Muhammad, '; also Mohammed' and other variants,Mahomet etc.; Turkish: Muhammed; for the Arabic pronunciation (c. 571 – 632) established the religion of Islam and the Muslim community. This does not mean that Muhammad was the first to propagate the submission to one god (= monotheism). Here, "Islam" and "Muslim" are used in their active lexical senses, not'' in their etymological senses. Muslims believe him to have been God's final prophet, to whom the Qur'an was revealed. According to traditional Muslim biographers, Muhammad was born c. 570 in Mecca and died June 8 632 in Medina, both in the Hejaz region of present day Saudi Arabia.
The name Muhammad etymologically means "the praised one" in Arabic, being a passive participle from the root ' "to praise". Within Islam, Muhammad is known as "The Prophet" and "The Messenger". The Qur'an () also refers to him as the "Seal of the Prophets" (Arabic: '). In verse 61:6 he is referred to as Ahmad, which in Arabic means 'more praiseworthy'.
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Born ibn `Abdu'llah ibn `Abdu'l-Muttalib, the man who later came to be called Muhammad was said to have initially been a merchant who traveled widely. Muhammad often retreated to a cave in the mountains outside Mecca, for contemplation. Muslims believe that in 610, at about the age of forty, while in a cave in the mountain called Hira, he was visited by the Angel Gabriel, who commanded him to recite the verses sent by God. These verses were later collected as part of the Qur'an (which was revealed to him over a period of about twenty-three years until his death).
He expanded his mission as a prophet, publicly preaching strict monotheism and warning of a Day of Judgment when all humans shall be held responsible for their deeds. He did not completely reject Judaism and Christianity, two other monotheistic faiths known to the Arabs, but said that he had been sent by God in order to complete and perfect those teachings.
Many in Mecca resented his preaching and persecuted him and his followers. Eventually, in 622, he was forced to move out of Mecca in a journey known to Muslims as the Hijra (the Migration). He settled in the area of Yathrib (now known as Medina) with his followers, where he was the leader of the first avowedly Muslim community.
The Meccans started attacking Medina to destroy the Islamic state. Even though the attacking armies were several times stronger in numbers and in weaponry, Muslims defeated these invaders every time they attacked. Muslims finally attacked Mecca under the leadership of Mohammad after eight years of Hijra and took control of the city. The Muslims subsequently removed all idols from the Kaaba. Most of the townspeople accepted Islam. Deputations began to come in from other Arabian tribes. The conditions for their adherence were: the acceptance of Islam, the destruction of idols, and the payment of the 'zakat' (tax) for the support of the Muslim community. In March 632, Mohammed led the pilgrimage, the Hajj. On returning to Medina he fell ill and died after a few days, on June 8.
Under Muhammad's immediate successors, the Islamic empire expanded into Palestine, Syria, Mesopotamia, Persia, Egypt, North Africa, and Iberia. Later conquests, commercial contact between Muslims and non-Muslims, and missionary activity spread Islam over much of the Eastern Hemisphere, including China and Southeast Asia.
In the immediate aftermath of the death of Muhammad, Muslims generally kept records orally, rather than in written form. The Qur'an itself, which literally translates as "Recitiation", was originally maintained by the "Hafiz", people who memorised the entire Qur'an (later written to parchment and animal skins by scribes). Similarly, for some time, the immediate or contemporary biographical records of Muhammad, his "Sunnah", were passed on orally.
When they were written, most biographical sources of Muhammad were written by Muslims and were recorded in writing centuries after his death. Only fragmentary references in non-Muslim historical records from the seventh century are available, and no inscriptions or archaeological remains survive from that time.
One of very few known non-Islamic contemporary accounts of this time and place, the Doctrina Iacobi, records a Judeo-Arab preacher whom it does not name proclaiming the advent of a Jewish Messiah, and states that the Jews and Arabs were allies against the Byzantines, which does not correspond with the Hadiths, and it also states that this Messiah's power was "diminished and torn asunder", which is almost entirely opposite to the traditions. Other people claiming to be Prophets appeared in the Mideastern world at the time of Muhammad, such as Musailama al-Kazzab or Aswad Ansi, who both claimed to be prophets and both led ultimately unsuccessful military campaigns, and it is possible that the unnamed Messiah figure relates to one of these.
