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  1. World Encyclopedia
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Holy Land - Wikipedia
Extended-protected article
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abrahamic term for Israel and Palestine
For other uses, see Holy Land (disambiguation).

Holy Land
אֶרֶץ הַקּוֹדֶשׁ (Hebrew)
Άγιοι Τόποι (Greek)
Terra Sancta (Latin)
الأرض المقدسة (Arabic)
Map of the Holy Land by Genoese cartographer Pietro Vesconte in 1321, described as "the first non-Ptolemaic map of a definite country" by Swedish explorer Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld in 1889.[1]
Map
Interactive map of Holy Land
אֶרֶץ הַקּוֹדֶשׁ (Hebrew)
Άγιοι Τόποι (Greek)
Terra Sancta (Latin)
الأرض المقدسة (Arabic)
TypeSacred ground
LocationSouthern Levant
Original useThe Promised Land, bestowed upon Abraham and his descendants (the Israelites), according to the Abrahamic religions
Current useMajor pilgrimage destination for the Abrahamic world, including Jews, Christians, and Muslims

The term "Holy Land"[a] is used to collectively denote areas of the Southern Levant that hold great significance in the Abrahamic religions, primarily because of their association with people and events featured in the Bible. It is traditionally synonymous with what is known as the Land of Israel (Zion) or the Promised Land in a biblical or religious context, or as Canaan or Palestine in a secular or geographic context—referring to a region that is mostly between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River. Today, it chiefly overlaps with the combined territory of the modern states of Israel and Palestine. Most notable among the religions that tie substantial spiritual value to the Holy Land are Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.[2]

A considerable part of the Holy Land's importance derives from Jerusalem, which is regarded as extremely sacred in and of itself. It is the holiest city in Judaism and Christianity and the third-holiest city in Islam (behind Mecca and Medina in the Arabian Peninsula). The Temple in Jerusalem, referring to Solomon's Temple and the Second Temple, was the central place of worship for Israelites and Jews and serves as the namesake of the Temple Mount. According to the Bible, Jerusalem was made the capital city of the Kingdom of Israel and Judah under the House of David, thereafter being inherited by the Kingdom of Judah alone. Jesus of Nazareth, first brought to Jerusalem to be presented at the Second Temple shortly after his birth, was also highly active throughout the city during his life as a preacher. In Islamic belief, Isra' and Mi'raj refer to a night journey by Muhammad to the Holy Land, with the supernatural "Buraq" transporting him from Mecca's Masjid al-Haram to Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa Mosque, where he ascended to heaven and met God and past Islamic prophets and messengers; Jerusalem also served as the qibla (direction of Muslim prayers) prior to Mecca's Kaaba.

Historically, the Holy Land is notable for being the site of numerous religious wars. In the Middle Ages, the Christian pilgrimage, which involves visiting sites associated with Jesus or his disciples, contributed to the beginning of the Crusades, which were aimed at restoring Christian sovereignty in the region after it was lost to the early Muslim conquests. In the 19th century, the Holy Land again became the subject of international diplomatic wrangling as part of the "Eastern Question" with regard to the Ottoman Empire, culminating in the Crimean War in the 1850s. Around the same period, the emergence of Zionism, a nationalist ideology that tapped into Jewish aspirations to recover the Land of Israel, spurred a sizable portion of the Jewish diaspora to begin working towards the development of the region as the Jewish homeland. Eventually, following numerous waves of Jewish immigration, the Zionist movement issued the Israeli Declaration of Independence in May 1948, triggering the First Arab–Israeli War. Since then, the Holy Land's religious and political atmosphere has been dominated by the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.[3]

Pilgrimage and other religious activity in the Holy Land has long been central to the Judeo-Christian tradition and other Abrahamic religions. Restrictions on entry to the Temple Mount in the Old City of Jerusalem have been recurrent since the Ottoman era, with Jordan and Israel currently splitting responsibility of the site's administration. A number of sites are contested between certain groups, but subject to the "Status Quo" in Jerusalem and Bethlehem that effectively bars even the most minuscule changes in their status without universal consensus from the relevant religious parties. Pilgrims from all parts of the Abrahamic world visit the Holy Land to touch and see physical manifestations of their faith, to confirm their beliefs in the holy context with collective excitation,[4] and to establish a personal connection with the sites in order to strengthen their sense of spirituality.[5]

