-
Safiyya bint
Huyayy (Arabic: صفية بنت حيي Ṣafiyya bint
Ḥuyayy) was a
Jewish convert to
Islam from the Banu
Nadir tribe.
After the
Battle of
Khaybar in...
-
Huyayy ibn
Akhtab (Arabic: حيي بن أخطب; Hebrew: חי בן אחיטוב) was a
chief of the Banu Nadir, a
Jewish tribe of
Medina in pre-Islamic Arabia. His ancestry...
- both of them for profit. The Banu Nadir, led by Ka'b ibn al-Ashraf and
Huyayy ibn Akhtab, and the Banu
Qurayza fought with the Aws,
while the Banu Qaynuqa...
- bint al-Harith and
Ramla bint Abi
Sufyan ibn Harb in 628; and
Safiyya bint
Huyayy and
Maymunah bint al-Harith in 629. The
statuses of
Rayhanah bint Zayd and...
- Yahud!"), in the
context of the Arab–Israeli conflict.
After the
death of
Huyayy Chief of the
Jewish tribe Banu Nadir, Abu al-Rafi ibn Abi al-Huqayq took...
- from the city.
Early in 627, the Banu
Nadir met with the
Quraysh of Mecca.
Huyayy ibn Akhtab,
along with
other leaders from Khaybar,
traveled to
swear allegiance...
-
member of the
Nadir tribe. He was a
distant cousin of the
tribal chief,
Huyayy ibn Akhtab, and he was also
related to the Abu’l-Huqayq
branch of the tribe...
-
readmitted Huyayy ibn Akhtab, the
chief of the Banu
Nadir whom
Muhammad had
exiled (during the
Invasion of Banu Nadir), Al-Waqidi
reports that
Huyayy tore up...
-
Zaynab bint Khuzayma,
Sawda bint Zamʿa,
Hafsa bint Umar,
Safiyya bint
Huyayy,
Ramla bint Abi Sufyan,
Aisha bint Abi Bakr The
grave of
Ibrahim ibn Muhammad...
-
invading army. Ibn
Ishaq writes that
during the siege, the
Qurayza readmitted Huyayy ibn Akhtab, the
chief of the Banu
Nadir whom
Muhammad had
exiled and who...