Sirin bint Shamun

Sîrîn bint Sham'ûn was an Egyptian Coptic Christian concubine, sent with her sister Maria al-Qibtiyya as gifts to the Islamic prophet Muhammad from the Egyptian official Muqawqis in 628.[1]

Sîrîn bint Sham'ûn
BornEgypt
SpouseHassan ibn Thabit
ReligionIslam

According to the historian Ibn Saad, both sisters converted to Islam while on their way to Arabia with the encouragement of Hatib ibn Abi Balta'ah, who had been sent as a messenger to a governor of Egypt.[2]

Sirin was married to the poet Hassan ibn Thabit, and bore a son, Abdurahman ibn Hassan.[3]

See also

  • List of non-Arab Sahaba
  • Sunni view of the Sahaba

Notes

  1. Ibn Ishaq
  2. Hidayatullah, A. (2010). Māriyya the Copt: gender, sex and heritage in the legacy of Muhammad’s umm walad. Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations, 21(3), 221–243. doi:10.1080/09596410.2010.500475
  3. Tabari, p. 131.

References


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