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Life of Mahomet [Volume III Chapter 17]
page 255
THE BIOGRAPHY OF MAHOMET, AND RISE OF ISLAM.
CHAPTER SEVENTEENTH.
Siege of Medina, and Massacre of the Bani Coreitza
Dzul Cada, A.H. V. February, March, A.D. 627.
More stirring scenes open upon Mahomet
WHILE Mahomet thus occupied himself with the
cares of his increasing harem, and, by messages
addressed to them from heaven, enjoined upon his
wives virtue and propriety of life, more weighty
and stirring scenes suddenly opened out before him.
The Coreish, joined by an immense force of Bedouin tribes,
march against Medina
The winter season was again come round at which The Coreish,
it had now become customary with the Coreish to prepare for
hostilities against Mahomet1.
Their enmity was at this time farther stimulated by Huwey
and other Jewish chiefs exiled from Medina, who
undertook the duty of rousing the Bedouin tribes of
the neighbourhood, bound by alliance or sympathy
in the same cause. Among these allies were several
clans of the great Ghatafan family, between whom
and Mahomet there had already been some warlike
passages. The Bani Ashja and Murra, each brought
four hundred warriors; and the Bani Fezara,
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a large force, with one thousand camels, under
Uyeina;2
the Bani Suleim, who had been concerned in the massacre
at Maunia, joined the army at Marr al Tzahran, with seven
hundred men3.
The Bani Sad and Bani Asad also swelled the force, the
latter still smarting from the attack made on them by
Mahomet about two years before4.
The Coreish themselves brought four thousand soldiers,
including three hundred horse, and one thousand five hundred
riders upon camels, into the field. The entire force
was estimated at ten thousand men. They marched
in three separate camps; all were under the general
leadership of Aba Sofian, but when the time for
action came, the several chiefs appear each for a day
to have commanded in succession.
Mahomet defends Medina by digging a trench.
Shawwal, A.H. V. February, A.D. 627.
Mahomet had notice of their approach barely in time to
prepare for their reception. The unfortunate issue of
the affair at Ohod, against numbers much inferior, put it
out of the question to offer battle. A happy suggestion
was made by Salman, "the Persian," who was familiar with
the mode in which camps and cities were defended in other
countries.5
page 257
Mahomet and his followers, by his advice, at once
adopted the stratagem hitherto unknown in Arabia,
of entrenching the town. The stone houses of Medina
were built so compactly together that, for a
considerable distance, they presented a high and
nearly unbroken wall, of itself a sufficient protection.
But it was necessary to connect this on the northwest by
a line of defence with the rugged mass of rocks which
there approach the town,6
and to carry it round the other open and defenceless quarters on
the east and south. The work, consisting of a deep
ditch and rude earthen dyke, was portioned out
amongst the various clans. Mahomet stimulated
the enthusiasm of his followers by himself carrying
the excavated earth, and joining in their song, as at
the building of the Mosque:-
"O Lord! there is no happiness but that of Futurity;
Wherefore have mercy on the men of Medina and the Refugees!"
He also frequently repeated the following verses,
covered as he was, like the rest, with earth and
dust:-
The fortress or castle of Medina is now built on this "outcropping
mass of rock." Burton, ii. 29. Burckhardt calls it a
small rocky elevation, p. 321. Speaking of the great Syrian
chain, be also says : - "The last undulations of these mountains
touch the town on the north side." This is apparently what, in
tradition, is called Sila, though Burckhardt gives that name
"Jebel Sila," to the Monakh (or encamping ground) lying immediately
south of it. See p.327. I gather that the part of modern Medina
immediately to the east of the fort was in ancient times open
and unbuilt upon.
page 258
"Oh Lord! without thee, we had not been guided!
We should never have given alms, neither should we have
prayed!
Send down upon us tranquillity, and in battle stablish our
steps ! For they have risen up against us, and sought to pervert us.
but we refused! - Yea, WE REFUSED !"
And as he repeated the last two words, he raised his
voice high and loud.
The army of Medina posted within the trench.
8th Dzul Cada A.H. V. 2nd March A.D. 626 7
In six days, the trench was finished, deep and wide
throughout almost the whole length of the defence.
The houses outside the town were evacuated, and the
women and children were placed for security on the
tops of the double-storied houses within the entrenchment.
These arrangements were hardly completed
when the enemy was reported to be advancing by
Ohod. The army of Medina, three thousand strong,
was immediately marshalled and posted across the
road, leading to Ohod, having the trench in front, and
their rear resting upon the north-eastern quarter of
the city and the rising ground of Sila8.
The northern face was the point most vulnerable to the enemy, the
approaches from the east being covered by walls
and palm enclosures.
The Coreish encamp opposite them,
The Coreish, with their allies, encamped at first upon
their old ground at Jorf and al Ghaba, near Ohod.
