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Ansar (Islam)

Medinan hosts of Muhammad and his followers

Ansar (Islam)

Medinan hosts of Muhammad and his followers

FieldValue
nameAnsar
()
typeAzd, Qahtanites
imageFile:Ansar Flag (4).png
captionBanner of the Ansar at the Battle of Siffin
nisbaAl-Ansari
locationArabia
descendedHaritha bin Tha'labah bin Amr bin 'Amir bin Haritha bin Tha'labah bin Mazen bin al-Azd
parent_tribeAzd
religionIslam
ethnicityArab
languageArabic
surnamesAl-Ansari (surname)
branchesBanu Khazraj, Banu Aws

() The Ansar (), also spelled Ansaar or Ansari, were the local inhabitants of Medina (mostly Muslims) who supported the Islamic prophet Muhammad, and his followers (the Muhajirun), when they fled from Mecca to Medina during the hijrah. The Ansar belonged to the Arabian tribes of Banu Khazraj and Banu Aws.

Background

Banu Aws branches

The Medinese, which consisted of Banu Aws and Banu Khazraj, along with their Arabian Jewish allies (Banu Nadir, Banu Qurayza, and Banu Qaynuqa), were involved in years of degenerating warfare, such as the battle of Sumair, battle of Banu Jahjaha of Aus-Banu Mazin of Khazraj, battle of Sararah day, battle of Banu Wa'il ibn Zayd, battle of Zhufr-Malik, battle of Fari', battle of Hathib, battle of Rabi' day, first battle of Fijar in Yathrib (not Fijar war between Qays with Kinana in Mecca), battle of Ma'is, battle of Mudharras, and second battle of Fijar in Yathrib. The Medinese also even contacted against foreign invaders came from outside Hejaz, including such as Shapur II of Sasanian Empire in relatively vague result, and also in successful defense against Himyarite Kingdom under their sovereign, Tabban Abu Karib, who also known as Dhu al-Adh'ar. However, the most terrible conflict for both Aws and Khazraj was a civil war called the Battle of Bu'ath, which left a bitter taste for both clans, and caused them to grow weary of war, due to the exceptionally high level of violence, even by their standards, and the needless massacres that occurred during that battle.

Thus, in search of enlightenments and seeking arbitration from third party, the Yathribese then pledged their allegiance to Muhammad, a Qurayshi Meccan who preached a new faith, Islam, during the Medinese pilgrimage to Kaaba. As Muhammad managed to convince many notables of both Aws and Khazraj, which also included Abbad ibn Bishr who personally convinced by a Muhajirun named Mus'ab ibn Umayr of his cause on his new faith, the chieftains of both Aus and Khazraj tribe, particularly Sa'd ibn Mu'adh, Usaid Bin Hudair, Saʽd ibn ʽUbadah, and As'ad ibn Zurara agreed to embrace Islam and appoint Muhammad as arbitrator and de facto leader of Medina. In no time, Abbad and other Yathribese agreed to provide shelter for Meccan Muslims who had been persecuted by Quraysh polytheists, while also agreeing to change their city name from Yathrib to Medina, as Yathrib has bad connotation in Arabic.

Battles where the Ansari helped Muhammad

Main article: List of expeditions of Muhammad

The Ansari helped Muhammad in several battles, one of the earliest the Patrol of Buwat. A month after the raid at al-Abwa that Muhammad ordered, he personally led two hundred men including Muhajirs and Ansars to Bawat, a place on the caravan route of the Quraysh merchants. A herd of fifteen hundred camels was proceeding, accompanied by one hundred riders under the leadership of Umayyah ibn Khalaf, a Quraysh. The purpose of the raid was to plunder this rich Quraysh caravan. No battle took place and the raid resulted in no booty. This was due to the caravan taking an untrodden unknown route. Muhammad then went up to Dhat al-Saq, in the desert of al-Khabar. He prayed there and a mosque was built at the spot. This was the first raid where a few Ansars took part.

After the death of Muhammad

During the tenure of Caliphates after Muhammad, the Ansar mainly became important military elements in many conquests, (as indicated with the appointing of Thabit, bin Qays bin Shammas, an orator of Ansar), to lead Ansaris in support of Khalid ibn al-Walid in the Battle of Buzakha at the time of Caliph Abu Bakr. Later they also played a prominent role in the Battle of Yamama where Ansars under Al Bara bin Malik Al Ansari charged at a perilous moment of the battle marking its turning point. The battle of Yamama is also where the Ansar's most prominent warrior, Abu Dujana, fell.

During the caliphate of Umar, prominent Ansaris contributed greatly during campaigns against Byzantium. The Ansari chief 'Ubadah ibn al-Samit particularly played many significant roles during Muslim conquest of Egypt and Muslim conquest of Levant under the likes of Abu Ubaydah, Khalid ibn Walid, Amr ibn al-Aas, and Muawiyah

In the year 24/645, during the caliphate of Uthman Ibn Affan, prominent Ansaris also held major positions like Al-Bara' ibn `Azib who was made governor of al-Ray (in Persia). He eventually retired to Kūfā and there he died in the year 71/690.

