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The central messenger and prophet in Islam; the receiver and transmitter of Gods message to mankind, as recorded in the Holy Koran, the principal religious text for Muslims. Muhammad has no religious importance in Christianity and Judaism, and is considered not to be a prophet by adherents of these two religions, while Muhammad's position in later religions, like Baha'i, resemble what is found in Islam.
The
Sources The material is extensive, and the presentation of Muhammad in the early texts is straightforward: different versions of stories are presented, and Muhammad himself is presented as a human being with both his good and his bad sides (the latter have been used by opponents of Islam to present Muhammad as a false prophet). Except for certain passages, the material bears few traces of being legendary, and was first told by people who knew Muhammad as a man, and told to people of the same époque and cultural environment. These are very good reasons for us to treat the material on Muhammad's life as historical sources, and even more, as good historical sources. Sadly, many Western historians have under-evaluated the efforts put down in the compilations available, but more respect is paid by scientists of our time.
Muhammad
As A Normal Man (570-610) As Muhammad's father, Abdullah, died before the birth of his son, and his mother, Amina, when he was 6, Muhammad was in the care of his grandfather Abd al-Muttalib for two years, and then with his uncle Abu Talib, until he reached mature age.
Muhammad is by Muslim theologists not believed to have received any education, and in young age he started working with the caravans. It was while working as a trader, that Muhammad came to know the widow (and divorcee) Khadija, who was the owner of a caravan company where Muhammad was employed. At the age of 25 Muhammad married Khadija, then 40. Even though Khadija had children from both of her former marriages, she had 7 children with Muhammad.
Khadija died in 619, and soon Muhammad remarried. Unlike in his marriage with Khadija, he chose to have several wives, 9 are reported. While some of these wives were ways of knotting closer relations with powerful people in the society, and some were widows without economical support, Muhammad did provoke the death of husbands of wives.
The First Revelation (610) Muhammad was ordered to recite. The first fraction Muhammad received is believed to be the beginning of sura 96:
After this first revelation, no new one came for a period. Then they came back, and continued for the rest of Muhammad's life. The revelations changed in style during the 22 years of revelations, from more poetic in the beginning to more prosaic later, and in the content, it changed from warnings on what was to come to mankind from God if man didn't turn in direction of God's will, to regulations on behavior and rules for the society. These changes came parallel to changes in the position of Islam in the society. In the beginning when only a small group of people were Muslims, the need for spreading the message was prevailing. Later, from the time when Muhammad moved to Medina, and got a leading position in the town, the need for rules for a society were more important. The ordering of the elements of the revelations are not chronological to their disclosure to Muhammad, and elements from early times are often arranged together with later elements.
Conversions And Resistance (610-619) Muhammad also enjoyed the protection of his uncle and earlier guardian, Abu Talib. But Abu Talib and Khadija both died in 619, and from this time on, Muhammad's position was under strong threat. The process of converting was slow in the early years, and he was strongly opposed by other Meccans, who accused him of little respect for the religion of the forefathers, which had some resemblance with Islam, but was a polytheistic religion. One story, rejected by many Muslims, yet our sources are Muslim, is the one of the "Satanic verses." Muhammad once added one ayat where three former Meccan goddesses, Al-Lat, Al-'Uzza and Manat, were mentioned as intermediaries, in sura 53.
19 Have you though of Al-Lat and Al-'Uzza, 20 and Manat, the third of the? 21 These are intermediaries exalted whose intercession is to be hoped for. 22 Such as they do not forget
The ayats 21-22 are not in our present Koran, where this text now is found:
21 Is it the male for you, and female for him? 22 That would have been a crooked division!
There are two interpretations of this: many Muslim scholars doubt the sources, yet they do not totally reject that there is something to the story. Many others, among them Western scholars, believe that the first version was an attempt, and a successful one, to entice the Meccans to join Islam. The name of the verses "Satanic verses" come from an explanation found among some Muslim scholars, that the two first verses were given to Muhammad by Satan.
No matter how one interprets this, all scholars seem to agree that the difficult conditions of the first few Muslims are reflected in this story.
The Hijra (Hicret) (622) Muhammad is believed to have been invited to Yathrib, as a hakim, a judge, and here he could establish the first Muslim community, and Muhammad served as the head of the leaders of the other communities of Yathrib. Soon after, Yathrib started to be called madinatu r-rasûl, 'the city of the messenger'.
Medina And The Rise To Power (622-630) Muhammad enforced his position in the region, and in particular in Yathrib, through successful military campaigns, like the one at Badr in 624, and the defense battles in Uhud (where the Muslims faced a slight defeat) in 625 and Ditsh in 627. Neighboring tribes started to enter into agreements with Muhammad, and in 628, after Muhammad tried to perform the pilgrimage, Hajj he concluded a treaty with the Meccans, that allowed the Muslims to enter Mecca the following year for performing. In 630 Muhammad managed to take control over Mecca without any resistance. A general amnesty was granted to all Qurayshis, Muhammad's former enemies, even if they did not convert to Islam.
Ruler Of Hijaz And The Muslims (630-632) Muhammad is equally considered a manifestation of God in Baha'i and Babism, two religions that have grown out of Islam. Both of these religions revere Muhammad highly, but have their focus on the later revelations of Bab and Baha'ullah, both of the 19th century.
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