Then passing unopposed by the scene of their former
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victory, and finding the country deserted, they swept
rapidly up the road to Medina. The enemy formed
their several camps in front of the Moslem army,
the picquets of which were now posted closely along
the trench. The Coreish were astonished and disconcerted
at the new tactics of Mahomet. Unable to come to close
quarters, they contented themselves for sometime with
a distant discharge of archery.
and detach the Bani Coreitza from the side of Mahomet
Meanwhile, Abu Sofian succeeded in detaching at
the Jewish tribe of Coreitza from their allegiance to
Mahomet. Huwey, the Jewish chief was sent to
their fortress, and was at first refused admittance.
But, persevering in his solicitations, dwelling upon
the ill-concealed enmity of Mahomet towards the
Jews, and representing the overwhelming numbers
of the confederate army as "a surging sea," he at
last persuaded Kab, their chief to relent. It was
agreed that the Coreitza would assist the Coreish,
and that Huwey should retire into their fortress,
in case the allies marched back without inflicting a
fatal blow upon Medina. Rumours of this defection
reaching Mahomet, he sent the Sad ibn Muadz and
Sad ibn Obada, chief men of the Aws and Khazraj,
to ascertain the truth of the report, and strictly
charged them, if the result of their inquiry was
unfavourable, to divulge it to none but to himself
They found the Coreitza in a sullen mood. "Who
is Mahomet," said they, "and who is the Apostle of
God, that we should obey him? There is no bond
or compact betwixt us and him." After high words
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and threats, the two messengers took their leave,
and reported to Mahomet that the temper of the
Jews was even worse than he had feared.9
The Coran, our surest guide, says simply that they "assisted"
the allies,
(S. xxxiii. 20); and the best
traditions confine themselves to this general expression. Had
there been any active hostilities entered upon, they would,
I think, according to Mahomet's habit, have been more distinctly
specified in the Coran.
On the other hand, a tradition from Ayesha states that, when
the allies broke up, the Coreitza "returned", to their fort;
and some traditions, though not of much weight, speak of them as part
of the besieging force before Medina.
There is also a weak tradition that Hodzeifa, sent as a spy to
the enemy's camp, overheard Abu Sofian telling his comrades the
good news that the Coreitza had agreed to join him, after ten
days' preparation , provided he sent seventy warriors to hold their
fortress while they were absent in the field; and that Hodzeifa's report
was the first intelligence Mahomet had of the defection.
On the whole, any impression is that the Coreitza entered into
a league with Huwey, making common cause with him, and promising
to take part in following up any success on the part of the Coreish,
- a promise which they were in the best position to fulfill, - their
fortress being, though at some distance, on the undefended side
of Medina. But, before any opportunity offered, they saw the
likelihood of the siege failing, and then distrust and
disunion broke out.
It is to be noticed that the compact existing betwixt them and
Mahomet is admitted to have been a slight one
K.Wackidi, 114 ˝. Al Jowhari says that this term means
a treaty entered into without forecast or design, or without
confirmation, a slight one. "Foedus vel pactum forte
initum, vel haud firmum."
page 261
Danger to Medina from this defection and measures for its safety
This news alarmed Mahomet. He justly apprehended
that his previous treatment of the Jewish
tribes might now drive the Coreitza to desperate measures.
The south-eastern quarter of the city, which
lay on their side, was the least capable of defence.
The Jews had still many friends and adherents
among the citizens. Disaffection lurked everywhere.
Even amongst the professed followers of the
Prophet, some began to talk already of deserting.
To protect the families of his followers throughout
the town, and to guard against surprise or treachery,
Mahomet was obliged to detach from his force, already
barely adequate to man the long trench, two parties,
each composed of two or three hundred soldiers, which
night and day patrolled the streets.10
A strong guard was also kept over his own tent.
A party of the enemy’s horse clear the ditch, but
are driven back by Ali
The enemy, notwithstanding their numbers, were
paralyzed by the vigilance of the Moslem outposts.
They professed to regard the trench as an unworthy
subterfuge "Truly," they said in their chagrin,
"this is a foreign artifice, to which no Arabs have
ever yet descended." But, it was nevertheless the
safety of Medina. The confederate army resolved if
possible to storm it, and having discovered a certain
narrow and weakly-guarded part, a general attack was
made upon it. The cavalry spurred their horses forward,
page 262
and a few of them, led by Ikrima, son of Abu
Jahl, cleared the ditch, and galloped vauntingly in
front of their enemy. No sooner was this perceived
than Ali with a body of picked men moved out against
them. These, by a rapid manoeuvre, gained the rear
of Ikrima, and occupying the narrow point which he had
crossed, cut off his retreat. At this moment Amr, son of
Abd Wudd, an aged chief11
in the train of Ikrima, challenged his adversaries to single
combat. Ali forthwith accepted the challenge,
and the two stood alone in the open plain. Amr,
dismounting, maimed his horse, in token of his
resolve to conquer or to die. They closed, and for a
short time were hidden in a cloud of dust. But
it was not long before the well-known Takbir,
"Great is the Lord!" from the lips of Ali, made
known that he was the victor. The rest, taking
advantage of the diversion, again spurred their
horses, and all gained the opposite side of the ditch,
excepting Nowfal, who failing in the leap, was despatched by Zobeir.
