Puneet Varma (Editor)

Banu Lakhm

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Nisba
  
al-Lakhmi

Descended from
  
Malik ibn 'Adiyy

Location
  
Al-Hira

Branches
  
Banu Murr

Religion
  
Polytheism, later Islam

Banu Lakhm is a large Arab tribe tracing their lineage back to Qahtan, who among many achievements, created an Arab kingdom in Al-Hira, near modern Kufa, Iraq. This kingdom acted as a buffer zone between Arabia and the Persian Empire, preventing Bedouin Arab tribes from infiltrating Persian lands.

Contents

Lineage

The Banu Lakhm, or Lakhmids, are descendents from Malik (Malichus) bin Uday bin Al-Harith (Aretas) bin Murr bin Add bin Zayed bin Yashjub bin Oreb bin Zayed bin Kahlan bin Saba' (Sheba) bin Qahtan (Joktan), a Qahtanite Yemeni Arab tribe.

Lakhmid Settlements

Their kingdom in Al-Hira was ruled by the Banu Nasr (The House of Nasr).

Famous Lakhmid families, emirates and persons

Besides the lakhmid Kingdom Of Hira and its kings, there are other notable Lakhmids:

  • Musa Bin Nusair, the Ummayad general and administrator of Andalus
  • Imam Abdul-Rahman bin Amr bin Abdullah bin Safwan Al-nasri (Abu Zar'a al-Dimashqi)
  • Banu Ubad, the lords of Sevilla and Bani Bahr.
  • The Naa'mna family in Jordan, Israel, the West Bank And Egypt
  • The Abbadid family in Al-Andalus
  • Gamal Abdel Nasser was from Banu Mur, of the Banu Lakhm.
  • Most Druze in Jabal al-duruz in Lebanon claim descent from Lakhm. Perhaps the most famous among them is the Lebanese historian and writer Emir Shakib Arslan. Lakhmids also exist in great numbers in Iraq, Yemen, and Oman.

    References

    Banu Lakhm Wikipedia