ALI B. ABI TALIB
son of Abu Talib
(son of Abdul Muttalib)
and Fatima (daughter of Asad).
Abu Talib was an older brother of Muhammad's father Abdallah.
He took care of Muhammad
when he was young.
Ali married the youngest daughter of Muhammad,
Fatima.
Thus, Ali is a cousin and son-in-law of Muhammad.
He became the 4th
caliph (656-661 A.D.),
after the murder of the third caliph Uthman.
Ali became a Muslim when he was 10 years old.
The hadiths contain many stories about Muhammad's fondness and special
consideration for Ali, although sometimes it is difficult to tell if
these are fabricated by the his proponents, or whether they were
genuine. Nevertheless, some of these hadiths belong to the
Sunnis.
After Muhammad's death, a group of Muslims supported Ali to be the
caliph, but the rest chose
Abu Bakr.
Those who supported Ali came to be known as the
Shi'ites.
Ali was supposed to have kept a codex of the
Qur'an in chronological order
instead of the order found in today's Qur'an.
He was also credited with gathering the Qur'an together before Uthman,
although the hadith is isolate. For more details, see
Collection of the Qur'an - from the hadiths.
The capital of Ali's administration was moved to Iraq.
Muawiya, the governor of Syria, rebelled against Ali,
but after the inconclusive battle Ali and Muwaiya had a truce.
In 40 A.H., the Kharijites, who broke away from Ali because of the
truce, wanted the caliphate to end, insisting to be ruled over by no
ruler except God. Ali was assassinated in 661 A.D.
He was stabbed to death with a poisoned sword by
ibn Muljim, on 20th Ramadan, 40. A.H..
Shiites believed him to be the first
imam.
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