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  1. Banu Quraysh (by marriage) Jaʿda bint al-Ashʿath ( Arabic: جعدة بنت الأشعث) (Full name: Jaʿda bint al-Ashʿath ibn Qays al-Kindī) was the wife of Hasan ibn Ali. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] Few details about her early life and biography are known. She was of Arab origin from the tribe of Kinda .

    • Isma'il ibn Ya'qub, Ishaq ibn Ya'qub, Abu Bakr ibn Ya'qub, Muhammad ibn Abbas, Qariba bint Abbas
    • Hasan ibn Ali (widowed), Ya'qub ibn Talha (widowed), Abbas ibn Abd Allah ibn Abbas
    • Bint al-Ash'ath
    • Lineage
    • Marriage
    • Killing Imam Al-Hasan
    • After Imam Al-Hasan

    There is no mention in historical books about the birth of Ja'da, but about her lineage, it is mentioned that her father Ash'ath b. Qays al-Kindi was among famous people in early decades of Islam and her mother was Umm Farwa, Abu Bakr's sister. Abu al-Faraj Isfahani said, "It is said that she had names including Sukayna, Sha'tha' and 'Ayisha but he...

    Al-Baladhuri believed that Ash'ath b. Qays had a hypocrite role in this marriage. He believed that Imam Ali (a) had considered the daughter of Sa'id b. Qays named "Umm 'Imran" for the wife of his son al-Hasan (a), but Sa'id consulted his brother Ash'ath about that and Ash'ath directed him so that Sa'id gave his daughter to son of Ash'ath and the ma...

    According to Shia and Sunni reports, Ja'da was the one who killed Imam al-Hasan (a). Al-Sakhawi quoted from Ibn 'Abd al-Barr saying, "Due to her hatred toward Imam al-Hasan (a), Ja'da poisoned him. Shi'a sources have said that Mu'awiya made plot and promised Ja'da with financial helps and marriage with his son, Yazid, and encouraged her to poison I...

    Abu al-Faraj wrote, "Mu'awiya fulfilled his financial promise and sent a hundred thousand Dirhams for Ja'da, but did not accept that she marries Yazid. About this, Mu'awiya said, 'I am afraid you do to my son what you did in poisoning the son of the Prophet (s).'"

  2. Ja'da is charged in some sources for poisoning and murdering al-Hasan, though the historian Asad Ahmed notes this "is very likely an elaboration of ʿAlīd propaganda against al-Ash'ath". After Ali was assassinated in January 661, Mu'awiya soon after gained general recognition as caliph.

  3. 114 Views. SHARE. Al-Ashʿath ibn Qays al-Kindī was a chief of the Kinda tribe of Hadhramawt in Yemen. According to some historical reports, his teknonym was Abu Muhammad and his original name was Ma’dikarib, ibn Qays but he was popularly known as Al-Ash’ath (meaning, ‘the dishevelled’) because he was known to have dishevelled hair.

  4. 16 set 2021 · Ja'da bint Al-Ash'ath poisoned Imam Hasan (a). Why did Imam marry her and how did Imam Ali (a) allow this? Sheikh Mohammed Al-Hilli explains. #ImamHasan.

    • 7 min
    • 12,2K
    • Noor Islamic Education
  5. Abd al-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn al-Ash'ath (Arabic: عبد الرحمن بن محمد بن الأشعث, romanized: ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Muḥammad ibn al-Ashʿath; died 704), commonly known as Ibn al-Ash'ath after his grandfather, was a prominent Arab nobleman and military commander during the Umayyad Caliphate, most notable for ...

  6. German. Why did Imam Ali, alayhi as-salam, Amir al-Mu'minin, marry his son Imam al-Hasan to Ja'dah. Why? Knowing this family and its negative, evil status. Let's look at the story narrated to us by Al-Baladhari', one of the historians, narrates what happened. Imam Amir al-Mu'minin, had a companion by the name of Saee'd Ibn Qays.