Judaism

Olive trees, like this one in Jerusalem, have intrinsic symbolism in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.[6]
Jewish cemetery on the Mount of Olives, Jerusalem. The holiness of Israel attracted Jews to be buried in its holy soil. The sage Rabbi Anan said "To be buried in Israel is like being buried under the altar."[7][8][9]

Researchers consider that the concept of a land made holy by being the "earthly dwelling of the God of Israel" was present in Judaism at the latest by the time of Zechariah (6th century BCE).[10]

Jews commonly refer to the Land of Israel as "The Holy Land" (Hebrew: אֶרֶץ הַקוֹדֵשׁ Eretz HaKodesh).[11] The Tanakh explicitly refers to it as "holy land" in Zechariah 2:16.[12] The term "holy land" is further used twice in the deuterocanonical books (Wisdom 12:3,[13] 2 Maccabees 1:7).[14] The holiness of the Land of Israel is generally implied by the Tanakh's claim that the Land was given to the Israelites by God, that is, it is the "Promised Land", an integral part of God's covenant.[citation needed]

In the Torah, many mitzvot commanded to the Israelites can only be performed in the Land of Israel,[15] which serves to differentiate it from other lands. For example, in the Land of Israel, "no land shall be sold permanently" (Leviticus 25:23).[16] Shmita is only observed with respect to the Land of Israel, and the observance of many holy days is different, as an extra day is observed in the Jewish diaspora.

According to Eliezer Schweid:

The uniqueness of the Land of Israel is...'geo-theological' and not merely climatic. This is the land which faces the entrance of the spiritual world, that sphere of existence that lies beyond the physical world known to us through our senses. This is the key to the land's unique status with regard to prophecy and prayer, and also with regard to the commandments.[17]

From the perspective of the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, the holiness of Israel had been concentrated since the sixteenth century, especially for burial, in the "Four Holy Cities": Jerusalem, Hebron, Safed and Tiberias – as Judaism's holiest cities. Jerusalem, as the site of the Temple, is considered especially significant.[18] Sacred burials are still undertaken for diaspora Jews who wish to lie buried in the holy soil of Israel.[19]

According to Jewish tradition, Jerusalem is Mount Moriah, the location of the binding of Isaac. The Hebrew Bible mentions the name "Jerusalem" 669 times, often because many mitzvot can only be performed within its environs. The name "Zion", which usually refers to Jerusalem, but sometimes the Land of Israel, appears in the Hebrew Bible 154 times.

The Talmud mentions the religious duty of populating Israel.[20] So significant in Judaism is the act of purchasing land in Israel, the Talmud allows for the lifting of certain religious restrictions of Sabbath observance to further its acquisition and settlement.[21] Rabbi Johanan said that "Whoever walks four cubits in Eretz Yisrael [the Land of Israel] is guaranteed entrance to the World to Come".[22][19] A story says that when R. Eleazar b. Shammua' and R. Johanan HaSandlar left Israel to study from R. Judah ben Bathyra, they only managed to reach Sidon when "the thought of the sanctity of Palestine overcame their resolution, and they shed tears, rent their garments, and turned back".[19] Due to the Jewish population being concentrated in Israel, emigration was generally prevented, which resulted in a limiting of the amount of space available for Jewish learning. However, after suffering persecutions in Israel for centuries after the destruction of the Temple, Rabbis who had found it very difficult to retain their position moved to Babylon, which offered them better protection. Many Jews wanted Israel to be the place where they died, in order to be buried there. The sage Rabbi Anan said "To be buried in Israel is like being buried under the altar."[7][8][9] The saying "His land will absolve His people" implies that burial in Israel will cause one to be absolved of all one's sins.[19][23]

Christianity

See also: Christian pilgrimage, Travelogues of Palestine, Jerusalem in Christianity, and List of Christian holy sites in the Holy Land
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is one of the most important pilgrimage sites in Christianity, as it is the purported site of Christ's resurrection.

For Christians, the Holy Land is considered holy because of its association with the birth, ministry, crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus, whom Christians regard as the incarnation of God and the Messiah.

Christian books, including many editions of the Bible, often have maps of the Holy Land (considered to include the regions of Galilee, Samaria, and Judea). For instance, the Itinerarium Sacrae Scripturae (lit. 'Travel book through Holy Scripture') of Heinrich Bünting (1545–1606), a German Protestant pastor, featured such a map.[24] His book was very popular, and it provided "the most complete available summary of biblical geography and described the geography of the Holy Land by tracing the travels of major figures from the Old and New testaments."[24] As a geographic term, the description "Holy Land" loosely encompasses modern-day Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, western Jordan and southwestern Syria.

