Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Muhammad_in_Islam> ?p ?o }
- Muhammad_in_Islam abstract "Muḥammad ibn ʿAbdullāh (Arabic: محمد بن عبد الله بن عبد المطلب) (c. 570 – 632), in short form Muhammad, is considered in Islam to be the greatest messenger (Quran 48:29) and prophet sent by God to guide humanity to the right way (Quran 7:157). Muslims believe that Muhammad is the final prophet sent by God; and the Quran, which is the central religious text of Islam, was revealed to Muhammad by God. According to Muslims, he was sent to restore Islam, which they believe to be the unaltered original monotheistic faith of Adam, Ibrahim, Musa, Isa, and other prophets. The religious, social, and political tenets that Muhammad established in the light of Quran became the foundation of Islam and Islamic civilization.He is usually referred to as Prophet Muhammad, or just The Prophet or The Messenger, by Muslims, and regarded by them as the greatest of all the prophets, and his established religion as the only accepted religion to God (Quran 3:19). He is seen by Muslims as a possessor of many virtues. As an act of respect Muslims follow the name of Muhammad by the Arabic benediction \"sallallahu `alayhi wa sallam\" (Peace be upon him, sometimes abbreviated S.A.W.), a practice instructed by Quran and Hadith. The deeds and sayings in the life of Muhammad – known as Sunnah – are considered a model of the life-style that Muslims are obliged to follow. Recognizing Muhammad as God's true messenger is one of the central requirements in Islam which is clearly laid down in the second part of Shahadah, the Islamic proclamation of faith: \"There is no god but God, and Muhammad is the Messenger of God\". The Quran chiefly refers to Muhammad as \"Messenger\" and \"Messenger of God\" (Quran 48:29), and asks people to follow him so as to become successful in this life and the afterlife (Quran 3:132).Born in about 570 CE into a respected Quraysh family of Mecca, Muhammad earned the title \"al-Amin\" (Arabic: الامين), meaning \"the Trustworthy\". At the age of 40 in 610 CE, Muhammad is said to have received his first verbal revelation in a cave named Mount Hira, which was the beginning of the descent of the Quran that continued up to the end of his life; and Muslims hold that Muhammad was asked by God to preach the oneness of God in order to stamp out idolatry, a practice overtly present in Arab society. Because of persecution of the newly converted Muslims, upon the invitation of a delegation from Medina (then known as Yathrib), Muhammad and his followers migrated there in 622 CE, an event known as Hijra (Hegira). A turning point in Muhammad’s life, this Hijra also marks the beginning of Islamic calendar. In Medina Muhammad sketched out the Constitution of Medina specifying the rights of and relations among the various existing communities there, formed an independent Muslim community (Ummah), and managed to establish the first Islamic state. Despite the ongoing hostility of the Meccans, Muhammad, along with his followers, took control of Mecca in 630 CE, treated its citizens with generosity, and ordered to destroy all the pagan idols. In later years in Medina, Muhammad unified the different Arab tribes under Islam, carried out social and religious reforms, and made administrative developments that further consolidated the Islamic community. By the time he died in 632, his teachings had won the acceptance of Islam by almost all the tribes of the Arabian Peninsula.".
- Muhammad_in_Islam birthPlace Mecca.
- Muhammad_in_Islam birthYear "0012".
- Muhammad_in_Islam deathPlace Medina.
- Muhammad_in_Islam deathYear "0012".
- Muhammad_in_Islam majorShrine Al-Masjid_an-Nabawi.
- Muhammad_in_Islam thumbnail Dark_vignette_Al-Masjid_AL-Nabawi_Door800x600x300.jpg?width=300.
- Muhammad_in_Islam title "Apostle of God".
- Muhammad_in_Islam veneratedIn Islam.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageExternalLink 2up.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageExternalLink books?id=-VTIkkcUFHQC&pg=PA182.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageExternalLink books?id=Ggp8OFBIzssC&pg=PA5.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageExternalLink books?id=f_j9ayrVpHMC&pg=PT113.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageID "4701870".
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageLength "76217".
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageOutDegree "263".
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageRevisionID "707154122".
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abd-Allah_ibn_Ubayy.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abd_Manaf_ibn_Qusai.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abdul-Muttalib.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abdullah_(name).
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abdullah_ibn_Abdul-Muttalib.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abdullah_ibn_Masud.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abraham.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abraham_in_Islam.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abu_Bakr.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abu_Dhar_al-Ghifari.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abu_Sufyan_ibn_Harb.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abu_Talib_ibn_Abd_al-Muttalib.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Abū_Lahab.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Adam_in_Islam.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Adhan.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Adnan.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Afterlife.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Aisha.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Al-Abwa.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Al-Alaq.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Al-Isra.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Al-Khasais-ul-Kubra.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Al-Masjid_an-Nabawi.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Al-Muqawqis.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Al-Suyuti.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Ali.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Amin_(name).
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Aminah.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Amr_ibn_Hishām.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink An-Nadr_ibn_Kinanah.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Aniconism.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Ansar_(Islam).
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Arabian_Peninsula.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Arabs.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Arqam.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Ayah.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Badr,_Saudi_Arabia.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Bahira.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Bahrain.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Aws.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Bakr.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Ghatafan.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Hashim.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Khazraj.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Khuzaa.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Kinanah.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Lahyan.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Saad.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Badr.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Uhud.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_the_Trench.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Bedouin.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Bible.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Bilal_Ibn_Rabah.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Black_Stone.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Brotherhood_among_the_Sahabah.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Buraq.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Byzantium.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Cairo.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Camel_train.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Category:Islamic_belief_and_doctrine.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Category:Muhammad.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Circa.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Constitution_of_Medina.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Depictions_of_Muhammad.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Durood.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Egypt.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Ethiopia.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Ethiopian_Empire.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Expedition_of_Al_Raji.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Expedition_of_Bir_Maona.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Family_tree_of_Muhammad.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Fihr_ibn_Malik.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Gabriel.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink God_in_Islam.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Gospel.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Green_Dome.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Hadith.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Hagiography.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Hajj.
- Muhammad_in_Islam wikiPageWikiLink Halimah_bint_Abi_Dhuayb.