The hadith are the written collection of the Arab oral traditions concerning Muhammad. The dates often given for Muhammad's life are 570-632 CE. The most authoritative hadiths in Sunni Islam are compiled in the "Sahih Bukhari", or "Sahih Muslim", while in Shia'ism more emphasis is placed on the "Usul al-Kafi".
The earliest biography of Muhammad known is a collection of hadith: the Sirah Rasul Allah or, the Life of the Apostle of God, by Ibn Ishaq, who was born about 717 and died in 767. He thus wrote his biography well over one hundred years after Muhammad died. He would not have been able to speak to any eyewitnesses, only to those who had heard their accounts, or accounts of their accounts. Ibn Ishaq's work is contained in fragments quoted in a compilation of anecdotes and traditions composed by Islamic historian Ibn Hisham (???-834) and al-Tabari (838-923).
Other sources for biographies of Muhammad are: the military chronicles of Waqidi (745-822); the biographies of Ibn Sa'd (783-845), a student of Waqidi; later histories; Quranic commentaries; and collections of Prophetic hadith. These texts were recorded more than a century, and often several centuries, after the death of Muhammad. Some passages in the Qur'an are believed to shed some light on Muhammad's biography; however, they require a great deal of interpretation to be useful.
Some skeptical scholars (Wansbrough, Cook, Crone, and others) have raised doubts about the reliability of the Islamic sources, especially the hadith collections. They note for instance that the earliest biography of Muhammad of Ibn Ishaq does not contain any dates or explicit details; yet, later Islamic narratives have progressively more dates, with minute details of Muhammad's life being inserted into their accounts as successive generations of scholars relay the story, such that by the time we arrive at contemporary renditions of Muhammad's story, dates and details have exploded exponentially without explanation. These skeptics believe that many hadith and other traditions were manufactured, or doctored, to support one or another of the many political or doctrinal factions that had developed within Islam in its first century or later. The life of Muhammad was believed to be the exemplar for all Muslims; hence the importance of showing that Muhammad said or did something proving that a particular faction was right. If the skeptics are right, and if much of the early material cannot really be trusted, then all that is factually known is what is contained in the summary above.
Other academic scholars, such as Montgomery Watt and Wilferd Madelung, have been much more willing to trust the Islamic sources. Their accounts of the life of Muhammad are similar to those held by most believing Muslims. These historical "traditionalists," both Muslim and non-Muslim, present a much more detailed picture of Muhammad's life.
There is a great deal of possibly unreliable material available on the life of Muhammad, but very little that is accepted by all academics. In a 2003 article, Gregor Schoeler summarizes it thus:
Many, but not all of the first group of scholars would probably accept the first section of this article, the Summary. The second group of academics is more willing to accept the traditional Muslim accounts, shorn of hagiography and supernatural claims and based on the earliest accounts rather than later traditions.
Many Muslims accept even fuller accounts of Muhammad's life. They believe traditions not credited by non-Muslim scholars. However, Muslims are not of one mind on the subject. Some Muslims accept "naturalistic" versions pared of most supernatural elements; some Muslims believe in versions of Muhammad's life full of miracles. There are versions of Muhammad's life favoring different traditions within Islam. A Sunni version of Muhammad's life is very different from a Shi'a version. It is impossible to present one Muslim version. However, a few of the most common traditions, ones that are not accepted by academics but widely believed by Muslims, are covered in a final section.
Most Muslims, and the Western academics who are willing to trust some of the Islamic traditions, accept a much more detailed version of Muhammad's life.
Muhammad traced his genealogy back as far as Adnan, whom the northern Arabs believed to be their common ancestor. Adnan in turn is said to have been a descendant of Ishmael, son of Abraham, though the exact genealogy is disputed. Muhammad's genealogy up to Adnan is as follows:
Muhammad is the son of Abd Allah, who is son of Abd al-Muttalib (Shaiba) son of Hashim (Amr) ibn Abd Manaf (al-Mughira) son of Qusai (Zaid) ibn Kilab ibn Murra son of Ka`b ibn Lu'ay son of Ghalib ibn Fahr (Quraish) son of Malik ibn an-Nadr (Qais) the son of Kinana son of Khuzaimah son of Mudrikah (Amir) son of Ilyas aon of Mudar son of Nizar son of Ma`ad ibn Adnan. (ibn means "son of" in Arabic; alternate names of people with two names are given in parentheses.) Ar-Raheeq Al-Makhtum: The Lineage and Family of Muhammad by Saifur Rahman al-Mubarakpuri
He was also called Abul-Qaasim (meaning "father of Qaasim") by some, after his short-lived first son.
