Banu Jusham

The Banu Jusham bin Muawiyah
(Arabic: بنو جشم بن معاوية)
Adnanite/Qaysi Arab tribe/Ismaelites
Descended from Jusham Ibn Mu'awiyah ibn Bakr Ibn Hawazin Ibn Mansur Ibn Ikrimah Ibn Khasafah Ibn Qays ʿAylān Ibn Mudar Ibn Nizar Ibn Ma'ad Ibn Adnan.
Parent tribe Hawazin
Branches
  • Bani Guzayah
  • Bani Os'ma
  • Bani Oday
Religion Polytheism (pre-630s)
Islam (post 630s)

The Banu Jusham ibn Muawiyah (Arabic: بنو جشم بن معاوية) were a large sub-tribe in the Arabian Peninsula during the time of Mohammed. According to genealogists and various oral traditions, they are the descendants of Jusham Ibn Mu'awiyah ibn Bakr Ibn Hawazin Ibn Mansur Ibn Ikrimah Ibn Khasafah Ibn Qays ʿAylān Ibn Mudar Ibn Nizar Ibn Ma'ad Ibn Adnan.

The lineage of some of the branch of Barga of the Otaibah tribe is traced to Hawazin through Jusham Ibn Muawiyah. In the 21st century, the name has slightly evolved for one clan from Banu Jusham, or Al-Jush'ami to Al-Qthami.[1]

Branches

The main tribes that constituted this sub-tribe were as follows:

  • Bani Guzayah
  • Bani Ouseema
  • Bani Oday

Notable members

Dorayd bin Al Soma, a poet and a knight who is said in Pre-Islamic Arabic folklore to have never been defeated in battle.

References

  1. Al-Qthami, Hmood bin Dawi (1985). North of Hejaz. Jeddah: Dar Al Bayan. p. 213.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.