Zubaid

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan participated in raising the banner of the Arabian tribe of Zubaid, which participated with the Ottoman Empire in the memory of the Gallipoli Campaign in 2016.

Zubayd or Zubaid is a large Arab tribe that migrated to Iraq, before and after the Islamic conquest. The tribe was an offshoot of the Yemeni tribe of Madhhij, which is a majority Qahtanite Arab tribe. However, a few branches of the tribe such as the al-Bu Hamid, al-Bu Yusef and al-Bu Ali sects trace their lineage back to Adnan through Elias ibn Mudhar and so are Adnanite Arabs, recognised as Zubayds only by early settlement and migration. The Zubayd tribe hails from and derives its name from a town on Yemen's western coastal plain known as Zabid. Its first leader was the companion of Mohammed, named Amro bin Maadi Karb.

The main tribe of Zubayd is based in Al-Suwaira, in the Governorate of Wasit in Iraq. Zubayd's overall leader is Shaikh Maad Jassim Al-Samarmad. Many other tribes trace their lineage to Zubayd. During the late 18th century and the 19th century, the bulk of today's Shi'a Zubayd in Iraq converted to Shia Islam.[1][2][3][4] However, the Bani Hukayyim section (of the Zubaid) only converted to Shi'ism during the latter part of the 19th century.[5] Some sections of Zubayd, such as Al-Ajeel tribe in Tikrit, and Al-Jhaishat in Suwaira remain Sunni Muslims. Other tribes that trace their lineage to Zubaid have their own separate Shaikhs, or tribal leaders, including Dulaim, Juboor, Al-Laheeb, Azzah, Obaid, Al Uqaydat, Al Bu Sultan, Al Bu Mohammed Shuwailat and Al Suwaed(Al-Saedi).

Notes

  1. The Shi'is of Iraq By Yitzhak Nakash, pg.27
  2. ‘Uthman ibn Sanad al-Basri al-Wa’ili, Mukhtasar Kitab Matali’ al-Su’ud bi-tayyib Akhbar al-Wali Da’ud, ed. Amin al-Hilwani (Cairo, 1951/2), 169
  3. ‘Abdallah Mahmud Shukri [al-Alusi], “Di’ayat al-Rafd wa al-Khurafat wa al-Tafriq Bayn al-Muslimin”, al-Manar 29 (1928): 440
  4. Haydari, ‘Unwan al-majd, pg110-15, 118
  5. The Shi'is of Iraq By Yitzhak Nakash, pg.42, and “Iraq, 1900 to 1950” by Stephen Longrigg (Oxford, 1953), 25
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