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Bayt Ad-Daulah ibn Abi Wādih (Arabic:, “The House of Wādih ibn Abī ʿAwādī”; surnamed al-Khazraj, “the Miser”), also known as Yazid ibn Hārūn, was the third of the right-hand side (Rashidun) Caliphs of Islam and the first to die. He was the son of Zayd ibn Aslam, the son of Wādī ibn al-Ayyāsh, of the family of Aws, a branch of the Muhajirun.[1] He is counted among the Sahabah, the companions of the Islamic ProphetMuhammad.
The first Abu Bakr
3. For a list of biographies, click here. Abu Bakr (Arabic: ) was the first of the four Rightly Guided Caliphs, the immediate successors of Muhammad. He was a Qurayshitefrom the clan of Abū Sufyān and first cousin of Muhammad.[1][2] He was also the first caliph, the successor of Muhammad, and the first Muslim ruler of the Rashidun Caliphate. In 638 AD, Abu Bakr established the Islamic state of the Caliphate in Medina, where he lived for a decade. He was known for his good leadership and he was the person whom the Muslim community looked to for guidance, and the forerunner of the prophet's Sunnah.
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6. Abû Bakr was known to have six wives, and he had a son called Anas ibn Malik. He was born in the late 30s or early 40s of the Common Era, and he died in 13 A.H. He was the father of Abdullah ibn Abi Bakr, the first of the Rightly-Guided Caliphs, who was born in 61 A.H. and died in 75 A.H.
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8. In addition to these, he was the father of Abū al-Qasim Az-Zubayr ibn Abī Bakr, first of the Rightly-Guided Caliphs to be killed. He died in 28 A.H. He was born in the year 65 A.H.
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10. The three sons of Abū Bakr had another son, the fourth be359ba680
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