Skip to content
Wellsprings
Ali ibn Abi Talib

Ali ibn Abi Talib

600 CE661 CE · Najaf

Ali ibn Abi Talib (born c. 600 CE in Mecca; died 661 CE in Kufa) was a cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet Muhammad and the fourth of the Rashidun ("rightly-guided") caliphs. Tradition holds he was raised in Muhammad's household and was among the very first to accept Islam, though modern historians caution that much detail of his early life rests on later, devotional sources rather than firm record. A popular tradition that he was born inside the Ka'ba (Mecca's central sanctuary) is cherished, especially among Shia Muslims, but is not historically established.

He married Muhammad's daughter Fatima, and their sons Hasan and Husayn became central figures in later history. After Uthman's killing, Ali was acclaimed caliph in Medina in 656. His reign (656-661) was consumed by the First Fitna, the first Muslim civil war: the Battle of the Camel near Basra (656), then the inconclusive Battle of Siffin (657) against Mu'awiya, and the suppression of the Kharijites (a breakaway faction) at Nahrawan (658). He moved his capital to Kufa. In 661 a Kharijite, Ibn Muljam, struck him in Kufa's mosque; he died of the wound.

The dispute over whether Ali was the rightful successor to Muhammad is the root of the Sunni-Shia divide; Shia traditions revere him as the first Imam, while Sunnis honor him as the last Rashidun caliph. These are positions held by communities, not settled facts. His burial place is traditionally identified as Najaf, though this is disputed.

Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the orchard map →

Stop 1 of 5600–622Born

Mecca

What they did here

Born in Mecca c. 600 CE to Abu Talib and Fatima bint Asad, and (per tradition) raised in the household of his cousin Muhammad. The birth year is a traditional estimate, not securely attested, and the cherished account that he was born inside the Ka'ba is a devotional tradition (especially honored by Shia Muslims) rather than an established fact.

See other sages who lived in Mecca

Works

No works attributed in the corpus yet.