The Banu Jusham bin Sa'd (Arabic: بنو جشم بن سعد) | |
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Adnanite/Qaysi Arab tribe/Ishmaelites | |
Descended from | Jusham ibn Sa'd ibn Bakr ibn Hawazin ibn Mansur ibn Ikrimah ibn Khasafah ibn Qays ʿAylān ibn Mudar ibn Nizar ibn Ma'add ibn Adnan. |
Parent tribe | Hawazin |
Branches |
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Religion | Polytheism (pre-630s) Islam (post 630s) |
The Banu Jusham (Arabic: بنو جشم) 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 Sa'd ibn Bakr ibn Hawazin.
Branches
The main tribes that constituted this sub-tribe were as follows:
Banu Ghazia
invading And the Gazans are an independent tribe, their largest and their homes were with their people in Sarawat between Tihama and Najd, and after Islam, it spread in Iraq and the Maghreb, and the main stomachs of Gaza are:
Otaiba bin Ghazia
Jada'a bin Ghazia
Atwara bin Ghazia
Hami bin Ghazia
As for Otaiba, among them was Obaidullah bin Ramahs, Juda’a, among whom was Duraid bin Al-Samma, and Atwara, among whom was Hanak bin Thabet, the poet and the knight who participated in the cloudy day on Kinana.
Bani Asima
They are Banu Usaima bin Jashem, and they are two branches:
Buni kaeb
Buni eaqaba
Among them is the companion of Abdullah bin Masoud, and he is Abu Al-Ahwas Awf bin Malik, and among them is the poet Rifa’a bin Darraj Al-Asmy and the companion Malik bin Nadla