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{{Short description|Daughter of Husayn ibn Ali}}
{{Short description|Daughter of Husayn ibn Ali}}
{{About-distinguish|Ruqayya bint al-Husayn|Sakinah (Fatima al-Kubra) bint Husayn}}
{{About-distinguish|Ruqayya bint al-Husayn|Sakinah (Fatima al-Kubra) bint Husayn}}
{{multiple issues|
{{POV|date=October 2016}}
{{tone|date=October 2016}}
}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Ruqayya bint al-Husayn<br/>{{lang|ar|رُقَيَّة بِنْت ٱلْحُسَيْن}}
| name = Ruqayya bint al-Husayn<br/>{{lang|ar|رُقَيَّة بِنْت ٱلْحُسَيْن}}
| image =
| image =
| caption =
| caption =
| father = [[Husayn ibn Ali]]
| father = [[Husayn ibn Ali]]
| mother = [[Rubab bint Imra al-Qais]]
| mother =
| birth_date = 20 [[Rajab]], 56 AH (676 [[Common Era|CE]])
| birth_date = {{circa|676 CE}}
| birth_place = [[Medina]], [[Umayyad Caliphate]]
| birth_place = [[Medina]], [[Umayyad Caliphate]]
| death_date = {{circa|680 CE}}
| death_date = 10th safar, 60 / 61 AH (680 / 681 CE)<ref name="book388-9">{{cite book |title=Nafasul Mahmoom |year=2005 |publisher=Ansariyan Publications |location=Qum |pages=388–389 |chapter=3}}</ref>
| death_place = [[Damascus]], [[Umayyad Caliphate]]
| death_place = [[Damascus]], Umayyad Caliphate
| resting_place = [[Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque]], Damascus
| resting_place = [[Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque]], Damascus
}}
}}


'''Ruqayya bint al-Ḥusayn''' ({{lang-ar|رُقَيَّة بِنْت ٱلْحُسَيْن}}) is said to have been a daughter of [[Husayn ibn Ali]], the third [[Twelve Imams|Imam]] in [[Twelver Shi'ism|Twelver Shia]]. Husayn and a small group of his supporters were massacred in the [[Battle of Karbala]] in 680 [[Common Era|CE]] on the order of the [[Umayyad Caliphate|Umayyad]] caliph [[Yazid I|Yazid]] ({{Reign|680|683}}). Their women and children were then taken captive and marched to the capital [[Damascus]], where it is said that Ruqayya died at the age of about three, possibly due to the hostility of her captors. The shrine associated with Ruqayya in Damascus is a popular destination for Shia pilgrimage.
'''Ruqayya bint al-Ḥusayn'''<ref name="CDKA">{{Cite book |last1=Arne |first1=Ambros |last2=Stephan |first2=Procházka |year=2004 |title=A Concise Dictionary of Koranic Arabic |place=Wiesbaden |publisher=Ludwig Reichert Verlag |page=136 |isbn=3-89500-400-6}}</ref> ({{lang-ar|رُقَيَّة بِنْت ٱلْحُسَيْن}}, born on the 20th of [[Rajab]], 56 AH – 5 [[Rabi' al-Thani]], 60 / 61 AH or 676 [[Common Era|CE]]; died on the 10th of [[Safar]], 60 / 61 AH or 680 / 681 CE),<ref name="book388-9">{{cite book |title=Nafasul Mahmoom |year=2005 |publisher=Ansariyan Publications |location=Qum |pages=388–389 |chapter=3}}</ref> was the daughter of [[Husayn ibn Ali]] and [[Rubab bint Imra al-Qais]].<ref name=Qummi>Shaykh Abbas Qummi. ''Nafasul Mahmoom.'' p.298.</ref> Her brothers included [[Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al-Abidin|Ali Zayn al-Abidin]], [[Ali al-Akbar ibn Husayn|Ali al-Akbar]], and [[Ali al-Asghar ibn Husayn|Ali al-Asghar]]. Her sisters included [[Daughters of Husayn ibn Ali|Fatima al-Sughra and Fatima al-Kubra]], with the latter also being called 'Sakina'.<ref name=Ihic.org>[http://www.ihic.org.au/articles.php?a_id=32 Ihic.org] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091016134802/http://www.ihic.org.au/articles.php?a_id=32 |date=October 16, 2009 }}</ref><ref name="Shi‘ah.org">[http://www.shia.org/aliakbar.html/ Shia.org] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090301064957/http://www.shia.org/aliakbar.html/ |date=March 1, 2009 }}</ref><ref name=ImamRida.net>{{cite web |url=http://www.imamreza.net/eng/imamreza.php?id=3062/ |title=(A.S.) Network |publisher=Imamreza.net |access-date=2015-07-02}}</ref><ref name=Fortunecity>[http://members.fortunecity.com/masoom110/TRUEISLAM/id17.html/ Fortunecity.org] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090221072107/http://members.fortunecity.com/masoom110/TRUEISLAM/id17.html/ |date=February 21, 2009 }}</ref><ref name=Alimoula2015>{{cite web |url=http://www.alimoula110.com/woman2.php/ |title=The Role of Women in Karbala |publisher=Alimoula110.com |access-date=2015-07-02}}</ref>


