This HTML5 document contains 520 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

The embedded RDF content will be recognized by any processor of HTML5 Microdata.

Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
n23http://www.kister.huji.ac.il/content/
n19https://global.dbpedia.org/id/
dbpedia-arhttp://ar.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbpedia-ithttp://it.dbpedia.org/resource/
provhttp://www.w3.org/ns/prov#
rdfhttp://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
dbpedia-trhttp://tr.dbpedia.org/resource/
wikidatahttp://www.wikidata.org/entity/
dbthttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Template:
n26http://dbpedia.org/resource/Template:Tree_chart/
owlhttp://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#
n11http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/
dbchttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Category:
n9https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29516/1/
dbpedia-pthttp://pt.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbohttp://dbpedia.org/ontology/
dbpedia-idhttp://id.dbpedia.org/resource/
wikipedia-enhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
dctermshttp://purl.org/dc/terms/
n18http://ur.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbphttp://dbpedia.org/property/
rdfshttp://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#
dbrhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/
n7http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:
foafhttp://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/
goldhttp://purl.org/linguistics/gold/
yago-reshttp://yago-knowledge.org/resource/
freebasehttp://rdf.freebase.com/ns/
n4https://books.google.com/
xsdhhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#

Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Banu_Kilab
rdf:type
owl:Thing dbo:Insect
rdfs:label
Quilabidas Banu Kilab بنو كلاب Bani Kilab Banu Kilab
rdfs:comment
The Banu Kilab (Arabic: بنو كِلاب, romanized: Banū Kilāb) was an Arab tribe in the western Najd (central Arabia) where they controlled the horse-breeding pastures of Dariyya from the mid-6th century until at least the mid-9th century. The tribe was divided into ten branches, the most prominent being the Ja'far, Abu Bakr, Amr, Dibab and Abd Allah. The Ja'far led the Kilab and its parent tribe of Banu Amir, and, at times, the larger Hawazin tribal confederation from the time of the Kilab's entry into the historical record, c. 550, until the advent of Islam, c. 630, except for two occasions when the larger Abu Bakr was at the helm. Under the Ja'far's leadership the Kilab defeated rival tribes and the Lakhmid kings and eventually became guards of the Lakhmid caravans to the annual fair in the I Banū Kilāb - più propriamente Banū Kilāb ibn Rabīʿa - (in arabo: ﺑﻨﻮ ﻛـلاﺏ‎), furono una tribù araba beduina che faceva parte della più vasta stirpe dei . Il suo luogo di abituale frequentazione erano quindi le regioni nord-occidentali della Penisola araba. Presero parte alla Guerra di Fijar, uno degli episodi bellici preislamici narrati nella silloge epica degli Ayyām al-ʿArab (I giorni degli Arabi). La tribù abbracciò l'Islam grazie al suo Sayyid al-Ḍaḥḥāk b. Sufyān, che trascinò i suoi contribuli nella sua scelta. Quilabidas ou Banu Quilabe (em árabe: ﺑﻨﻮ ﻛـلاﺏ‎; romaniz.: Banū Kilāb) era uma tribo árabe que dominou a Arábia Central no fim da era pré-islâmica. Era um ramo importante dos e, portanto, da linhagem do norte da Arábia ou cáicidas. Durante e após a conquista muçulmana da Síria, os quilabidas migraram para o norte da Síria. Seu chefe liderou a revolta cáicida contra o Califado Omíada (r. 651–750) até que garantiu a paz com o último em 691. Banu Kilab (/: Banū Kilāb) adalah sebuah suku Arab yang mendominasi tengah Arabia pada akhir era pra-Islam. Ini adalah cabang besar dari suku . Pada saat dan setengah penaklukan Suriah oleh Muslim, suku Kulabi bermigrasi ke utara Suriah. Kepala suku mereka Zufar bin al-Harith al-Kilabi memimpin pemberontakan Qais melawan Kekhalifahan Umayyah sampai ia berdamai pada 691. بنو كلاب هي قبيلة عربية كانت قد سادت على وسط الجزيرة العربية في أواخر عصر ما قبل الإسلام. لقد كانت فرعًا رئيسيًا لقبيلة بنو عامر بن صعصعة، وكانت بالتالي من شمال الجزيرة العربية أو القيسية. أثناء وبعد الفتح الإسلامي لسوريا، هاجر رجال قبائل بنو كلاب إلى شمال سوريا. قاد زعيمهم زفر بن الحارث الكلابي ثورة القيسية ضد الخلافة الأموية حتى حصل على السلام مع الأخير عام 691.