During the Umayyad era the Ansar became somewhat of an opposing political faction of the regime. They are described as closely affiliated with the Hashim Clan Contingent rather than with the incumbent Umayyad. Such Ansar-Hashim connections are described as forming a new elite local political hegemony in Hejaz.

List of Ansaris

Banu Khazraj

Men

  • Mahas
  • Saʽd ibn ʽUbadah, chief
  • Bashir ibn Sa'd
  • As'ad ibn Zurarah
  • 'Abd Allah ibn Rawahah
  • Abu Ayyub al-Ansari
  • Ubayy ibn Ka'b
  • Zayd ibn Thabit
  • Hassan ibn Thabit
  • Jabir ibn Abd-Allah
  • Abu Mas'ud Al-Ansari
  • Amr ibn al-Jamuh
  • Saad ibn ar-Rabi
  • Al-Bara' ibn `Azib
  • Ubayda ibn as-Samit
  • Zayd ibn Arqam
  • Abu Dujana
  • Abu Darda
  • Habab ibn Mundhir
  • Anas ibn Nadhar
  • Anas ibn Malik
  • Al-Bara' ibn Malik
  • Sahl ibn Sa'd
  • Farwah ibn `Amr ibn Wadqah al-Ansari
  • Habib ibn Zayd al-Ansari
  • Tamim al-Ansari
  • Qays ibn Sa'd

Women

  • Nusaybah bint Ka'ab, mother of Habib ibn Zayd
  • Rufaida Al-Aslamia

Banu Aus

  • Sa'd ibn Mua'dh, chief
  • Asim ibn Thabit
  • Abbad ibn Bishr
  • Muadh ibn Jabal
  • Muhammad ibn Maslamah
  • Khuzaima ibn Thabit
  • Khubayb ibn Adiy
  • Sahl ibn Hunaif
  • Uthman ibn Hunaif
  • Abu'l-Hathama ibn Tihan
  • Hanzala Ibn Abi Amir
  • Al-Nuayman ibn Amr

Uncategorized

  • Amr ibn Maymun
  • Hudhaifa ibn Yaman
  • Umayr ibn Sad al-Ansari

References

Sources

References

  1. {{harvnb. Ali. 2019
  2. {{harvnb. Labīb Rizq. 1993
  3. {{harvnb. Avigdor Chaikin. 1899
  4. (2019). "Sirah ibn Hisham". Qisthi Press.
  5. {{harvnb. Ali. 2019
  6. (2010). "Sahabat-sahabat Rasulullah: chapter Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas". Pustaka Ibnu Katsir.
  7. {{harvnb. Abū Khalīl. 2004
  8. {{harvnb. Ibn Sa'd. 1990
  9. Mubarakpuri, Saifur Rahman Al. (2005). "The sealed nectar: biography of the Noble Prophet". Darussalam Publications.
  10. "List of Battles of Muhammad".
  11. [https://books.google.com/books?id=BpfJVSSiAMwC&dq=ansar+khalid+walid&pg=PA62 The History of al-Tabari Vol. 10: The Conquest of Arabia: The Riddah Wars A.D. 632-633/A.H. 11]
  12. [https://books.google.com/books?id=h0CZBQAAQBAJ&dq=ansar+khalid+walid&pg=PT159 Golden Stories of Accepted Prayers By Abdul Malik Mujahid]
  13. Khatib Baghdadi, ''Tarikh Baghdad'', vol.1, pg.177
  14. [https://books.google.com/books?id=dpA4gm-PVn4C&dq=ansar+during+umayyad+era&pg=PA70 Literary Criticism in Medieval Arabic-Islamic Culture: The Making of a Tradition By Wen-chin Ouyang]
  15. [https://books.google.com/books?id=MxTWmfKEloAC&q=ansar+ansar&pg=PA9 The History of al-Tabari Vol. 26: The Waning of the Umayyad Caliphate Footnote by W. Montgomery Watt]
  16. [https://books.google.com/books?id=v1dwdBDDjcUC&q=ansar&pg=PA99 The Religious Elite of the Early Islamic Ḥijāz: Five Prosopographical Case Studies by Asad Q. Ahmed]
  17. "Imamate: The Vicegerency of the Prophet". [[Ahlul Bayt Digital Islamic Library Project]].
  18. (4 November 2013). "Narrators of Hadith al Thaqalayn From Among the Sahabah". Ahlul Bayt Digital Islamic Library Project.
  19. (10 November 2013). "A Restatement of the History of Islam and Muslims, Umar bin al-Khattab, the Second Khalifa of the Muslims". Ahlul Bayt Digital Islamic Library Project.
  20. {{Hadith-usc. Bukhari. 3. 34. 439
  21. "Al-Bara' ibn Malik Al-Ansari: Allah & Paradise". [[IslamOnline.
  22. "The life of Rufaydah Al-Aslamiyyah". Islamweb.
  23. [[William Montgomery Watt]], ''Muhammad at Medina'', Oxford, 1966.
  24. "253. Chapter: The miracles of the friends of Allah and their excellence". Qibla.
  25. "Letter 80". [[A Shi'i-Sunni dialogue]].
  26. ''[[History of the Caliphs]]'' by [[al-Suyuti]]
  27. (26 January 2013). "Seventh Session, Wednesday Night, 29th Rajab 1345 A.H.". [[Peshawar Nights]].
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