Muhammad ibn ‘Abdullāh ( ; ; also
spelled Mohammed or Muhammed)
(ca. 570/571 Mecca
[مَكَةَ ]/[
مَكَهْ ] – June 8, 632 Medina
), is the
founder of the religion of
Islam [ إِسْلامْ ] and is regarded by Muslims as a messenger and
prophet of , the last and the greatest
law-bearer in a series of Islamic
prophets as taught by the . Muslims thus consider him
the restorer of an uncorrupted original
monotheistic faith
(
islām) of
Adam,
Noah,
Abraham,
Moses,
Jesus and
other
prophets. He was also active as a
diplomat,
merchant,
philosopher,
orator,
legislator,
reformer,
military general, and, according to
Muslim belief, an agent of divine action.
Born in
570 in the Arabian city of
Mecca
, he was orphaned at a young age and brought up
under the care of his uncle Abu
Talib. He later worked mostly as a merchant, as well as
a shepherd, and was first married by age 25. Discontented with life
in Mecca, he retreated to a cave in the surrounding mountains for
meditation and reflection. According to
Islamic beliefs it was here, at age 40, in the month of
Ramadan, where he claimed to receive
his first revelation from God.
Three years after this event Muhammad started
preaching these revelations publicly, proclaiming that
"
God is One", that complete "surrender" to
Him (lit.
islām) is the only way
(
dīn) acceptable to God,
and that he himself was a prophet and messenger of God, in the same
vein as
other
Islamic prophets.
Muhammad gained few
followers early on, and
was met with
hostility from some Meccan
tribes; he and his followers were treated harshly.
To escape persecution
Muhammad and his followers migrated to Medina
(then known
as Yathrib) in the year 622. This event, the
Hijra, marks the beginning of the
Islamic calendar. In Medina, Muhammad
united the conflicting tribes, and after eight years of fighting
with the Meccan tribes, his followers, who by then had grown to ten
thousand,
conquered Mecca. In 632,
a few months after returning to Medina from his
Farewell pilgrimage, Muhammad fell
ill and died. By the time of his death, most of the
Arabian Peninsula had
converted to Islam; and he united the
tribes of Arabia into a single
Muslim religious polity.
The revelations (or
Ayat, lit. "Signs
of
God")—which Muhammad reported receiving until
his death—form the verses of the
Qur'an,
regarded by Muslims as the “Word of God” and around which the
religion is based. Besides the Qur'an, Muhammad’s life
(
sira) and traditions
(
sunnah) are also upheld by Muslims.
They discuss Muhammad and other prophets of Islam with reverence,
adding the phrase
peace be upon
him whenever their names are mentioned. While conceptions
of Muhammad in
medieval Christendom and
premodern times were largely negative, appraisals
in
modern times have been far less so.
Besides this, his life and deeds have been debated by followers and
opponents over the centuries.
Names and appellations in the Qur'an
The
name Muhammad means
"Praiseworthy" and occurs four times in the Qur'an. The Qur'an
addresses Muhammad in the second person not by his name but by the
appellations prophet,
messenger, servant of God (
'abd), announcer (
bashir), warner
(
nathir), reminder (
mudhakkir), witness
(
shahid), bearer of good
tidings (
mubashshir), one who calls [unto God]
(
dā‘ī) and the light-giving lamp
(
siraj munir). Muhammad is sometimes addressed by
designations deriving from his state at the time of the address:
thus he is referred to as the enwrapped (
al-muzzammil) in
Qur'an and the shrouded (
al-muddaththir) in Qur'an . In
the Qur'an, believers are not to distinguish between the messengers
of God and are to believe in all of them (Surah ). God has caused
some messengers to excel above others and in Surah He singles out
Muhammad as the "
Seal of the
Prophets". The Qur'an also refers to Muhammad as
Aḥmad "more praiseworthy" ( , Surah ).
Sources for Muhammad's life
Being a highly influential historical figure, Muhammad's life,
deeds, and thoughts have been debated by followers and opponents
over the centuries, which makes a biography of him difficult to
write.
The Qur'an
Muslims regard the Qur'an as the primary source of knowledge about
the historical Muhammad. The Qur'an has a few allusions to
Muhammad's life,. The Qur'an responds "constantly and often
candidly to Muhammad's changing historical circumstances and
contains a wealth of hidden data."
Early biographies
Next in importance are the historical works by writers of the third
and fourth century of the Muslim era. These include the traditional
Muslim biographies of Muhammad and quotes attributed to him (the
sira and
hadith
literature), which provide further information on Muhammad's
life.
The earliest surviving written
sira (biographies of
Muhammad and quotes attributed to him) is
Ibn
Ishaq's
Life of God's
Messenger written ca. 767 (150 AH). The work is lost, but
was used verbatim at great length by
Ibn
Hisham and
Al-Tabari.
Another early source is
the history of
Muhammad's campaigns by
al-Waqidi
(death 207 of Muslim era), and
the work of his secretary
Ibn Sa'd al-Baghdadi (death 230
of Muslim era).
Many scholars accept the accuracy of the earliest biographies,
though their accuracy is unascertainable. Recent studies have led
scholars to distinguish between the traditions touching legal
matters and the purely historical ones. In the former sphere,
traditions could have been subject to invention while in the latter
sphere, aside from exceptional cases, the material may have been
only subject to "tendential shaping".
In addition, the
hadith
collections are accounts of the verbal and physical traditions
of Muhammad that date from several generations after his death.
Hadith compilations are records of the traditions or sayings of
Muhammad. They might be defined as the biography of Muhammad
perpetuated by the long memory of his community for their
exemplification and obedience.
Western academics view the hadith collections with caution as
accurate historical sources. Scholars such as
Madelung do not reject the narrations which have
been complied in later periods, but judge them in the context of
history and on the basis of their compatibility with the events and
figures.
Finally, there are oral traditions. Although usually discounted by
historians, oral tradition plays a major role in the
Islamic understanding of
Muhammad.
Non-Arabic sources
The earliest Greek source for Muhammed is the 9th century writer
Theophanes. The earliest Syriac source is
the 7th century
John bar
Penkaye.
Background

Approximate locations of some of the
important tribes and Empire of the Arabian Peninsula at the dawn of
Islam (approximately 600 CE / 50 BH).