rdfs:seeAlso
dbr:Qays dbr:Yaman_tribes
dbp:name
Banu Kilab
foaf:depiction
n11:House_of_al-Sa'iq_ibn_Amr_ibn_Kilab.png n11:Political_map_of_the_Levant,_circa_1085.png n11:Aleppo._Citadel_(1265963614).jpg n11:Sayf_al-Dawla_at_his_court.png n11:Mirdasids_1025.png n11:Map_of_Arabia_600_AD.svg
dcterms:subject
dbc:Banu_Kilab
dbo:wikiPageID
44120057
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1113131683
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Thierry_Bianquis dbr:Mu'awiya_II dbr:Harb_ibn_Umayya dbr:Al-Waqidi n7:Political_map_of_the_Levant,_circa_1085.png dbr:Muhammad dbr:Aslam_ibn_Zur'a dbr:Emirate_of_Cordoba dbr:Waki_ibn_al-Jarrah dbr:Rashid_al-Dawla_Mahmud dbr:Circesium dbr:Fazara dbr:Arabian_Peninsula dbr:Qal'at_Ja'bar dbr:Mansur_ibn_Lu'lu' dbr:Jazira_(caliphal_province) dbr:Mezzeh dbr:Early_Muslim_conquests dbr:Al_Fadl dbr:Ghulam dbr:Ibn_Bayhas dbr:Bishr_ibn_Marwan dbr:Taym_ibn_Murrah dbr:Ka'aba dbr:Abd_Allah_ibn_al-Zubayr dbr:Mu'awiya_I dbr:Kufa dbr:Arabian_horses dbr:Aq-Sunqur dbr:Al-Basasiri dbr:Al-Hira dbr:Anarchy_at_Samarra dbr:Banu_Nasr dbr:Marwan_ibn_al-Hakam dbr:Hassan_ibn_Mufarrij dbr:Turubah dbr:Al-Yamamah dbr:Dhahab_River dbr:Ibn_al-Adim dbr:Ikshidids dbr:Religion_in_pre-Islamic_Arabia dbr:Atharib dbr:Battle_of_Marj_Rahit_(684) dbr:Vizier dbr:Fath_al-Qal'i n7:Aleppo._Citadel_(1265963614).jpg dbr:Ibn_Khan dbr:Armenian_Kingdom_of_Cilicia dbr:Ma'arrat_Misrin dbr:Hawazin dbr:Kingdom_of_Kinda dbr:Khalaf_ibn_Mula'ib dbr:Euphrates dbr:Edessa dbr:Arabia dbr:Diocese_of_the_East dbr:Sulayman_ibn_Abd_al-Malik dbr:History_of_the_Hajj dbr:Basra dbr:Marwanids_(Diyar_Bakr) dbr:Ibn_Mulhim dbr:Kafartab dbr:Khabur_(Euphrates) dbr:Turkmens dbr:Sidon dbr:C._E._Bosworth dbr:Blood_money_(restitution) dbr:Muhammad_al-Nafs_al-Zakiyya dbr:Najran dbr:Barbalissos dbr:Balj_ibn_Bishr_al-Qushayri dbr:Ibn_Sa'd dbr:Banu_Tayy dbr:Baalbek dbr:Ranyah dbc:Banu_Kilab dbr:Fijar_War dbr:Harran dbr:Al-Wathiq dbr:Shia dbr:Zufar_ibn_al-Harith dbr:Werner_Caskel dbr:Herbaceous dbr:Romanos_III dbr:Battle_of_Uhud dbr:Nahd dbr:Sunni_Muslim dbr:Expedition_of_Dahhak_al-Kilabi dbr:Al-Andalus dbr:Al-Jazira_(caliphal_province) dbr:Sa'id_ibn_Aslam_al-Kilabi dbr:Al-Rahba dbr:Yazid_I dbr:Yazid_III