General attack on the following day upon the
line of defence - unsuccessful
Nothing farther was attempted that day. But
great preparations were made during the night;
and next morning, Mahomet found the whole force
of the allies drawn out against him. It required
the utmost activity and an unceasing vigilance on his
side to frustrate the manoeuvres of the enemy, who
sought, by massing their troops on the least protected
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points, and by a sustained and galling discharge
of arrows, to gain the opposite side of the trench.
This continued throughout the day ; and as the
army of Mahomet was but just sufficient to guard
the long line, there could be no relief. Even at
night Khalid, with a strong party of horse, kept up
the alarm, and still threatening the line of defence,
rendered outposts at frequent intervals necessary.
But all their endeavours were without effect. The
trench was not crossed; and during the whole operations
Mahomet lost only five men.12
Sad ibn Muadz, a chief of the Bani Aws, was wounded severely by
an arrow in the shoulder. The archer, as he shot it,
cried aloud : - " There, take that from the son of
Arca." Mahoinet, with a savage play upon the
name, exclaimed, - "The Lord cause thy face to
sweat13
in hell fire!" The confederates had but three
men killed.
Prayers repeated in the evening for those missed during the day
No prayers had been said that day : the duty at
the trench was too heavy and incessant. When it was
dark, therefore, and the greater part of the enemy during the
had retired to their camp, the Moslem troops were assembled,
and a separate service was repeated for each
prayer which hail been omitted. Mahomet on this
occasion is said to have cursed the allied army, and
said, -- "They have kept us from our daily prayers:
God fill with fire their bellies and their
graves!"14
page 264
Secret negotiation to buy off the Ghatafan, abandoned
Though the loss of life had been trifling, yet the
army of Medina was harassed and wearied with the
unceasing watch and duty. They were moreover dispirited
by finding themselves hemmed in, and by seeing no
prospect of the siege being raised. Mahomet
himself was in constant alarm lest the trench should
be forced, and lest his rear should be threatened by
the Jews or other disaffected citizens. Many of his
followers, whose habitations and possessions lay at a
distance, afraid or pretending to fear that they would
be plundered, begged leave to go and protect them.
Mahomet appeared now in the eyes of his people to
be weak and helpless. "Where," it was asked," were
the Prophet's hopes, and all his promises of Divine
assistance?" It was indeed a day of grievous trial. In
the vivid language of the Coran : --- "The enemy came
upon them from above and from beneath; and the Sight
became confused; and Hearts reached to the throat;
and the people imagined concerning God strange
Imaginations." In this state of alarm, when
the siege had now lasted eleven or twelve
days,15
collection of traditions on the point, p. 113. There is
a tradition that Safia, Mahomet's aunt, from the top of
her house, espied a Jew prowling about. She asked
Hassan the Poet, who was present, to go down and kill him,
as he would be likely to go back and tell his people of
their defenceless state. Hassan declined; and so Safia
herself went down and slew him. Hishami, 292.
The story may be true, but the same tale is told of Safia
during the action at Ohod. Wackidi, p.282.
page 265
Mahomet bethought him of a stratagem for buying
off the least hostile portion of his foe. He sent
secretly to Uyeina, chief of the Fezftra,16 and
sounded him as to whether he would engage to
withdraw the Ghatafan tribes, and thus break up
the confederate army, on condition of receiving
one third of the produce of the date-trees of
Medina. Uyeina signified his readiness, if one half
were guaranteed to him. But Mahomet had over-
estimated his own authority. On sending for the
two Sads, as representatives of the Aws and Khazraj,
they spurned the compromise. But, still maintaining
their subordination to the Prophet, they added, --
If thou hast received a command from God, then
do thou act according to the same." "Nay," said
Mahomet, "if I had received a command, I would
not have consulted you; I ask only your advice
as to that which is most expedient." "Then our
counsel is," they replied, "to give nothing unto them
but the Sword." And so the project dropped.17
Mutual distrust excited by an emissary from Mahomet,
between the Jews and the Coreish
Another and more artful device was now tried.
There was a man of the allied army, who possessed
the ear of both sides, --- the same Nueim who had been
employed in the previous year to prevent Mahomet
page 266
from advancing on Badr, by exaggerated accounts of
the preparations at Mecca. He is now represented
as an exemplary believer,18
but secretly, for fear of his tribe the Bani Ashja. This
man offered his services to the Prophet and they were
gladly accepted. "See now;" said Mahomet to him, "whether
thou canst not break up this confederacy against us: for
War verily is a game of deception." Nueim went
first to the Bani Coreitza, and representing himself
as a true friend, artfully insinuated that the interests
of the Allies were diverse from theirs, and that
before they coinpromised themselves irretrievably
with Mahomet, by joining in the impending general attack
on Medina, they ought to demand from the Coreish hostages,
as a guarantee against being deserted and left in their
enemy's power.19
They suspected no harm, and agreed to act on his advice.
