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Fatima bt. Asad (a): Difference between revisions

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Fatima bt. Asad was from the [[Hashemite family]]. Her lineage was recorded by biographers as Fatima bt. Asad b. [[Hashim b. Abd Manaf]]<ref>Ibn ʿAbd al-Barr, ''al-Istīʿāb'', vol. 4, p. 1891; Ibn al-Athīr, ''al-Kāmil fī l-tārīkh'', vol. 6, p. 217.</ref>. She was raised in [[Mecca]] and married to [[Abu Talib]]. After the emergence of Islam, she migrated to [[Medina]], where she passed away. She is said to be the first Hashemite woman with a Hashemite husband. Their children were Hashemite from both sides. And she was the first Hashemite woman whose son became the [[Caliph]] of Muslims.<ref>Ibn ʿAbd al-Barr, ''al-Istīʿāb'', vol. 4, p. 1891; Ziriklī, ''al-Aʿlām'',  vol. 5, p. 130.</ref>
Fatima bt. Asad was from the [[Hashemite family]]. Her lineage was recorded by biographers as Fatima bt. Asad b. [[Hashim b. Abd Manaf]]<ref>Ibn ʿAbd al-Barr, ''al-Istīʿāb'', vol. 4, p. 1891; Ibn al-Athīr, ''al-Kāmil fī l-tārīkh'', vol. 6, p. 217.</ref>. She was raised in [[Mecca]] and married to [[Abu Talib]]. After the emergence of Islam, she migrated to [[Medina]], where she passed away. She is said to be the first Hashemite woman with a Hashemite husband. Their children were Hashemite from both sides. And she was the first Hashemite woman whose son became the [[Caliph]] of Muslims.<ref>Ibn ʿAbd al-Barr, ''al-Istīʿāb'', vol. 4, p. 1891; Ziriklī, ''al-Aʿlām'',  vol. 5, p. 130.</ref>


Some sources have appealed to a number of unreliable [[hadith]]s in order to show that Fatima bt. Asad did not convert to Islam until the last moments of her life. The claim is rejected by the majority of old and contemporary Islamic historical sources. On their accounts, she converted to Islam in Mecca, and then she migrated to [[Medina]].
Some sources have appealed to a number of unreliable [[hadith]]s in order to show that Fatima bt. Asad did not convert to Islam until the last moments of her life.<ref>Balādhurī, ''Ansāb al-ashrāf'', vol. 2, p. 36.</ref> The claim is rejected by the majority of old and contemporary Islamic historical sources. On their accounts, she converted to Islam in Mecca, and then she migrated to [[Medina]].<ref> Ibn ʿAbd al-Barr, ''al-Istīʿāb'', vol. 4, p. 1891.</ref>


==Children==
==Children==
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