Wives of the Prophet of Islam: Difference between revisions

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==Abstract==
That what is accepted anonymously by great Shia and Sunni historians is that the number of the wives of the Prophet (s) with whom the Prophet had a house and bed, was eleven. And it was till that time beyond which it was prohibited for him to marry, the prohibition which was declared through revelation of verse 52 of chapter of Ahzab. Names of those eleven individuals is as follows: Khadijah, Sawdah, ‘A’ishah, Hafsah, Umm Salmah, Zaynab daughter of Jahsh, Zaynab daughter of Khuzaymah, Juwayriyyah, Umm Habibah, Safiyah and Maymunah. Out of them, Khadijah and Zaynab daughter of Khuzaymah passed away while the Prophet (s) was still alive. There were other women who were married to the Prophet (s) but they did not share a house and bed with the Prophet (s), they had requested to live separately; the historians do not count them as wives of the Prophet (s). Also the slave girls with whom the Prophet (s) had shared a bed are not considered his wives.
That what is accepted anonymously by great Shia and Sunni historians is that the number of the wives of the Prophet (s) with whom the Prophet had a house and bed, was eleven. And it was till that time beyond which it was prohibited for him to marry, the prohibition which was declared through revelation of verse 52 of chapter of Ahzab. Names of those eleven individuals is as follows: Khadijah, Sawdah, ‘A’ishah, Hafsah, Umm Salmah, Zaynab daughter of Jahsh, Zaynab daughter of Khuzaymah, Juwayriyyah, Umm Habibah, Safiyah and Maymunah. Out of them, Khadijah and Zaynab daughter of Khuzaymah passed away while the Prophet (s) was still alive. There were other women who were married to the Prophet (s) but they did not share a house and bed with the Prophet (s), they had requested to live separately; the historians do not count them as wives of the Prophet (s). Also the slave girls with whom the Prophet (s) had shared a bed are not considered his wives.