The
Arabian Peninsula was largely
arid and volcanic, making agriculture difficult except near oases
or springs.
The landscape was thus dotted with towns and
cities, two prominent ones being Mecca
and Medina
.
Medina was a large flourishing agricultural settlement, while Mecca
was an important financial center for many surrounding tribes.
Communal life was essential for survival in the
desert conditions, as people needed support against
the harsh environment and lifestyle. Tribal grouping was encouraged
by the need to act as a unit, this unity being based on the bond of
kinship by blood. Indigenous Arabs were either
nomadic or sedentary (or
bedouins), the former constantly travelling from
one place to another seeking water and pasture for their flocks,
while the latter settled and focused on trade and agriculture.
Nomadic survival was also dependent on raiding caravans or oases,
the nomads not viewing this as a crime.
In pre-Islamic Arabia, gods or goddesses were viewed as protectors
of individual tribes, their spirits being associated with sacred
trees, stones, springs and wells.
As well as being the site of an annual
pilgrimage, the Kaaba
shrine in
Mecca housed 360 idol statues of tribal patron deities.
Aside from these gods, the Arabs shared a common belief in a
supreme deity called
Allah (literally "the
god"), who was remote from their everyday concerns and thus not the
object of cult or ritual. Three goddesses were associated with
Allah as his daughters:
Allāt,
Manāt and
al-‘Uzzá. Monotheistic communities
existed in Arabia, including
Christians
and
Jews.
Hanifs – native
pre-Islamic Arab monotheists – are also sometimes listed alongside
Jews and Christians in pre-Islamic Arabia, although their
historicity is disputed amongst scholars.
According to Muslim tradition, Muhammad himself was a Hanif and one
of the descendants of
Ishmael, son of
Abraham.
Life
Muhammad in Mecca
Muhammad was born and lived in Mecca for the first 52 years of his
life (570–622) which was divided into two phases, that is before
and after declaring the
prophecy.
Childhood and early life
Muhammad was born in the month of
Rabi'
al-awwal in 570.
He belonged to the Banu Hashim, one of the prominent families of
Mecca
, although it seems not to have been prosperous
during Muhammad's early lifetime. Tradition places the year
of Muhammad's birth as corresponding with the
Year of the Elephant, which is named
after the failed destruction of Mecca that year by the
Aksumite king Abraha
who had in his army a number of elephants. Recent scholarship has
suggested alternative dates for this event, such as 568 or
569.
Muhammad's father,
Abdullah, died almost six
months before he was born. According to the tradition, soon after
Muhammad's birth he was sent to live with a Bedouin family in the
desert, as the desert-life was considered healthier for infants.
Muhammad stayed with his foster-mother,
Halimah bint Abi Dhuayb, and her
husband until he was two years old. Some western scholars of Islam
have rejected the historicity of this tradition. At the age of six
Muhammad lost his mother
Amina to
illness and he became fully orphaned. He was subsequently brought
up for two years under the guardianship of his paternal grandfather
Abd al-Muttalib, of the Banu
Hashim
clan of the
Quraysh
tribe. When Muhammad was eight, his grandfather also died. He
now came under the care of his uncle
Abu Talib, the new
leader of Banu Hashim. According to
Watt, because of the general
disregard of the guardians in taking care of weak members of the
tribes in Mecca in sixth century, "Muhammad's guardians saw that he
did not starve to death, but it was hard for them to do more for
him, especially as the fortunes of the clan of Hashim seem to have
been declining at that time."
While
still in his teens, Muhammad accompanied his uncle on trading
journeys to Syria
gaining
experience in the commercial trade, the only career open to
Muhammad as an orphan. According to tradition, when Muhammad
was either nine or twelve while accompanying the Meccans' caravan
to Syria, he met a Christian monk or hermit named
Bahira who is said to have foreseen Muhammed's career
as a prophet of God.
Little is known of Muhammad during his later youth, and from the
fragmentary information that is available, it is hard to separate
history from legend.
It is known that he became a merchant and
"was involved in trade between the Indian ocean
and the Mediterranean Sea
." Due to his upright character he acquired
the nickname "Al-Amin" (Arabic: الامين), meaning "faithful,
trustworthy" and was sought out as an impartial arbitrator. His
reputation attracted a proposal from
Khadijah, a forty-year-old widow in
595. Muhammad consented to the marriage, which by all accounts was
a happy one.
Beginnings of the Qur'an
At some point Muhammad adopted the practice of meditating alone for
several weeks every year in a cave on
Mount
Hira near Mecca. Islamic tradition holds that during one of his
visits to Mount Hira, the angel
Gabriel
appeared to him in the year 610 and commanded Muhammad to recite
the following verses:
Proclaim!
(or read!) in the name of thy Lord and Cherisher, Who
created- Created man, out of a (mere) clot of congealed blood:
Proclaim!
And thy Lord is Most Bountiful,- He Who taught (the use
of) the pen,- Taught man that which he knew not.(Qur'an
)
According to some traditions, upon receiving his first revelations
Muhammad was deeply distressed and contemplated throwing himself
off the top of a mountain but the spirit moved closer and told him
that he has been chosen as a messenger of God. Muhammad returned
home and was consoled and reassured by his wife, Khadijah and her
Christian cousin,
Waraqah ibn
Nawfal. Shia tradition maintains that Muhammad was neither
surprised nor frightened at the appearance of Gabriel but rather
welcomed him as if he had been expecting him. The initial
revelation was followed by a pause of three years during which
Muhammad gave himself up further to prayers and
spiritual practices. When the revelations
resumed he was reassured and commanded to begin preaching: Your
lord has not forsaken you nor does he hate [you] (Qur'an ).
According to
Welch these revelations
were accompanied by mysterious seizures, and the reports are
unlikely to have been forged by later Muslims. Muhammad was
confident that he could distinguish his own thoughts from these
messages. According to the Qur'an, one of the main roles of
Muhammad is to warn the unbelievers of their eschatological
punishment (Qur'an , Qur'an ). Sometimes the Qur'an does not
explicitly refer to the Judgment day but provides examples from the
history of some extinct communities and warns Muhammad's
contemporaries of similar calamities (Qur'an ). Muhammad is not
only a warner to those who reject God's revelation, but also a
bearer of good news for those who abandon evil, listen to the
divine word and serve God. Muhammad's mission also involves
preaching monotheism: The Qur'an demands Muhammad to proclaim and
praise the name of his Lord and instructs him not to worship idols
apart from God or associate other deities with God.