Going next to the allied chiefs, he cautioned them
against the Jews: - "I have heard;" he said, " that
the Bani Coreitza intend to ask for hostages; beware how
ye give them, for they have already
repented of their compact with you, and promised
Mahomet to give up the hostages to be slain, and
then to join in the battle against you." The insidious
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plot immediately took effect; for when the Coreish
sent to demand of the Coreitza the fulfilment of
their engagement to join in a general attack on the
following day, they pleaded their Sabbath as a pretext
against fighting, and their fear of being deserted
as a ground for demanding hostages. The Allies
regarded this as a confirmation of Nueim's intelligence,
and were so fully persuaded of the treachery of the
Coreitza that they began even to fear an attack
from that quarter.
A tempest: Abu Sofian orders the allied forces to break up
The confederate chiefs were already disheartened.
After the two days of vigorous but unsuccessful
fighting described above, they had not again attempted
any general assault. Perhaps the system
by which the chiefs commanded each on successive
days had paralyzed their energies.20
The hope entertained from another engagement, during
which the Coreitza were to have fallen upon the city
in the rear of Mahomet, was now changed into the fear
of hostilities from the treacherous Coreitza themselves.
Their provisions were running short; and their camels
and horses were dying daily in numbers. Wearied and
damped in spirit, the night set in upon them cold and
tempestuous. Wind and rain beat mercilessly on the
unprotected camp.21
The
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storm rose to a hurricane. Fires were extinguished;
tents were blown down; cooking vessels and other
equipage overthrown. Cold and comfortless, Abu
Sofian suddenly resolved on an immediate march.
Hastily summoning the chiefs, he made known his
decision:-" Break up the camp," he said, "and
march ; - as for me, I am gone." With these words
The enemy retires
he leaped on his camel (so great was his impatience)
while its fore leg was yet untied, and led the
way.22
Khalid with two hundred horse brought up the
rear, as a guard against pursuit. The Coreish took
the road by Ohod for Mecca, and the Bani Ghatafan
retired to their haunts in the Desert.
which Mahomet attributes to Divine intervention
The grateful intelligence soon reached Mahomet, who
had sent Hodzeifa in the dark, to spy out the enemy's
movements. In the morning not one of
them was left in sight. The Prophet was not slow
in attributing this happy issue to the divine interposition.
It was an answer, he said, to the earnest
prayer which he had for some days been offering
up, in these words :- "O Lord! Revealer of the
Sacred Book, who art swift in taking account! turn
to flight the confederate Host! Turn them to flight,
O Lord, and make them to quake!"23
It was God
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who, hearing these petitions, sent the tempestuous
wind; and the armies of heaven fought likewise,
striking terror into the enemy.24
The Moslem army breaks up.
The army of Medina, thus unexpectedly relieved, joyfully
broke up their camp, in which they had been besieged
flow for fifteen days,25
and returned to their homes. Mahomet had no thoughts of
a pursuit, - it would have been affording the Coreish that
which they perhaps still desired, - an action in the
open country; but he had thoughts of a surer and
more important blow nearer home.
But is immediately formed again,
to chastise the Bani Coreitza
He had just begun to cleanse himself from the dust
of the campaign, when suddenly he pretended that
Gabriel had brought him a command to proceed
immediately against the Bani Coreitza. "What!" said
The only patent discrepancy of the secretary is as to the day of
the week on which the Coreish retired. The Coreitza objected to
join in the last grand attack on the following day, because it
was their Sabbath; and the tenor of the narrative is that the camp
was broken up that night. But all have said before, the evidence
of the treachery of the Jews is open to suspicion; and the desire
to incriminate them more deeply may have led tradition into
inconsistencies.
page 270
the heavenly visitant, in the language of reproach,
"hast thou laid asside thine armour, while as yet
the angels have not laid theirs aside! Arise and go
forth against the Coreitza. Behold I go before thee,
to shake the foundations of their walls."26
Instantly Bilal was sent to make proclamation
throughout the town.
Siege of the Bani Coreitza: Dzul Cada and Dzul Hijj.
A.H. V. March, A.D. 626
An immediate march was ordered; all were to be present
at the evening prayer in the camp,
before the fortress of the Coreitza, which
lay two or three miles to the south-east of Medina. The
standard raised to oppose the Coreish stood yet unfurled
in the Mosque: it was now placed in the hands of Ali.
Mahomet mounted his ass, and the army (as
before, three thousand strong, with thirty-six horse,)
followed after him. The fortress of the Coreitza was
at once invested, and a discharge of archery kept up
steadily, but without any effect. One man approaching
incautiously near, was killed by a Jewess, who
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cast down a mill-stone on him. But the improvident
Jews, whom the fate of their brethren should have
taught to better purpose, had not calculated on the
chances and the necessities of a siege; they were soon
reduced to great distress and sought to capitulate. But
Mahomet, having no longer any other Jewish neighbours
to alarm or alienate by his severity, was bent
on a bloody revenge, and refused to listen. In their
extremity, the Coreitza appealed to their ancient
friendship with the Bani Aws, and the services
rendered to them in bygone days.27
They begged that Abu Lubaba, of that tribe, might be allowed
to visit and counsel them.
