1.20 The Second Pledge of Aqabah
At Aqabah,
they pledged their allegiance to the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings be
upon him), vowing to defend him as they would defend their own families and to
invite him, along with his companions, to join them in Medina. That night,
Abbas ibn Abd al-Muttalib, though not yet a Muslim, attended as a guarantor for
his nephew. Displaying remarkable sincerity, Al-Bara ibn Ma'rur gave his full
support to the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings be upon him), being the
first to pledge allegiance, joined by Abu al-Haytham ibn Tayhan and Abbas ibn
Ubadah ibn Nadla. On that blessed night, seventy-three men and two women
solemnly pledged their loyalty to the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings
be upon him).
The
Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings be upon him) selected twelve naqibs
(leaders) from among them, representing the Khazraj and Aws tribes. Among them
were:
- From
the Khazraj:
- As'ad ibn Zurara, who was
previously mentioned among the six and the twelve.
- Sa'd ibn Rabi' ibn Amr of Banu
Amr ibn Abu Zuhayr ibn Malik.
- Rafi' ibn Malik ibn al-Ajlan,
also among the six and the twelve.
- Al-Bara ibn Ma’rur of Banu Salama.
- Abdullah ibn Amr ibn Haram,
father of Jabir.
- Sa'd ibn Ubadah of Banu Sa'idah.
- Al-Mundhir ibn Amr of Banu
Sa'idah.
- Ubadah ibn al-Samit, mentioned
previously among the twelve.
- Abdullah ibn Rawaha of Banu
al-Harith.
These
nine men were from different branches of the Khazraj: Banu Amr, Banu Awf, Banu
al-Harith, Banu Ka'b, and Banu Jusham.
- From
the Aws:
- Usayd ibn Hudayr of Banu Abd
al-Ashhal.
- Sa'd ibn Khaythama of Banu
al-Nahhat (this lineage later became extinct, with the last of its
members passing during the time of Harun al-Rashid, fulfilling the
prophecy of the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings be upon him) that
the Ansar would dwindle).
- Rifa’ah ibn Abd al-Mundhir,
though some sources mention Abu al-Haytham ibn Tayhan in place of
Rifa’ah.
1.20.1 The
Names of Those Who Attended the Pledge of ‘Aqabah Amongst the Non- Leaders – May
Allah Be Pleased with Them and Bestow His Mercy Upon Them
Among them were the men from the tribe of Aws, specifically from the clan of Banū ‘Abd al-Ashhal ibn Jusham ibn al-Ḥārith ibn al-Khazraj ibn ‘Amr ibn Mālik ibn al-Aws ibn Ḥārithah:
- Salamah ibn Salāmah ibn Waqsh ibn Zughbah ibn Za‘ūrā’ ibn ‘Abd al-Ashhal.
- Ẓuhair ibn Rāfi‘ ibn ‘Adī ibn Zayd ibn Jusham ibn Ḥārithah.
- Abū Burdah ibn Niyār, whose name was Hāni’ ibn Niyār ibn ‘Amr ibn ‘Ubayd ibn Kilāb ibn Dahmān ibn Ghanm ibn Dhubyān ibn Hamīm ibn Kāhil ibn Dahl ibn Hanī’ ibn Balī ibn ‘Amr ibn al-Ḥāf ibn Quḍā‘ah, who was an ally of theirs.
- Nuhair ibn al-Haytham, from the Banū Nābi’ ibn Majda‘ah ibn Ḥārithah; then from the household of al-Barrāq ibn Qays ibn ‘Āmir ibn Nābi’.
From the Banū ‘Amr ibn ‘Awf ibn Mālik ibn al-Aws:
- ‘Abdullāh ibn Jubayr ibn al-Nu‘mān ibn Umayyah ibn al-Barrāk. Al-Barrāk's given name was Imru’ al-Qays ibn Tha‘labah ibn ‘Amr.
- Ma‘an ibn ‘Adī ibn al-Judd ibn al-‘Ajlān ibn Dubay‘ah, who was an ally of theirs from Balī. He was martyred at the Battle of Yamāmah.
- ‘Uwaym ibn Sā‘idah, who was also an ally from Balī.
Thus, the total number of
those from the Aws who witnessed the pledge amounted to eleven men.
From the Khazraj,
specifically from the Banū al-Najjār—who were the descendants of
Taymullah ibn Tha‘labah ibn ‘Amr ibn al-Khazraj:
- Abū Ayyūb Khālid ibn Zayd ibn Kulayb ibn Tha‘labah ibn ‘Abd ibn ‘Awf ibn Ghanm ibn Mālik ibn al-Najjār.