The key themes of the early Qur'anic verses included the
responsibility of man towards his creator; the resurrection of
dead, God's final judgment followed by vivid descriptions of the
tortures in hell and pleasures in Paradise; and the signs of God in
all aspects of life. Religious duties required of the believers at
this time were few: belief in God, asking for forgiveness of sins,
offering frequent prayers, assisting others particularly those in
need, rejecting cheating and the love of wealth (considered to be
significant in the commercial life of Mecca), being chaste and not
to kill newborn girls.
Opposition
According to Muslim tradition, Muhammad's wife Khadija was the
first to believe he was a prophet. She was soon followed by
Muhammad's ten-year-old cousin
Ali ibn Abi
Talib, close friend
Abu Bakr, and
adopted son
Zaid. Around 613,
Muhammad began his public preaching (Qur'an ). Most Meccans ignored
him and mocked him, while a few others became his followers. There
were three main groups of early converts to Islam: younger brothers
and sons of great merchants; people who had fallen out of the first
rank in their tribe or failed to attain it; and the weak, mostly
unprotected foreigners.
According to Ibn Sad, the opposition in Mecca started when Muhammad
delivered verses that condemned idol worship and the Meccan
forefathers who engaged in polytheism. However, the Qur'anic
exegesis maintains that it began as soon as Muhammad started public
preaching. As the number of followers increased, he became a threat
to the local tribes and the rulers of the city, whose wealth rested
upon the Kaaba, the focal point of Meccan religious life, which
Muhammad threatened to overthrow. Muhammad’s denunciation of the
Meccan traditional religion was especially offensive to his own
tribe, the
Quraysh, as they were the
guardians of the Ka'aba. The powerful merchants tried to convince
Muhammad to abandon his preaching by offering him admission into
the inner circle of merchants, and establishing his position
therein by an advantageous marriage. However, he refused.
Tradition records at great length the persecution and ill-treatment
of Muhammad and his followers.
Sumayyah bint Khabbab, a slave of
Abu Jahl and a prominent Meccan leader, is
famous as the first martyr of Islam, having been killed with a
spear by her master when she refused to give up her faith.
Bilal, another Muslim slave, was tortured by
Umayyah ibn Khalaf who placed a
heavy rock on his chest to force his conversion. Apart from
insults, Muhammad was protected from physical harm as he belonged
to the Banu Hashim clan.
In 615,
some of Muhammad's followers emigrated to the Ethiopian
Aksumite Empire and
founded a small colony there under the protection of the Christian
Ethiopian emperor Aṣḥama ibn
Abjar.
An early
hadith known as "The Story of the
Cranes" (translation: قصة الغرانيق, transliteration: Qissat al
Gharaneeq) was propagated by two Islamic scholars, Ibn Kathir al
Dimashqi and Ibn Hijir al Masri, where the former has strengthened
it and the latter called it fabricated (see
Science of hadith). The hadith describes
Muhammad's involvement at the time of migration in an episode which
historian
William Muir called the
"
Satanic Verses." The account holds
that Muhammad pronounced a verse acknowledging the existence of
three Meccan goddesses considered to be the daughters of Allah,
praising them, and appealing for their intercession. According to
this account, Muhammad later retracted the verses at the behest of
Gabriel. Islamic scholars have weakened the hadith and have denied
the historicity of the incident as early as the tenth century. In
any event, relations between the Muslims and their pagan
fellow-tribesmen were already deteriorated and worsening.
In 617 the leaders of
Makhzum and
Banu Abd-Shams, two important Quraysh clans,
declared a public
boycott against Banu
Hashim, their commercial rival, to pressurize it into
withdrawing its protection of Muhammad. The boycott lasted three
years but eventually collapsed as it failed in its objective.
Last years in Mecca
Muhammad's wife Khadijah and his uncle Abu Talib both died in 619,
the year thus being known as the "
year of
sorrow." With the death of Abu Talib, the leadership of the
Banu Hashim clan was passed to Abu Lahab, an inveterate enemy of
Muhammad. Soon afterwards,
Abu Lahab
withdrew the clan's protection from Muhammad. This placed Muhammad
in danger of death since the withdrawal of clan protection implied
that the blood revenge for his killing would not be exacted.
Muhammad then
visited
Ta'if, another important city in Arabia, and tried to find a
protector for himself there, but his effort failed and further
brought him into physical danger. Muhammad was forced to return to
Mecca. A Meccan man named Mut'im b. Adi (and the protection of the
tribe of
Banu Nawfal) made it possible
for him safely to re-enter his native city.
Many
people were visiting Mecca on business or as pilgrims to the
Kaaba
. Muhammad took this opportunity to look for
a new home for himself and his followers.
After several
unsuccessful negotiations, he found hope with some men from Yathrib
(later called Medina
). The
Arab population of Yathrib were familiar with monotheism because a
Jewish community existed there. Converts to Islam came from nearly
all
Arab tribes in Medina, such that by June of
the subsequent year there were seventy-five Muslims coming to Mecca
for pilgrimage and to meet Muhammad.
Meeting him secretly
by night, the group made what was known as the "Second Pledge of al-`Aqaba",
or the "Pledge of War" Following the pledges at Aqabah,
Muhammad encouraged his followers to emigrate
to Yathrib
. As
with the
migration to
Abyssinia, the Quraysh attempted to stop the emigration.
However, almost all Muslims managed to leave.
Isra and Mi'raj

The Al-Aqsa Mosque, adjacent to the
Dome of the Rock, the site from which Muhammad is believed to have
ascended to heaven.
Islamic tradition relates that in 620, Muhammad experienced the
Isra and Mi'raj, a
miraculous journey said to have occurred with the angel
Gabriel in one night.
In the first part of
the journey, the Isra, he is said to have travelled from
Mecca
to "the farthest mosque" (in Arabic: masjid
al-aqsa), which Muslims usually identify with the Al-Aqsa Mosque
in Jerusalem
. In the second part, the
Mi'raj,
Muhammad is said to have toured
heaven and
hell, and spoken with earlier prophets, such as
Abraham,
Moses, and
Jesus.