William Montgomery Watt accepts the following description of Muhammad from the Islamic sources:
Muhammad was born into a well-to-do family settled in the northern Arabian town of Mecca. Some calculate his birthdate as having been 20 April, 570, while Shi'a Muslims believe it to have been 26 April 570. Other sources calculate the year of his birth to have been 571; tradition places it in the Year of the Elephant. Muhammad's father, Abdullah, had died almost six months before he was born and the young boy was brought up by his paternal grandfather Abd al-Muttalib, of the Banu Hashim clan of the Quraish tribe. At the age of six, Muhammad lost his mother Amina. When he was eight years of age, his grandfather Abd al-Muttalib, who had become his guardian, also died. Muhammad now came under the care of his uncle Abu Talib, the new leader of the Hashim clan of the Quraish tribe, the most powerful in Mecca.
Mecca was a thriving commercial centre, due in great part to a stone temple (now called the Kaaba) that housed many different cult figures (idols). Merchants from various tribes would visit Mecca during the pilgrimage season, when all inter-tribal warfare was forbidden and they could trade in safety. While still in his teens, Muhammad began accompanying his uncle on trading journeys to Syria. He thus became well-travelled and knowledgeable as to foreign ways.
Ibn Ishaq records that Khadijah bore Muhammad six children: two sons named Al Qasem and Abdullah (who is also called Al Tayeb and Al Taher) and four daughters. All of Khadija's children were born before Muhammad received his first revelation. His son Qasim died at the age of two. The four daughters are said to be Zainab, Ruqayyah, Umm Kulthum, and Fatima.
The Shi'a say that Muhammad had only the one daughter, Fatima, and that the other daughters were either children of Khadijah by her previous marriage, or children of her sister.
| Timeline of Muhammad | |
|---|---|
| Important dates and locations in the life of Muhammad | |
| >c. 569 | Death of his father, `Abd Allah |
| >c. 570 | Possible date of birth, April 20: Mecca |
| >570 | Legendary unsuccessful Ethiopian attack on Mecca |
| >576 | Death of Mother |
| >578 | Death of Grandfather |
| >c. 583 | Takes trading journeys to Syria |
| >c. 595 | Meets and marries Khadijah |
| >610 | First reports of Qur'anic revelation: Mecca |
| >c. 610 | Appears as Prophet of Islam: Mecca |
| >c. 613 | Begins spreading message of Islam publicly: Mecca |
| >c. 614 | Begins to gather following: Mecca |
| >c. 615 | Emigration of Muslims to Ethiopia |
| >616 | Banu Hashim clan boycott begins |
| >c. 618 | Medinan Civil War: Medina |
| >619 | Banu Hashim clan boycott ends |
| >c. 620 | Isra and Miraj |
| >622 | Emigrates to Medina (Hijra) |
| >624 | Battle of Badr Muslims defeat Meccans |
| >624 | Expulsion of Banu Qaynuqa |
| >625 | Battle of Uhud Meccans defeat Muslims |
| >625 | Expulsion of Banu Nadir |
| >626 | Attack on Dumat al-Jandal: Syria |
| >627 | Battle of the Trench |
| >627 | Destruction of Banu Qurayza |
| >627 | Bani Kalb subjugation: Dumat al-Jandal |
| >628 | Treaty of Hudaybiyya |
| >c. 628 | Gains access to Mecca shrine Kaaba |
| >628 | Conquest of the Khaybar oasis |
| >629 | First hajj pilgrimage |
| >629 | Attack on Byzantine empire fails: Battle of Mu'tah |
| >630 | Attacks and bloodlessly captures Mecca |
| >c. 630 | Battle of Hunayn |
| >c. 630 | Siege of Taif |
| >630 | Establishes theocracy: Conquest of Mecca |
| >c. 631 | Subjugates most of the Arabian peninsula |
| >c. 632 | Attacks the Ghassanids: Tabuk |
| >632 | Farewell hajj pilgrimage |
| >632 | Death (June 8): Medina |
His wife Khadijah and her Christian cousin Waraqah ibn Nawfal were the first to believe that Muhammad was a prophet. They were soon followed by Muhammad's ten-year-old cousin Ali ibn Abi Talib, close friend Abu Bakr and adopted son Zaid bin Haarith. (The identity of the first male Muslim is a hotly debated topic.)
