Did you know?

  • Thread starter Thread starter ajr
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies 49
  • Views Views 12K
Did you know?

The Islamic concept of God is that He is loving, merciful, and compassionate. But Islam also teaches that He is just and swift in punishment. Nevertheless, Allah once said to Prophet Muhammad, "My mercy prevails over my wrath." Islam teaches a balance between fear and hope, protecting one from both complacency and despair.
 
Did you know...

Jesus (a.s) is mentioned more often in the Quran than Muhammad (SAW)
 
Did you know....

Tomorrow is never promised to anyone, but standing infront of Allah on the day of Judgement is
 
Did you know?

Muslims do not believe in the concept of "vicarious atonement" but rather believe in the law of personal responsibility. Islam teaches that each person is responsible for his or her own actions. On the Day of Judgment Muslims believe that every person will be resurrected and will have to answer to God for their every word, thought, and deed. Consequently, a practicing Muslim is always striving to be righteous.
 
Did you know?

The word "jihad" does not mean "holy war". Instead, it means the inner struggle that one endures in trying to submit their will to the will of God. Some Muslims may say they are going for "jihad" when fighting in a war to defend themselves or their fellow Muslims, but they only say this because they are conceding that it will be a tremendous struggle. But there are many other forms of jihad, which are more relevant to the everyday life of a Muslim such as the struggles against laziness, arrogance, stinginess, or the struggle against a tyrant ruler or against the temptation of Satan, or against one's own ego, etc.
 
Did you know...

The Prophet used to teach children that failure doesnt exist.

Narrated Anas (r.a): I served the Prophet for years, and he never said to me, 'Uff' (word denoting impatience) and never blamed me by saying, 'Why did you do so or why didnt you do so?' (Kitab al Adab, Sahih Bukhari (Volume 8:64)
 
Did you know....

Salahudeen Ayubi was 14 years old when he got married...
 
Did you know?

English translations of the Quran head the American best-seller list...
 
Did you know?

Abdullah Ibn Zubair (RA) was the first baby boy to be born after Hijrah. His Father was Zubair (RA) and his mother was Asma (RA). His aunt (mother's sister) was none other than Ummul Mu'mineen Aaiysha (RA) and his grand father was Abu Bakr Siddique (RA)
 
Did you know....

After taking Algeria from the Ottoman Caliphate in 1830 CE, the French army raped thousands of Muslim women until 1962 CE...

*Historians predict the number to be higher than 50 000*
 
Last edited:
According to Historians her name was Ismat ad-Din Khatun, unfortunately i dont know her age...
 
Ismat ad-Din Khatun

Ismat ad-Din was also the name of the Mamluk sultana more commonly known as Shajar al-Durr.ʿIṣmat ad-Dīn Khātūn (Arabic: '''عصمة الدين خاتون'''; died January 26, 1186), also known as Asimat, was the daughter of Mu'in ad-Din Unur, regent of Damascus, and wife of two of the greatest Muslim generals of the 12th century, Nur ad-Din Zangi and Saladin.

Ismat ad-Din is a laqab (the descriptive part of an Arabic name) meaning "purity of the faith"; Khatun is an honorific meaning "lady" or "noblewoman". Her given name (ism) is unknown. Her father became regent of Damascus in 1138, and ruled the city on behalf of a series of young emirs of the Burid dynasty. During this time, Damascus's chief rivals to the north, Aleppo and Mosul, were united under the rule of the Zengid dynasty. Damascus had maintained an unsteady alliance with the crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem, but in 1147, Mu'in ad-Din negotiated an alliance with the Zengid emir of Aleppo, Nur ad-Din, who married Ismat ad-Din as part of the agreement. The next year, the Second Crusade besieged Damascus, and Mu'in ad-Din was forced to recognize Nur ad-Din, who had come to his rescue against the crusaders, as overlord of the city. Ismat ad-Din Khatun's father died in 1149 and her husband gained complete control over Damascus by 1154.

When Nur ad-Din died in 1174, King Amalric I of Jerusalem took advantage of the situation and besieged the city of Banias. Ismat offered him a bribe to lift the siege, but, hoping for a larger offer, Amalric continued the siege for two weeks, until finally accepting the money along with the release of twenty Christian prisoners. William of Tyre describes Ismat as having "courage beyond that of most women" in this matter. Nur ad-Din's general Saladin had meanwhile gained control over Egypt, and claimed Damascus as his successor; he legitimized this claim by marrying Ismat at-Din in 1176. She was apparently not his only wife. However, by the time she died in 1186, Saladin was writing letters to her every day; as he was himself recovering from a lengthy illness at the time, news of her death was kept from him for three months.

She had no children with either Nur ad-Din or Saladin. In Damascus she was the patron of numerous religious buildings, including a madrasa and a mausoleum for her father. She was buried in the Jamaa' al-Jadid in Damascus.
 
Did you know....

From the 8th Century until the 16th Century

THE MUSLIMS..

were the masters of ...

Mathematics,
Physics,
Biology,
Medicine,
Science,
Military,
Politics,
History,
Commerce and Travel,
Architecture,
Art,
Economics...etc

I think there is a certain irony to this, seeing as a lot of Muslim preachers like talking about striving for the hereafter rather than the dunya.

The pen was certainly mightier than the sword.. At times.
 
Did you know...

In 952 CE, the Shia broke Hajarul Aswad (the stone from heaven), into 7 pieces

(The Abbasid Caliph paid a huge ransom to the Shia to get the pieces of the stone back.)
 
Did you know...

The American Army, unable to take the City of Fallujah from Al Qaeda and the muslim resistance, bombarded the city with DEPLETED URANIUM in 2004...

Hundreds of thousands of muslims were subjected to toxic poison
Thousand muslim babies were born deformed due to exposure

(Many Historians consider the legacy of Fallujah to be far worse than Hiroshima)
 
Did you know...

When the Prophet Muhammad and the muslims destroyed the pagan statues in Mecca. It was a Glorious Islamic Act BUT when the men today destroy the same pagan statues it is an act of Barbarity and it is an un-Islamic act??
 
^ The current Kaaba is also not exactly based on the foundation of Abraham.

Did you know: The entirety of humanity was given life during the lifetime of Hazrat Adam (pbuh) and gave witness to Allah? This can be thought of as a precursor to Judgement Day.And @ when your Lord took from the children of Adam - from their loins - their descendants and made them testify of themselves, [saying to them], "Am I not your Lord?" They said, "Yes, we have testified." [This] - lest you should say on the day of Resurrection, "Indeed, we were of this unaware." (Quran 7:172);
 

Similar Threads

Back
Top