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==Tribes==
==Tribes==
*[[Al-Ali (tribe)|Al-Ali]]
*[[Al-Ali (tribe)|Al-Ali]]
*[[Al-Faraj (tribe)|Al-Faraj]]
*Al-Faraj
*Al-Ismail
*Al-Ismail
*Al-Awabid
*Al-Awabid

Revision as of 18:33, 9 April 2018

Bani Malik (Template:Lang-ar) or Banu Malik (Template:Lang-ar) (Template:Lang-en) is one of the major Arab tribes of the Arabian Peninsula. They are descendants of Malik al-AshtarAl-Nakh'ei who fought with Ali ibn Abi Talib, the cousin of Prophet Muhammad.

A hyphenated Al (Al-) means "The" if it is prefixed to the tribe name but means "The son of..." if prefixed to a person's name, while the plain Al (آل) and Bani (بني) or Albu (ألبو) or Banu (بنو) mean the plural "The sons of..". Their great ancestor is Qahtan (قحطان) from the southern Arabian Peninsula. Qahtan is one of the two great fathers of all Arab tribes, the other one is Adnan (عد نان) and the father of the north Arabicized Arabs who are the naturalized stock of the northern peninsula. Bani Malik are named after Malik al-Ashtar from Nakh'a tribe, an offshoot of a bigger tribe called Madhhij. After they became Muslims, Al-Nakh'a continued their ancestry with their cousins, the tribe of Azd (Madhhij's brother), who lived in Makkah called Khuza'a (خزاعة) named after Khuza’a (also named Haritha) Ibn Amr Ibn Muzaqiba of Al-Azd the major Qahtani tribe. Khuza'a tribe fought with prophet Muhammad against the pagans and infidels Banu Bakr who tried to conquer Makka. This incident has been mentioned and blessed in a verse in the Quran (Verse At-Tawba-14). Sulaiman bin Kuthayer who is one of the Abbasid supporters descended from Bani Malik. He was later killed by Abu-Muslim al-Khurasani a dissident Persian outlaw. Bani Malik lived in Ahwaz, Qatif, Bahrain and in Iraq. In Iraq, they now live in Basrah, Nassyriah and on the eastern bank of Euphrates River at al-Diwanyiah district in the middle part of Iraq. The territory of their major offshoot, Al-Ali tribe, extends from al-Diwanylah in the north to al-Rumaitha to the south. The area was named after their name, Al-Ali. The rivers – al-Rafi, al-Yusufyia and al-Lawah – irrigated the area. In 1900 when these rivers dried up they moved to an area around al-Hindyiah branch of Euphrates River, which was dug by Asif al-Dawla al-Hindi at 1205 AH (1845 AD).

Tribes

  • Al-Ali
  • Al-Faraj
  • Al-Ismail
  • Al-Awabid
  • Al-Humaidat
  • Al-Ibrahim
  • Bani Rzaij
  • Bani Hasan (Iraq)

References

  1. Al-Iber (العبر The Lessons), by lbn Khaldoun
  2. History of the Arabs (from the earliest times to the present), by Philip K. Hitti
  3. Nihayat Al-Arab Fe Ma'arifat Ansab Al-Arab نهاية الأرب في معرفة أنساب العرب (The ultimate information regarding the Arab ancestry), by Al-Kalkashandi
  4. Studies of the Iraqi tribes, by Hmud Al-Sa'idi