Until his death, Muhammad reportedly received frequent revelations, although there was a relatively long gap after the first revelation. This silence worried him, until he received surat ad-Dhuha, whose words provided comfort and reassurance.
Around 613, Muhammad began to spread his message amongst the people. Most of those who heard his message ignored it. A few mocked him. Others believed and joined him.
Several suras and parts of suras are said to date from this time, and reflect its circumstances: see for example al-Masadd, al-Humaza, parts of Maryam and al-Anbiya, al-Kafirun, and Abasa.
In 619, both Muhammad's wife Khadijah and his uncle Abu Talib died; it was known as aamul hazn ("the year of sorrows.") Muhammad's own clan withdrew their protection of him. Muslims patiently endured persecution: ostracism, an economic embargo and consequent poverty and hunger, even beatings and death threats..
Muslims believe that the Jerusalem mosque on the Temple Mount known as the Masjid al-Aqsa or furthest mosque, is the site from which Muhammad ascended to Heaven.
Muhammad came to Medina as a mediator, invited to resolve the feud between the Arab factions of Aws and Khazraj. He ultimately did so by absorbing both factions into his Muslim community, forbidding bloodshed among Muslims. However, Medina was also home to a number of Jewish tribes (whether they were ethnically as well as religiously Jewish is an open question, as is the depth of their "Jewishness"). Islamic tradition refers to the conversion to Islam of one of the leaders of the Jews named Ibn Salam. Muhammad had hoped that his conversion would be emulated by the other Jews, and that those others would also recognize him as a prophet, but they did not do so.
Some academic historians attribute the change of qibla, the Muslim direction of prayer, from the site of the former Temple in Jerusalem to the Kaaba in Mecca, which occurred during this period, to Muhammad's abandonment of hope of recruiting Jews as allies or followers. According to Muslims, the change of qibla was seen as a command from God both reflecting the independence of the Muslims as well as a test to discern those who truly followed the revelation and those who were simply opportunistic.
Muhammad and his followers are said to have negotiated an agreement with the other Medinans, a document now known as the Constitution of Medina (date debated), which laid out the terms on which the different factions, specifically the Jews and other "Peoples of the Book" could exist within the new Islamic State.
Muhammad turned to raiding caravans bound for Mecca. Caravan-raiding was an old Arabian tradition and according to Watt was "a kind of sport rather than war" Watt 1961 p. 105 and that the object of the raids was to take animals and other goods but killing was carefully avoided. Watt 1961 p.106 ; Muslims justified the raids by the Meccans' confiscation of the property they had left at Mecca and the state of war deemed to exist between the Meccans and the Muslims.
In March of 624, Muhammad led some three hundred warriors in a raid on a Meccan merchant caravan. The Meccans successfully defended the caravan and then decided to teach the Medinans a lesson. They sent a small army against Medina. On March 15, 624 near a place called Badr, the Meccans and the Muslims clashed. Though outnumbered more than three times (one thousand to three hundred) in the battle, the Muslims met with success, killing at least forty-five Meccans and taking seventy prisoners for ransom; only fourteen Muslims died. This marked the real beginning of Muslim military achievement.
After Khadija's death, Muhammad had married Aisha, the daughter of his friend Abu Bakr (who would later emerge as the first leader of the Muslims after Muhammad's death). In Medina, he married Hafsah, daughter of Umar (who would eventually become Abu Bakr's successor).
Muhammad's daughter Fatima married Ali, Muhammad's cousin. According to the Sunni, another daughter, Umm Kulthum, married Uthman. Each of these men, in later years, would emerge as successors to Muhammad and political leaders of the Muslims. Thus, all four caliphs were linked to Muhammad by marriage. Sunni Muslims regard these caliphs as the Rashidun, or Rightly Guided. (See Succession to Muhammad for more information on the controversy on the succession to the caliphate).
In April 627, Abu Sufyan led another strong force against Medina. But Muhammad had dug a trench around Medina and successfully defended the city in the Battle of the Trench.
Many of the Muslims believed that Abu Sufyan had been aided by sympathizers among the Medinans, being the Jewish tribe of Banu Qurayza. They attacked and defeated the Banu Qurayza, and subsequently killed hundreds of the adult men of the tribe. This execution has been the subject of much controversy.
Following the Muslims' victory at the Battle of the Trench, the Muslims were able, through conversion and conquest, to extend their rule to many of the neighboring cities and tribes.
Muhammad's followers were disgruntled at the inconclusive result of the Treaty of Hudaybiyya. Norman Stillman suggests that to deflect their opposition, Muhammad needed a new military victory:
The Muslim traditions, however, state that the attack on the rich oasis of Khaybar was in retribution for its role in the Battle of the Trench. Khaybar was inhabited by several Jewish tribes including the members of the Banu Nadir. In June 628, the Muslims captured Khaybar after a siege and, as some scholars hold, killed all Banu Nadir men present. But most sources don't mention any such execution, and so this particular issue is contentious among scholars. It was here that Muhammad married Safiyya bint Huyayy, daughter of the Banu Nadir chief, and who claimed direct lineage from the biblical and Quranic Prophet Aaron. Other Jews of Khaybar were allowed to remain in the oasis on condition of paying heavy tribute. Muslims also took substantial booty.Stillman (1975), p. 7, 8; "Khaybar", Encyclopaedia of Islam
Muhammad subsequently moved to attack Mecca. Tribal allies of the Muslims and the Meccans had clashed, and Muhammad regarded this incident as a breach of the treaty. Therefore, in 630, Muhammad marched on Mecca with an enormous force, said to number more than ten thousand men. After some scattered skirmishes, in which only twenty-four Meccans were killed,needed the Muslims seized Mecca. Muhammad promised a general amnesty to all but a few of the Meccans. Most Meccans converted to Islam, and Muhammad destroyed the idols in the Kaaba. Henceforth the pilgrimage would be a Muslim pilgrimage and the shrine a Muslim shrine.
According to scholars such as William Montgomery Watt, Muhammad was a both a social and moral reformer in his day and generation. He claims Muhammad created a "new system of social security and a new family structure, both of which were a vast improvement on what went before. By taking what was best in the morality of the nomad and adapting it for settled communities, he established a religious and social framework for the life of many races of men."Watt (1961), p. 229
Bernard Lewis believes the advent of Islam in a sense was a revolution which only partially succeeded after long struggles due to tensions between the new religon and very old societies in the countries that the Muslims conquered. He thinks that one such area of tension was a consequence of what he sees as the egalitarian nature of Islamic doctrine. Lewis believes that "the equality of Islam is limited to free adult male Muslims," but according to him "even this represented a very considerable advance on the practice of both the Greco-Roman and the ancient Iranian world. Islam from the first denounced aristocratic privilege, rejected hierarchy, and adopted a formula of the career open to the talents."
John Esposito sees Muhammad as a reformer who did away with many of the terrible practices of the pagan Arabs. He states that Muhammad's "insistence that each person was personally accountable not to tribal customary law but to an overriding divine law shook the very foundations of Arabian society... Muhammad proclaimed a sweeping program of religious and social reform that affected religous belief and practices, business contracts and practices, male-female and family relations."
For most of the sixty-three years of his life, Muhammad was a merchant, then a religious leader. He took up the sword late in his life. He was an active military leader for ten years.
Critics claim that Muhammad expanded his realm and imposed his religion by force. Muslim commentators, however, argue that he fought only to defend his community against the Meccans, and that he insisted on humane rules of warfare. The rules stated that women are not to be harmed or molested, children are not to be harmed. No non combatent is to be fought and if the enemy does not wish to fight you then escort him to a place of security. In reference to the Quran "fight those who fight you and do not commit aggression for God does not like those who commit aggression" ()
From 595 to 619, Muhammad had only one wife, Khadijah. After her death, he married Sawda bint Zama and Aisha (which marriage came first is disputed), then Hafsa. Later he was to marry more wives, to make for a total of eleven, of whom nine or ten were living at the time of his death. The status of Maria al-Qibtiyya is disputed; she may have been a slave, a freed slave, or a wife.
Muhammad had children by only two of these unions. Khadijah is said to have borne him four daughters and a son; only one daughter, Fatima, survived her father. Shi'a Muslims dispute the number of Muhammad's children, claiming that he had only one daughter, and that the other "daughters" were step-daughters. Maria al-Qibtiyya bore him a son, but the child died when he was ten months old.