Ibn Ishaq,
author of the first
biography of
Muhammad, presents this event as a spiritual experience whereas
later historians like
Al-Tabari and
Ibn Kathir present it as a physical journey. Some
western scholars of Islam hold that the oldest Muslim tradition
identified the journey as one traveled through the heavens from the
sacred enclosure at Mecca to the celestial
al-Baytu
l-Maʿmur (heavenly prototype of the Kaaba); but later
tradition identified Muhammad's journey from Mecca to
Jerusalem.
Muhammad in Medina
Hijra
A delegation consisting of the representatives of the twelve
important clans of Medina, invited Muhammad as a neutral outsider
to Medina to serve as chief arbitrator for the entire community.
There was fighting in Yathrib mainly involving its Arab and Jewish
inhabitants for around a hundred years before 620. The recurring
slaughters and disagreements over the resulting claims, especially
after the
Battle of Bu'ath in which
all clans were involved, made it obvious to them that the tribal
conceptions of blood-feud and
an eye for
an eye were no longer workable unless there was one man with
authority to adjudicate in disputed cases. The delegation from
Medina pledged themselves and their fellow-citizens to accept
Muhammad into their community and physically protect him as one of
themselves.
Muhammad instructed his followers to emigrate to Medina until
virtually all his followers left Mecca. Being alarmed at the
departure of Muslims, according to the tradition, the Meccans
plotted to assassinate Muhammad. With the help of
Ali, Muhammad fooled the Meccans who were watching him,
and secretly slipped away from the town with Abu Bakr.
By 622, Muhammad
emigrated to Medina
, a large
agricultural oasis. Those who migrated
from Mecca along with Muhammad became known as
muhajirun (emigrants).
Establishment of a new polity
Among the first things Muhammad did in order to settle down the
longstanding grievances among the tribes of Medina was drafting a
document known as the
Constitution of Medina, "establishing
a kind of alliance or federation" among the eight Medinan tribes
and Muslim emigrants from Mecca, which specified the rights and
duties of all citizens and the relationship of the different
communities in Medina (including that of the Muslim community to
other communities, specifically the
Jews and
other "
Peoples of the Book"). The
community defined in the Constitution of Medina,
Ummah, had a religious outlook but was also
shaped by practical considerations and substantially preserved the
legal forms of the old Arab tribes. It effectively established the
first Islamic state.
The first group of pagan converts to Islam in Medina were the clans
who had not produced great leaders for themselves but had suffered
from warlike leaders from other clans. This was followed by the
general acceptance of Islam by the pagan population of Medina,
apart from some exceptions. According to Ibn Ishaq, this was
influenced by the conversion of
Sa'd ibn
Mu'adh (a prominent Medinan leader) to Islam. Those Medinans
who converted to Islam and helped the Muslim emigrants find shelter
became known as the
ansar
(supporters). Then Muhammad instituted
brotherhood between the emigrants
and the supporters and he chose
Ali as his
own brother.
With the early general conversion of the pagans, the pagan
opposition was never of prime importance in the affairs of Medina.
Those remaining pagans were very bitter about the advance of Islam.
In particular,
Asma bint Marwan and
Abu 'Afak had composed verses taunting and
insulting the Muslims. These two were assassinated and Muhammad did
not disapprove of it. No one dared take vengeance on them, and some
members of
Asma bint Marwan's clan
who previously converted to Islam in secret, now professed Islam
openly. This ended overt opposition to Muhammad among the
pagans.
Beginnings of armed conflict
Following the emigration, the Meccans seized the properties of the
Muslim emigrants in Mecca. Economically uprooted and with no
available profession, the Muslim migrants turned to raiding Meccan
caravans as an act of war, deliberately initiating armed conflict
between the Muslims and Mecca. Muhammad delivered
Qur'anic verses permitting the Muslims to fight the
Meccans (see Qur'an
22:39–40). These attacks pressured Mecca by
interfering with trade, and allowed the Muslims to acquire wealth,
power and prestige while working towards their ultimate goal of
inducing Mecca's submission to the new faith.In March of 624,
Muhammad led some three hundred warriors in a raid on a Meccan
merchant caravan. The Muslims set an ambush for them at Badr. Aware
of the plan, the Meccan caravan eluded the Muslims. Meanwhile, a
force from Mecca was sent to protect the caravan, continuing
forward to confront the Muslims upon hearing that the caravan was
safe. The Battle of Badr began in March of 624. Though outnumbered
more than three to one, the Muslims won the battle, killing at
least forty-five Meccans with only fourteen Muslims dead. They also
succeeded in killing many Meccan leaders, including
Abu Jahl. Seventy prisoners had been
acquired, many of whom were soon ransomed in return for wealth or
freed. Muhammad and his followers saw in the victory a confirmation
of their faith. The Qur'anic verses of this period, unlike the
Meccan ones, dealt with practical problems of government and issues
like the distribution of spoils.
Muhammad expelled from Medina the
Banu
Qaynuqa, one of three main Jewish tribes. Following the Battle
of Badr, Muhammad also made mutual-aid alliances with a number of
Bedouin tribes to protect his community from attacks from the
northern part of Hijaz.
Conflict with Mecca
The attack at Badr committed Muhammad to
total
war with Meccans, who were now anxious to avenge their defeat.
To maintain their economic prosperity, the Meccans needed to
restore their prestige, which had been lost at Badr. In the ensuing
months, Muhammad led expeditions on tribes allied with Mecca and
sent out a raid on a Meccan caravan.
Abu
Sufyan subsequently gathered an army of three thousand men and
set out for an attack on Medina.
