man Abd al-Muttalib (Saba al-Hamd) of Clan Hashim‏‎, son of Abd al-Manaf al-Mujira or Hashim Amr of Arabia and Atika Qays Aylan of Arabia‏.
Born ‎± 530 at Mecca, Arabia, died ‎± 578 at Mecca, Arabia‎, approximately 48 years

THE FOUNDATIONS OF ISLAM

Muhammad: The Prophet and his message.

Life and Works.

Muhammad (in full Abu al-Qasim Muhammad ibn 'Abd Allah ibn 'Abd al-Muttalib ibn Hashim) was born in Mecca c. 570 after the death of his father, 'Abd Allah. Muhammad was at first under the care of his paternal grandfather 'Abd al-Muttalib. Because the climate of Mecca was considered to be unhealthful, he was given as an infant to a wet nurse from a nomadic tribe and spent some time in the desert. At six he lost his mother, Aminah of the clan Zuhra, and at eight his grandfather. Though his grandfather had been head of the prestigious Hashem (Hashim) clan and was prominent in Mecca politics, he was probably not the leading man in Mecca, as some sources suggest. [Encyclopedia Britannica]

Married/ Related to:

woman Fatima (Salma) bint `Amir of Ben Makhzum‏‎
Born ‎± 534 at Mecca, Arabia, died ‎ 606‎, approximately 72 years

Children:

1.
man 'Abd Allah ibn `Abd al-Muttalib of Clan Hashim‏
Born ‎± 550 at Mecca, Arabia, died ‎before 570 at Mecca, Arabia‎, buried ‎ at Dar al-Nabigha

THE FOUNDATIONS OF ISLAM

Muhammad: The Prophet and his message.

Life and Works.

Muhammad (in full Abu al-Qasim Muhammad ibn 'Abd Allah ibn 'Abd al-Muttalib ibn Hashim) was born in Mecca c. 570 after the death of his father, 'Abd Allah.
2.
man Abu Talib ('Abd Manaf) of Clan Hashim‏
Born ‎± 560 at Mecca, Arabia, died ‎after 600‎

Abu Talib, chief of a local clan. [Had taken care of Muhammad, The Prophet as a child; his own son Ali became an ardent follower of Muhammad and married his daughter Fatimah]. [Encyclopedia Britannica]

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THE FOUNDATIONS OF ISLAM

Muhammad: The Prophet and his message.

Life and Works.

...Muhammad came under the care of the new head of the clan [Hashem or Hashim], his uncle Abu Talib, and is reputed to have accopanied him on trading journeys to Syria. About 595, on such a journey, he was in charge of the merchandise of a rich woman, Khadijah of the clan of Asad, and so impressed her that she offered marriage. She is said to have been about 40, but she bore Muhammad at least two sons, who died young, and four daughters, of whom the best known was Fatimah, the wife of Muhammad's cousin 'Ali, who is regarded as Muhammad's divinely ordained successor by the Shi'ah branch of Islam. Until Khadijah's death in 619, Muhammad took no other wife. The marriage was a turning point in Muhammad's life. By Arab custom, minors did not inherit, and therefore Muhammad had no share in the property of his father or grandfather; but by his marriage he obtained sufficient capital to engage in mercantile activity on a scale commensurate with his abilities.