Abu Lubaba visits them,
He came, and overcome
by the wailing of the children and the cries of the
women, he had no heart to speak, but symbolically
drawing his hand across his throat, intimated that they
must fight to the last, as death was all they had to hope
for. On retiring, he felt that he had been too plain
and honest in his advice; for "war," as the Prophet
had said, "is a game of deception." Therefore he went
to Mahomet, and confessing his guilt, said, - " I repent:
for verily I have dealt treacherously with the Lord,
and with his Prophet." Mahomet vouchsafed no
reply; and Abu Lubaba, more strongly to mark his
contrition, went straightway to the Mosque and
bound himself to one of its posts. In this position
he remained for several days, till at last Mahomet
relented, and sent to pardon and release him. The
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"pillar of repentance" is still pointed out in the
Mosque to the pious pilgrim.28
They surrendered at the discretion of the Bani Aws
At last the wretched Jews, brought now to the last verge
of starvation, offered to surrender, if their fate were
decided by their allies, the Bani Aws. To this Mahomet agreed;
and, after a siege of fourteen days, according to others of
twenty five,29 the whole
tribe, men, women and children, came forth from
their stronghold. The men were hand-cuffed behind
their backs, and placed upon one side, under charge of
Mohammad son of Maslama, the assassin of Kab;
the women and children, torn from their fathers and
husbands, were put under the care of Abdallah, a
renegade Jew. As the women passed before the conqueror,
his eye marked the lovely features of Rihana, and he
destined her to be his own.30
The
Hishami says that Aba Lubaba remained bound at the pillar
six days, and that on the divine revelation of forgiveness,
Omm Salma obtained leave to announce it to him.
page 273
household stuff of the captives, their clothes and
armour,31
their camels and flocks, were all brought
forth to await the award of the arbiter. The wine
and fermented liquors were poured forth, the use of
such being now forbidden to the believer.
Sad ibn Muadz appointed arbiter of their fate
The Bani Aws were importunate that their ancient
allies should be spared. "These were our confederates;"
they urged. "We pray thee that the
same consideration may be shown to them, as aforetime,
at the suit of the Bani Khazraj, thou didst
show to their allies."32
"Are ye content, then; replied Mahomet, "that their fate be
committed to one of yourselves?" They expressed their
satisfaction, and Mahomet forthwith nominated Sad ibn Muadz
to be their judge.33
have been reported to him by some sycophant. It is to be noted
that Mahomet appropriated her before the division of the spoil,
under his personal privilege (previously described), and
consequently the first sight of her is as likely to have been in the
manner stated in the text, as in any other, if not more so. But I
think it right to distinguish always between my own conjecture
and the statement of tradition.
page 274
The bloody judgement of Sad
Sad still suffered from the severe wound received
at the trench. From the field of battle he had been
carried to a tent pitched by Mahomet in the courtyard
of the Mosque, where the wounded men were
waited on by Rufeida, an experienced nurse. His
wound had begun apparently to heal. But the
sense of the injury still rankled in his heart: and
Mahomet knew well the bitter hate into which his
former friendship had been turned by the treachery
or the Coreitza.34
He was now summoned. His figure was large and corpulent.
Having been mounted with some difficulty on a well-padded
ass, he was conducted to the camp. The men of
his tribe who thronged about him by the way continually
reminded him of the friendship and services of the
Coreitza, and urged him as their own
representative to deal gently with the prisoners.
He answered not a word till he approached the
scene: and then he said - "Verily, this grace is
given to Sad, that he careth not, in the affairs of God,
for any blame the Blamers may cast upon him." As
he drew near, Mahomet called aloud to those around
him, - "Stand up to meet your master, and assist him
to alight."35
Then he commanded that Sad should
Abu Lubaba's intimation of Mahomet's thirst for their
blood, this also is unlikely. K. Wackidi, 113 ˝, 263-4,
et seq. Hishami, 299.
page 275
pronounce his judgment on the Coreitza. It was a
scene well worthy the pencil of a painter. In the
background, the army of Medina watch with deep
interest this show of justice, regardinig with eager
eye the booty, the household stuff, the armour, the
camels, the flocks, and the deserted town, as about,
by the expected decree of confiscation, to become
their own. On the right, with hands pinioned behind
their backs, are the captive men, seven or eight
hundred in number, dejection or despair at the
ominous rigour of their treatment stamped on their
faces. On the left, are the women and the little children,
pale with terror, or frantic with grief and alarm
for themselves and for the fate of their husbands and
fathers, from whom they have been just now so
rudely dragged. In front is Mahomet, with his
chief companions by his side, and a crowd of followers
thronging behind. Before him stands Sad,
supported by his friends, weak and jaded with the
journey, yet distinguished above all around by his
portly anid commanding figure. "Proceed with the
judgement!" repeated tge Prophet. Sad turned himself
to his people, who were still urging mercy upon
him, and said, - "Will ye, then, bind yourselves by
the covenant of God that whatsoever I shall decide,
ye will accept the same?" There was a general
murmur of assent. Then he proceeded: - "This
The citizens, on the contrary regarded the words as addressed
to all them present, including the refugees, and as significant
of the honorable and commanding post of judge, assigned to Sad.
page 276
verily is my judgment, that the male captives shall
be put to death, that the female captives and the
children shall be sold into slavery, and the spoil be
divided amongst the army." Many a heart quailed,
besides the hearts of the wretched prisoners, at this
savage and bloody decree. But all questionings
were forthwith stopped by Mahomet, who adopted
the verdict as his own, nay, declared it to be the
Solemn judgment of the Almighty ; - cold and unmoved, he said,
-- "Truly thou hast decided according to the judgement of
God pronounced on high from beyond the seven heavens."
The butchery of the Bani Coreitza
No sooner was the sentence passed and ratified
than the camp broke up, and the people wended
their way back to Medina. The captives were
dragged roughly along; one alone was treated with
tenderness and care,- it was Rihana the beautiful
Jewess, set apart for Mahomet. The men were penned up
in a closed yard, while graves or trenches were being dug
for them in the chief marketplace of the city. When these
were ready, Mahomet, himself a spectator of the tragedy,
gave command that the captives should be brought forth
in companies of five or six at a time.36
Each company
page 277
was made to sit down by the brink of the trench
destined for its grave, and there beheaded. Party
by party they were thus led out, and butchered in
cold blood, till the whole were slain.37
One woman alone was put to death; it was she who threw the
millstone from the battlements.38
For Zoheir, an aged Jew, who had saved some of his allies
of the Bani Aws in the battle of Boath, Thabit interceded
and procured a pardon, including the restoration of
his family and his property. "But what hath become of all our chiefs,
- of Kab, of Huwey, of Ozzal the son of Samuel?" asked the old man.
As one after another he named the leading chiefs of
his tribe, he received to each inquiry the same
reply; - they had all been slain already. - "Then of
what use is life to me any longer? Slay me also,
that I may go and join those that have preceded
me." When this was told to Mahomet, he said,
"Yea, he shall join them, in the fire of Hell?"
the Prophet's Mosque: be left in the morning, and nothing was
ever beard of him afterwards.
page 278
Mahomet takes Rihana, a captive girl, for his concubine
Having sated his revenge, and drenched the market-place with the
blood of eight hundred victims,39
and having given command for the earth to be
smoothed over their remains, Mahomet returned
from the horrid spectacle to solace himself with the
charms of Rihana, whose husband and all whose
male relatives had just perished in the massacre.
He invited her to be his wife, but she declined;
and chose to remain (as indeed, having refused
marriage, she had no alternative) his slave or
concubine.40
She also declined the summons to conversion, and continued
in the Jewish faith, at which the Prophet was much concerned.
It is said, however, that she afterwards embraced Islam. She
lived with Mahomet till his death.
The women and children sold as slaves
A fifth of the booty was, as usual, reserved for
the Prophet, and the rest divided. From the fifth
page 279
In Najd, in exchange for horses
Mahomet made certain presents to his friends, of female slaves
and servants;41
and then sent the rest of the women and children to be sold
among the Bedouin tribes of Najd, in exchange for horses
and arms; for he kept steadily in view the advantage
of raising around him a body of efficient horse.42
Notice of these events in the Coran
The siege of Medina, and the massacre of the
Bani Coreitza, are noticed, and the Disaffected
bitterly reproached for their cowardice, during the
siege of Medina, in a passage of the Coran revealed
shortly after, and recited by Mahomet, as was customary,
from the pulpit:
Sura xxxiii
"O ye that believe! Call to mind the favour of God Upon
you, when Hosts came against you, and We sent against them a
Tempest and hosts which ye saw not; and God beholdeth that
which ye do.
"When they came at you from above you, and from beneath
you, and when the Sight was confused, and the hearts reached to
the throat, and ye imagined of God (strange) Imaginations. There
were the Faithful tried and made to tremble violently.
"And when the Disaffected said, and they in whose hearts
is a Disease43
said, God and his Prophet have promised only a Delusion:
"And when a Party amongst them said -- O men of Yathreb,
there is no security44
for you, wherefore retire; and a part of them asked leave of
the Prophet to depart, saying, Our Houses are without
protection; and they were not without protection, but they
desired only to escape.
"And if an entrance had been effected amongst them (by the
enemy) from some adjacent quarter, and they had been invited to
page 280
desist, they had surely consented thereto; then they had hot
remained in the same, but for a little.
"And verily they had heretofore covenanted with God, that
they would not turn their backs; and the covenant of God will
surely be inquired after.
"Say, - Flight will not profit you, were ye to flee from death
or slaughter; and if ye did, ye would enjoy this life but for a
little.
"Say, - Who is he that shall defend you from God, if he intend
Evil for you, or if he intend Mercy for you and they shall not
find for themselves besides God any patron, or any helper.
"Verily God knoweth those amongst you that turn (others)
aside, and those that say to their brethren, - Come hither to us;
and they go not to the battle excepting for a little.
"Covetous are they towards you. But when rear cometh
thou mayest see them looking towards thee, their eyes roiling
about, like unto him that is overshadowed with death. Then,
when the fear hath gone, they attack thee with sharp tongues,
being covetous of the best part (of the booty). These do not
believe; wherefore God hath made their works of no avail; and
with God that is easy.
"They thought that the Confederates would not depart. And
if the Confederates should come (again), they would wish
themselves were amongst the Arabs of the desert, asking
tidings of you. And if they were amongst you, they would not fight,
excepting a little.
"Verily, ye have in the Apostle of God an excellent example, to
him that hopeth in the Lord and in the last Day, and
remembereth God frequently.
"And when the Believers saw the Confederates, they said, -
This is what God and his Apostle promised us, and God and his
Apostle have spoken the Truth. And it only increased their
faith and submission.
"Of those that believe, some men have fulfilled that which they
covenanted with God; and some of them have finished their
course; and some of them are waiting; and they have not changed
their covenant in anywise.
"That God may reward those that fulfil (their covenant) on
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account of their Fidelity; and may chastise the Disaffected, if
he pleaseth, or may be turned unto them. Verily God is Forgiving
and Merciful.
"And God drove back the Infidels in their wrath. They
obtained no advantage. And God sufficeth for the Believers in
battle. God is strong and mighty.
"And he hath caused to descend from their strongholds the
Jews45 who assisted
them; and he struck terror into their hearts. A part ye
slaughtered, and ye made captive a part. And he hath
made you inherit their land, and their habitations,
and their wealth, and a land which ye had not trodden
upon46; and God is
over all things Powerful.47
These events greatly improved the position of Mahomet
In reviewing these transactions, it is evident that
the position of Mahomet had, at their close, become
greatly improved in strength and influence. The
whole weight of the Coreish and of the Ghatafanide
tribes, with all their mighty preparations, had been
successfully repelled, and that with hardly any loss.
The entire defence of Medina, by tacit consent, had
been conducted by Mahomet; notwithstanding the
ill-concealed disaffection of some of the inhabitants,
he was now the acknowledged Chief, as well as
Prophet, of the city. His negotiation with Uyeina
was no doubt a proof of his weakness at the moment,
and of distrust in his own cause; but, fortunately for
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him, it was hardly entered upon when, by the firmness
of the two Sads, it was broken off; and the
episode was lost sight of afterwards in the signal
success of the defence. We cannot, indeed, approve
the employment of Nueim to break up the confederacy by
falsehood and deception, but this perhaps
would hardly affect his character in Arab estimation.
Effect of the massacre of the B. Coreitza
The sanguinary fate of the Coreitza removed the
last remnant of open opposition, political or religious,
from the neigbourhood of Medina; and, though it did not at
the time escape criticism,48
yet it struck so great a terror into the hearts of all,
and the authority of the Prophet was already invested with so
mysterious and supernatural a sanction, that no one
dared openly to impugn it: and, moreover, the links
which bound this ill-fated tribe to the citizens of
Medina had begun to grow obsolete and feeble.
Its moral bearing on the character of Mahomet
That the massacre was savage and cruel, to a barbarous
and inhuman degree, it does not require any comment to prove.
The ostensible grounds upon which Mahomet proceeded were
purely political, for as yet he did not profess to force
men to join Islam, or to punish them for not embracing
it.49 It
may be admitted that a sufficient casus belli had
arisen. The compact with the Coreitza was indeed
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weak and precarious.50
Mahomet's policy towards
the Jews, from a very early period after his arrival
at Medina, had been harsh and oppressive; he had
attacked and expatriated two whole tribes on very
doubtful grounds; he had caused the assassination
of several Jews in so perfidious a manner, as to
create universal distrust and alarm; after the murder
of Kab and the incautious permission then given
to slaughter the Jews indiscriminately, he himself
felt that the existing treaty had been practically
set aside, and, to restore confidence, he had entered
into a new compact.51
All these circumstances
must plead against the strength of obligation which
bound the Coreitza to his cause. They, moreover,
had stood by the second compact at a time when
they might fairly have set it aside, and joined
the Bani Nadhir. That they now hearkened to
the overtures of the Coreish, though a proof of
want of prudence and foresight, was no more
than Mahomet might have expected, as the result
of his own hostile and treacherous conduct. Still
the Coreitza had joined his enemies at a critical
period, and he had now a good cause for warring
against them. He had, furthermore, fair grounds of
political necessity for requiring them perhaps even
to quit altogether a vicinity where they must have
continued to form a dangerous nucleus of disaffection,
and possibly of renewed attack upon Medina. We
page 284
might even concede that the conduct of their leaders
amounted to treason against the city, and warranted
a severe retribution. But the indiscriminate slaughter
of eight hundred men, and the subjugation of the
women and children of the whole tribe to slavery,
can be recognized by no civilized people otherwise
than as an act of enormous ferocity. The plea of
Divine ratification or command may allay the
scruples of the credulous Moslem; but it will be
summarily rejected by others, who call to mind that
the same authority was now habitually produced
for personal ends, and for the justification event of
unhallowed actions. However much Mahomet may
have deluded himself into the vain belief that he
had the Divine sanction for that which he did, a
candid and severe examination of his heart must have
shown him that these so-called revelations were but
the counterpart of his own will, that they followed
the course of his own longings and desires, and that
he was himself responsible for their shape and
colour. The butchery of the Coreitza leaves a dark
stain of infamy upon the character of Mahomet.
Death-bed of Sad ibn Muadz
Before closing this chapter, I will follow to its
end the career of Sad ibn Muadz. After delivering
himself of the bloody decree, he was conducted back upon
his ass to Rufeida's tent. But the excitement was
fatal to him; the wound burst forth anew. Mahomet
hastened to the side of his bed: embracing him, he
placed the dying man's head upon his knee and
prayed thus : -- "O Lord! Verily Sad hath laboured
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in thy service. He hath believed in thy Prophet,
and hath fulfilled his covenant. Wherefore do
Thou, O Lord, receive his Spirit with the best reception
wherewith Thou receivest a departing soul!"
Sad heard the words, and in faltering accents
whispered, - "Peace be on thee, O Apostle of God!
- Verily I testify that thou art the Prophet
of the Lord." When he had breathed his last, they
carried home the corpse.52
After the forenoon prayer,
Mahomet proceeded to join the burial; he reached
the house as they were washing the body. The
mother of Sad, weeping loudly, gave vent to her
grief in appropriate Arab verse. They chided her
for reciting poetry on such an occasion; but Mahomet
The tale of Sad is surrounded with supernatural associations.
For instance, when Mahomet went to be present at the washing of
the body, he walked so rapidly that the people could scarcely
keep up with him : - "You would have thought the thongs of
their sandals would have broken, and their mantles fallen from
their shoulders, they hurried so fast." when they asked the
reason, he replied: "Verily, I fear lest the Angels should reach his house
before us, as they got before us unto Hantzala; " - alluding to the
burial of the latter, and the supposed washing of his corpse by
the angels. Then there are numerous legends about the angels
crowding into the room where the corpse was laid out, and one of
them spreading out his wing for Mahomet to sit upon. K. Wackidi,
204. See Inrod. vol. i. p. lxv.
page 286
met interposed, saying: "Leave her alone; all other
poets lie but she?" The bier was then carried forth,
Mahomet helping to bear it for the first thirty or forty
and his burial.
yards. Notwithstanding that Sad was so large and
corpulent a man, the bier was reported to be marvellously light.
The Disaffected said: "We have never
heard of a corpse lighter in the bier than that of Sad:
know ye why this is? It is because of his judgment
against the Bani Coreitza."53
Mahomet hearing the
rash remark, turned aside its point by a mysterious
explanation, which was eagerly caught up by his followers:-
"The angels are carrying the bier, therefore
it is light in your hands. Verily the Throne on high
doth vibrate on account of Sad, and the portals of
heaven are opened, and he is attended by seventy
thousand angels that never trod the earth before."
I believe all these traditions to hang upon the reply of
Mahomet as given below to the Disaffected, viz. that the
bier was light, because supported by a crowd of Angels.
Although, in fact, it may be said with truth that there was hardly
any more fighting with the Coreish after this date, yet the prayer
is evidently an after-thought. So far as the author of
the Coran is concerned (and the Moslems refer the authorship to the
page 287
The long procession, with Mahomet at the head,
wended its way slowly to Backi al Gharcad, the
burial-ground of the Mussulmans. When they
readied the spot, four men descended into the grave,
and lowered the body into its place. At this
moment the colour of Mahomet changed, and his
countenance betrayed strong emotion. But he
immediately recovered himself, and gave praise to
God. Then he three times uttered the Takbir,
"Great is the Lord!" and the whole concourse,
which filled the burial-ground to overflowing, took
up the words, until the place re-echoed with the
shout. Some of the people asked him concerning
his change of colour, and he explained it to them
thus: "At that moment the grave had become
strait for your comrade, and the sides thereof closed
in upon him. Verily, if any one could have escaped
the straitening of the tomb it had been Sad. Then
the Lord gave him expansion therein." The
mother of Sad drew near, desiring to look into the
grave, and they forbade her. But Mahomet said,
"Suffer her to look." So she looked in, before the
body was covered over: As she gazed on the
remains of her son, she said, "I commit thee unto the
Lord;" and Mahomet comforted her. Then he
went aside and sat down near the grave, while they
built it over with bricks, and filled in the earth.
Deity) it was at the time quite uncertain whether Medina might
not again be besieged by the Coreish, in proof of which see
Sura xxxiii. 20.
page 288
When the whole was levelled, and the tomb
sprinkled with water, the prophet again drew near
and standing over the grave, prayed once more for
the departed chief. Then he turned, and returned to
his home.
The Life of Mahomet, Volume III [Table of Contents]