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Life of Mahomet [Volume IV Chapter 30]
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THE BIOGRAPHY OF MAHOMET, AND RISE OF ISLAM.
CHAPTER THIRTIETH.
Embassies of Submission received at Medina. Ninth and Tenth Years of the Hegira A.D. 630, 631.
Ętat. 62, 63.
Numerous embassies during the Tenth year of the Hegira.
THE life of Mahomet was now drawing to a close;
but his work was nearly completed. The proof
this was amply shewn "in the stream of submissive
embassies which from all quarters of Arabia now
flowed uninterruptedly towards Medina.
Embassies from the south and east follow the submission of Tayif,
The adhesion of Tayif and the destruction of its
famous idol produced a wide and powerful effect in
the south and east of the Peninsula. Within a few
months after those events, and before the close of the
ninth year of the Hegira, many of the chiefs and
princes of Yemen and Mahra, of Oman, Bahrein, and
Yemama, had signified by letter or by embassy their
conversion to Islam and submission to the Prophet.
Conversion of the province of Oman; Dzul Cada, VIII. February, 631.
Some of them had been converted even earlier.
On his return from the siege of Tayif; towards the
close of the eighth year of the Hegira,1 Mahomet
sent Amru with a despatch to Jeyfar, king of Oman,
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summoning him and his brother to make profession
of the true faith. At first they gave answer
"that they would be the weakest among the Arabs,
if they made another man possessor of their property."
But as Amru was about to depart, they
repented, and calling him back, embraced Islam. The
people followed their example, and without demur
paid their tithes to Amru, who continued till the
Prophet's death to be his representative in Oman.1
and or the Himyarite princes of Mahra and Yemen;
At the same time, Ayash ibn Harith was deputed
to Abd Khelal and other Himyarite princes of the
Christian faith in Yemen.2 He carried with him a
letter in which Mahomet expressed his belief in Moses
and Jesus, but denied the Trinity and the divinity
of Christ.3 Their reply, accepting the new faith
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with all its conditions, reached the Prophet after
his return from Tabuk; and he acknowledged it in
a despatch, praising the alacrity of their faith, setting
forth the legal demands of Islam, and commending
his tithe collectors to their favour.1
book they could adduce against Islam. When they spoke (or
perhaps recited their belief in Islam) in the Himyar tongue
he was to desire them to translate what they said into
Arabic. (See Vol i. Introduction, p. x.) Then he was to repeat
Sura xlii. 14th and 15th verses, in which it is asserted that there
is no real controversy between Mahomet and Christians. A
strange part of the instructions was, to call upon the people,
after
they believed, to produce three sticks,- two of which were gilded
white and yellow, and one a black knotted cane,- which they used
to worship. These he was to burn publicly in the marketplace.
K.Wackidi, 55.
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and of Bahrein and Hejer.
Simultaneously with the mission of Amru, or a
little later,1 Mahomet sent Ala "the Hadhramite
towards the Persian Gulph with a letter to Mundzir
ibn Sawa, the chief of Bahrein. Mundzir at once
embraced Islam, and forwarded a reply to Mahomet
saying, "that of the people of Hejer to whom he
had read the Prophet's letter, some were delighted
with the new religion, but others displeased with it;
and that among his subjects there were Jews and
Magians, regarding whom he solicited instructions."
A rescript was granted by Mahomet securing Mundzir
which they are responsible. Thus it shall be with all Jews and
Christians who embrace Islam. But they that will not abandon
Judaism and Christianity, shall pay tribute, every adult male and
female, whether bond or free, a full dinar of the Munfar
standard,
or its equivalent in cloth. Whosoever shall pay this, is embraced
in the guarantee of God and his Apostle: whoever refuseth is
their enemy."
Then he commends his messengers, teachers, and tithe collectors,
to the Princes' good offices, - specifying Muadz as their
chief,
and desiring that the tithe and tribute should be made over to
him. He forbids oppression, "for Mahomet is the protector of
the poor as well as of the rich amongst you." The tithe is not
for Mahomet or his family : it is a means of purifying the
rest
of the giver's property, and is to be devoted to the poor and
the
wayfarer.
See also the account of the deputation from Hannadan, who
sang as they approached Mahomet,- "We have come to thee from
the plains of Al Rif; in the hot whirlwinds of summer and
kharif." (Kharif, "autumnal harvest," a word familiar to the
Indian administrator.) Mahomet's reply secured to them their
hills and dales, &c. Hishami, 483.