A scout alerted Muhammad of the Meccan army's presence and numbers
a day later. The next morning, at the Muslim conference of war,
there was dispute over how best to repel the Meccans. Muhammad and
many senior figures suggested that it would be safer to fight
within Medina and take advantage of its heavily fortified
strongholds. Younger Muslims argued that the Meccans were
destroying their crops, and that huddling in the strongholds would
destroy Muslim prestige. Muhammad eventually conceded to the wishes
of the latter, and readied the Muslim force for battle. Thus,
Muhammad led his force outside to the mountain of Uhud (where the
Meccans had camped) and fought the
Battle
of Uhud on March 23. Although the Muslim army had the best of
the early encounters, indiscipline on the part of strategically
placed archers led to a Muslim defeat, with 75 Muslims killed
including
Hamza,
Muhammad's uncle and one of the best known
martyrs in the Muslim tradition. The
Meccans did not pursue the Muslims further, but marched back to
Mecca declaring victory. They were not entirely successful,
however, as they had failed to achieve their aim of completely
destroying the Muslims. The Muslims buried the dead, and returned
to Medina that evening. Questions accumulated as to the reasons for
the loss, and Muhammad subsequently delivered Qur'anic verses which
indicated that their defeat was partly a punishment for
disobedience and partly a test for steadfastness.
Abu Sufyan now directed his efforts towards another attack on
Medina. He attracted the support of nomadic tribes to the north and
east of Medina, using propaganda about Muhammad's weakness,
promises of booty, memories of the prestige of the
Quraysh and use of bribes. Muhammad's policy was now
to prevent alliances against him as much as he could. Whenever
alliances of tribesmen against Medina were formed, he sent out an
expedition to break them up. When Muhammad heard of men massing
with hostile intentions against Medina, he reacted with severity.
One example is the assassination of
Ka'b ibn al-Ashraf, a chieftain of the
Jewish tribe of
Banu Nadir who had gone
to Mecca and written poems that helped rouse the Meccans' grief,
anger and desire for revenge after the Battle of Badr. Around a
year later, Muhammad expelled the Banu Nadir from Medina.
Muhammad's attempts to prevent formation of a confederation against
him were unsuccessful, though he was able to increase his own
forces and stop many potential tribes from joining his
enemies.
Siege of Medina

Battle of Khandaq (Battle of the
Trench).
With the help of the exiled
Banu Nadir,
the Quraysh military leader
Abu Sufyan
had mustered a force of 10,000 men. Muhammad prepared a force of
about 3000 men and adopted a new form of defense unknown in Arabia
at that time: the Muslims dug a trench wherever Medina lay open to
cavalry attack. The idea is credited to a Persian convert to Islam,
Salman the Persian. The siege of
Medina began on March 31 627 and lasted for two weeks. Abu Sufyan's
troops were unprepared for the fortifications they were confronted
with, and after an ineffectual siege lasting several weeks, the
coalition decided to go home. The Qur'an discusses this battle in
verses Qur'an
33:9-33:27.During the battle, the Jewish tribe of
Banu Qurayza, located at the south of
Medina, had entered into negotiations with Meccan forces to revolt
against Muhammad. Although they were swayed by suggestions that
Muhammad was sure to be overwhelmed, they desired reassurance in
case the confederacy was unable to destroy him. No agreement was
reached after the prolonged negotiations, in part due to sabotage
attempts by Muhammad's scouts. After the coalition's retreat, the
Muslims accused the Banu Qurayza of treachery and besieged them in
their forts for 25 days. The Banu Qurayza eventually surrendered
and all the men, apart from a few who converted to Islam, were
beheaded, while the women and children were enslaved. In the siege
of Medina, the Meccans exerted their utmost strength towards the
destruction of the Muslim community. Their failure resulted in a
significant loss of prestige; their trade with Syria was gone.
Following the Battle of the Trench, Muhammad made two expeditions
to the north which ended without any fighting. While returning from
one of these (or some years earlier according to other early
accounts), an
accusation of
adultery was made against
Aisha,
Muhammad's wife. Aisha was exonerated from the accusations when
Muhammad announced that he had received a revelation confirming
Aisha's innocence and directing that charges of adultery be
supported by four eyewitnesses.
Truce of Hudaybiyyah
Although Muhammad had already delivered Qur'anic verses commanding
the
Hajj, the Muslims had not performed it due
to the enmity of the Quraysh. In the month of
Shawwal 628, Muhammad ordered his followers to
obtain sacrificial animals and to make preparations for a
pilgrimage (
umrah) to Mecca, saying
that God had promised him the fulfillment of this goal in a vision
where he was shaving his head after the completion of the Hajj.
Upon hearing of the approaching 1,400 Muslims, the
Quraysh sent out a force of 200 cavalry to halt
them. Muhammad evaded them by taking a more difficult route,
thereby reaching al-Hudaybiyya, just outside of Mecca. According to
Watt, although Muhammad's decision to make the pilgrimage was based
on his dream, he was at the same time demonstrating to the pagan
Meccans that Islam does not threaten the prestige of their
sanctuary, and that Islam was an Arabian religion.
Negotiations commenced with emissaries going to and from Mecca.
While these continued, rumors spread that one of the Muslim
negotiators,
Uthman bin al-Affan, had been
killed by the Quraysh. Muhammad responded by calling upon the
pilgrims to make a pledge not to flee (or to stick with Muhammad,
whatever decision he made) if the situation descended into war with
Mecca. This pledge became known as the "Pledge of Acceptance" ( )
or the "
Pledge under the Tree."
News of Uthman's safety, however, allowed for negotiations to
continue, and a treaty scheduled to last ten years was eventually
signed between the Muslims and Quraysh. The main points of the
treaty included the cessation of hostilities; the deferral of
Muhammad's pilgrimage to the following year; and an agreement to
send back any Meccan who had gone to Medina without the permission
of their protector.

A rendering of the seal attributed to
Muhammad used in the letters sent to other heads of state.
Many Muslims were not satisfied with the terms of the treaty.
However, the Qur'anic sura "
Al-Fath" (The
Victory) (Qur'an ) assured the Muslims that the expedition from
which they were now returning must be considered a victorious one.
It was only later that Muhammad's followers would realise the
benefit behind this treaty. According to Welch, these benefits
included the inducing of the Meccans to recognise Muhammad as an
equal; a cessation of military activity posing well for the future;
and gaining the admiration of Meccans who were impressed by the
incorporation of the pilgrimage rituals.