==Life==
==Parents==
Some early historians list only two daughters for [[Husayn ibn Ali]], namely, Fatima and [[Sakina bint Husayn|Sakina]].{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}}{{Sfn|Madelung|2004}} These include the [[Sunni Islam|Sunni]] authors [[Ibn Sa'd]] ({{Died in|845}}) and [[al-Baladhuri]] ({{Died in|892}}), and the [[Twelver Shi'ism|Twelver]] authors [[Al-Shaykh al-Mufid|al-Mufid]] ({{Died in|1022}}) and [[Shaykh Tabarsi|al-Tabarsi]] ({{Died in|1153}}).{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}} Some authors add Zaynab as the third daughter,{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} including the Twelver [[Ibn Shahrashub]] ({{Died in|1192}}) and Imad al-Din al-Tabari ({{Died in|{{circa|1300}}}}).{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}} Finally, some others have reported four daughters for Husayn, including the [[Shia Islam|Shia]] Baha al-Din al-Irbili ({{Died in|1293-4}}) and the Sunni Ibn Talha Shafi'i ({{Died in|1339}}). Out of these four, the latter author only names Fatima, Sakina, and Zaynab.{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} The prominent polymath [[Abu'l-Hasan Bayhaqi|Ibn Fondoq]] ({{Died in|1170}}) lists the four daughters as Fatima, Sakina, Zaynab, and Umm Kulthum, but emphasizes that the last two died in childhood.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Reyshahri|2009|p=383}} Ibn Fondoq elsewhere writes that Husayn was survived by Fatima, Sakina, and Ruqayya,{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} which suggests that Ruqayya is the same person as Umm Kulthum.{{Sfn|Reyshahri|2009|p=383}} Aside from Fatima and Sakina, sources thus differ and some count Ruqayya among the daughters of Husayn.{{Sfn|Haj-Manouchehri|2022}} This name is also mentioned in some accounts of Husayn's parting words for his family before he left for the battlefield one last time, but the Twelver cleric [[Mohammad Reyshahri|M. Reyshahri]] ({{Died in|2022}}) writes that this could also be a reference to [[Ruqayya bint Ali]], wife of [[Muslim ibn Aqil]], Husayn's slain envoy to the [[Kufa|Kufans]].{{Sfn|Reyshahri|2009|p=384}} The name Ruqayya also appears twice in a poem about Husayn ascribed to Sayf ibn Umayra Nakha'i, who was a companion of [[Ja'far al-Sadiq]] ({{Died in|765}}), the sixth [[Twelve Imams|Imam]] in Twelver Shia, but the attribution of this poem to Sayf is not certain.{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} Little is now known about her mother.{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}}
''Ruqayya'' ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: رقيّة) is an [[Arabic]] [[female]] [[given name]] that means to "rise, ascent, ascend", or "chant or recite Divine Words". It is derived either from the Arabic "Ruqia", meaning "rise, ascent", or from "ruqyah", telling "spell, charm, incantation".<ref>{{cite web |title=Definitions for ruqayya |url=https://www.definitions.net/definition/ruqayya |website=definitions}}</ref> According to [[Najm al-Din Tabasi|Najim al-Din Tabasi]], the name of the fourth daughter of Husayn is Ruqayya.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Tabasi|first1=Najm al-Din|title=Ruqayya bnt. al-Ḥusayn|pages=8–9}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Ruqayyah bint Al-Husayn |url=http://www.quranreading.com/blog/ruqayyah-bint-al-husayn-a-short-biography-of-her-birth-aniversary-in-rajab/ |website=quranreading|date=17 March 2020 }}</ref> The name of Ruqayya and the events that took place for her in the ruins of Sham were mentioned in other books including Kamil Baha'i by Imad al-Din Tabari, [[Bihar al-Anwar]] by [[Mohammad-Baqer Majlesi]], and [[Lohoof]] by [[Sayyed Ibn Tawus]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Majlisi |first1=Allama Muhammad Baqir |title=Behar al-Anwar, Volumes 44 & 45 |date=December 2014 |publisher=Islamic Seminary Incorporated, The; 1st edition (December 1, 2014) |isbn=978-0991430819 |pages=115–161 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aTS9rQEACAAJ&q=Behar+Al-Anwar+Volume+45}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=al-Tabari|first1=Imad al-Din|title=Kamil Baha'i|page=523}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Ruqayya bent. al-Ḥusayn |url=http://twelfthimamandhisancestors.blog.ir/post/12 |website=fthimamand}}</ref><ref name="Bayhaqi"/> However, in mentioning the names of the children of Husayn, [[Al-Shaykh Al-Mufid]] mentioned just two daughters named Fatima and Sukayna binte Husayn.<ref name="Bayhaqi">{{cite book |last1=Bayhaqi |first1=Abu'l-Hasan |title=Lubab al-ansab wa-al-alqab wa-al-a'qab |year=2013 |publisher=Turath For Solutions, 2013 |isbn=9789957694760 |pages=350–355 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JuG3AQAACAAJ}}</ref> After the Battle of the Karbala, she was taken to Suriya with other members family of Muhammad, the prophet of Islam, and the heads of those murdered by the forces of Yazid as a captive.<ref name="Tahmasebi Beldaji">{{cite journal|last1=Tahmasebi Beldaji|first1=Asghar|title=Documentary review of Quran in sermons of Zainab bint Ali|journal=Science of Quran and Hadith|date=April 2013 |volume=16|url=http://www.noormags.ir/view/fa/articlepage/983682}}</ref><ref name="Mahjubah">{{cite web |title=Mahjubah, Volume 15 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qYvYAAAAMAAJ&q=4+years+old+daughter+of+husayn+martyred+on+syria |date=Jul 2, 2009}}</ref> Taking hadith and history sources into consideration, a daughter of Husayn (who was named Ruqayya or Fatima) died near the head of her father in the ruins of Sham.<ref>{{cite book |last1=al-Qummi |first1=Shaikh Abbas |title=Nafasul Mahmoom: Relating to the Heart Rending Tragedy of Karbala |year=2005 |isbn=978-1500796785 |pages=415–416 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LJTTXwAACAAJ}}</ref><ref name="al-Irbili">{{cite web |last1=al-Irbili |first1=Ali b. Isa |title=Kashf al-ghummah fi ma'rifat al-A'immah |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RsZFtAEACAAJ&q=Kashf+al-Ghummah+fi+Ma%E2%80%99rifat+al-A%E2%80%99immah+google+book |website=books.google|year=1961 }}</ref> According to different narrations, she was three, or four, at the time of her death.<ref name="sibtayn">{{cite web |title=Hazrat Ruqayyah (A.S), the Young Heroin of Karbala |url=https://www.sibtayn.com/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7346:hazrat-ruqayyah-a-s-,-the-young-heroin-of-karbala&catid=587&Itemid=2070}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Tabari|first1=Imad al-Din|title=Baha al-Din's al-Kamil|page=523}}</ref>


