80000 2800 Location Iraq | Start date 659 AD | |
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8 killed 2791 killed, 9 escaped. Result Rashidun Caliphate victory Similar Battle of Siffin, Battle of the Camel, Battle of the Trench, Battle of Uhud, Battle of Khaybar |
23 the life of imam ali battle of nahrawan dr sayed ammar nakshwani ramadhan 1435
The Battle of Nahrawan (Arabic: معركة النهروان, Ma'rakat an-Nahrawān) was a battle between Ali ibn Abi Talib (the first Shi'ah Imam and the fourth Sunni Caliph) and the Kharijites commanded by ‘Abdullah ibn Wahb al-Rasibi, near Nahrawan, twelve miles from Baghdad.
Contents
- 23 the life of imam ali battle of nahrawan dr sayed ammar nakshwani ramadhan 1435
- The battle of nahrawan
- References
Having disposed of the Kharijites at Nahrawan, according to some Shia sources Ali resumed his march to Syria. However, the chiefs of his followers urged him to stop at Kufa to let the men rest before the long journey and to enable the army to repair their weapons and armor. Ali agreed to this request and camped at al-Nukhaylah outside Kufah. The soldiers were allowed to leave the camp for a day.
On the next day, hardly any men returned and at length, Ali entered Kufah and gave a stern sermon to the people. However, nobody came forward and no one wanted to fight and finally, Ali turned away from them in disappointment. The Syrian expedition was abandoned, never to be resumed.
Others argue that the Kharijites had been making every one fight and after they separated, Ali himself also did not want to fight the Syrians.
A few years later they re-emerged in Iraq and north of the Arabian Peninsula. They were defeated by the Umayyads.
Two years later, in 40 A.H Ali was assassinated by a Kharijite called Abd al-Rahman ibn Muljam, who attacked him with a poisoned sword in the mosque of Kufah, on the 19th of the month of Ramadan, finally succumbing to poison on the 21st of the month of Ramadan.
In Syria Muawiyah I had a more professional army and was not reliant of volunteers and therefore no sects developed.
When Ali was told that the Kharijites had been killed, he replied: "By Allah! No, not yet. They still exist in the loins of men and wombs of women. Whenever a chief would appear from among them, he would be cut down till the last of them would turn thieves and robbers."
The nine Kharijites that survived the battle against Ali managed to flee to Basrah, Sistan, Khurasan, Oman, Yemen, Tell Mozan, and elsewhere, where they had their offspring, spread their beliefs and recruited more followers. Today Ibadis of Oman (and parts of Africa) are known as their descendants and followers.