Khadija bint Khuwaylid
555 CE–619 CE · Mecca
Khadija bint Khuwaylid was a wealthy merchant of the Quraysh — the leading tribe of Mecca — and the first wife of the Prophet Muhammad. She belonged to the Asad clan of Quraysh and, according to the tradition, ran a substantial caravan trade in her own right; one widely repeated report holds that her caravan rivalled those of all other Quraysh merchants combined (a measure of esteem rather than an audited figure). She is said to have employed Muhammad to lead a trading journey to Syria and, impressed by his conduct, to have proposed marriage to him.
In the standard biographical tradition (sira), Khadija was the first person to accept Islam after Muhammad received his first revelation; she is reported to have reassured him and to have taken him to her cousin Waraqa ibn Nawfal, a Christian who is said to have affirmed his prophethood. (The separate question of who was the first male convert — Ali, Abu Bakr, or Zayd ibn Haritha — is debated chiefly along Sunni–Shia lines and does not concern Khadija's own precedence.)
Sources report that the couple had several children, including the daughter Fatima. Her age at marriage is disputed in the tradition, commonly given as forty but also as twenty-eight. Khadija died in Mecca, traditionally in the tenth year of Muhammad's mission (about 619 CE), roughly three years before the emigration to Medina — a year later remembered as the "Year of Sorrow." Her birth date (c. 555 CE) is a traditional estimate and highly uncertain.
Life journeyclick any stop, or use ←/→Trace on the orchard map →
Mecca
What they did here
Khadija's entire documented life unfolds in Mecca. She was a Meccan of the Asad clan of Quraysh, conducted her caravan trade from there, married Muhammad there, and — in the standard tradition — became the first person to accept Islam after the first revelation. She died in Mecca, traditionally in the tenth year of the mission (c. 619 CE), some three years before the Hijra; she never emigrated to Medina. Her birth year (c. 555 CE) and her age at marriage (reported as 40, or as 28) are traditional estimates and uncertain. Sources are essentially unanimous that she lived and died in Mecca; only the dates are soft. (Sources: Britannica s.v. Khadijah; EI2 s.v. Khadidja, via Wikipedia.)
In Mecca at the same time
Hamza ibn Abd al-Muttalib, Ammar ibn Yasir, Abu Bakr al-Siddiq, Uthman ibn Affan, Bilal ibn Rabah, Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.