Qur'an & Tafsir
Seerah of the Prophet ﷺ
Prophets in Islam
Islamic History
The Sahaba
100

The only Surah in the Qur'an that does not begin with the Bismillah.

At-Tawbah

100

The year the Prophet ﷺ lost both Khadijah (RA) and Abu Talib.

The Year of Sorrow (ʿĀm al-Ḥuzn)

100

This prophet is mentioned by name more times in the Qur'an than any other — over 130 times.

Prophet Musa (Moses) (AS)

100

Founded by Abd ar-Rahman I, this Umayyad emirate in Iberia became a center of Islamic learning for centuries.

Al-Andalus

100

This Companion was the Prophet's ﷺ cousin and is known as "the Scholar of the Ummah" and "the Translator of the Qur'an" for his deep knowledge of tafsir.

Abdullah ibn Abbas

200

Known as the "heart of the Qur'an," this surah was recommended to be recited over the deceased.

Surah Ya-Sin

200

The treaty initially seen as a setback that the Qur'an described as a "manifest victory."

The Treaty of Hudaybiyyah

200

This prophet was given the ability to understand the speech of birds and ants, and commanded an army of jinn and humans.

Prophet Sulayman (Solomon) (AS)

200

The Ottoman sultan who conquered Constantinople in 1453, fulfilling a prophecy of the Prophet ﷺ.

Sultan Mehmed II

200

This female Companion was the first martyr in Islam, killed by Abu Jahl for refusing to renounce her faith.

Sumayyah bint Khayyat (RA)

300

The longest verse in the Qur'an, found in Surah Al-Baqarah, dealing with rules of recording debts.

Ayat ad-Dayn

300

This Companion was the Prophet's ﷺ scribe for revelation and later compiled the Qur'an under Abu Bakr

Zayd ibn Thabit (RA)

300

This prophet is described in the Qur'an as having been given wisdom as a child, and his mother was falsely accused upon his miraculous birth.

Prophet Isa (Jesus)

300

This Mongol-Mamluk battle in 1260 in Palestine halted the Mongol advance into the Muslim heartlands.

The Battle of Ayn Jalut

300

This Persian Companion suggested digging a trench around Madinah to defend against the Confederate armies, a strategy that gave the Battle of the Trench its name.

Salman al-Farisi (RA)

400

This Madinan surah, the 49th in the Qur'an, lays out etiquette with the Prophet ﷺ and prohibits mockery, suspicion, and backbiting.

Surah Al-Hujurat

400

At this battle, the Muslims initially won but suffered losses after archers left their post on Jabal ar-Rumat.

The Battle of Uhud

400

This prophet was sent to the people of Madyan and is associated with the trial of Prophet Musa (AS), who worked for him for ten years in exchange for marriage to his daughter.

Prophet Shu'ayb (AS)

400

This caliph established the Diwan (administrative register) and the Hijri calendar.

Umar ibn al-Khattab (RA)

400

This Companion narrated the famous "Hadith of Jibril" in which the angel appeared in the form of a man and asked the Prophet ﷺ about Iman, Islam, and Ihsan.

Umar ibn al-Khattab (RA)

500

This classical mufassir, a student of Ibn Taymiyyah, authored a tafsir famous for its narrations from the Salaf and emphasis on tafsir bil-ma'thur.

Ibn Kathir (Ismail ibn Kathir)

500

The Abyssinian Christian king who granted refuge to the early Muslims; the Prophet ﷺ prayed Salat al-Janazah in absentia for him.

An-Najashi (Ashama ibn Abjar)

500

This prophet was given a miracle of a she-camel that emerged from a rock; his people, the tribe of Thamud, were destroyed when they hamstrung her.

Prophet Salih (AS)

500

This Ayyubid sultan recaptured Jerusalem from the Crusaders in 1187 after the Battle of Hattin.

Salah ad-Din al-Ayyubi (Saladin)

500

This Companion was the standard-bearer of the Muslims at the Battle of Mu'tah and was martyred after both his arms were severed; the Prophet ﷺ said Allah replaced his arms with two wings in Paradise.

Ja'far ibn Abi Talib