dbr:Abu_Bakr dbr:Twelver_Shia_Islam dbr:Palestine_(region) dbr:Jarrahid dbr:Amir_al-arab dbr:Iqta dbr:Ahmad_ibn_Tulun dbr:Irfan_Shahid dbr:Islam dbr:Zuhayr_ibn_Jadhima dbr:Ibn_Hayyus dbr:Salih_ibn_Mirdas dbr:Byzantine_Empire dbr:Citadel_of_Aleppo dbr:Battle_of_Hunayn dbr:Ahmad_ibn_Hanbal dbr:Abu_Bara dbr:Third_Muslim_Civil_War dbr:Al-Mutawakkil dbr:Abbasid_Revolution dbr:Alp_Arslan dbr:First_Muslim_Civil_War dbr:Primogeniture dbr:Emirate dbr:Mukhtar_al-Thaqafi dbr:Sa'd_al-Dawla n7:Mirdasids_1025.png dbr:Companions_of_Muhammad dbr:Hejaz dbr:Abraha dbr:Yazid_ibn_Umar_ibn_Hubayra dbr:Zufar_ibn_al-Harith_al-Kilabi dbr:Al-Adil dbr:Wali_al-ahd dbr:Yazid_ibn_al-Muhallab dbr:Salamiyah dbr:Eastern_Arabia dbr:Marwan_II dbr:Kamal_Salibi dbr:M._J._Kister dbr:Aziz_al-Dawla dbr:Pre-Islamic_poetry dbr:Al-Mu'tasim dbr:Al-Walid_I dbr:Al-Walid_II dbr:Wasit dbr:Greater_Khurasan dbr:Khanasir dbr:Amsar dbr:Husayn_ibn_Ali dbr:Qarmatian dbr:Hauran dbr:Syria_(region) dbr:Rashidun_Caliphate dbr:Baghdad dbr:Sabiq_ibn_Mahmud dbr:Ibn_Abi_Hasina dbr:Bahrayn_(historical_region) dbr:Lakhmid dbr:Battle_of_Azaz_(1030) dbr:Terminus_ante_quem dbr:Al-Hajjaj_ibn_Yusuf dbr:Caliphate dbr:Hadith_scholar dbr:Jurjan dbr:Ali dbr:Al-Nu'man_III_ibn_al-Mundhir dbr:Qahtaba_ibn_Shabib dbr:Thaqif dbr:Twelver_Shia_Muslim dbr:Numayrids dbr:Battle_of_Badr dbr:Asabiyyah dbr:Alqama_ibn_Ulatha dbr:Isma'ili dbr:Tuwaiq dbr:Khath'am dbr:Yusuf_ibn_Umar_al-Thaqafi dbr:Constantinople dbr:Az-Zahir_Ghazi dbr:Jund_Hims n7:Map_of_Arabia_600_AD.svg dbr:Jund_Qinnasrin dbr:Siege_of_Mecca_(692) dbr:Pre-Islamic_Arabia dbr:Abu_al-Ward dbr:Nasir_al-Dawla dbr:Nasir_al-Dawla_ibn_Hamdan dbr:Khalid_ibn_al-Walid dbr:South_Arabia dbr:Anatolia dbr:Bloodwit dbr:Raphanea dbr:Hadramawt dbr:Kinana dbr:Greater_Khorasan dbr:Nakhla_(Saudi_Arabia) dbr:Hama dbr:Rajaz_(prosody) dbr:Fourth_Muslim_Civil_War dbr:Amir_ibn_al-Tufayl dbr:Alid dbr:Fijar_Wars dbr:Battle_of_Zab dbr:Syrian_steppe dbr:Bugha_al-Kabir dbr:Quraysh dbr:Anushtakin_al-Dizbari dbr:Al-Mubarqa dbr:Tutush_I dbr:Ma'arrat_al-Nu'man dbr:Hass_Mountain dbr:Cabra,_Spain dbr:Abbasid dbr:Yaman_(tribal_group) dbr:Abu'l-Hayja_Abdallah_ibn_Sa'd_al-Dawla dbr:Anno_Hegirae dbr:Al-Rabi_ibn_Ziyad dbr:Dabiq,_Syria