Islam

Dome of the Rock (left) and Masjid Al-Qibli (right). The mosque was Islam's first direction of prayer (Qibla), and Muslims believe that Muhammad ascended to heaven from there
See also: Jerusalem in Islam and Syria (region)

In the Quran, the term Al-Ard Al-Muqaddasah (Arabic: الأرض المقدسة, English: 'Holy Land') is used in a passage about Musa (Moses) proclaiming to the Children of Israel: "O my people! Enter the Holy Land which Allah has destined for you ˹to enter˺. And do not turn back or else you will become losers."[Quran 5:21] The Quran also refers to the land as being 'Blessed'.[25][26][27]

Jerusalem, known in Arabic as Al-Quds (Arabic: الـقُـدس, 'The Holy') has particular significance in Islam. The Quran refers to Muhammad's experiencing the Isra and Mi'raj as "Glory be to the One Who took His servant ˹Muḥammad˺ by night from the Sacred Mosque to the Farthest Mosque whose surroundings We have blessed, so that We may show him some of Our signs".[Quran 17:1] Ahadith infer that the "Farthest Masjid" is in Al-Quds; for example, as narrated by Abu Hurairah: "On the night journey of the Apostle of Allah, two cups, one containing wine and the other containing milk, were presented to him at Al-Quds (Jerusalem). He looked at them and took the cup of milk. Angel Gabriel said, 'Praise be to Allah, who guided you to Al-Fitrah (the right path); if you had taken (the cup of) wine, your Ummah would have gone astray'." Jerusalem was Islam's first Qiblah (direction of prayer) in Muhammad's lifetime, however, this was later changed to the Kaaba in the Hijazi city of Mecca, following a revelation to Muhammad by the Archangel Jibril.[28] The current construction of the Al-Aqsa mosque, which lies on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, is dated to the early Umayyad period of rule in Palestine. Architectural historian K. A. C. Creswell, referring to a testimony by Arculf, a Gallic monk, during his pilgrimage to Palestine in 679–82, notes the possibility that the second caliph of the Rashidun Caliphate, Umar ibn al-Khattab, erected a primitive quadrangular building for a capacity of 3,000 worshipers somewhere on the Haram ash-Sharif. However, Arculf visited Palestine during the reign of Mu'awiyah I, and it is possible that Mu'awiyah ordered the construction, not Umar. This latter claim is explicitly supported by the early Muslim scholar al-Muthahhar bin Tahir.[29] According to the Quran and Islamic traditions, Al-Aqsa Mosque is the place from which Muhammad went on a night journey (al-isra) during which he rode on Buraq, who took him from Mecca to al-Aqsa.[30] Muhammad tethered Buraq to the Western Wall and prayed at al-Aqsa Mosque and after he finished his prayers, the angel Jibril (Gabriel) traveled with him to heaven, where he met several other prophets and led them in prayer.[31] The historical significance of the al-Aqsa Mosque in Islam is further emphasized by the fact that Muslims turned towards al-Aqsa when they prayed for a period of 16 or 17 months after migration to Medina in 624; it thus became the qibla ('direction') that Muslims faced for prayer.[32]

The exact region referred to as being 'blessed' in the Quran, in verses like 17:1, 21:71 and 34:18,[25][26][27] has been interpreted differently by various scholars. Abdullah Yusuf Ali likens it to a wide land-range including Syria and Lebanon, especially the cities of Tyre and Sidon; Az-Zujaj describes it as "Damascus, Palestine, and a bit of Jordan"; Muadh ibn Jabal as "the area between al-Arish and the Euphrates"; and Ibn Abbas as "the land of Jericho".[33] This overall region is referred to as "Ash-Shām" (Arabic: الـشَّـام).[34][35]

Baháʼí Faith

The holiest places for Baháʼí pilgrimage are the Shrine of Bahá'u'lláh and the Shrine of the Báb, which are UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the coastal cities of Acre and Haifa, respectively.[36]

The Baháʼí Faith's founder, Bahá'u'lláh, was exiled to Acre Prison from 1868 and spent his life in its surroundings until his death in 1892. In his writings he set the slope of Mount Carmel to host the Shrine of the Báb which his appointed successor 'Abdu'l-Bahá erected in 1909 as a beginning of the terraced gardens there. The Head of the religion after him, Shoghi Effendi, began building other structures and the Universal House of Justice continued the work until the Bahá'í World Centre was brought to its current state as the spiritual and administrative centre of the religion.[37][38] Its gardens are highly popular places to visit[39] and Mohsen Makhmalbaf's 2012 film The Gardener featured them.[40]

See also

  • Archaeological sites in Israel
  • Crusader states
  • History of Palestine
  • History of the Jews and Judaism in the Land of Israel
  • Holiest sites in Islam
  • Holy places
  • List of religious sites
  • Laws and customs of the Land of Israel in Judaism
  • Rivers of Paradise, sometimes associated with a religious concept of the Holy Land

Notes

  1. ^ Hebrew: אֶרֶץ הַקּוֹדֶשׁ, romanized: Ereṣ haqQōdeš; Greek: Άγιοι Τόποι, romanized: Ágioi Tópoi; Latin: Terra Sancta; Arabic: الأرض المقدسة, romanized: al-Arḍ al-Muqaddasah, or الديار المقدسة, ad-Diyār al-Muqaddasah.