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in the government of his province so long as he
administered it well, and directing that tribute
should be levied from the Jews and Magians. To
the Magians he dictated a separate despatch, inviting
them to believe in die Coran :-- "If they
declined, toleration would be extended to them
on the payment of tribute; but in such case, their
women would not be taken in marriage by true
believers, nor would that which they killed be lawful
as food to any Moslem."1
Ala remained at the court
of Mundzir as the representative of Mahomet.
Embassies from the Bani Hanifa and other Christian tribes. End of A.H. IX; beginning of 631 A.D.
Among the tribes of Bahrein which sent embassies
to Medina before the close of the ninth year
of the Hegira, were the Bani Bakr, who had so
gloriously overthrown the forces of Persia twenty
years before2 ; the Abd al Cays; and the Bani
Hanifa, a Christian branch of the Bani Bakr, who
inhabited Yemama. One of the deputation from the
Bani Hanifa was Museilama, who, from what he
then saw, conceived the idea that he too might successfully
set up pretensions to be a Prophet. When
the customary presents were distributed amongst
them, the deputies solicited a share for him, saying
that he had been left behind to guard the baggage.
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Mahomet commanded that he should have the same
as the rest,- "for his position," he said," is none the
worse among you because of his present duty."
These words were afterwards converted by Museilama to his own ends.1
A Christian tribe desired to demolish its church
On the departure of the embassy, the Prophet gave
them a vessel with some water in it remaining over
from his own ablutions, and said to them: "When
ye reach your country, break down your church,
sprinkle its site with this water, and in place of it
build up a Mosque." These commands they carried
into effect, and abandoned Christianity without compunction.2 To another Christian tribe, as I have
shewn before, he prohibited the practice of baptism,
so that, although the adults continued to be nominally Christian, their children grew up with no profession but that of the Coran.3 It is no wonder
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that Christianity (which, as I have shewn before,
never had obtained in Arabia a firm and satisfactory
footing,) now warred against, and, where her adherents
remained faithful, reduced to tribute,-her distinctive
right prohibited wherever the professors
were passive and careless,- her churches demolished
and their sites purified before they could be used
again for worship by the Christian converts, - it is
no wonder that Christianity, thus insulted and
trampled under foot, languished, and soon disappeared
from the Peninsula.
Deputations from the South. Beginning of A.H. X. April and May, 632.
The tenth year of the Hegira opened with fresh
deputations from the south. The Bani Morad and
Zobeid, inhabiting the sea coast of Yemen, the
Bani Khaulan, who lived in the hilly country of
that name, and the Bani Bajila, were among the first
whose embassies appeared at Medina. The latter
tribe at Mahomet's command destroyed the famous
image of Dzul Kholasa, of which the Temple, from
the popularity of its worship, was called the "Kaaba
of Yemen."1
Submission of the Bani Azd and the people of Jorsh
About this time, a party of fifteen or twenty men
of the Bani Azd from Yemen2
presented themselves,
with Surad, one of their chiefs. This person was
recognized by Mahomet as the ruler of his clan,
and a commission was given to him to war against
the heathen tribes in his neighbourhood. The injunction
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was promptly fulfilled. After besieging
Jorsh, the chief city of the idolaters, for more than
a month without success, Surad made the feint of
retiring to a hill. The enemy falling into the snare
pursued him, and in a pitched battle sustained a
signal defeat. The people of Jorsh immediately
sent an embassy of submission to Medina.1
Chiefs of the Bani Kinda from Hadhramaut visit Medina
From Hadhramaut, two princes of the Bani
Kinda, Wail and Al Ashath, the former chief of
the coast, the latter of the interior, visited the Prophet at the head of a brilliant cavalcade, arrayed in
garments of Yemen stuff lined with silk. "Will ye
embrace Islam?" said Mahomet to them, after he
had received their salutations in the Mosque.-
"Yea; it is for that end we have come." "Then
why all this silk about your necks?" The silken
lining was forthwith torn out and cast aside. 2
To
mark his delight at the arrival of the embassy,
Mahomet desired Bilal to call aloud the summons
to general prayer.3
When the citizens were assembled,
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the Prophet introduced the strangers to
the congregation. "O People!" he said; "this is
Wail ibn Hejr, who hath come unto you from the
region of Hadhramaut, out of desire to embrace
Islam." He then presented Wail with a patent
securing him in his rights: "Since thou hast believed,
I confirm thee in possession of all thy lands and
fortresses. One part in every ten shall be taken from
thee: a just collector shall see to it. I guarantee that
thou shalt not be injured in this respect so long as
the faith endureth. The Prophet, and all believers,
shall be thine allies."1
Muavia, son of Abu Sofian,
was desired to carry Wail to his house and entertain
him there. On his way, the haughty prince displayed
what Mahomet styled "a remnant of heathenism." He would not allow Muavia to mount behind
him: the ground was scorching from the mid-day
sun, yet he refused the use even of his sandals to his
host, who was obliged to walk barefooted by the
camel:- "What would my subjects in Yemen say,"
he exclaimed in disdain, "if they heard that a common
man had worn the sandals of the king! Nay,
but I will drive the camel gently, and do thou walk
in my shade." Such insolent demeanour was altogether
foreign to the brotherhood of Islam: but
it was tolerated by Mahomet, for the accession was
too valuable to be imperilled.
Al Ashath marries Abu Bakr's daughter
The other chief, Al Ashath, sealed his adhesion
to the cause of Mahomet by marrying Omm Farwa,
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Abu Bakr's daughter. The marriage was not then
consummated, her parents declining that the bride
should leave them for so distant a home as Hadhramaut.1
Muadz sent forth at the head of a band of collectors of envoys to the south of Arabia.
The supremacy of Islam being thus widely recognized
in the south of Arabia, Mahomet sent forth
a band of officers charged with the instntction of the
people, and the collection of the public dues. Over
them he placed Muadz ibn Jabal, who had by this
time fulfilled his mission at Mecca.2. "Deal gently
with the people," said the Prophet to Muadz, as he
dismissed him to his new scene of labour, "and be
not harsh. Scare them not, but rather cheer. Thou
A member of the royal family in the deputation besought
Mahomet to pray that his stammer might be removed. This the
Prophet did, and appointed him a portion from the tithes or
Hadhramaut. Another tradition relates that this man was seized
with a paralytic affection on his way home. His followers came
and told Mahomet, who desired them to heat a needle and pierce
his eyelid with it; and this remedy healed him. Mahomet attributed
the illness to something which the chief must have said
after leaving Medina. K. Wackidi, 68.
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wilt meet with Jews and Christians who will ask thee,
What is the key of Paradise? Reply, Verily the key
of Paradise is to testify that there is no God but the
Lord alone. With him there is no partner."1
These
envoys of Mahomet were invested to some extent
with a judicial authority. Acceptance of the new
faith implied of necessity the simultaneous recognition
of its social and juridical institutions.
Every dispute must be brought to the test of the
Coran, or of the instructions of Mahomet, and the
exponents of these became, therefore, the virtual
judges of the land.2
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Najran submits to Khalid. Rabi 1st A.H. X. June, A.D. 6311
Towards the close of the Prophet's life, the sound
of war had almost died away at Medina. Only two
expeditions of a hostile character were undertaken
during the tenth year of the Hegira. The first,
under command of Khalid, set out against the Bani
Harith, of Najran, during summer. About a year
before, a deputation consisting of the bishop and
clergy of Najran had visited Mahomet, and (as I
have before recounted) had obtained terms of security
on the payment of tribute.2
Khalid was now
instructed to call on the rest of the people to embrace Islam; if they declined he was, after three
days, to attack and force them to submit. Having
reached his destination, he sent mounted parties in
all directions, with this proclamation, "Ye people!
Embrace Islam, and ye shall be safe." They all submitted, and professed their belief in the new faith.3
Mahomet in a despatch to Khalid acknowledged with
delight his report of these proceedings, and summoned
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him to return and bring with him a deputation from the Bani Harith. An embassy from the
tribe accordingly visited Medina, and were treated
with courtesy.1
Campaign of Ali to Yemen against the Bani Nakha &c. Ramadhan, A.H. X Dec. A.D. 631
As the Bani Nakha and some other tribes of the
Madhij2
stock in Yemen still held out, Ali was
sent in the winter at the head of three hundred
well equipped horse, to reduce them to submission.
Yemen had repeatedly sent forth armies to subdue
the Hejez; this was the first army the Hejez had
ever sent forth to conquer Yemen. Ali met with
but feeble opposition. His detachmpnts ravaged the
country all around, and returned with spoil of every
kind,-women, childreng camels, and flocks. Driven
to despair, the people drew together, and attacked
Ali with a general discharge of stones and arrows.
The Moslem line charged and put them to flight,
with the slaughter of twenty men. Ali held back
his troops from pursuit, and again summoned the
fugitives to accept his terms. This they now
hastened to do. The chiefs did homage, and pledged
that the people would follow their example. Ali
accepted their promise; he then retraced his steps
with the booty, and reaching Mecca in the spring,
joined Mahomet in his last pilgrimage. The Bani
Nakha fulfilled their pledge, and submitted themselves
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to Muadz, the Prophet's envoy in Yemen.
Two hundred of them set out to tender a personal
allegiance to Mahomet. It was the last deputation
received by him. They reached Medina at the
beginning of the eleventh year of the Hegira.1
Numerous embassies and despatches.
Numerous other embassies are described by the
Secretary of Wackidi, who has devoted a long chapter
to the subject, and a chapter also to the despatches
and rescripts of the Prophet. Those which I have
already described will afford a sufficient conception
of the whole; further detail would be tedious and
unprofitable. But one or two incidents of interest
connected with them may be subjoined.
The Bani Aamir ibn Sassaa, Abu Bera applies to Mahomet for a cure
The part played by the mini Aamir ibn Sassaa at
the massacre of Bir Mauna, will be in the memory
of the reader.2
This tribe had taken little share
with the rest of the Bani Hawazin (of which they
formed a branch) in the battle of Honein. It maintained,
under its haughty chieftain Aamir ibn Tofail,
an independent neutrality. The aged chief of the
tribe, Abu Bera, still exhibited friendly feelings
towards Mahomet, but with advancing years his
influence had passed away. Labouring under all
internal ailment, he sent his nephew Labid, the
poet of the tribe, to the Prophet, with the present of
a beautiful horse, and an urgent request that he
would point out a cure for his disease. Mahomet
declined the gift, saying courteously, "If I could ever
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accept the offering of an idolater it would be that
of Abu Bera." Then taking up a clod of earth, he
spat upon it, and directed that Abu Bera should
dissolve it in water, and drink the mixture. Tradition
tells us that when he had done this, he recovered
from his sickness.1
Interview of Aamir ibn Tofail with Mahomet, Conversion of the Bani Aamir. A.H. X. A.D. 631, 632.
The following year Aamir ibn Tofail, at the
solicitation of his tribe, presented himself before
Mahomet, and sought to obtain advantageous terms.
"What shall I have," he asked, "if I believe?"
"That which other believers have," replied Mahomet,
"with the same responsibilities." "Wilt
thou not give me the rule after thee?" "Nay, that is
not for thee, nor for thy tribe." "Then assign unto
me the Nomad tribes; and do thou retain the rest."
"This," said Mahomet, "I cannot do; but I will give
thee the command over the cavalry, for thou excellest
as a horseman." Aamir turned away in disdain:
"Doth this man not know," he cried, "that I can
fill his land from one end to the other with troops,
both footmen and horse?" Mahomet was alarmed
at the threat, for the Bani Aamir were a formidable
tribe; he prayed accordingly for deliverance from
this foe: "O Lord! defend me against Aamir ibn
Tofail. O Lord! guide his tribe unto the truth;
and save Islam from his stratagems!"
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The haughty chieftain never reached his home;
he sickened by the way, and died miserably in a
deserted hut.1 The Bani Aamir shortly after gave
in their adhesion to the Prophet.
Prejudices of the Bani Jufi
The Bani Jufi, a tribe inhabiting Yemen, had a
deeply-rooted prejudice against eating the heart of
any animal. Cays, one of their chief men, came to
Mahomet with his brother, and professed belief in
the Coran. They were told that their faith was
imperfect until they broke through their heathenish
scruples, and a roasted heart was placed before them.
Cays took it up and ate it: trembling violently.
Mahomet; satisfied with the test of his sincerity,
presented him with a patent which secured him in
the rule over his people.2 But before Cays and his
brother left the presence of Mahomet, the conversation turned upon the guilt of infanticide: "Our
mother Muleika," said they, "was full of good deeds
and charity; but she buried a little daughter alive.
What is her condition now?" "The burier and
The text chiefly follows the Secretary, p 60 ½. Hishami adds
the popular story, that Aamir visited Mahomet with the design of
assassinating him; but that Arbad, who was to deliver the stroke
while Aamir engaged the Prophet in conversation, was restrained
by a supernatural power: p.419. The tale is apocryphal. It is
of the same class as that described in vol. i. p. lxxx.
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the buried are both in hell," replied the Prophet.
The brothers turned away in wrath. "Come back,"
Mahomet cried; "my own mother, too, is there with
yours." They would not listen. "This man," they
said, as they departed, "hath not only made us eat
the heart of animals, but saith that our mother is in
hell: who would follow him?"
Two of their chiefs cursed by Mahomet for robbing his tithe camels
On their way home, they met one of Mahomet's
followers returning to Medina with a herd of camels
which had been collected as tithe. They seized his tithe
the man, left him bound, and carried off the camels.
Mahomet was greatly offended; and he entered the
names of the robbers in the curse (the repetition of
which seems still to have been kept up) against
the perpetrators of the massacre at Bir Mauna.1
The Life of Mahomet, Volume IV [Table of Contents]