When the Muslim army conquered the town of Ein-Ul-Tamr they found a number of Arab Christian priests in a monastery. One of them was called Nusair another called Serine. They both embraced Islam, Nusair is the father of Mosa Ben Nusair, the supreme commander of the forces which later conquered Spain under the leadership of Tariq Ben Zeyad, the second in command for Mosa Ben Nusair.
| Property | Value |
| dbpedia-owl:Event/date
|
- 0633-01-01 00:00:00 (xsd:date)
|
| dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/causalties
| |
| dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/combatant
|
- Rashidun Caliphate
- Sassanid Imperial troops along with their Arab Christian auxiliaries
|
| dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/commander
| |
| dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/partOf
| |
| dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/place
| |
| dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/result
| |
| dbpedia-owl:MilitaryConflict/strength
|
- 500-600
- Unknown number, although it consisted of a "great" following of Arab Christian tribes and Sassanian troops.
|
| dbpedia-owl:causalties
| |
| dbpedia-owl:combatant
|
- Rashidun Caliphate
- Sassanid Imperial troops along with their Arab Christian auxiliaries
|
| dbpedia-owl:commander
| |
| dbpedia-owl:date
|
- 0633-01-01 00:00:00 (xsd:date)
|
| dbpedia-owl:partOf
| |
| dbpedia-owl:place
| |
| dbpedia-owl:result
| |
| dbpedia-owl:strength
|
- 500-600
- Unknown number, although it consisted of a "great" following of Arab Christian tribes and Sassanian troops.
|
| dbpprop:abstract
|
- When the Muslim army conquered the town of Ein-Ul-Tamr they found a number of Arab Christian priests in a monastery. One of them was called Nusair another called Serine. They both embraced Islam, Nusair is the father of Mosa Ben Nusair, the supreme commander of the forces which later conquered Spain under the leadership of Tariq Ben Zeyad, the second in command for Mosa Ben Nusair. Serine, the other convert, is the father of the scholar Ibn Serine who became one of the more celebrated Muslim theologians. This battle took place in modern day Iraq between the early Muslim Arab forces and the Sassanians along with their Arab Christian auxiliary forces. Ein-ul-tamr is located west of Anbar and was a frontier post which had been established to aid the Sassanids. The Muslims under Khalid ibn al-Walid's command soundly defeated the Sassanian auxiliary force, which included large numbers of non-Muslim Arabs who broke earlier covenants with the Muslims. According to non-Muslim sources, Khalid ibn al-Walid captured the Arab Christian commander, Aqqa ibn Qays ibn Bashir, with his own hands. After the battle, some Persians had hoped that the Muslim commander, Khalid ibn al-Walid, would be "like those Arabs who would raid [and withdraw]. " However, Khalid continued to press further against the Persians and their allies in the subsequent Battle of Daumat-ul-jandal.
- Ayn al-Tamr (Font de dàtils) és una població d'Iraq propera al desert entre Anbar i Kufa a uns 130 km a l'oest de Karbala. Està situada al mig d'un palmerar. Era una ciutat dels lakhmides d'Hira. El rei persa Sapor es va casar aquí amb Nadira filla del rei d'Hatra. Fou atacada el 633 pel genral Khalid al-Walid i llavors era una fortalesa ben defensada amb una ciutadella fortificada. Khalid la va conquerir i va massacrar a la guarnició; els no combatents foren agafats com esclaus i enviats a Medina on van ser els primers esclaus que van arribar i alguns dels seus descendents van arribar a ser figures destacades com a militars administradors i intel·lectuals . La ciutat tenia una església cristiana i una comunitat jueva amb sinagoga pero la major part de la seva població eren àrabs. Va conservar certa importància com a enllaç entre el centre fèrtil iraquià i el desert sirià. Per aquesta ruta arribaven alguns atacs a Kufa i el governador d'aquesta vila hi va establir una guarnició. Els kharigites la van utilitzar com a base per la seva posició aïllada. Al segle IX fou poblada pels Banu Asad; al segle X era altre cop una vila fortificada. El 1258 fou capturada pels mongols que van conquerir també Bagdad i saquejada. Al segle XVI fou refugi de beduins. Fou visitada al 1919 per Gertrude Bell que la descrivia com una vila rodejada de muralles i una ciutadella, amb aigües sulfuroses, cultiu de cereals i 170.000 palmeres. El 1924 fou designada com a capital d'un districte (nahika). La vila estava dividida en quatre zones o barris: Abu Hardan. Kasr Thamir, Kasr al-Ayn i Kasr Abu Hwayd.
- ‘Ayn al-Tamr è una piccola città dell’Iraq, situata in una fertile area al confine del deserto, tra Anbar e Kufa, 130 km a ovest di Karbala. Il nome – che in arabo significa “La sorgente del dattero” – è giustificato dalla presenza di un gran numero di palme da dattero sul suo territorio. Secondo Hisham ibn al-Kalbi, ‘Ayn al-Tamr faceva parte della monarchia lakhmide di al-Hira, all’epoca di Jadhima al-Abrash. Fu conquistata nel 634 dal comandante musulmano Khalid ibn al-Walid. ‘Ayn al-Tamr (come buona parte del regno lakhmide) era di fede cristiana monofisita e ciò sarebbe dimostrato dalla presenza di una chiesa. Era presente anche una comunità ebraica, dal momento che esisteva anche una sinagoga. La massima parte degli abitanti apparteneva alle tribù dei Banu Taghlib, dei B. Numayr e dei B. Asad, tutti impegnati nell’agricoltura. ‘Ayn al-Tamr conservò la sua rilevanza di centro agricolo e i governatori di Kufa la dotarono di una significativa guarnigione che potesse fungere da difesa dell’importante capoluogo di governatorato e delle importanti strade di comunicazione con l’Arabia e la Persia.
|
| dbpprop:casualties
| |
| dbpprop:combatant
| |
| dbpprop:commander
| |
| dbpprop:conflict
| |
| dbpprop:date
| |
| dbpprop:partof
| |
| dbpprop:place
| |
| dbpprop:reference
| |
| dbpprop:result
| |
| dbpprop:strength
|
- 500-600
- Unknown number, although it consisted of a "great" following of Arab Christian tribes and Sassanian troops.
|
| dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
| rdf:type
| |
| rdfs:comment
|
- When the Muslim army conquered the town of Ein-Ul-Tamr they found a number of Arab Christian priests in a monastery. One of them was called Nusair another called Serine. They both embraced Islam, Nusair is the father of Mosa Ben Nusair, the supreme commander of the forces which later conquered Spain under the leadership of Tariq Ben Zeyad, the second in command for Mosa Ben Nusair.
- Ayn al-Tamr (Font de dàtils) és una població d'Iraq propera al desert entre Anbar i Kufa a uns 130 km a l'oest de Karbala. Està situada al mig d'un palmerar. Era una ciutat dels lakhmides d'Hira. El rei persa Sapor es va casar aquí amb Nadira filla del rei d'Hatra. Fou atacada el 633 pel genral Khalid al-Walid i llavors era una fortalesa ben defensada amb una ciutadella fortificada.
- ‘Ayn al-Tamr è una piccola città dell’Iraq, situata in una fertile area al confine del deserto, tra Anbar e Kufa, 130 km a ovest di Karbala. Il nome – che in arabo significa “La sorgente del dattero” – è giustificato dalla presenza di un gran numero di palme da dattero sul suo territorio. Secondo Hisham ibn al-Kalbi, ‘Ayn al-Tamr faceva parte della monarchia lakhmide di al-Hira, all’epoca di Jadhima al-Abrash.
|
| rdfs:label
|
- Battle of Ein-ul-Tamr
- Ayn al-Tamr
- Ayn al-Tamr
|
| skos:subject
| |
| foaf:name
| |
| foaf:page
| |
| is dbpprop:redirect
of | |