Muhammad's marriages have been the subject of some criticism. Some consider it wrong that he had more wives than the four generally allowed by the Qur'an (although one Qur'anic verse makes an exception for Muhammad). They question the circumstances of some of his marriages, such as those to Zaynab bint Jahsh, his adopted son's ex-wife, and to Aisha, who according to hadith was nine years old when the marriage was consummated.Sahih Bukhari , , , , , Sahih Muslim , (though there is reason to believe that she was in fact older and that the hadiths that state she was nine are weak). D. A. Spellberg, Politics, Gender, and the Islamic Past: the Legacy of A'isha bint Abi Bakr, Columbia University Press, 1994
The term Sahaba (companion) refers to anyone who met three criteria. First, he must have been a contemporary of Muhammad. Second, he must have seen or heard Muhammad speak on at least one occasion. Third, he must have converted to Islam. Companions are considered the ultimate sources for the oral traditions, or hadith, on which much of Muslim law and practice are based. There were many other companions in addition to the ones listed here.
List in alphabetic order:
According to Shi'a Islam, Muhammad had appointed his son-in-law Ali as his successor in a public sermon at Ghadir Khumm. Shi'a believe that Muhammad's companions Abu Bakr and Umar conspired to oust Ali and make Abu Bakr the leader or caliph. Sunni Muslims dispute this, and say that the leaders of the community conferred and freely chose Abu Bakr, who was pre-eminent among the followers of Muhammad. The matter is further discussed in the article Succession to Muhammad.
Abu Bakr spent much of his short reign suppressing rebellious tribes in the Ridda Wars. With unity restored in Arabia, the Muslims looked outward and commenced the conquests that would eventually unite the Middle East under the caliphs.
Descendants of Muhammad are known by sharifs'' شريف (plural: ِأشراف Ashraaf). Many rulers and notables in Muslim countries, past and present, claim such descent, with various degrees of credibility, such as the Fatimid dynasty of North Africa, the Idrisids, and the current royal families of Jordan and Morocco. In various Muslim countries, there are societies that authenticate claims of descent; some societies are more credible than others.
After he returned to Mecca, he is said to have been beloved by all around him because he was such a polite and honest child.
As a youth, he was called upon to solve a vexing political problem for his Meccan neighbors. They were rebuilding the Kaaba and feuding over which clan should have the honor of raising the Black Stone into place. Muhammad suggested that the heads of each clan raise the Black Stone on a cloth, so that all had the honor of lifting it. Muhammad then put the stone into its place.
As a young man and a merchant, Muhammad was known to be trustworthy and honest. The other Meccans called him "Al-Amin", the trustworthy one or the honest one. USC-MSA Compendium of Muslim Texts: About the Prophet Muhammad After he proclaimed his prophethood, however, his neighbors turned against him.
It is traditional for Muslims to illustrate and express their love and veneration for Muhammad in a number of different ways.
Michael H. Hart in his book The 100 claims Muhammad was the most influential person in history due to his supreme success on both the religious and secular levels.Hart (1992), p. 3
570 births | 632 deaths | Islam | Muhammad
محمد بن عبد الله | হযরত মুহাম্মদ (সা:) | Мөхәммәт | Muhamed | Мохамед | Mahoma | Mohamed | Muhammad | Muhammed | Mohammed | Muḩammad | Μωάμεθ | Mahoma | Mohamedo | Muhammad | محمد پسر عبدالله | Mahomet | Muhammad | Mahoma - محمد | 무함마드 | Mohameka | मुहम्मद | Muhamed | Muhammad | Mahomet | Múhameð | Maometto | מוחמד | წინასწარმეტყველი მუჰამედი | Mahomm | Muhammad | Mihemmed Pêxember | Machometus | Mahometas | Mohamed próféta | Мухамед | Nabi Muhammad s.a.w. | Mohammed | ムハンマド・イブン=アブドゥッラーフ | Muhammed | Muhammed | Mahomet | Maomé | Mahomed | Мухаммад | मुहम्मद | Maumettu | Muhammad | Mohamed | Mohamed | Мухамед | Muhammad | Muhammad | Muhammed | มุฮัมมัด | Muhammad | Muhammed bin Abdullah | Мугаммад | محمد صلی اللہ علیہ و آلہ و سلم | 穆罕默德
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