Family tree of Shaiba ibn Hashim
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Lineage of Shaiba ibn Hashim
Shaiba ibn Hashim was the grandfather of Prophet Muhammad, who was the cousin and father-in-law of Ali ibn Abi Talib, who was the fourth and last of the Rightly Guided Caliphs according to Sunni Muslims and the first Imam according to Shia Muslims. According to Arab and Islamic genealogists, the line of Muhammad traces back to Adam as follows:
- Muhammad
- Abd Allah
- Abd al-Muttalib (who was called Shaiba)
- Hashim (named ‘Amr, after whom the Banu Hashim clan was named)
- Abd-e-Manaf (called Al-Mugheera)
- Qusai (Qusayy) (also called Zaid)
- Kilab
- Murra
- Ka'b
- Luwai (Lo’i)
- Ghalib
- Fihr (known as Quraish and whose tribe was called after him)
- Malik
- an-Nadr (also called Qais)
- Kinana (founder of the largest Adnanite tribe of western Saudi Arabia in Hijaz)
- Khuzaima (Khuzaiman)
- Mudrika (who was called ‘Amir)
- Ilyas (Elias)
- Mudhar (Muzar) (patriarch of one of the two main branches of the "North Arabian" Adnanite tribes)
- Nazar (Nizar)
- Ma'ad
- Adnan (ancestor of the Adnani Arabs of northern, central and western Arabia)
- Udad (Awwad)
- Al-Muqawwim
- Al-Yas'a
- Al-Hamis (Al-Humaisa)
- Nibt (Nobet)
- Salaman (Sulayman)
- Hamal (Haml)
- Qidar (Qaidar) (father of the North Arabian Qedarite tribe that controlled the region between the Persian Gulf and the Sinai Peninsula
- Isma'il (Ishmael)
- Ibrahim Khalil-Ullah (Abraham)
- Ta'rikh (Azar)
- Tahur
- Shahru
- Abraghu (Ra‘u)
- Taligh (Falikh)
- Abir
- Shale' (Shalikh)
- Arfakhad (Arfakhshad)
- Sam - the Semitic family/race, which encompass a large group of families
- Nuh (Noah)
- Lumuk (Lamik)
- Mutu Shalkh (Mutwashlack)
- Akhnukh (who is said to be Prophet Idris)
- Yarad (Yarid)
- Mahla'il
- Qinan (Qainan)
- Anush (Anusha)
- Sheeth
- Adam Abu'l-Bashar (Adam)[1]
See also
- Ahl al-Bayt
- Family tree of Muhammad
- Ancestry of Qusai ibn Kilab
- Descent from Adnan to Muhammad
- Banu Hashim
- Banu Quraysh
- Banu Kinanah
- Banu Mudhar
References
- ↑ Firestone et al., 2001, pp. 11-12. This list of names is based on the work of a 16th century Syrian scholar. Alternate transliterations of the Arabic appear in parentheses. For those names that have articles, which use the most common English name, the article has been linked, but the name appears as transliterated from the Arabic.
Bibliography
- Firestone, Reuven; American Jewish Committee Harriet and Robert Heilbrunn Institute for International Interreligious Understanding (2001), Children of Abraham: An Introduction to Judaism for Muslims, KTAV Publishing House, Inc., ISBN 9780881257243
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