=== Narrative ===
== Death ==
{{See also|Battle of Karbala}}
[[File:Muharram in cities and villages of Iran-342 16 (157).jpg|130px|thumbnail|An Iranian child in [[Mourning of Muharram]], with a red [[Headband]] written "O Ruqayya"]]
[[File:Muharram in cities and villages of Iran-342 16 (157).jpg|130px|thumbnail|An Iranian child in [[Mourning of Muharram]], with a red [[headband]] reading "O Ruqayya!"]]
Husayn denounced the accession of the [[Umayyad Caliphate|Umayyad caliph]] [[Yazid I|Yazid ibn Mu'awiya]] in 680 CE. When pressed by Yazid's agents to pledge his allegiance, Husayn first fled from his hometown of [[Medina]] to [[Mecca]] and later set off for Kufa, accompanied by his family and a small group of supporters. They were intercepted near the city and massacred by the Umayyad forces, who first surrounded them for some days and cut off their access to the nearby [[Euphrates]].{{Sfn|Madelung|2004}} After the battle, the women and children were taken captive and marched to Kufa and then the capital [[Damascus]].{{Sfn|Veccia Vaglieri|2012}} The earliest account of the death in captivity of a daughter of Husayn appears in {{Transl|ar|Kamel al-bahai}} by Imad al-Din al-Tabari without giving her name.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} He writes that the women had hidden the death of Husayn from his young children until they were brought to the palace of Yazid. There a daughter of Husayn, aged four, woke up crying one night and asked for her father, saying that she had just seen him distressed and anguished in her dream. The women's cry awakened Yazid who then learned from his men about its cause. Yazid ordered Husayn's head to be taken to the child. The shock left the child ill and she died in the coming days.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}}{{Sfn|Reyshahri|2009|p=385}} The source of al-Tabari was the non-extant {{Transl|ar|al-Hawiya fi masalib Mu'awiya}} by the Sunni scholar Qasim ibn Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Ma'muni.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} The [[Sufism|Sufi]] scholar [[Husayn Kashifi]] ({{Died in|910}}) gives a similar account in his martyrology {{Transl|ar|Rawzat al-shuhada}}, again without naming the child, this time sourced from {{Transl|ar|Kanz al-ghara'ib fi ghasas al-aja'ib}}, a book by Najm al-Din Qasim Madhmakini about the first four caliphs, Husayn, and his elder brother [[Hasan ibn Ali|Hasan]] ({{Died in|670}}).{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} The main difference between the two versions is that the child dies on the same night in the latter version, and this is what the later sources report.{{Sfn|Reyshahri|2009|p=386}} Some later sources also identify this child as Ruqayya or Zubayda.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} A common narrative in the [[Qajar Iran|Qajar]]-era ritual remembrance of Karbala was that Ruqayya saw her father in a dream and prayed to be allowed to join her. She died soon after and her death was regarded as a form of martyrdom which thus released her from her suffering at the hands of the Umayyads.{{Sfn|Aghaie|2009|p=51}} Some modern sources identify as Sakina this young child of Husayn who is said to have died in captivity in Damascus.{{Sfn|Pinault|2016|p=13}}{{Sfn|Nematollahi Mahani|2013|p=39}}


== Shrine ==
The story of Ruqayya is one of the many romanticized stories that Muslims tell about Husayn and his martyrdom at the hands of [[Yazid I|Yazid]]'s troops. The [[Battle of Karbala]] and the subsequent events at the court of Yazid are explained and mourned annually during the commemoration of the 10th of [[Muharram]], also known as "'[[Ashura]]".

