Mahamid: Difference between revisions
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{{Arab tribes in Saudi Arabia}} |
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Revision as of 21:47, 23 January 2021
المحاميد | |
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File:علم المحاميد.png | |
Religion | |
Sunni Islam (Hanbali) | |
Related ethnic groups | |
harb (tribe) |
The Mahameed and sometimes the Mihmadi or the Mahmudi are an Arab tribe that traces its origins to the Khawlani al-Qahtaniyah Harb[1] The majority of them resided originally in the Hijaz, between Mecca and Medina, and then spread in the Arabian Peninsula and the countries of the Maghreb, which are considered among the Arab tribes spread throughout the Arab countries.
Tribe lineage
They are the Mahameed, the sons of Muhammad or Mahmud (who disagreed with him) from the Muttalhah from Maymun from Salem from Harb[2] from Saad from Saad from Khawlan from Qahtan, on the way they traveled some of them entered Bani Amr and they were Mahameed from Khayriyah from Bani Mahmoud from Bani Amr from Masruh from the Harb tribe .
Tribe biography
their biography is repeated in the frequent travels, emigration and instability during their travels from their homes by origin, and their biography indicates that when the tribe enlarged and narrowed their area of residence in Najd and Hijaz[3], they gathered to take opinions about what they need to do, and some of them said we conquer the tribes, and this suggestion was rejected because most of those in the neighborhood Among them were clans and sub-clans from the Harb tribe[4], and from them all five gathered together, i.e. those who were united by the fifth grandfather and suggested leaving and settled their opinion on him, and their opinion was the direction north and settled for a period of time in Rabigh and Asfan and near Jeddah and a few of them remained there, and on the way of their travel he entered them or ( They swore) some of the Arab tribes because their fate was not known at the time and to protect their offspring, and they are:
- Baqum tribe
- Anazzah tribe
- Banu Hudhayl tribe
- Shammar tribe
- Mutayr tribe
- Banu Salim tribe (the majority)
- Banu Malik tribe
And the last information of their cousins is that they went to the Dumat Al-Jandal area in the north, settled there for a period of time, and then moved towards the Levant.
hey moved until they reached the Karak region and settled in it, and they were in a large number that outnumbered the largest tribes in the region, and they allied themselves with some of the Karak clans and the most prominent of them were Al-Omaro Bani Uqba, and they established an emirate called (Emirate of Mahamid) for the majority of them from the Al-Amru clan at that time and their rule remained for a long time, and some of the Orientalists narrated And historians have wronged those under their rule as they were cruel to them, which prompted this different clans to unite against them.
Tribe spread
The tribe is divided into several branches, and they are:
- almatiei
- almadhakir
- almuhabida
- alrathea
The Levant and Iraq:
Branched out from them:
- The Hourani
Branched out from them:
- Al Abdul Dayem
- Al-Shaleikh
- Al-Bahri
- Ayal Abdo
- The Abu Karaki family (the Mahamid who came from Daraa, immigrated from them to Umm al-Fahm, after which to the Karak governorate)
- The Mahameed alliance with Al-Huwaitat.
- The Mahameed alliance with Bani Abbad.
- The Mahameed alliance with Bani Hamida
- The Mahameed alliance with Zoubi
Branched out from them:
- kiawan
- alkhudur
- alsawalima
- alhamamada
- almusaeada
- alhasasana
- aljeayisa
- dar alearabi
- al'asead
- al'ahmad
They migrated with their allies Banu Selim from the Hijaz to Africa
Branched out from them:
- alsabea
- 'awlad sula
- 'awlad almarmurii
- 'awlad shabl
References
- ^ Al'iiklil. Abu Muhammad al-Hasan al-Hamdani.
- ^ Book chapters from the history of the Harb tribe in the Hijaz and Nejd (Page 105). Fayez Musa Al-Badrani. 1996.
- ^ Burton's journey to Egypt and the Hijaz. Richard Francis Burton.
- ^ Genealogical population of civilized families in Najd. Hamad Al-Jassir.
- ^ The Hijaz Journey. Muhammad ibn Ali al-Sanusi.
- ^ a b Hawran alddamia. Hinna abu Rashed.
- ^ Two years in Amman. Al-Zirikli.
- ^ "Imperial War Museums". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 2020-12-17.
- ^ الحطاب, سلطان (2006-10-29). "من عرب المحاميد الى عربنا !!". Alrai (in Arabic). Retrieved 2020-12-17.