dbr:Abu_al-Umaytir_al-Sufyani dbr:Damascus dbr:Tanukh dbr:Labīd dbr:Ridda_wars dbr:Hugh_N._Kennedy dbr:Malik-Shah_I dbr:Homs dbr:Balharith dbr:Transjordan_(region) dbr:Ajlan_(tribe) dbr:Shabib_ibn_Yazid_al-Shaybani dbr:Muhammad_ibn_Tughj_al-Ikhshid dbr:Al-Dahhak_ibn_Sufyan dbr:Harun_al-Rashid dbr:Murad dbr:Riyadh dbr:Antioch dbr:Harem,_Syria dbr:Muslim_conquest_of_the_Levant dbr:Ayyubid_dynasty dbr:Baybars dbr:Saruj dbr:Province_of_Córdoba_(Spain) dbr:Mamluk_Sultanate dbr:Sasanian_Empire dbr:Mamluk_Sultanate_(Cairo) dbr:Rifq dbr:Banu_Sulaym dbr:Progenitor dbr:Muslim_conquest_of_Iraq dbr:Banu_Tamim dbr:Millennarian dbr:Mosul dbr:Najd dbr:Jabal_al-Summaq dbr:Bedouin dbr:Mecca dbr:Manbij dbr:Jaén,_Spain dbr:Muslim_ibn_Quraysh dbr:Muslim_ibn_Sa'id_al-Kilabi dbr:Dahhak_ibn_Qays_al-Fihri dbr:Qays dbr:Al-Mundhir_IV dbr:Atiyya_ibn_Salih dbr:Banu_Asad dbr:Shia_Islam dbr:Banu_Uqayl dbr:Ukaz,_Arabia dbr:Fatimid_Caliphate dbr:Gibelacar dbr:Nasr_ibn_Mahmud dbr:Battle_of_Shi'b_Jabala dbr:Roman_Egypt dbr:Shimr dbr:List_of_expeditions_of_Muhammad dbr:Souk_Okaz dbr:Sistan dbr:Sinjar dbr:Ta'if dbr:Medina dbr:Wadi_al-Rummah dbr:Hanbali dbr:Umar_II dbr:Kharijite dbr:Maslama_ibn_Abd_al-Malik dbr:Bakjur n7:House_of_al-Sa'iq_ibn_Amr_ibn_Kilab.png dbr:Qarmatians dbr:First_Crusade dbr:Tughril_Bey dbr:Qushayr dbr:Makran dbr:Sasanian_Iran dbr:Kingdom_of_Armenia_(Middle_Ages) dbr:Banu_Hilal dbr:Banu_Jusham dbr:Banu_Kalb dbr:Banu_Ka'b dbr:Aleppo dbr:Banu_Dhubyan dbr:Expedition_of_Bir_Maona dbr:Sayf_al-Dawla dbr:Ghazi_(warrior) dbr:Sulayman_ibn_Qutulmush dbr:Charles_James_Lyall dbr:Banu_Ghani n7:Sayf_al-Dawla_at_his_court.png dbr:Sarmin dbr:Banu_Abs dbr:Banu_Numayr dbr:Banu_Amir dbr:Banu_Ammar dbr:Qadi dbr:Banu_Qushayr dbr:Banu_Sa'd dbr:Afrin_River dbr:Mirdasid_dynasty dbr:Ribab dbr:Berber_Revolt dbr:Hamdanid_dynasty dbr:Gaziantep dbr:Banu_Muharib dbr:Oman dbr:Waththab_ibn_Mahmud dbr:Banu_Munqidh dbr:Sibt_ibn_al-Jawzi dbr:Banu_Murra dbr:Muqallid_ibn_Kamil dbr:Tiberias dbr:Uthman dbr:Yazid_ibn_al-Sa'iq dbr:Raqqa dbr:Al-Ma'mun dbr:Ja'da dbr:Ibn_al-Ash'ath dbr:Umar dbr:Umayyad_Caliphate dbr:Al-Ma'arri dbr:Aman_(Islam) dbr:Ghouta dbr:Harish_(tribe) dbr:Banu_Asad_ibn_Khuzaymah dbr:Jarm dbr:Abd_Allah_ibn_Tahir dbr:Battle_of_Buzakha dbr:Banu_Bakr_ibn_Abd_Manat dbr:Ghatafan dbr:Abd_al-Malik_ibn_Marwan dbr:Apostasy_in_Islam