=== Journey to Iraq and Shaam ===
{{main|Battle of Karbala}}
[[File:Hall of Yezid mahal detainee karbala war.jpeg|thumb|Hall of [[Umayyad Mosque|Yazid Mahal]] where Ruqayya died weeping over her father's head]]

She accompanied her father when he travelled from [[Mecca]] to [[Kufa]] in [[Iraq]]. On the 2nd of Muharram, 61 AH (680 CE), Husayn and 72 of his family members and companions were forced to camp in the plains of [[Karbala]] by [[Yazid I|Yazid]]'s army of 30,000 men.<ref>{{cite book|last=Wellhausen|first=Julius |year= 1901|title=Die religiös-politischen Oppositionsparteien im alten Islam|language=de|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.358135|publisher=Weidmannsche Buchhandlung|location=Berlin|oclc=453206240}}</ref> Yazid ibn [[Mu'awiya I|Mu'awiya]] was the practical [[Umayyad Caliphate#List of caliphs|Caliph]] who desired religious authority by obtaining the allegiance of Husayn, but the Imam would not give up his principles.<ref name="Iranica">{{cite encyclopedia | last=Madelung | first=Wilferd | author-link=Wilferd Madelung | title=HOSAYN B. ALI | encyclopedia=Iranica | access-date=12 January 2008 | url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/hosayn-b-ali-i | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120930053613/http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/hosayn-b-ali-i | archive-date=30 September 2012 | url-status=live }}</ref> After being deprived of food and water for 3 days, on the 10th of [[Muharram]], the Imam's [[Ahl al-Bayt|household]] was attacked, a number of his companions were killed, and the survivors were made captives. The survivors included the Imam's sisters, wife, and daughters, including Ruqayya, relatives of companions of the Imam, and his son, Ali Zayn al-Abidin, who did not participate in the battle, due to an illness. Ruqayya, as with others, had grieved over the killings.<ref>{{cite book |last=Donaldson |first = Dwight M. |title = The Shi'ite Religion: A History of Islam in Persia and Irak|year=1933|pages=101–111|publisher=Burleigh Press }}</ref> They had also suffered from thirst.<ref name="coej.org"/>

The survivors were marched by Yazid's army from Karbala to Kufa, where the women received water from a sympathetic woman, and then to Damascus in [[Syria (region)|Shaam, Syria]]. There was a lack of pity on the captors' part during the journey. Even in these times of hardship and misery, Ruqayya was sympathetic to others, such as her mother, whom she consoled her mother on the death of Ali al-Asghar.<ref name="coej.org">[http://www.coej.org/boardsdesks/ica/project-enlightenment-mainmenu-729/2178--bibi-sakina-as-the-young-hashemite-princess Coej.org] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110214210850/http://www.coej.org/boardsdesks/ica/project-enlightenment-mainmenu-729/2178--bibi-sakina-as-the-young-hashemite-princess |date=February 14, 2011 }}</ref><ref name="al-islam.org">{{cite web|url=http://www.al-islam.org/journey-of-tears/8.htm |title=The Fourth Journey – Kufa to Shaam &#124; The Journey of Tears &#124; Books on Islam and Muslims |publisher=Al-Islam.org |date=2013-10-28 |access-date=2015-06-02}}</ref><ref name=NuM>Nafs ul Mahmoom by Sheikh ‘Abbas Qummi, Behar ul Anwaar, Vol I by ‘Allamah Sayyad Mohammad Baqir Majlisi and others.</ref>

==Death==
Zaynab, Ruqayya, and the other survivors of Husayn's army, most of them women and children, were marched to Damascus, Yazid's capital, where they were held captive.<ref name="Hyder">{{cite book |last1=Hyder |first1=Syed Akbar |title=Reliving Karbala: Martyrdom in South Asian Memory |date=20 April 2006 |publisher=Oxford University Press, 2006 |isbn=9780195345933 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E80OGPmP3GoC&q=Zainab+accompanied+hussain+kufa&pg=PA95}}</ref><ref name="Kendal">{{cite book |last1=Kendal |first1=Elizabeth |title=After Saturday Comes Sunday: Understanding the Christian Crisis |date=8 June 2016 |publisher=Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2016 |isbn=9781498239875 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I9jPDAAAQBAJ&q=Zaynab+accompanied+hussain+kufa&pg=PA28}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=SYRIA |url=https://mailviruskid.tripod.com/ |website=mailviruskid}}</ref>

=== Mosque ===
{{Main|Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque}}
{{Main|Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque}}
A shrine in Damascus is often associated with Ruqayya.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}} Among others, this is the view of the Twelver authors Muhammad Hashim Khorasani ({{Died in|1933-4}}) and Muhammad Haeri Karaki (alive in 1548 CE).{{Sfn|Reyshahri|2009|pp=389-92}} Some have instead considered the shrine to be the burial site of Husayn's head, including the Sunni historians [[Ibn Kathir]] ({{Died in|1373}}) and [[al-Dhahabi]] ({{Died in|1348}}).{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}} Yet some others have reported it as the grave of Ruqayya bint Ali,{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}} which might be in [[Cairo]] instead.{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} There are also eye-witness accounts in some sources that the grave belongs to a female child, whose body had to be exhumed and reburied during the repairs to the site.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}{{Sfn|Reyshahri|2009|pp=389-92}} The attribution of the shrine to Ruqayya bint al-Husayn is thus not certain, according to Reyshahri, who nevertheless believes that the site is associated with the [[Ahl al-Bayt]], that is, the House of Muhammad.{{Sfn|Reyshahri|2009|p=393}} A popular destination for Shia pilgrimage, the shrine is located in the Suq al-Emara market to the north of the [[Umayyad Mosque]]. There are also surviving records of multiple reconstructions and expansions, as early as the fifteenth century CE.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}} The current building was completed about 1991 CE,{{Sfn|Mohtaram-Vakili|2015}} exhibiting a mix of [[Syria|Syrian]] and [[Iranian architecture|Iranian]] architectures, with substantial use of mirrors, tiles, and white stone.{{Sfn|Khameh-Yar|2023}}
{{gallery
|title=Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque
|align=center
|Image:Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque 05.jpg|View of the courtyard
|Image:Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque 03.jpg|Prayer hall
|Image:Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque - Chandelier 02.jpg|A chandelier in the mosque
|File:Mosque Sayyeda Ruqayya, Damasscus.jpg|[[Minaret]]
}}
{{gallery
|align=center
|Image:Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque 02.jpg|[[Zarih]]
|Image:Zarih of Ruqayya bint Husayn.jpg|
|File:Zarih Ruqayya bint Husain.jpg|
}}