- Mu‘ādh,
- Mu‘awwidh,
- and ‘Awf—the sons of ‘Afrā’, whose father was al-Ḥārith ibn Rifā‘ah ibn al-Ḥārith ibn Sawād ibn Mālik ibn Ghanm ibn Mālik ibn al-Najjār.
- ‘Amārah ibn Ḥazm ibn Zayd ibn Lawdhān ibn ‘Amr ibn ‘Abd ibn ‘Awf ibn Ghanm ibn Mālik ibn al-Najjār, who was martyred at the Battle of Yamāmah.
From the Banū ‘Amr ibn Mabdhūl, whose given name was ‘Āmir ibn Mālik ibn al-Najjār:
- Sahl ibn ‘Atīk ibn al-Nu‘mān ibn ‘Amr ibn ‘Atīk ibn ‘Amr ibn ‘Āmir, who was also known as Mabdhūl.
From the Banū ‘Amr ibn Mālik ibn al-Najjār, specifically from the
Banū Ḥadīlah:
- Aws ibn Thābit ibn al-Mundhir ibn Ḥarām ibn ‘Amr ibn Zayd Manāh ibn ‘Adī ibn ‘Amr ibn Mālik ibn al-Najjār.
- Abū Talḥah, whose name was Zayd ibn Sahl ibn al-Aswad ibn Ḥarām ibn ‘Amr ibn Zayd Manāh ibn ‘Adī ibn ‘Amr ibn Mālik ibn al-Najjār.
From the Banū Māzin ibn al-Najjār:
- Qays ibn Abī Ṣa‘ṣa‘ah, whose father’s name was ‘Amr ibn Zayd ibn ‘Awf ibn Mabdhūl ibn ‘Amr ibn Ghanm ibn Māzin. He was in charge of the rear guard at the Battle of Badr.
- ‘Amr ibn Ghaziyyah ibn ‘Amr ibn Tha‘labah ibn Khansā’ ibn Mabdhūl ibn ‘Amr ibn Ghanm ibn Māzin.
Thus, the total number of those from the Khazraj who witnessed the pledge amounted to eleven men.
From the Banū al-Ḥārith ibn al-Khazraj:
- Khārijah ibn Zayd ibn Abī Zuhayr ibn Mālik ibn Imru’ al-Qays ibn Mālik al-Aghar ibn Tha‘labah ibn Ka‘b ibn al-Khazraj ibn al-Ḥārith ibn al-Khazraj.
- Bashīr ibn Sa‘d ibn Tha‘labah ibn Khallās ibn Zayd ibn Mālik al-Aghar ibn Tha‘labah ibn Ka‘b ibn al-Khazraj ibn al-Ḥārith ibn al-Khazraj. He was the father of al-Nu‘mān ibn Bashīr.
- ‘Abdullāh ibn Zayd ibn Tha‘labah ibn ‘Abd Rabbih ibn Zayd ibn al-Ḥārith ibn al-Khazraj ibn Jusham ibn al-Ḥārith ibn al-Khazraj, who was the one shown the call to prayer (adhān).
- Khallād ibn Suwayd ibn Tha‘labah ibn ‘Amr ibn Ḥārithah ibn Imru’ al-Qays ibn Mālik al-Aghar ibn Tha‘labah ibn Ka‘b ibn al-Khazraj.
- ‘Uqbah ibn ‘Amr ibn Tha‘labah ibn Yasīrah ibn ‘Usayrah ibn Jadhārah ibn ‘Awf ibn Ḥārith ibn al-Khazraj, also known as Abū Mas‘ūd al-Badrī. He, along with Jābir ibn ‘Abdullāh, was among the youngest to have attended the pledge.
From the Banū Jusham ibn al-Ḥārith, specifically from the
Banū Bayāḍah ibn ‘Āmir ibn Zurayq ibn ‘Abd Ḥārithah ibn Mālik ibn Ghadab ibn Jusham
ibn al-Khazraj:
- Ziyād ibn Labīd ibn Tha‘labah ibn Sinān ibn ‘Āmir ibn ‘Adī ibn Umayyah ibn Bayāḍah.
- Furwah ibn ‘Amr ibn Wudfah ibn ‘Ubayd ibn ‘Āmir ibn Umayyah ibn Bayāḍah.
- Khālid ibn Qays ibn Mālik ibn ‘Ajlān ibn ‘Āmir ibn Bayāḍah.
From the Banū Zurayq ibn ‘Āmir, the brother of Bayāḍah ibn ‘Āmir:
- Dhakwān ibn ‘Abd Qays ibn Khuldah ibn Mukhlid ibn ‘Āmir ibn Zurayq ibn ‘Āmir.

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