- The Banu al-Harith (Arabic: بَنُو الْحَارِث Banū al-Ḥārith or Arabic: بَنُو الْحُرَيْث Banū al-Ḥurayth) is an
Arabian tribe which once
governed the cities...
- the
sources as Tha'laba, Amir, Abd Allah, and Malik. He
belonged to the
Balharith family of the
Khazraj tribe of Yathrib. The
Islamic prophet Muhammad emigrated...
- Abu
Ubayda belonged to the al-Harith ibn Fihr clan, also
called the
Balharith, of the
Quraysh tribe. The clan was
settled in the
lower quarter of Mecca...
- or Sa'id ibn
Zabban of the Banu Kalb tribe, and
Lamis bint Ali of the
Balharith. From his
wives he had
seven known children, as well as
seven other children...
- at the head of 480 men to
invite the
mixed Christian and
polytheistic Balharith tribe of
Najran to
embrace Islam. The
tribe converted and
Khalid instructed...
-
writing in his
early twenties, and
published his
first novel The Road to
Balharith in 1981–82.
Since then he had
written more
novels as well as
short story...
-
disrupted by the estates'
former owners, in
particular from the
Ansarite Balharith clan.
Uthman ibn
Muhammad responded by ****igning a
guard force to help...
- destro**** an
impenetrable fortress for the
Turks in the town of
Nasiriyah in
Balharith, and they
seized many weapons,
ammunition and horses, and the war plan...
- the Banu Amir
around 592, he led the clan's
exodus to the
refuge of the
Balharith tribe of Najran. Abu Bara's son Bara was
killed in an
abortive raid by...
-
rejection of a
Balharith proposal for a
marriage alliance,
which he
considered tantamount to
reducing the Ja'far to a
satellite clan of the
Balharith. The Ja'far...