According to [[Shia Islam|Shia]][[Islam|Islamic]] narrations that are commemorated every year on the occasion of [[Ashura]], after enduring the [[Battle of Karbala]] and the torturous journey to Damascus that followed it, Ruqayya died at the age of four weeping over her father's head in [[Umayyad Mosque|Yazid palace hall]] where the prisoner initially stayed and, her body was originally buried at a nearby site. Centuries later, an ''ʿĀlim'' ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: عَالِم, Scholar) had a dream in which Ruqayya asked him to move her body from the grave to another site, due to water pouring into her grave. He and some people opened the grave and saw that groundwater was indeed entering the grave, besides that her body was still intact. Ruqqaya's body was moved from its original burial place, the dungeon, and reburied where her [[Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque|Mosque]] is now located.<ref name=SOTTOSR2008>'Summary of the Tragedy of Sayyeda Ruqayya', Booklet at Ruqayya Mosque, 2008</ref><ref name=Mailviruskid>{{cite web |title=Syria |publisher=Mailviruskid.tripod.com |url=http://mailviruskid.tripod.com |access-date=2016-10-14}}</ref>
The mosque was built around the mausoleum in 1985 and exhibits a modern version of [[Iranian architecture]], with a substantial amount of mirror and gold work. There is a small mosque area adjoining the shrine room, along with a small courtyard in front. This mosque is found a short distance from the [[Umayyad Mosque]] and the [[Al-Hamidiyah Souq]] in central Damascus.<ref name=Mailviruskid/>

<gallery caption="Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque" perrow="6">
Image:Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque 05.jpg|View of the courtyard
Image:Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque 03.jpg|Prayer hall
Image:Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque 02.jpg|Grave of Sayyidah Ruqayya
Image:Sayyidah Ruqayya Mosque - Chandelier 02.jpg|A chandelier in the mosque
Image:Zarih of Ruqayya bint Husayn.jpg|[[Zarih]]
File:Zarih Ruqayya bint Husain.jpg|The zarih with a chandelier over
File:Mosque Sayyeda Ruqayya, Damasscus.jpg|Name board on the mosque
</gallery>

== Family tree ==
{{Shia Islam|Holy women}}
{|class="wikitable"
|-
| colspan="4"| [[Adam in Islam|Adam]]
|-
| colspan="4"| [[Noah in Islam|Nuh]] ([[Noah]])<ref>{{cite book|last= Saadia Gaon|author-link= Saadia Gaon|title= Saadya's Commentary on Genesis|editor= Moshe Zucker|year= 1984b|publisher= [[Jewish Theological Seminary of America]]|location= New York|language= he|oclc= 1123632274}}</ref>
|-
| colspan="4"|[[Abraham in Islam|Ibrahim]] ([[Abraham]])<ref name="u">{{cite web|url=https://www.yabeyrouth.com/8073-%D8%A2%D9%84-%D9%86%D8%AC%D9%91%D8%A7%D8%B1-2|access-date=20 October 2018|title=Banu Najjar}}</ref>
|-
| colspan="2"| [[Ishmael in Islam|Isma'il]] ([[Ishmael]])<ref name="u"/>
| colspan="2"| [[Isaac in Islam|Is-haq]] ([[Isaac]])
|-
| colspan="2"| '[[Adnan]] (b.122 BC)
.
.
.
.
.
.
| colspan="2"| [[Jacob in Islam|Ya'qub]] ([[Jacob]])
|-
| colspan="2"| '[[Abd al-Muttalib]]<ref name="t"/>
||
|| [[Moses in Islam|Musa]] ([[Moses]])
|-
|| [[Abdullah ibn Abd al-Muttalib|'Abdullah]] (d.570 AD)<ref name="t">{{Cite web|url=https://www.al-islam.org/life-muhammad-prophet-sayyid-saeed-akhtar-rizvi/early-years|title=Early Years|website=Al-Islam.org|date=18 October 2012|language=en|access-date=18 October 2018}}</ref>
|| [[Abu Talib ibn Abd al-Muttalib|Abu Talib]] (d.620 AD)<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|title = Alī ibn Abu Talib|encyclopedia = Encyclopædia Iranica|access-date = 16 December 2010|url = http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/ali-b-abi-taleb|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110429163734/http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/ali-b-abi-taleb|archive-date = 29 April 2011|url-status=live|df = mdy-all}}</ref>
||[[Jesus in Islam|Esa (Jesus)]]
||
|-
|| [[Muhammad]] (d.632 AD)<ref>{{cite web|title=Fatimah bint Muhammad|url=http://www.msawest.com/islam/history/biographies/sahaabah/bio.FATIMAH_BINT_MUHAMMAD.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://archive.today/20090528032523/http://www.msawest.com/islam/history/biographies/sahaabah/bio.FATIMAH_BINT_MUHAMMAD.html|archive-date=28 May 2009|website=[[Muslim Students' Association]] (West) Compendium of Muslim Texts}}</ref>
||
||
||
|-
|| [[Fatimah]] (d.11 AH)<ref name="r"/>
|| ʿ[[Ali]] (d.661 AD)<ref name="r">{{cite web|title=Husayn ibn Ali|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/al-Husayn-ibn-Ali-Muslim-leader-and-martyr|website=[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]|quote=Al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī, (born January 626, Medina, Arabia [now in Saudi Arabia]—died October 10, 680, Karbalāʾ, Iraq), hero in Shiʿi Islam, grandson of the Prophet Muhammad through his daughter Fāṭimah and son-in-law ʿAlī (the first imam of the Shiʿah and the fourth of the Sunni Rashidun caliphs).}}</ref>
||
||
|-
|colspan="2"| [[Husayn ibn Ali|Al-Husayn]] (d.680 AD)<ref name="CDKA"/>
||
||
|-
|colspan="2"| Ruqayya (d.680 AD)<ref name="Madelung4">{{cite web |title=ʿALĪ B. ḤOSAYN B. ʿALĪ B. ABĪ ṬĀLEB |url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/ali-b-hosayn-b-ali |website=ENCYCLOPÆDIA IRANICA |access-date=1 August 2011}}</ref>
||
||
|}