After
signing the truce, Muhammad made an expedition against the Jewish
oasis of Khaybar
, known as the Battle
of Khaybar. This was possibly due to it housing the Banu
Nadir, who were inciting hostilities against Muhammad, or to regain
some prestige to deflect from what appeared to some Muslims as the
inconclusive result of the truce of Hudaybiyya. According to Muslim
tradition, Muhammad also
sent
letters to many rulers of the world, asking them to convert to
Islam (the exact date is given variously in the sources).Lings
(1987), p. 260Khan (1998), pp. 250–251
Hence he sent
messengers (with letters) to Heraclius of
the Byzantine Empire (the eastern
Roman Empire), Khosrau of Persia, the chief of Yemen
and to some
others. In the years following the truce of
Hudaybiyya, Muhammad sent his forces against the Arabs on Transjordanian
Byzantine soil in the Battle of Mu'tah, in which the Muslims were
defeated.
Final years
Conquest of Mecca

An anonymous artist's 16th-century
illustration of Muhammad and his companions advancing on
Mecca.
The angels Gabriel, Michael, Israfil and Azrail, are also
shown.

The Mosque of the Prophet (Al-Masjid
al-Nabawi) is Islam's second most sacred site.
The green dome in the background stands above Muhammad's
tomb.
The
truce of Hudaybiyyah had
been enforced for two years.Khan (1998), p. 274 The tribe of
Banu Khuza'a had good relations with
Muhammad, whereas their enemies, the
Banu Bakr, had an alliance with the
Meccans. A clan of the Bakr made a night raid against the
Khuz'aah, killing a few of them. The Meccans helped the
Banu Bakr with weapons and, according to some sources, a few
Meccans also took part in the fighting. After this event, Muhammad
sent a message to Mecca with three conditions, asking them to
accept one of them. These were that either the Meccans paid
blood money for those slain among
the Khuza'ah tribe; or, that they should disavow themselves of the
Banu Bakr; or, that they should declare the truce of Hudaybiyya
null.Khan (1998), pp. 274–5.
The Meccans replied that they would accept only the last condition.
However, soon they realized their mistake and sent
Abu Sufyan to renew the Hudaybiyya treaty, but
now his request was declined by Muhammad.
Muhammad began to prepare for a campaign. In 630, Muhammad marched
on Mecca with an enormous force, said to number more than ten
thousand men. With minimal casualties, Muhammad took control of
Mecca. He declared an amnesty for past offences, except for ten men
and women who had mocked and ridiculed him in songs and verses.
Some of these were later pardoned. Most Meccans converted to Islam
and Muhammad subsequently destroyed all the statues of Arabian gods
in and around the Kaaba. The Qur'an discusses the conquest of
Mecca.
Conquest of Arabia
Soon after the conquest of Mecca, Muhammad was alarmed by a
military threat from the confederate tribes of Hawazin who were
collecting an army twice the size of Muhammad's. The
Banu Hawazin were old enemies of the Meccans. They
were joined by the
Banu Thaqif
(inhabiting the city of Ta'if) who adopted an anti-Meccan policy
due to the decline of the prestige of Meccans. Muhammad defeated
the Hawazin and Thaqif tribes in the Battle of Hunayn.
In the same year, Muhammad made the expedition of Tabuk against
northern Arabia because of their previous defeat at the
Battle of Mu'tah as well as reports of the
hostile attitude adopted against Muslims. Although Muhammad did not
make contact with hostile forces at Tabuk, he received the
submission of some local chiefs of the region.
A year
after the Battle of Tabuk, the Banu Thaqif sent emissaries to
Medina
to surrender to Muhammad and adopt Islam.
Many bedouins submitted to Muhammad in order to be safe against his
attacks and to benefit from the booties of the wars. However, the
bedouins were alien to the system of Islam and wanted to maintain
their independence, their established code of virtue and their
ancestral traditions. Muhammad thus required of them a military and
political agreement according to which they "acknowledge the
suzerainty of Medina, to refrain from attack on the Muslims and
their allies, and to pay the
Zakat, the Muslim
religious levy."
Farewell pilgrimage and death
At the end of the tenth year after the migration to Medina,
Muhammad carried through his first truly Islamic pilgrimage,
thereby teaching his followers the rites of the annual Great
Pilgrimage (Hajj).
After completing the pilgrimage, Muhammad delivered a famous speech
known as
The Farewell Sermon. In
this sermon, Muhammad advised his followers not to follow certain
pre-Islamic customs such as
adding
intercalary months to align the
lunar calendar with the
solar calendar. Muhammad abolished all old
blood feud and disputes
based on the former
tribal system and asked
for all old pledges to be returned as implications of the creation
of the new Islamic community. Commenting on the vulnerability of
women in his society, Muhammed asked his male followers to “Be good
to women; for they are powerless captives (awan) in your
households. You took them in God’s trust, and
legitimated your sexual relations
with the Word of God, so come to your senses people, and hear my
words ...”. He also told them that they were entitled to discipline
their wives but should do so with kindness. Muhammad also addressed
the issue of inheritance by forbidding false claims of paternity or
of a client relationship to the deceased and also forbidding his
followers to leave their wealth to a testamentary heir. He also
upheld the sacredness of four lunar months in each year. According
to
Sunni tafsir, the
following Qur'anic verse was delivered in this incident: “Today I
have perfected your religion, and completed my favours for you and
chosen Islam as a religion for you.”(Qur'an 5:3) According to
Shia tafsir, it refers to appointment of
Ali ibn Abi Talib at the
pond of Khumm as
Muhammad's successor, this occurring
a few days later when Muslims were returning from Mecca to
Medina.
A few months after the farewell pilgrimage, Muhammad fell ill and
suffered for several days with
head pain
and weakness. He died on Monday, June 8, 632, in Medina.
He is
buried where he died which was in his wife Aisha's house and is now
housed within the Mosque of the Prophet
in Medina
. Next
to Muhammad's tomb, there is another empty tomb that Muslims
believe awaits Jesus.
Aftermath

Conquests of Muhammad and the
Rashidun.
Muhammad united the
tribes of
Arabia into a singular Arab Muslim religious polity in the last
years of his life. With Muhammad's death, disagreement broke out
over who would succeed him as leader of the Muslim community.
Umar ibn al-Khattab, a prominent
companion of Muhammad, nominated
Abu Bakr,
Muhammad's friend and collaborator. Others added their support and
Abu Bakr was made the first
caliph.
This
choice was disputed by some of Muhammad's companions, who held that
Ali ibn Abi Talib, his cousin and son-in-law, had been designated
the successor by Muhammad at Ghadir Khumm
. Abu Bakr's immediate task was to make an
expedition against the
Byzantine (or
Eastern Roman Empire) forces
because of the previous defeat, although he first had to put down a
rebellion by Arab tribes in an episode referred to by later Muslim
historians as the
Ridda wars, or "Wars of
Apostasy".
The pre-Islamic
Middle East was
dominated by the
Byzantine and
Sassanian empires. The
Roman-Persian Wars between the two had
devastated the inhabitants, making the empires unpopular amongst
local tribes. Furthermore, most Christian Churches in the lands to
be conquered by Muslims such as
Nestorians,
Monophysites,
Jacobites and
Copts were under pressure from the
Christian Orthodoxy who deemed them
heretics. Within only a decade, Muslims conquered
Mesopotamia and
Persia,
Roman Syria and
Roman Egypt. and established the
Rashidun empire.
Wives and children
Muhammad's life is traditionally defined into two periods:
pre-hijra in Mecca (from 570 to 622), and
post-hijra in Medina (from 622
until 632). Muhammad is said to have had thirteen wives or
concubines (there are differing accounts on the status of some of
them as wife or concubine) All but two of his marriages were
contracted after the
migration to
Medina.
At the age of 25, Muhammad married
Khadijah bint Khuwaylid. The
marriage lasted for 25 years and was a happy one. Muhammad
relied upon Khadija in many ways and did not enter into marriage
with another woman during this marriage. After the death of
Khadija, it was suggested to Muhammad by Khawla bint Hakim, that he
should marry
Sawda bint Zama, a
Muslim widow, or
Aisha, the six- or
seven-year-old daughter of Abu Bakr. Muhammad is said to have asked
her to arrange for him to marry both. Later, Muhammad married
additional wives nine of whom
survived him. Aisha, who became known as Muhammad's favourite wife
in Sunni tradition, survived him by many decades and was
instrumental in helping to bring together the scattered sayings of
Muhammad that would form the Hadith literature for the Sunni branch
of Islam.
After migration to Medina, Muhammad (who was now in his fifties)
married several women. These marriages were contracted mostly for
political or humanitarian reasons, these wives being either widows
of Muslims who had been killed in the battles and had been left
without a protector, or belonging to important families or clans
whom it was necessary to honor and strengthen alliances.
Muhammad did his own household chores and helped with housework,
such as preparing food, sewing clothes and repairing shoes.
Muhammad is also said to have had accustomed his wives to dialogue;
he listened to their advice, and the wives debated and even argued
with him.
Khadijah is said to have borne Muhammad four daughters (
Ruqayyah bint Muhammad,
Umm Kulthum bint Muhammad,
Zainab bint Muhammad,
Fatimah Zahra) and two sons (
Abd-Allah ibn Muhammad and
Qasim ibn Muhammad) who both died in
childhood. All except two of his daughters, Fatimah and Zainab,
died before him. Shi'a scholars contend that Fatimah was Muhammad's
only daughter.
Maria al-Qibtiyya
bore him a son named
Ibrahim ibn
Muhammad, but the child died when he was two years old.
Muhammad's descendants through Fatimah are known as
sharifs,
syeds or
sayyids. These are honorific titles in
Arabic,
sharif meaning 'noble' and
sayed or
sayyid meaning 'lord' or 'sir'. As
Muhammad's only descendants, they are respected by both Sunni and
Shi'a, though the Shi'as place much more emphasis and value on
their distinction.
Slaves
Muhammad was the owner of slaves, including concubines, a
wetnurse, and his adopted son Zayd.
Legacy
Reforms
According to
William Montgomery
Watt, for Muhammad, religion was not a private and individual
matter but rather “the total response of his personality to the
total situation in which he found himself. He was responding [not
only]… to the religious and intellectual aspects of the situation
but also to the economic, social, and political pressures to which
contemporary Mecca was subject."
Bernard
Lewis says that there are two important political traditions in
Islam – one that views Muhammad as a statesman in Medina, and
another that views him as a rebel in Mecca. He sees Islam itself as
a type of revolution that greatly changed the societies into which
the new religion was brought.
Historians generally agree that Islamic social reforms in areas
such as
social security, family
structure, slavery and the rights of women and children improved on
the
status quo of Arab society. For
example, according to Lewis, Islam "from the first denounced
aristocrat privilege, rejected
hierarchy, and adopted a formula of the career open to the
talents". Muhammad's message transformed the society and
moral order of life in the Arabian Peninsula
through reorientation of society as regards to identity,
world view, and the hierarchy of values.Economic
reforms addressed the plight of the poor, which was becoming an
issue in
pre-Islamic Mecca. The Qur'an
requires payment of an alms tax (
zakat) for
the benefit of the poor, and as Muhammad's position grew in power
he demanded that those tribes who wanted to ally with him implement
the zakat in particular.
Sunnah
The
Sunnah represents the actions and sayings
of Muhammad (preserved in reports known as
Hadith), and covers a broad array of activities and
beliefs ranging from religious rituals, personal hygiene, burial of
the dead to the mystical questions involving the love between
humans and God. The Sunnah is considered a model of emulation for
pious Muslims and has to a great degree influenced the Muslim
culture. The greeting that Muhammad taught Muslims to offer each
other, “may peace be upon you” (Arabic:
as-salamu `alaykum) is used by
Muslims throughout the world. Many details of major Islamic rituals
such as daily prayers, the fasting and the annual pilgrimage are
only found in the Sunnah and not the Qur'an.
The Sunnah also played a major role in the development of the
Islamic sciences. It contributed much to the development of Islamic
law, particularly from the end of the first Islamic century. Muslim
mystics, known as
sufis, who were seeking for
the inner meaning of the Qur'an and the inner nature of Muhammad,
viewed the prophet of Islam not only as a prophet but also as a
perfect saint. Sufi orders trace their chain of spiritual descent
back to Muhammad.
Traditional views
Muslim veneration
Following the attestation to the oneness of God, the belief in
Muhammad's prophethood is the main aspect of the
Islamic faith. Every Muslim proclaims in the
Shahadah that "I testify that
Muhammad is a
messenger of Allah". The
Shahadah is the basic creed or tenet of Islam. Ideally, it is the
first words a newborn will hear, and children are taught as soon as
they are able to understand it and it will be recited when they
die. Muslims must repeat the shahadah in the call to prayer
(
adhan) and the
prayer itself. Non-Muslims wishing to
convert to Islam are required to recite
the creed.
Muslims have traditionally expressed love and veneration for
Muhammad. Stories of Muhammad's life, his intercession and of his
miracles (particularly "
Splitting
of the moon") have permeated popular Muslim thought and poetry.
The Qur'an refers to Muhammad as "a mercy (
rahmat) to the
worlds" (Qur'an ). The association of rain with mercy in Oriental
countries has led to imagining Muhammad as a rain cloud dispensing
blessings and stretching over lands, reviving the dead hearts, just
as rain revives the seemingly dead earth (see, for example, the
Sindhi poem of Shah ʿAbd al-Latif).
Muhammad's birthday is celebrated as a
major feast throughout the
Islamic
world, excluding
Wahhabi-dominated
Saudi Arabia where these public celebrations are discouraged.
Muslims experience Muhammad as a living reality, believing in his
ongoing significance to human beings as well as animals and plants.
When Muslims say or write the name of Muhammad or any other prophet
in Islam, they usually follow it with
Peace be upon him (Arabic:
sallAllahu `alayhi wa sallam) like "Muhammad(Peace be upon
him)".
According to the Qur'an, Muhammad is only the last of a series of
Prophets sent by Allah for the benefit of mankind, and thus
commands Muslims to make no distinction between them and to
surrender to one God Allah. states that "...it (the Qur'an) is a
confirmation of (revelations) that
went before it, and a fuller explanation
of the Book - wherein there is no doubt - from
The
Lord of the Worlds.". Similarly states "...And before this was
the book of Moses, as a guide and a mercy. And this Book confirms
(it)...", while commands the believers of Islam to "Say: we believe
in God and that which is revealed unto us, and that which was
revealed unto
Abraham and
Ishmael and
Isaac and
Jacob and the tribes, and that which
Moses and
Jesus received, and
which the prophets received from their Lord. We make no distinction
between any of them, and unto Him we have surrendered."
Historian Denis Gril believes that the Qur'an does not overtly
describe Muhammad performing miracles, and the supreme miracle of
Muhammad is finally
identified with
the Qur’an itself. However, Muslim tradition credits Muhammad
with several supernatural events. For example, many Muslim
commentators and some Western scholars have interpreted the Surah
as referring to Muhammad
splitting
the Moon in view of the
Quraysh when
they began persecuting his followers.
European and Western views
The biographical knowledge about Muhammad in the learned, Latin
circles of the
Middle Ages in Europe,
was remarkably precise to some extent and a good amount of concrete
data about his life was known. Learned European circles of the time
interpreted the data in such a way that Muhammad was viewed as a
charlatan driven by ambition and eagerness for power, and who
seduced the
Saracens into his submission
under a religious guise. This knowledge about Muhammad's life in
Latin theological texts was not reflected in the popular literature
of the Middle Ages, in which Muhammad was viewed as an idol or one
of the heathen gods. Some medieval Christians said he died in 666,
alluding to
the number of the
beast, instead of 632; others changed his name from Muhammad to
Mahound, the "devil incarnate".
Bernard Lewis writes "The development of the
concept of
Mahound started with considering
Muhammad as a kind of demon or false god worshipped with
Apollyon and
Termagant in
an unholy trinity." A later medieval work,
Livre dou
Tresor represents Muhammad as a former monk and cardinal.
Dante's Divine Comedy (Canto
XXVIII), puts Muhammad, together with Ali, in
Hell "among the sowers of discord and the
schismatics, being lacerated by devils again and again."
After the
reformation,
Muhammad was no longer viewed as a god or idol, but as a cunning,
ambitious, and self-seeking impostor.
Guillaume Postel was among the first to
present a more positive view of Muhammad. Boulainvilliers described
Muhammad as a gifted political leader and a just lawmaker.
Gottfried Leibniz praised Muhammad because
"he did not deviate from the natural religion".
Thomas Carlyle defines Muhammed as "A silent
great soul, one of that who cannot but be earnest" .
Edward Gibbon in his book
The
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
observes that "the good sense of Mohammad despised the pomp of
royalty."
Friedrich
Martin von Bodenstedt (1851) described Muhammad as "an ominous
destroyer and a prophet of murder." Later Western works, many of
which, from the 18th century onward, distanced themselves from the
polemical histories of earlier Christian authors. These more
historically-oriented treatments, which generally reject the
prophethood of Muhammad, are coloured by the
Western philosophical and theological
framework of their authors. Many of these studies reflect much
historical research, and most pay more attention to human, social,
economic, and political factors than to religious, theological, and
spiritual matters..
It was not until the latter part of the 20th century that Western
authors combined rigorous scholarship as understood in the modern
West with empathy toward the subject at hand and, especially,
awareness of the religious and spiritual realities involved in the
study of the life of the founder of a major world religion.
According to
Watt and
Richard Bell, recent writers have generally dismissed the idea that
Muhammad deliberately deceived his followers, arguing that Muhammad
“was absolutely sincere and acted in complete good faith”. Watt
says that sincerity does not directly imply correctness: In
contemporary terms, Muhammad might have mistaken his own
subconscious for divine revelation. Watt and
Lewis argue that viewing Muhammad as a
self-seeking impostor makes it impossible to understand the
development of Islam.
Welch holds
that Muhammad was able to be so influential and successful because
of his firm belief in his vocation. Muhammad’s readiness to endure
hardship for his cause when there seemed to be no rational basis
for hope shows his sincerity.
Other religious traditions
See also
- *Mohammad, Messenger
of God (aka The Message)
- *Muhammad: Legacy
of a Prophet (documentary)
Notes
References
- Al-Hibri, Azizah Y. (2003). "An Islamic Perspective on Domestic
Violence". 27 Fordham International Law Journal 195.
- (New edition 1974)
Encyclopedias
Further reading
- Musa, A. Y. Hadith as Scripture: Discussions on The
Authority Of Prophetic Traditions in Islam, New York:
Palgrave, 2008
External links
Non-Muslim biographies
Muslim biographies