References

  1. ^ Nordenskiöld, Adolf Erik (1889). Facsimile-atlas to the Early History of Cartography: With Reproductions of the Most Important Maps Printed in the XV and XVI Centuries. Kraus. pp. 51, 64.
  2. ^ "Palestine | History, People, & Religion | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  3. ^ "Religion and the Israel-Palestinian Conflict: Cause, Consequence, and Cure". washingtoninstitute.org. Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Retrieved 18 February 2025.
  4. ^ Harris, David (2005). "Functionalism". Key Concepts in Leisure Studies. Sage Key Concepts series (reprint ed.). London: Sage. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-7619-7057-6. Retrieved 9 March 2019. Tourism frequently deploys metaphors such [as] pilgrimage [...] Religious ceremonies reinforce social bonds between believers in the form of rituals, and in their ecstatic early forms, they produced a worship of the social, using social processes ('collective excitation').
  5. ^ Metti, Michael Sebastian (1 June 2011). "Jerusalem - the most powerful brand in history" (PDF). Stockholm University School of Business. Archived from the original on 26 January 2020. Retrieved 1 July 2011.
  6. ^ Angus, Julie (2014). Olive Odyssey: Searching for the Secrets of the Fruit That Seduced the World. Greystone Books. pp. 127–129. ISBN 978-1-77100-006-2. Retrieved 8 October 2020. The Olive Tree flourishes throughout Judaism, Islam and Christianity as a symbol of peace and prosperity, its oils cherished and its growers respected.
  7. ^ a b Ketubot (tractate) 111, quoted in Ein Yaakov
  8. ^ a b Rodkinson, Michael L. (translator) (2010). The Babylonian Talmud: all 20 volumes (Mobi Classics). MobileReference. p. 2234. ISBN 978-1-60778-618-4. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  9. ^ a b Gil, Moshe (1997). A history of Palestine, 634–1099. Cambridge University Press. p. 632. ISBN 978-0-521-59984-9.
  10. ^ Magness, Jodi (2017). "Purity Observance among Diaspora Jews in the Roman World" (PDF). Archaeology and Text. 1. Ariel University and Lehigh University: 39–65. doi:10.21461/AT012017.39-66 (inactive 17 July 2025). ISSN 2521-8034. Retrieved 16 July 2021.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of July 2025 (link)
  11. ^ Troen, Ilan; Troen, Carol (2019). "Indigeneity". Israel Studies. 24 (2). Israel Studies, Vol. 24, No. 2: 17. doi:10.2979/israelstudies.24.2.02. ISSN 1084-9513. JSTOR 10.2979/israelstudies.24.2.02. S2CID 262013035. Retrieved 24 September 2023. For Jews, Christians, and Muslims, the land between the Jordan and the Mediterranean is not just a place. It is the Holy Land or Eretz HaKodesh, Terra Sancta, and Al-Ard. Al-Muqaddasah.
  12. ^ Zechariah 2:16
  13. ^ Wisdom 12:3
  14. ^ 2 Maccabees 1:7
  15. ^ Ziegler, Aharon (2007). Halakhic positions of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik. Vol. 4. New York: KTAV Publishing House. p. 173. ISBN 978-0-88125-937-7. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
  16. ^ Leviticus 25:23
  17. ^ Schweid, Eliezer (1985). The Land of Israel: National Home Or Land of Destiny. Translated by Deborah Greniman. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press, ISBN 978-0-8386-3234-5, p. 56.
  18. ^ Feintuch, Yossi (1987). U.S. Policy on Jerusalem, Greenwood Publishing Group, p. 1. ISBN 978-0-313-25700-1. Quote: "For the Jews the city has been the pre-eminent focus of their spiritual, cultural, and national life throughout three millennia [i.e. since the 10th century BCE.]."
  19. ^ a b c d Jacobs, Joseph; Eisenstein, Judah David (1906). "Palestine, holiness of". The Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 30 July 2021 – via JewishEncyclopedia.com.
  20. ^ Herzog, Isaac (1967). The Main Institutions of Jewish Law: The law of obligations. Soncino Press. p. 51.
  21. ^ Zahavi, Yosef (1962). Eretz Israel in rabbinic lore (Midreshei Eretz Israel): an anthology. Tehilla Institute. p. 28. If one buys a house from a non-Jew in Israel, the title deed may be written for him even on the Sabbath. On the Sabbath!? Is that possible? But as Rava explained, he may order a non-Jew to write it, even though instructing a non-Jew to do a work prohibited to Jews on the Sabbath is forbidden by rabbinic ordination, the rabbis waived their decree on account of the settlement of Palestine.
  22. ^ Rabbi Nathan Shapira (1655). Chapter Eleven, Part 1: Footsteps in the Land. Venice. Retrieved 30 October 2018 – via chabad.org. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  23. ^ "Why Do Jews Fly Their Dead to Israel for Burial?". www.chabad.org. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  24. ^ a b Bünting, Heinrich (1585). "Description of the Holy Land". World Digital Library (in German).
  25. ^ a b Quran 17:1–16
  26. ^ a b Quran 21:51–82
  27. ^ a b Quran 34:10–18
  28. ^ Quran 2:142–177
  29. ^ Elad, Amikam. (1995). Medieval Jerusalem and Islamic worship : holy places, ceremonies, pilgrimage. Leiden: E.J. Brill. pp. 29–43. ISBN 978-90-04-10010-7. OCLC 30399668.
  30. ^ Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim world. Martin, Richard C. New York: Macmillan Reference USA. 2004. p. 482. ISBN 978-0-02-865603-8. OCLC 52178942.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  31. ^ Vuckovic, Brooke Olson. (2005). Heavenly journeys, earthly concerns: the legacy of the mi'raj in the formation of Islam. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-48747-1. OCLC 61428375.
  32. ^ Buchanan, Allen E.; Moore, Margaret, eds. (2003). States, nations, and borders: the ethics of making boundaries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-511-06159-2. OCLC 252506070.
  33. ^ Ali (1991), p. 934
  34. ^ Bosworth, C.E. (1997). "Al-Shām". Encyclopaedia of Islam. Vol. 9. p. 261.
  35. ^ Salibi, Kamal S. (2003). A House of Many Mansions: The History of Lebanon Reconsidered. I.B. Tauris. pp. 61–62. ISBN 978-1-86064-912-7. To the Arabs, this same territory, which the Romans considered Arabian, formed part of what they called Bilad al-Sham, which was their own name for Syria.
  36. ^ UNESCO World Heritage Centre (8 July 2008). "Three new sites inscribed on UNESCO's World Heritage List". Retrieved 8 July 2008.
  37. ^ Gatrella, Jay D.; Noga Collins-Kreinerb (September 2006). "Negotiated space: Tourists, pilgrims, and the Baháʼí terraced gardens in Haifa". Geoforum. 37 (5): 765–778. doi:10.1016/j.geoforum.2006.01.002. ISSN 0016-7185.
  38. ^ Smith, Peter (2000). "Arc-buildings of; Bahá'í World Centre". A concise encyclopedia of the Bahá'í Faith. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. pp. 45–46, 71–72. ISBN 978-1-85168-184-6.
  39. ^ Leichman, Abigail Klein (7 September 2011). "Israel's top 10 public gardens". Israel21c.org. Retrieved 30 March 2014.
  40. ^ Dargis, Manohla (8 August 2013). "The Cultivation of Belief – 'The Gardener,' Mohsen Makhmalbaf's Inquiry into Religion". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 March 2014.

External links

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Holy Land.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Holy Land.
  • Manuscripts from the Holy Land Shapell Manuscript Foundation
  • "Description of the Holy Land", 1585 map depicting the Holy Land at the time of Jesus, World Digital Library

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Palestine, Holiness of". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

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    • Brothers (including Binyāmin (Benjamin) and Simeon)
    • Egyptians
      • ʿAzīz (Potiphar, Qatafir or Qittin)
      • Malik (King Ar-Rayyān ibn Al-Walīd))
      • Wife of ʿAzīz (Zulaykhah)
    • Mother
    People of
    Aaron and Moses
    • Egyptians
      • Believer (Hizbil or Hizqil ibn Sabura)
      • Imraʾat Firʿawn (Āsiyá bint Muzāḥim the Wife of Pharaoh, who adopted Moses)
      • Magicians of the Pharaoh
    • Wise, pious man
    • Moses' wife
    • Moses' sister-in-law
    • Mother
    • Sister
    Evil ones
    • Āzar (possibly Terah)
    • Firʿawn (Pharaoh of Moses' time)
    • Hāmān
    • Jālūt (Goliath)
    • Qārūn (Korah, cousin of Moses)
    • As-Sāmirī
    • Abū Lahab
    • Slayers of Ṣāliḥ's she-camel (Qaddar ibn Salif and Musda' ibn Dahr)
    Implied or
    not specified
    • Abraha
    • Abu Bakr
    • Bal'am/Balaam
    • Barṣīṣā
    • Caleb or Kaleb the companion of Joshua
    • Luqman's son
    • Nebuchadnezzar II
    • Nimrod
    • Rahmah the wife of Ayyub
    • Shaddad
    Groups
    Mentioned
    • Aṣḥāb al-Jannah
      • People of Paradise
      • People of the Burnt Garden
    • Aṣḥāb as-Sabt (Companions of the Sabbath)
    • Jesus' apostles
      • Ḥawāriyyūn (Disciples of Jesus)
    • Companions of Noah's Ark
    • Aṣḥāb al-Kahf war-Raqīm (Companions of the Cave and Al-Raqaim?
    • Companions of the Elephant
    • People of al-Ukhdūd
    • People of a township in Surah Ya-Sin
    • People of Yathrib or Medina
    • Qawm Lūṭ (People of Sodom and Gomorrah)
    • Nation of Noah
    Tribes,
    ethnicities
    or families
    • ‘Ajam
    • Ar-Rūm (literally 'The Romans')
    • Banī Isrāʾīl (Children of Israel)
    • Muʾtafikāt (Sodom and Gomorrah)
    • People of Ibrahim
    • People of Ilyas
    • People of Nuh
    • People of Shuaib
      • Ahl Madyan People of Madyan)
      • Aṣḥāb al-Aykah ('Companions of the Wood')
    • Qawm Yūnus (People of Jonah)
    • Ya'juj and Ma'juj/Gog and Magog
    • People of Fir'aun
    • Current Ummah of Islam (Ummah of Muhammad)
      • Aṣḥāb Muḥammad (Companions of Muhammad)
        • Anṣār (literally 'Helpers')
        • Muhajirun (Emigrants from Mecca to Medina)
    • People of Mecca
      • Wife of Abu Lahab
    • Children of Ayyub
    • Sons of Adam
    • Wife of Nuh
    • Wife of Lut
    • Yaʾjūj wa Maʾjūj (Gog and Magog)
    • Son of Nuh
    Aʿrāb (Arabs
    or Bedouins)
    • ʿĀd (people of Hud)
    • Companions of the Rass
    • Qawm Tubbaʿ (People of Tubba)
      • People of Sabaʾ or Sheba
    • Quraysh
    • Thamūd (people of Ṣāliḥ)
      • Aṣḥāb al-Ḥijr ('Companions of the Stoneland')
    Ahl al-Bayt
    ('People of the
    Household')
    • Household of Abraham
      • Brothers of Yūsuf
      • Lot's daughters
      • Progeny of Imran
    • Household of Moses
    • Household of Muhammad
      • ibn Abdullah ibn Abdul-Muttalib ibn Hashim