== See also ==
== See also ==
{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|
* [[Adnanites]]
* [[Arabs]]
* [[Banu Hashim]]
* [[Family tree of Husayn ibn Ali]]
* [[Family tree of Husayn ibn Ali]]
* [[Fatimah]]
* [[Fatimah bint Musa]]
* [[Quraysh]]
* [[Sakina bint Husayn]]
* [[Sakina bint Husayn]]
* [[Ruqayya bint Ali]]
* [[Ruqayya bint Ali]]
* [[Fatima]]
* [[Abrahamic religions|Semite]]
}}
* Umm [[Ammar ibn Yasir|ʿAmmar]] [[Sumayyah bint Khayyat|Sumayyah Bint Khabbat]], wife of [[Yasir ibn Amir|Yasir ibn Amir ibn Malik al-ʿAnsi]]
* [[John the Baptist|Yahya]] [[Patronymic#Arabic|ibn]] [[Zechariah (New Testament figure)|Zekariyyah]]


== References ==
== Footnotes ==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


== Bibliography ==
== References ==
{{refbegin|2}}
* Momen, Moojan ''An Introduction to Shi'a Islam'', Yale University Press, 1985.
* {{cite encyclopedia |title=ḤOSAYN B. ʿALI i. LIFE AND SIGNIFICANCE IN SHIʿISM |encyclopedia=[[Encyclopaedia Iranica]] |volume=XII/5 |pages=493-8 |year=2004 |url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/hosayn-b-ali-i |last=Madelung |first=Wilferd |author-link=Wilferd Madelung}}

* {{cite book |title=دانشنامه امام حسين |title-link= |first=Mohammad |author-link=Mohammad Reyshahri |last=Reyshahri |language=fa |trans-title=The Encyclopedia of Imam Husayn |year=2009 |isbn=((9789644931)) |volume=1}}
== External links ==
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Veccia Vaglieri |first=L. |author-link=Laura Veccia Vaglieri |title=(al-)Ḥusayn b. ʿAlī b. Abī Ṭālib |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Islam |edition=Second |editor1-first=P. |editor1-last=Bearman |editor2-first=Th. |editor2-last=Bianquis |editor3-first=C. E. |editor3-last=Bosworth |editor4-first=E. |editor4-last=van Donzel |editor5-first=W. P. |editor5-last=Heinrichs |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0304 |year=2012 |isbn=9789004161214}}
* [http://www.world-federation.org/IEB/IslamicResources/JourneyTears/journ-tear4.htm Sakina] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081010002615/http://www.world-federation.org/IEB/IslamicResources/JourneyTears/journ-tear4.htm |date=2008-10-10 }}
* {{cite book |author-last=Qutbuddin |author-first=Tahera |title=The 'Other' Martyrs: Women and the Poetics of Sexuality, Sacrifice, and Death in World Literatures |publisher=Eisenbrauns |year=2019 |isbn=9783447112147 |editor1-last=Korangy |editor1-first=Alireza |chapter=Orations of Zaynab and Umm Kulthūm in the Aftermath of Ḥusayn's Martyrdom at Karbala: Speaking Truth to Power |author-link=Tahera Qutbuddin |editor2-last=Rouhi |editor2-first=Leyla}}
* [http://www.shianews.com/hi/articles/education/0000203.php Sakina, the young Hashemite princess] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160124132407/http://www.shianews.com/hi/articles/education/0000203.php |date=2016-01-24 }}
* {{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/womenofkarbalari0000unse/page/44/mode/2up |title=The Women of Karbala: Ritual Performance and Symbolic Discourses in Modern Shi'i Islam |year=2009 |isbn=9780292784444 |publisher=University of Texas Press |editor-first=Kamran Scot |editor-last=Aghaie |pages=45-64 |chapter=The Gender Dynamics of Moharram Symbols and Rituals in the Latter Years of Qajar Rule |author-first=Kamran Scot |author-last=Aghaie}}
* [http://www.poetryofislam.com/category/ya-sakinaas/ Poem for Bibi Sakina(A.S) by Mahmood Abu Shahbaaz Londoni]
* {{cite book|title=Horse of Karbala: Muslim Devotional Life in India|author-first=David|author-last= Pinault|year= 2016|isbn= 9781137047656|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan US|url=https://archive.org/details/horseofkarbalamu00pina/mode/}}
* {{cite book|title=The Holy Drama: Persian Passion Play in Modern Iran|author-first=Mahnia A.|author-last= Nematollahi Mahani|year=2013|publisher=Leiden University Press|isbn= 9789087281151|url=https://scholarlypublications.universiteitleiden.nl/access/item%3A2723300/view}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Khameh-Yar |first1=Ahmad |title=رقیه، دختر امام حسین (ع) |encyclopedia=The Great Islamic Encyclopaedia |year=2023 |url=https://cgie.org.ir/fa/article/267367/رقیه |publisher=[[Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia]] |language=Persian |trans-title=Ruqayya, daughter of Imam Husayn}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |encyclopedia=[[Encyclopaedia of the World of Islam]] |publisher=Encyclopaedia Islamica Foundation |url=https://rch.ac.ir/article/Details/14079 |trans-title=Ruqayya bint Husayn |year=2015 |title=رقیه بنت حسین |volume=20 |language=Persian |author-first=Sahar |author-last=Mohtaram-Vakili}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Haj-Manouchehri |first1=Faramarz |title= حسین(ع)، امام، ابعاد شخصیت حضرت |encyclopedia=The Great Islamic Encyclopaedia |year=2023 |url=https://www.cgie.org.ir/fa/article/227344/%D8%AD%D8%B3%DB%8C%D9%86(%D8%B9)%D8%8C-%D8%A7%D9%85%D8%A7%D9%85?entryviewid=245006#c52b28bd0-34ba-440b-a05a-edfbec9215cc |publisher=[[Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia]] |language=Persian |trans-title=Husayn, Imam II. Personality |volume=20|year=2022}}
{{refend}}