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
n4:books%3Fid=tcBSAQAAQBAJ n4:books%3Fid=L1JNHWby2RQC n9:10731672.pdf n4:books%3Fid=pfwAG3-rpzcC n4:books%3Fid=KM3zPwi0gmYC n4:books%3Fid=47PEMS6emv0C n4:books%3Fid=7CP7fYghBFQC&pg=PA1005 n4:books%3Fid=pfdNlTCJ2fQC n4:books%3Fid=gZknAAAAQBAJ n4:books%3Fid=9fC44Rh46y0C n4:books%3Fid=60S5VkeC9CkC&pg=PA76 n4:books%3Fid=dQ9KCcDUBT4C n4:books%3Fid=HLULAAAAIAAJ n4:books%3Fid=DFO-eV9cQ0sC n4:books%3Fid=ErUOAAAAIAAJ n4:books%3Fid=kIKGclA7YykC n4:books%3Fid=YSipAgAAQBAJ n4:books%3Fid=9pqsCCQfngwC n4:books%3Fid=ZzgjAQAAIAAJ n23:expedition-bi%CA%BEr-ma%CA%BF%C5%ABna n4:books%3Fid=1_03AAAAIAAJ n4:books%3Fid=XzWCAAAAIAAJ n4:books%3Fid=2C6KIBw4F9YC n4:books%3Fid=AI5tAAAAMAAJ n4:books%3Fid=SdrtpZQphYUC n4:books%3Fid=1oZtAAAAMAAJ n4:books%3Fid=i23sCgAAQBAJ n4:books%3Fid=4tnRAAAAMAAJ n4:books%3Fid=RCglDwAAQBAJ n4:books%3Fid=QrraNpIVn3gC n4:books%3Fid=ybgUAAAAIAAJ n4:books%3Fid=sbltAAAAMAAJ n4:books%3Fid=OYERAAAAYAAJ n4:books%3Fid=t8w3DwAAQBAJ n4:books%3Fid=t02r3yh48ygC
owl:sameAs
dbpedia-ar:بنو_كلاب dbpedia-it:Banu_Kilab n18:بنو_کلاب n19:nDej dbpedia-pt:Quilabidas dbpedia-id:Bani_Kilab wikidata:Q18378261 freebase:m.0123nhmd yago-res:Banu_Kilab dbpedia-tr:Beni_Kilab
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Convert dbt:Circa dbt:Historical_Arab_tribes dbt:Chart_bottom dbt:Chart_top dbt:Sfn dbt:Efn dbt:The_History_of_al-Tabari dbt:Literally dbt:Main dbt:EI2 dbt:Reflist dbt:Infobox_tribe dbt:Refend dbt:Refbegin dbt:Reign dbt:Slaves_on_Horses dbt:Daftary-The_Ismailis dbt:Notelist dbt:Cite_thesis dbt:Cite_journal dbt:Cite_encyclopedia n26:end n26:start dbt:Cite_book dbt:Tree_chart dbt:Transl dbt:See_also dbt:The_Prophet_and_the_Age_of_the_Caliphates
dbo:thumbnail
n11:Map_of_Arabia_600_AD.svg?width=300
dbp:article
Ḍarīyya Kilāb b. Rabīʿa Hawāzin Buzākha Mirdas Shi'b Jabala Labīd b. Rabīʿa Ghaṭafān
dbp:authorlink
William Montgomery Watt Carl Brockelmann Irfan Shahid Werner Caskel
dbp:branches
*Abd Allah *Abu Bakr **Qurata **Mirdasid dynasty *Al-Adbat *Amr **Banu Zufar *Amir **Wahid *Ja'far *Ka'b *Mu'awiya al-Dibab **Banu Bayhas *Rabi'a *Ru'as
