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Abdullah ibn Ja'far

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Spouse
  
Zaynab bint Ali

Parents
  
Ja'far ibn Abi Talib

Died
  
680 AD, Medina, Saudi Arabia

Children
  
Muhammad ibn Abdillah, Aun ibn Abdillah, Abbas ibn Abdullah, Ali ibn Abdullah

Cousins
  
Muslim ibn Aqeel, Muhammad ibn al‑Hanafiyyah, Muhsin ibn Ali, Husayn ibn Ali, Hasan ibn Ali

Similar
  
Ja'far ibn Abi Talib, Muhammad ibn Abu Bakr, Abu Talib ibn Abd al‑Muttalib, Muhammad ibn Ja'far, Fatimah bint Asad

Islamic history abdullah ibn ja far son of ja far ibn abu talib shrine in syria


Abdullah ibn Ja'far (Arabic: عبد الله بن جعفر‎‎) (died 680) was a companion and relative of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and a nephew of Ali.

Contents

Early life

He was the son of Ja'far ibn Abu Talib and Asma bint Umais. They had emigrated to Abyssinia in 616, and Abdullah and his two brothers were born there. Abdullah accompanied his father (probably the rest of the family) and Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas in overseas preaching in north-east India, including Manipur, and China, after leaving Abyssinia in 615 by sea. They later returned to Abyssinia by 624.

The family returned to Arabia in 628 and settled in Medina. Ibn Hajar quoted Muhammad as having said that Abdullah was like him in character, then taking him by the right hand and praying to God to extend his mercy over the household of Abdullah bin Ja'far.

Marriage and Family Life

Ali had particularly wished that his daughters should marry Ja'far's sons. When Abdullah asked for Zainab's hand, Ali accepted it. Her marriage settlement was equal to her mother's.

Abdullah and Zainab had five children.

  • Ali ibn Abdullah.
  • Awn ibn Abdullah.
  • Abbas ibn Abdullah.
  • Muhammad ibn Abdullah.
  • Umm Kulthum bint Abdullah.
  • Although Abdullah was a man of means, Zainab lived a modest life. They were charitable to the poor; the Arabs called Abdullah "the sea or the cloud of munificence".

    The marriage of Zainab did not diminish her strong attachment to her family. Ali also felt a great affection for his daughter and nephew. He told Ja'far not to prevent Zainab from going on a journey with her brother Husayn. When Ali became the Caliph in 656 and moved from Medina to Kufa, Zainab and Abdullah joined him.

    Abdullah was concurrently married to Layla bint Masud.

    After Zainab's death, Abdullah married her sister, Umm Kulthum bint Ali, who was the widow of his brother Muhammad. This marriage was childless, and Umm Kulthum also predeceased Abdullah.

    Career

    Muslim historians have noted Abdullah's status before Ali as a military leader. During Ali's caliphate in Kufa, Abdullah was one of his four chief lieutenants (the other three being Ali's three eldest sons).

    When Husayn received a request from the men of Kufa to come and lead them, Abdullah urged him not to go unless the Kufans first overthrew their Umayyad magistrates. When Husayn nevertheless left on the expedition that ended with Karbala, Abdullah sent his young sons Awn and Muhammad with his wife, Husayn's sister Zainab.

    References

    Abdullah ibn Ja'far Wikipedia