Saturday, August 3, 2019
Muhammad And The Beginnings Of Islam :: History Historical Islam Islamic muslim
Muhammad And The Beginnings Of Islam     Muhammad, whose full name was Abu al-Qasim Muhammad ibn 'Abd Allah ibn  'Abd al-Muttalib ibn Hashim, was born in Mecca around 570 AD after the  death of his father, 'Abd Allah. Muhammad was at first under the care  of his paternal grandfather, 'Abd al-Muttalib. Because the climate of  Mecca was considered to be unhealthful, he was given as an infant to a  wet nurse from a nomadic tribe and spent some time in the desert. At  six, he lost his mother, Aminah of the clan of Zuhra, and at eight his  grandfather. Though his grandfather had been head of the prestigious  Hashem clan and was prominent in Mecca politics, he was probably not the  leading man in Mecca as some sources suggest. Muhammad came under the  care of the new head of the clan, his uncle Abu Talib, and is reputed to  have accompanied him on trading journeys to Syria. About 595, on such a  journey, he was in charge of the merchandise of a rich woman, Khadijah  of the clan of Asad, and so impressed her that she offered marriage.   She is said to have been about 40, but she bore Muhammad at least two  sons, who died young, and four daughters. The best known daughter was  Fatimah, the wife of Muhammad's cousin 'Ali who is regarded as  Muhammad's divinely ordained successor by the Shi'ah branch of Islam.   Until Khadijah's death in 619, Muhammad took no other wife. The  marriage was a turning point in Muhammad's life. By Arab custom, minors  did not inherit, and therefore Muhammad had no share in the property of  his father or grandfather. However, by his marriage he obtained  sufficient capital to engage in mercantile activity on a scale  commensurate with his abilities.     Muhammad appears to have been of a reflective turn of mind and is said  to have adopted the habit of occasionally spending nights in a hill cave  near Mecca. The poverty and misfortunes of his early life doubtless  made him aware of tensions in Meccan society. Mecca, inhabited by the  tribe of Quraysh to which the Hashim clan belonged, was a mercantile  center formed around a sanctuary, the Kaââ¬â¢bah, which assured the safety  of those who came to trade at the fairs. In the later 6th century there  was extensive trade by camel caravan between the Yemen and the  Mediterranean region (Gaza and Damascus), bringing goods from India and  Ethiopia to the Mediterranean. The great merchants of Mecca had  obtained monopoly control of this trade. Mecca was thus prosperous, but  most of the wealth was in a few hands.  					    
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