamia

  • Bābil (Babylon)
  • Qaryat Yūnus ('Township of Jonah,' that is Nineveh)
  • Religious
    locations

  • Miḥrāb
  • Monastery
  • Masjid (Mosque, literally 'Place of Prostration')
  • Salat (Synagogue)
  • Implied

  • Arabia
  • Ayla
  • Barrier of Dhul-Qarnayn
  • Bayt al-Muqaddas & 'Ariha
  • Bilād ar-Rāfidayn (Mesopotamia)
  • Canaan
  • Cave of Seven Sleepers
  • Dār an-Nadwa
  • Jordan River
  • Nile River
  • Palestine River
  • Paradise of Shaddad
  • Events, incidents, occasions or times

    • Incident of Ifk
  • Laylat al-Qadr (Night of Decree)
  • Event of Mubahala
  • Sayl al-ʿArim (Flood of the Great Dam of Ma'rib in Sheba)
  • The Farewell Pilgrimage
  • Treaty of Hudaybiyyah
  • Battles or
    military expeditions

  • Battle of Badr
  • Battle of Hunayn
  • Battle of Khaybar
  • Battle of Uhud
  • Expedition of Tabuk
  • Conquest of Mecca
  • Days

  • As-Sabt (The Sabbath or Saturday)
  • Days of battles
  • Days of Hajj
  • Doomsday
  • Months of the
    Islamic calendar

  • Ramaḍān
  • Pilgrimages

    • Al-Ḥajj (literally 'The Pilgrimage', the Greater Pilgrimage)
  • Al-ʿUmrah (The Lesser Pilgrimage)
  • Times for prayer
    or remembrance

    Times for Duʿāʾ ('Invocation'), Ṣalāh and Dhikr ('Remembrance', including Taḥmīd ('Praising'), Takbīr and Tasbīḥ):

    • Al-ʿAshiyy (The Afternoon or the Night)
  • Al-Ghuduww ('The Mornings')
    • Al-Bukrah ('The Morning')
    • Aṣ-Ṣabāḥ ('The Morning')
  • Al-Layl ('The Night')
  • Aẓ-Ẓuhr ('The Noon')
  • Dulūk ash-Shams ('Decline of the Sun')
    • Al-Masāʾ ('The Evening')
    • Qabl al-Ghurūb ('Before the Setting (of the Sun)')
      • Al-Aṣīl ('The Afternoon')
      • Al-ʿAṣr ('The Afternoon')
  • Qabl ṭulūʿ ash-Shams ('Before the rising of the Sun')
    • Al-Fajr ('The Dawn')
  • Implied

  • Ghadir Khumm
  • Laylat al-Mabit
  • First Pilgrimage
  • Other

    Holy books

  • Al-Qurʾān (The Book of Muhammad)
  • Ṣuḥuf-i Ibrāhīm (Scroll(s) of Abraham)
  • At-Tawrāt (The Torah)
  • Az-Zabūr (The Psalms of David)
  • Umm al-Kitāb ('Mother of the Book(s)')
  • Objects
    of people
    or beings

  • Noah's Ark
  • Staff of Musa
  • Tābūt as-Sakīnah (Casket of Shekhinah)
  • Throne of Bilqis
  • Trumpet of Israfil
  • Mentioned idols
    (cult images)

    • 'Ansāb
  • Jibt and Ṭāghūt (False god)
  • Of Israelites

  • The ʿijl (golden calf statue) of Israelites
  • Of Noah's people

  • Suwāʿ
  • Wadd
  • Yaghūth
  • Yaʿūq
  • Of Quraysh

  • Al-ʿUzzā
  • Manāt
  • Celestial
    bodies

    Maṣābīḥ (literally 'lamps'):

    • Al-Qamar (The Moon)
  • Kawākib (Planets)
    • Al-Arḍ (The Earth)
  • Nujūm (Stars)
    • Ash-Shams (The Sun)
  • Plant matter

  • Baṣal (Onion)
  • Fūm (Garlic or wheat)
  • Shaṭʾ (Shoot)
  • Sūq (Plant stem)
  • Zarʿ (Seed)
  • Fruits

  • Baql (Herb)
  • Qith-thāʾ (Cucumber)
  • Rummān (Pomegranate)
  • Tīn (Fig)
  • Zaytūn (Olive)
  • In Paradise
  • Bushes, trees
    or plants

  • Sidr (Lote-tree)
  • Līnah (Tender Palm tree)
  • Nakhl (Date palm)
  • Sidrat al-Muntahā
  • Zaqqūm
  • Liquids

    • Māʾ (Water or fluid)
      • Nahr (River)
  • Yamm (River or sea)
  • Sharāb (Drink)
  • Note: Names are sorted alphabetically. Standard form: Islamic name / Biblical name (title or relationship)

    International

    National

    Other


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Abu_Lahab&oldid=1230450018"

    Categories: 
    6th-century Arab people
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    624 deaths
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