Say O Prophet:O People of the Book; Come to common terms as between us and you, that we worship none but Allah, and that we associate no partners with Him, and that none of us shall take others as lords besides Allah. (3:64)
   
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Biography of prophet mohammed
 
 
 1  PRE-PROPHETHOOD
 
  •  Religious Conditions
  •  Social and Moral Conditions
  •  The Advent of Prophet Muhammed
  •  Arabia's Era of Depression
  •  Need of a New Prophet
  •  Arabian Peninsula
  •  Arabia in Ancient History
  • [ Earlier revealed Religions of Arabia ]
  •  Prophet Ismail in Mecca
  •  The Quraysh
  •  The Metropolis
 
 2 IN MECCA
 
  •  The Birth
  •  The Humanity's Morning Tide
  •  Acceptance of Islam
  •  Beginning of Persecution
  •  Quraysh in a Fix
  •  Muslims migrate to Abyssinia
  •  Hazrat Umar embraces Islam
  •  Boycott of Bani Hashim
  •  The Year of Grief
  •  Journey to Taif
  •  The Ascension
  •  The Risky Path of Islam
  •  The Beginning of Islam among the Ansar
  •  Strategic importance of Madina
  •  Expansion of Islam in Madina
  •  The Rejection
  •  The Weak Influence
  •  Adherence to cultural heritage
  •  The Jews and Christians
  •  Tribal Customs
  •  The Opposition of the Quraysh
  •  Under the Rulership
  •  The Migration (Hijrat)
  •  Prophet's Migration to Madina
  •  Lessons and Examples
 
 3 IN MADINA
 
  •  Difference between the societies of Mecca and Madina
  •  Religious and Cultural conditions
  •  Physical and Geographical conditions
  •  Religious and Social conditions
  •  Economic and Cultural conditions
  •  The Prophet in Madina
  •  Construction of the Prophet's Mosque
  •  Hypocrisy raises its head in Madina
  •  Change of the Qiblah
  •  Permission to Fight
  •  The Truce of Hudaibiyah
  •  Letters to the Arab Potentates
  •  Conquest of Mecca
  •  The Farewell Pilgrimage
  •  Eternal Rest
 
 4 THE BATTLES
 
  •  The Battle of Badr
  •  The Battle of Uhud
  •  The Battle of Trench
  •  The Banu Quraizah
  •  The Battle of Khayber
  •  The Battle of Mut'ah
  •  The Conquest of Mecca
  •  The Battle of Hunain
  •  The Battle of Taif
  •  The Battle of Tabuk
 
 5 LETTER & TREATIES
 
  •  Letters to Monarchs
  •  The Treaties
 
 
 



Earlier revealed Religions of Arabia Back  |  Home
 
 
Arabia had been the birth-place of several prophets of God in the bygone times. The Qur'an says:

"And make mention (O Muhammad) of the brother of A'ad when he warned his folk among the wind-curved sandhills-and verily warners came and went before and after him-saying: Serve none but Allah. Lo! I fear for you the doom of a tremendous Day . [Qur'an 46:21]

Prophet Hud(78) (Peace Be Upon Him) was sent to the A'ad; a people, according to historians, belonging to the 'Arab Ba'idah who lived in a tract of white or reddish sand blown into hill banks or dunes and covering a vast area to the south-west of al-Rub'e al-Khali (the vacant quarter) near Hadramaut. This region has no habitation and is void of the breath of life, but it was a verdant land in the ancient times, with flourishing towns inhabited by a people of gigantic strength and stature. The whole area was consumed by a fearful and roaring wind which covered it with sand dunes.(79)

The Qur'anic verse quoted above shows that the Prophet Hud (Peace Be Upon Him) was not the only messenger of God sent to the ancient Arabs of this area as many more 'warners came and went before him'.

Salih (80) (Peace Be Upon Him) was another Arabian Prophet sent to the people called Thamud who lived in al-Hijr situated between Tabuk and Hijaz. Prophet Isma'il (Peace Be Upon Him) was brought up in MAKKAH, and he died in the same city. If we extend the frontiers of the Arabian peninsula northwards to include Midian on the borders of Syria, Prophet Shu'yeb(81) (Peace Be Upon Him) would also be reckoned as an Arabian prophet.

The historian Abul Fida says that Midianites were Arabs, living in Midian near Ma'an, which is adjacent to the Sea of Lut (Dead Sea) in Syria on the frontier of Hijaz. The Midianites flourished after the downfall of the people of Lut.

Ancient Arabia had been the cradle of many a civilised and flourishing people to whom God had sent His Prophets. But all of them were either destroyed because of their evil ways or became strangers in their own homeland, or were forced to seek new homes.

The prophets of God born in the lands far away had sometimes to seek refuge in Arabia from the despotic kings of their lands. Ibrahim (Abraham) (Peace Be Upon Him) had migrated to MAKKAH and Moses (Peace Be Upon Him) had to flee to Midian. Followers of other religions, too, had to seek shelter in Arabia. The Jews, when persecuted by the Romans, had settled in Yemen and Yathrib while several Christian sects harassed by the Byzantine Emperors had migrated to Najran.(82)

 
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