- Amr ibn
Hurayth ibn Amr ibn
Uthman al-Makhzumi (Arabic: عمرو بن حريث بن عمرو بن عثمان, romanized: ʿAmr ibn
Ḥurayth ibn ʿAmr ibn ʿUthmān; died 705) was...
-
Humayd ibn
Hurayth ibn
Bahdal al-Kalbi (Arabic: حميد بن حريث بن بحدل الكلبي, romanized: Ḥumayd ibn
Ḥurayth ibn Baḥdal al-Kalbī; fl. 683 – 693) was a senior...
- (Arabic: بَنُو الْحَارِث Banū al-Ḥārith or Arabic: بَنُو الْحُرَيْث Banū al-
Ḥurayth) is an
Arabian tribe which once
governed the
cities of Najran, Taif, and...
-
Taghlib and Kalb. In
these later battles, the Kalb were led by
Humayd ibn
Hurayth al-Kalbi, an
Umayyad commander who
survived Khazir. The
Umayyad Caliphate...
- H****an, his
brother Sa'id and
another of Bahdal's grandsons,
Humayd ibn
Hurayth, went on to play
major roles in the
Umayyad administration and military...
-
these later battles, the Kalb was led by Ibn Bahdal's cousin,
Humayd ibn
Hurayth ibn Bahdal.
Medieval sources do not
mention if Ibn
Bahdal resumed his governorship...
-
during the
Muslim conquest of Khorasan,
either by
Abdallah ibn Amir or
Hurayth ibn Jabir. The
princess (possibly
alongside her sisters) was subsequently...
-
against the
Abbasids in the
areas around Kufa and Wasit,
under Mas'ud ibn
Hurayth and Abu
Muhammad Abdan's nephew, Isa ibn Musa. When the
Qarmatians of Bahrayn...
-
headquarters of the Hephthalites" (dār
mamlakat al-Hayāṭela). Thâbit and
Hurayth ibn Qutba, who were
brothers and
leaders of the
merchant community of Merv...
- Mesopotamia),
engaged the Kalb
under Ibn Bahdal's brother,
Humayd ibn
Hurayth, in a
series of
raids and counter-raids (ayyam)
during 686–689. The Kalb...