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}

Revision as of 11:42, 1 April 2023

Ruqayya bint al-Husayn
رُقَيَّة بِنْت ٱلْحُسَيْن
Bornc. 676 CE
Diedc. 680 CE
Damascus, Umayyad Caliphate
Resting placeSayyidah Ruqayya Mosque, Damascus
Parent

Ruqayya bint al-Ḥusayn (Arabic: رُقَيَّة بِنْت ٱلْحُسَيْن) is said to have been a daughter of Husayn ibn Ali, the third Imam in Twelver Shia. Husayn and a small group of his supporters were massacred in the Battle of Karbala in 680 CE on the order of the Umayyad caliph Yazid (r. 680–683). Their women and children were then taken captive and marched to the capital Damascus, where it is said that Ruqayya died at the age of about three, possibly due to the hostility of her captors. The shrine associated with Ruqayya in Damascus is a popular destination for Shia pilgrimage.

Parents

Some early historians list only two daughters for Husayn ibn Ali, namely, Fatima and Sakina.[1][2][3] These include the Sunni authors Ibn Sa'd (d. 845) and al-Baladhuri (d. 892), and the Twelver authors al-Mufid (d. 1022) and al-Tabarsi (d. 1153).[1] Some authors add Zaynab as the third daughter,[1][2] including the Twelver Ibn Shahrashub (d. 1192) and Imad al-Din al-Tabari (d.c. 1300).[1] Finally, some others have reported four daughters for Husayn, including the Shia Baha al-Din al-Irbili (d. 1293-4) and the Sunni Ibn Talha Shafi'i (d. 1339). Out of these four, the latter author only names Fatima, Sakina, and Zaynab.[2] The prominent polymath Ibn Fondoq (d. 1170) lists the four daughters as Fatima, Sakina, Zaynab, and Umm Kulthum, but emphasizes that the last two died in childhood.[1][4] Ibn Fondoq elsewhere writes that Husayn was survived by Fatima, Sakina, and Ruqayya,[1][2] which suggests that Ruqayya is the same person as Umm Kulthum.[4] Aside from Fatima and Sakina, sources thus differ and some count Ruqayya among the daughters of Husayn.[5] This name is also mentioned in some accounts of Husayn's parting words for his family before he left for the battlefield one last time, but the Twelver cleric M. Reyshahri (d. 2022) writes that this could also be a reference to Ruqayya bint Ali, wife of Muslim ibn Aqil, Husayn's slain envoy to the Kufans.[6] The name Ruqayya also appears twice in a poem about Husayn ascribed to Sayf ibn Umayra Nakha'i, who was a companion of Ja'far al-Sadiq (d. 765), the sixth Imam in Twelver Shia, but the attribution of this poem to Sayf is not certain.[2] Little is now known about her mother.[2]

Death

An Iranian child in Mourning of Muharram, with a red headband reading "O Ruqayya!"