      • Daughters of Muhammad
      • Muhammad's wives
    • Household of Salih
    Implicitly
    mentioned
    • Amalek
    • Ahl as-Suffa (People of the Verandah)
    • Banu Nadir
    • Banu Qaynuqa
    • Banu Qurayza
    • Iranian people
    • Umayyad Dynasty
    • Aus and Khazraj
    • People of Quba
    Religious
    groups
    • Ahl al-Dhimmah
    • Kāfirūn
      • disbelievers
    • Majūs Zoroastrians
    • Munāfiqūn (Hypocrites)
    • Muslims
      • Believers
    • Ahl al-Kitāb (People of the Book)
      • Naṣārā (Christian(s) or People of the Injil)
        • Ruhban (Christian monks)
        • Qissis (Christian priest)
      • Yahūd (Jews)
        • Ahbār (Jewish scholars)
        • Rabbani/Rabbi
      • Sabians
    • Polytheists
      • Meccan polytheists at the time of Muhammad
      • Mesopotamian polytheists at the time of Abraham and Lot
    Locations
    Mentioned
    • Al-Arḍ Al-Muqaddasah ('The Holy Land')
      • 'Blessed' Land'
    • Al-Jannah (Paradise, literally 'The Garden')
    • Jahannam (Hell)
    • Door of Hittah
    • Madyan (Midian)
    • Majmaʿ al-Baḥrayn
    • Miṣr (Mainland Egypt)
    • Salsabīl (A river in Paradise)
    In the
    Arabian Peninsula
    (excluding Madyan)
    • Al-Aḥqāf ('The Sandy Plains,' or 'the Wind-curved Sand-hills')
      • Iram dhāt al-ʿImād (Iram of the Pillars)
    • Al-Madīnah (formerly Yathrib)
    • ʿArafāt and Al-Mashʿar Al-Ḥarām (Muzdalifah)
    • Al-Ḥijr (Hegra)
    • Badr
    • Ḥunayn
    • Makkah (Mecca)
      • Bakkah
      • Ḥaraman Āminan ('Sanctuary (which is) Secure')
      • Kaʿbah (Kaaba)
      • Maqām Ibrāhīm (Station of Abraham)
      • Safa and Marwa
    • Sabaʾ (Sheba)
      • ʿArim Sabaʾ (Dam of Sheba)
    • Rass
    Sinai Region
    or Tīh Desert
    • Al-Wād Al-Muqaddas Ṭuwan (The Holy Valley of Tuwa)
      • Al-Wādil-Ayman (The valley on the 'righthand' side of the Valley of Tuwa and Mount Sinai)
        • Al-Buqʿah Al-Mubārakah ('The Blessed Place')
    • Mount Sinai or Mount Tabor
    In Mesopotamia
    • Al-Jūdiyy
      • Munzalanm-Mubārakan ('Place-of-Landing Blessed')
    • Bābil (Babylon)
    • Qaryat Yūnus ('Township of Jonah,' that is Nineveh)
    Religious
    locations
    • Bayʿa (Church)
    • Miḥrāb
    • Monastery
    • Masjid (Mosque, literally 'Place of Prostration')
      • Al-Mashʿar Al-Ḥarām ('The Sacred Grove')
      • Al-Masjid Al-Aqṣā (Al-Aqsa, literally 'The Farthest Place-of-Prostration')
      • Al-Masjid Al-Ḥarām (The Sacred Mosque of Mecca)
      • Masjid al-Dirar
      • A Mosque in the area of Medina, possibly:
        • Masjid Qubāʾ (Quba Mosque)
        • The Prophet's Mosque
    • Salat (Synagogue)
    Implied
    • Antioch
      • Antakya
    • Arabia
      • Al-Ḥijāz (literally 'The Barrier')
        • Al-Ḥajar al-Aswad (Black Stone) & Al-Hijr of Isma'il
        • Cave of Hira
        • Ghār ath-Thawr (Cave of the Bull)
        • Hudaybiyyah
        • Ta'if
    • Ayla
    • Barrier of Dhul-Qarnayn
    • Bayt al-Muqaddas & 'Ariha
    • Bilād ar-Rāfidayn (Mesopotamia)
    • Canaan
    • Cave of Seven Sleepers
    • Dār an-Nadwa
    • Jordan River
    • Nile River
    • Palestine River
    • Paradise of Shaddad
    Events, incidents, occasions or times
    • Incident of Ifk
    • Laylat al-Qadr (Night of Decree)
    • Event of Mubahala
