Expedition of Ibn Abi Al-Awja Al-Sulami

Expedition of Ibn Abi Al-Awja Al-Sulami[9] to Banu Sulaym took place in April 629 AD, 12th Month 8AH-1st Month 9AH, of the Islamic Calendar.[10][11]

Expedition of Ibn Abi Al-Awja Al-Sulami
DateFebruary 628 AD,10th Month 7AH
Location
Result
  • Unsuccessful operation, many Muslims killed[1][2][3]
Commanders and leaders
Ibn Abi Al-Awja Al-Sulami Unknown
Strength
50 Entire tribe (unknown population)
Casualties and losses
Most Muslims killed (Ibn Awja wounded)

Most enemies killed[4][5]

(2 captured)[6][7][8]

Expedition

During the summer, many expeditions took place, some of them ending disastrously. A month after Muhammad returned from the pilgrimage (1st Umrah), he dispatched Ibn Abi Al-Awja Al-Sulami a group of 50 Muslims fighters to Banu Sulaym, demanding their allegiance to Islam. Banu Sulaym were a sister tribe of Banu Hawazin and inhabited the area of Najran and Turbah.

When Ibn Abi Al-Awja arrived in the Banu Sulaym area, he called them to convert to Islam. When the tribe refused, fighting erupted. Banu Sulaym fought back, and showered the Muslims with arrows and killed many of them. Ibn Abi Al-Awja was wounded and escaped to Medina with great difficulty. However, a year later, the Banu Sulaym embraced Islam and sent an embassy to submit themselves, as Muhammad was increasing his power.[12][13][14]

See also

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.