Husayn denounced the accession of the Umayyad caliph Yazid ibn Mu'awiya in 680 CE. When pressed by Yazid's agents to pledge his allegiance, Husayn first fled from his hometown of Medina to Mecca and later set off for Kufa, accompanied by his family and a small group of supporters. They were intercepted near the city and massacred by the Umayyad forces, who first surrounded them for some days and cut off their access to the nearby Euphrates.[3] After the battle, the women and children were taken captive and marched to Kufa and then the capital Damascus.[7] The earliest account of the death in captivity of a daughter of Husayn appears in Kamel al-bahai by Imad al-Din al-Tabari without giving her name.[1][2] He writes that the women had hidden the death of Husayn from his young children until they were brought to the palace of Yazid. There a daughter of Husayn, aged four, woke up crying one night and asked for her father, saying that she had just seen him distressed and anguished in her dream. The women's cry awakened Yazid who then learned from his men about its cause. Yazid ordered Husayn's head to be taken to the child. The shock left the child ill and she died in the coming days.[1][2][8] The source of al-Tabari was the non-extant al-Hawiya fi masalib Mu'awiya by the Sunni scholar Qasim ibn Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Ma'muni.[1][2] The Sufi scholar Husayn Kashifi (d. 910) gives a similar account in his martyrology Rawzat al-shuhada, again without naming the child, this time sourced from Kanz al-ghara'ib fi ghasas al-aja'ib, a book by Najm al-Din Qasim Madhmakini about the first four caliphs, Husayn, and his elder brother Hasan (d. 670).[1][2] The main difference between the two versions is that the child dies on the same night in the latter version, and this is what the later sources report.[9] Some later sources also identify this child as Ruqayya or Zubayda.[1][2] A common narrative in the Qajar-era ritual remembrance of Karbala was that Ruqayya saw her father in a dream and prayed to be allowed to join her. She died soon after and her death was regarded as a form of martyrdom which thus released her from her suffering at the hands of the Umayyads.[10] Some modern sources identify as Sakina this young child of Husayn who is said to have died in captivity in Damascus.[11][12]

Shrine

A shrine in Damascus is often associated with Ruqayya.[1] Among others, this is the view of the Twelver authors Muhammad Hashim Khorasani (d. 1933-4) and Muhammad Haeri Karaki (alive in 1548 CE).[13] Some have instead considered the shrine to be the burial site of Husayn's head, including the Sunni historians Ibn Kathir (d. 1373) and al-Dhahabi (d. 1348).[1] Yet some others have reported it as the grave of Ruqayya bint Ali,[1] which might be in Cairo instead.[2] There are also eye-witness accounts in some sources that the grave belongs to a female child, whose body had to be exhumed and reburied during the repairs to the site.[1][13] The attribution of the shrine to Ruqayya bint al-Husayn is thus not certain, according to Reyshahri, who nevertheless believes that the site is associated with the Ahl al-Bayt, that is, the House of Muhammad.[14] A popular destination for Shia pilgrimage, the shrine is located in the Suq al-Emara market to the north of the Umayyad Mosque. There are also surviving records of multiple reconstructions and expansions, as early as the fifteenth century CE.[1] The current building was completed about 1991 CE,[2] exhibiting a mix of Syrian and Iranian architectures, with substantial use of mirrors, tiles, and white stone.[1]


See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Khameh-Yar 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Mohtaram-Vakili 2015.
  3. ^ a b Madelung 2004.
  4. ^ a b Reyshahri 2009, p. 383.
  5. ^ Haj-Manouchehri 2022.
  6. ^ Reyshahri 2009, p. 384.
  7. ^ Veccia Vaglieri 2012.
  8. ^ Reyshahri 2009, p. 385.
  9. ^ Reyshahri 2009, p. 386.
  10. ^ Aghaie 2009, p. 51.
  11. ^ Pinault 2016, p. 13.
  12. ^ Nematollahi Mahani 2013, p. 39.
  13. ^ a b Reyshahri 2009, pp. 389–92.
  14. ^ Reyshahri 2009, p. 393.

References

  • Madelung, Wilferd (2004). "ḤOSAYN B. ʿALI i. LIFE AND SIGNIFICANCE IN SHIʿISM". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Vol. XII/5. pp. 493–8.
  • Reyshahri, Mohammad (2009). دانشنامه امام حسين [The Encyclopedia of Imam Husayn] (in Persian). Vol. 1. ISBN 9789644931.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link)
  • Veccia Vaglieri, L. (2012). "(al-)Ḥusayn b. ʿAlī b. Abī Ṭālib". In Bearman, P.; Bianquis, Th.; Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W. P. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (Second ed.). ISBN 9789004161214.
  • Qutbuddin, Tahera (2019). "Orations of Zaynab and Umm Kulthūm in the Aftermath of Ḥusayn's Martyrdom at Karbala: Speaking Truth to Power". In Korangy, Alireza; Rouhi, Leyla (eds.). The 'Other' Martyrs: Women and the Poetics of Sexuality, Sacrifice, and Death in World Literatures. Eisenbrauns. ISBN 9783447112147.
  • Aghaie, Kamran Scot (2009). "The Gender Dynamics of Moharram Symbols and Rituals in the Latter Years of Qajar Rule". In Aghaie, Kamran Scot (ed.). The Women of Karbala: Ritual Performance and Symbolic Discourses in Modern Shi'i Islam. University of Texas Press. pp. 45–64. ISBN 9780292784444.
  • Pinault, David (2016). Horse of Karbala: Muslim Devotional Life in India. Palgrave Macmillan US. ISBN 9781137047656.
  • Nematollahi Mahani, Mahnia A. (2013). The Holy Drama: Persian Passion Play in Modern Iran. Leiden University Press. ISBN 9789087281151.
  • Khameh-Yar, Ahmad (2023). "رقیه، دختر امام حسین (ع)" [Ruqayya, daughter of Imam Husayn]. The Great Islamic Encyclopaedia (in Persian). Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia.
  • Mohtaram-Vakili, Sahar (2015). "رقیه بنت حسین" [Ruqayya bint Husayn]. Encyclopaedia of the World of Islam (in Persian). Vol. 20. Encyclopaedia Islamica Foundation.
  • Haj-Manouchehri, Faramarz (2022). "حسین(ع)، امام، ابعاد شخصیت حضرت" [Husayn, Imam II. Personality]. The Great Islamic Encyclopaedia (in Persian). Vol. 20. Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia.