Hijri year

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This article is about Islamic Calendar and how it was formed, for the event of hijra see Migration to Medina.

The Hijra (هِجْرَة), or withdrawal, is the emigration of Muhammad and his followers to the city of Medina in 622, and marks the start of the Hijri year of the Islamic calendar.

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While sometimes translated as "pilgrimage," Hijra means something like "severing relational ties". An even closer English equivalent could be, "running away from home" or "divorcing your relatives"

It generally conotes a migration, specifically the migration of Muhammad from Mecca to Medina

Alternate spellings of this Arabic word in the Latin alphabet are Hijrah, or Hegira in Latin.

On the actual year the migration took place, there was already a functioning Lunar Calendar with named months. However, this calendar did not number the years, so for example, the year Muhammad and Ammar ibn Yasir where born was called The "Year of the Elephant".

The actual event of migration started in Thursday 26 in the Month of Safar AH 1 (9 September 622) of that year.

That year was named "The permission to travel". 17 years later, that year was chosen as the year to start counting from: "first year of Hijra", "1 After Hijra" or "1 AH". The first day of 1 AH, corresponds to Friday July 16th, 622 CE in the Julian Calendar.

The Muslim dates are in the Islamic calendar extended back in time. The Western dates are in the Julian calendar. The Hijra is celebrated annually on 8 Rabi' I, about 66 days after 1 Muharram, the first day of the Muslim year. Many writers confuse the first day of the year of the Hijra with the date of the Migration to Medina itself, erroneously stating that the Hijra occurred on 1 Muharram AH 1 or 16 July 622.

All dates given above may have occurred about 89 days (three lunar months) earlier in the Julian calendar. The calendar conversions quoted above may not have been corrected by early Muslims for the intercalary months (probably three) which had been inserted in the lunar calendar between the year of the Hijra and the year of Muhammad's last Hajj (AH 10), when intercalary months were forbidden.

Main article: Migration to Medina

Muhammads preachings did not at first have much success in the city of Mecca. His tribe, the Quraysh, which was in charge of the Kaaba, persecuted and harassed him continuously. This eventually led to the Migration to Medina

The Muslim year during which the Hijra occurred was designated the first year of the Islamic calendar by Umar in 638, 17 AH (anno hegirae = "in the year of the hijra").

According to Sunni sources:

Hakim Muhammad Said wrote:

  1. ^ Umar bin Al-Khattab. Islamic Actions and Social Mandates: The Hijri Calendar. witness-pioneer.org. Retrieved on December 16, 2006.
  2. ^ Aisha El-Awady. Ramadan and the Lunar Calendar. Islamonline.net. Retrieved on December 16, 2006.
  3. ^ Hakim Muhammad Said. The History of the Islamic Calendar in the Light of the Hijra. Al-islam.org. Retrieved on December 16, 2006.

also:

  • F. A. Shamsi (1984). "The Date of Hijrah". Islamic Studies 23: 189-224, 289-323. 

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