返回总目录
Life of Mahomet [Volume IV Chapter 35]
page 293
THE BIOGRAPHY OF MAHOMET, AND RISE OF ISLAM.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIFTH.
The Burial of Mahomet.
Grave prepared in Ayesha's house. Tuesday, 14th Rabi, 9th June.
WHEN Abu Bakr had ended his speech, preparations
were made for the burial of the Prophet. The people
differed regarding the place most fitting for his grave.
Some urged that the body should be buried in the
Mosque close by the pulpit; and some, beneath the
spot where as Imam he had so long led the daily
prayers; while others wished to inter him beside
his followers in the grave-yard of Backi al Gharcad.
Abu Bakr, with whom as Caliph the matter now
rested, approved none of these proposals: for, said
he, "I have heard it from the lips of Mahomet
himself, that in whatsoever spot a Prophet dieth,
there also should he be buried." He therefore
gave command that the grave should be dug where
the body was still lying within the house of Ayesha.
It was dug in the vaulted fashion
Another question arose as to the form in which
the tomb should be prepared. Two fashions prevailed
in Arabia: in one kind, the bottom or pavement
of the grave was flat ;1 in the other, the
bottom was partly excavated for the reception of
page 294
the body, a ledge being left on one side of the vault or cavity.1 The former was the plan followed at Mecca, the latter at Medina; and for each there was a separate grave-digger. Both were now summoned. The man of Medina first appearing, dug the grave in the vaulted form; and so this fashion is followed by all Mahometans to the present day.
The body is visited by the people. Oration of Abu Bakr and Omar
The body of Mahomet remained upon the bier for about four-and-twenty hours, namely, from the afternoon or the evening of Monday to the same hour on the following day. On Tuesday, it was
visited by all the inhabitants of the city. They entered in companies by the door of the apartment which opened into the Mosque; and, after gazing once more at the countenance of their Prophet and praying over his remains, retired by the opposite entrance. The room was crowded to the utmost at the time when Abu Bakr and Omar entered together. They prayed as follows : “Peace be upon thee, O Prophet of God; and the mercy of the Lord, and his blessing! We bear testimony that the Prophet of God hath delivered the message revealed to him; hath fought in the ways of the Lord until that God brought forth his religion crowned with victory; bath fulfilled his words, commanding that he alone is to be worshiped in his Unity; hath drawn us to himself, and been kind and tender-hearted to believers; hath sought
page 295
no recompence for delivering to us the Faith, neither
hath he sold it for a price at any time!" And all
the people said, Amen! Amen!" The women followed
in companies, when the men had departed;
and then even the children crowded round the bier
for a last look at their Prophet's face.
Burial
In the evening the final rites were paid to the
remains of Mahomet. A red mantle, worn by him,
was first spread as a soft covering at the bottom of
the grave; then the body was lowered into its last
resting-place by the same near relatives who had
washed and laid it out. The vault was built over
with unbaken bricks, and the grave filled up.1
Ayesha continued to occupy an apartment next to the grave
Ayesha continued as before to live in her house
thus honoured as the Prophet's cemetery. She
I must not omit a tradition which seems to me to illustrate the
scepticism of Omar regarding the Prophet's death. Omm Salma,
one of his wives, says,- "I did not really believe that Mahomet
was dead, till I heard the sound of the pickaxes at the digging of
the grave, from the next room." Ayesha also says that the sound
of the pickaxes was the first intimation she had of the
approaching interment. She had apparently retired, with the other wives,
into an adjoining apartment. K. Wackidi, 162 ½.
page 296
occupied a room adjoining that which contained
the grave, but partitioned off from it. When her father
died, he was buried close by the Prophet in the
same apartment, and in due time Omar also. It is
related of Ayesha that she used to visit the room
containing the graves of the Prophet and her father,
unveiled; but after the burial of Omar there (as if
a stranger had been introduced), she never entered
that room unless veiled and fully dressed.1
Wackidi tells us that there was no wall at first round
Mahomet's
house. Omar surrounded it with a low wall, which Abdallah ibn
Zobeir increased. K. Wackidi, 160 ½.
The Life of Mahomet, Volume IV [Table of Contents]