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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Umm Farwa 11 found (20 total)
alternate case: umm Farwa
Muhammad ibn Isma'il
(1,061 words)
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Idris Imad al-Din. His mother was a slave-wife (umm al-walad) called Umm Farwa . The sources claim that Muhammad was 26 years old in 765, meaning that
Al-Qasim ibn Hasan ibn Ali
(1,218 words)
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Qasim was born the son of Hasan ibn Ali, the second Imam, and his wife Umm Farwa . His father was the elder son of Ali ibn Abi Talib and Fatima. Qasim was
Abu Quhafa
(1,131 words)
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married a younger woman, Hind bint Nuqayd. They had three daughters: Umm Farwa , Qurayba and Umm Amir. When Abu Bakr became a Muslim in 610, Abu Quhafa
Al-Ash'ath ibn Qays
(2,877 words)
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Umm Farwa . This was a rare honour, and none of the other leaders of the Ridda wars were similarly treated. As al-Ash'ath's principal wife, Umm Farwa bore
Asma bint Adiy al-Bariqiyyah
(85 words)
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Sakhar ibn 'Amr Hind bint Nuqayd 'Uthman Abu Quhafa ibn 'Amir Salma Umm al-Khair bint Sakhar Umm Farwa Qurayba Abu Bakr Muataq Mu'aytaq Quhafa Umm Amir
Muhammad ibn al-Ash'ath al-Kindi
(741 words)
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and succeeded him following his father's death in 661. His mother was Umm Farwa , a sister of the first caliph, Abu Bakr (r. 632–634. Muhammad married
Umm al-Khayr
(330 words)
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Hind bint Nuqayd 'Uthman Abu Quhafa ibn 'Amir[contradictory] Salma Umm al-Khayr bint Sakhar Umm Farwa Qurayba Abu Bakr Muataq Mu'aytaq Quhafa Umm Amir
Ridda Wars
(6,553 words)
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Umm Farwa . This was a rare honour, and none of the other leaders of the Ridda wars were similarly treated. As al-Ash'ath's principal wife, Umm Farwa bore
Ibn al-Ash'ath
(7,019 words)
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al-Ash'ath was nevertheless pardoned and married Caliph Abu Bakr's sister, Umm Farwa , who became his chief wife. He went on to participate in the crucial battles
Usama ibn Munqidh
(3,750 words)
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1126, and another son, Abu Bakr, who died as a child. He had a daughter, Umm Farwa , in Hisn Kayfa in 1166. He mentions other children, but their names, and
Abu Bakr
(10,155 words)
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was later given land in Medina as well as the hand of Abu Bakr's sister Umm Farwa in marriage. At their heart, the Ridda movements were challenges to the