    • Sayl al-ʿArim (Flood of the Great Dam of Ma'rib in Sheba)
    • The Farewell Pilgrimage
    • Treaty of Hudaybiyyah
    Battles or
    military expeditions
    • Battle of al-Aḥzāb ('the Confederates')
    • Battle of Badr
    • Battle of Hunayn
    • Battle of Khaybar
    • Battle of Uhud
    • Expedition of Tabuk
    • Conquest of Mecca
    Days
    • Al-Jumuʿah (The Friday)
    • As-Sabt (The Sabbath or Saturday)
    • Days of battles
    • Days of Hajj
    • Doomsday
    Months of the
    Islamic calendar
    • 12 months
      • Ash-Shahr Al-Ḥarām (The Sacred or Forbidden Months:
        • Dhu al-Qadah
        • Dhu al-Hijjah
        • Muharram
        • Rajab)
      • Ramadan
    Pilgrimages
    • Al-Ḥajj (literally 'The Pilgrimage', the Greater Pilgrimage)
    • Al-ʿUmrah (The Lesser Pilgrimage)
    Times for prayer
    or remembrance
    Times for Duʿāʾ ('Invocation'), Ṣalāh and Dhikr ('Remembrance', including Taḥmīd ('Praising'), Takbīr and Tasbīḥ):
    • Al-ʿAshiyy (The Afternoon or the Night)
    • Al-Ghuduww ('The Mornings')
      • Al-Bukrah ('The Morning')
      • Aṣ-Ṣabāḥ ('The Morning')
    • Al-Layl ('The Night')
      • Al-ʿIshāʾ ('The Late-Night')
    • Aẓ-Ẓuhr ('The Noon')
    • Dulūk ash-Shams ('Decline of the Sun')
      • Al-Masāʾ ('The Evening')
      • Qabl al-Ghurūb ('Before the Setting (of the Sun)')
        • Al-Aṣīl ('The Afternoon')
        • Al-ʿAṣr ('The Afternoon')
    • Qabl ṭulūʿ ash-Shams ('Before the rising of the Sun')
      • Al-Fajr ('The Dawn')
    Implied
  • Ghadir Khumm
  • Laylat al-Mabit
  • First Pilgrimage
  • Other
    Holy books
    • Al-Injīl (The Gospel of Jesus)
    • Al-Qurʾān (The Book of Muhammad)
    • Ṣuḥuf-i Ibrāhīm (Scroll(s) of Abraham)
    • At-Tawrāt (The Torah)
      • Ṣuḥuf-i-Mūsā (Scroll(s) of Moses)
      • Tablets of Stone
    • Az-Zabūr (The Psalms of David)
    • Umm al-Kitāb ('Mother of the Book(s)')
    Objects
    of people
    or beings
    • Heavenly food of Jesus' apostles
    • Noah's Ark
    • Staff of Musa
    • Tābūt as-Sakīnah (Casket of Shekhinah)
    • Throne of Bilqis
    • Trumpet of Israfil
    Mentioned idols
    (cult images)
    • 'Ansāb
    • Jibt and Ṭāghūt (False god)
    Of Israelites
    • Baʿal
    • The ʿijl (golden calf statue) of Israelites
    Of Noah's people
    • Nasr
    • Suwāʿ
    • Wadd
    • Yaghūth
    • Yaʿūq
    Of Quraysh
    • Al-Lāt
    • Al-ʿUzzā
    • Manāt
    Celestial
    bodies
    Maṣābīḥ (literally 'lamps'):
    • Al-Qamar (The Moon)
    • Kawākib (Planets)
      • Al-Arḍ (The Earth)
    • Nujūm (Stars)
      • Ash-Shams (The Sun)
    Plant matter
  • Baṣal (Onion)
  • Fūm (Garlic or wheat)
  • Shaṭʾ (Shoot)
  • Sūq (Plant stem)
  • Zarʿ (Seed)
  • Fruits
    • ʿAdas (Lentil)
    • Baql (Herb)
    • Qith-thāʾ (Cucumber)
    • Rummān (Pomegranate)
    • Tīn (Fig)
    • Zaytūn (Olive)
    • In Paradise
      • Forbidden fruit of Adam
    Bushes, trees
    or plants
    • Plants of Sheba
      • Athl (Tamarisk)
      • Sidr (Lote-tree)
    • Līnah (Tender Palm tree)
    • Nakhl (Date palm)
    • Sidrat al-Muntahā
    • Zaqqūm
    Liquids
    • Māʾ (Water or fluid)
      • Nahr (River)
      • Yamm (River or sea)
    • Sharāb (Drink)
    Note: Names are sorted alphabetically. Standard form: Islamic name / Biblical name (title or relationship)
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