Related Topics:Medina ( or المدينة ; also transliterated into English as Madinah) is a city in the Hejaz region of western Saudi Arabia.
Its importance as a religious site derives from the presence there of the shrine of Muhammad by Masjid al-Nabawi (or the Mosque of the Prophet), famously known as Qubbat al-Nabi, Prophet's Dome or Green Dome, which was built on a site adjacent to Muhammad's home. His home later became part of the mosque when it was expanded by the Umayyad caliph al-Waleed ibn AbdelMalek. The first mosque of Islam is also located in Medinah and is known as Masjid Quba, (the Quba Mosque).
Like Mecca, the city of Medina only permits Muslims to enter. Both cities' numerous mosques are the destination for large numbers of Muslims on their annual pilgrimage. Hundreds of thousands of Muslims will come to Medina annually to worship at these mosques in a unified celebration.
Islamic sources such as the hadith state that Medina had a population of two pagan tribes (the Banu Aus and Banu Khazraj) as well as many Jewish tribes: Banu Qainuka'a, Banu Nadhir, Banu Sa'ida, Banu Harith, Banu Jusham, Banu Najjar and Banu Qurayza. The two powerful tribes of Banu Aus and Banu Khazraj were in a 120 year old conflict with eachother that had escalated to full war a in the 610s: The battle of Bu'ath
According to Islamic tradition, the two tribes got word of Muhammad in Mecca and decided to allow him to resolve their conflict. Muhammad and his followers thus agreed to move (known as the Hijra migration) to Yathrib, which eventually became known as al-Madinah al-Nabi, the city of the Messenger. Upon entry Muhammad drafted the Constitution of Medina * making him the leader of the city. The charter drew up an alliance between the Muslim, pagan and Jewish communities. The communities were to remain economically and socially separate, but militarily and politically one unit. Treachery and breach in trust was strictly forbidden.
In 1256 Medina was threatened by lava flow from the last eruption of Harrat Rahat.
In 1924 Medina, which had been in Ottoman hands for centuries, fell to Ibn Saud, who later became the first King of Saudi Arabia.
Medina is off limits to non-Muslims. This, however, is different from the times of Muhammad, who permitted Christians to pray inside the Masjid al-Nabawi.
Holy cities | Cities in Saudi Arabia | Medina
المدينة | Medína | Medina (Saudi Arabia) | Medina | Medina | Mediina | Medina | Medino | مدینه | Médine (Arabie saoudite) | Medina | मदीना | Madinah | Medina | אל-מדינה | მედინა | Medîne | Medina | Medina | Medina (Szaúd-Arábia) | Madinah al-Munawwarah | Medina (Arabië) | マディーナ | Medina | Medina | Medyna | Medina (Arábia Saudita) | Медина | Medina | Medina | 麦地那
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