dbp:first
W. Montgomery Irfan C. E. J. W. Thierry C. W. R. G.
dbp:last
Brockelmann Caskel Khoury Bosworth Shahid Bianquis Watt Fück
dbp:location
6 7
dbp:page
1358 101
dbp:pages
1023 424 583 115 285
dbp:religion
Shia Islam dbr:Religion_in_pre-Islamic_Arabia Islam
dbp:title
Wakīʿ b. al-Djarrāḥ b Malīḥ 'Amir b. Sa'sa'a
dbp:type
Qaysi Arab tribe
dbp:url
n4:books%3Fid=kIKGclA7YykC n4:books%3Fid=KM3zPwi0gmYC n4:books%3Fid=t02r3yh48ygC n4:books%3Fid=SdrtpZQphYUC n4:books%3Fid=L1JNHWby2RQC n4:books%3Fid=47PEMS6emv0C
dbp:volume
11 9 2 3 1 7 5 27 24 19 22 20 34
dbo:abstract
I Banū Kilāb - più propriamente Banū Kilāb ibn Rabīʿa - (in arabo: ﺑﻨﻮ ﻛـلاﺏ‎), furono una tribù araba beduina che faceva parte della più vasta stirpe dei . Il suo luogo di abituale frequentazione erano quindi le regioni nord-occidentali della Penisola araba. Presero parte alla Guerra di Fijar, uno degli episodi bellici preislamici narrati nella silloge epica degli Ayyām al-ʿArab (I giorni degli Arabi). La tribù abbracciò l'Islam grazie al suo Sayyid al-Ḍaḥḥāk b. Sufyān, che trascinò i suoi contribuli nella sua scelta. Svolsero un ruolo importante nel processo di "ri-beduinizzazione" delle regioni settentrionali del Bilad al-Sham intorno al X e XII secolo, che impedì ai Fatimidi d'impadronirsi dell'area (essenziale per poter sciamare verso l'Iraq, sede del loro acerrimo nemico abbaside, e che agevolò non poco la stessa vittoriosa avanzata dei Crociati in Terrasanta. Apparteneva ai B. Kilāb la dinastia dei Mirdasidi, che controllò l'Emirato di Aleppo tra il 1024 e il 1080. Quilabidas ou Banu Quilabe (em árabe: ﺑﻨﻮ ﻛـلاﺏ‎; romaniz.: Banū Kilāb) era uma tribo árabe que dominou a Arábia Central no fim da era pré-islâmica. Era um ramo importante dos e, portanto, da linhagem do norte da Arábia ou cáicidas. Durante e após a conquista muçulmana da Síria, os quilabidas migraram para o norte da Síria. Seu chefe liderou a revolta cáicida contra o Califado Omíada (r. 651–750) até que garantiu a paz com o último em 691. Mais duas migrações em massa de quilabidas para o norte da Síria ocorreram nos séculos IX e X, sendo a última onda associada ao movimento rebelde carmata. Por sua força numérica, habilidade de espada e mobilidade beduína, os quilabidas emergiram como a força militar dominante nas estepes do deserto, ao norte de Palmira e ao redor de Alepo, às custas de tribos semi-sedentárias bem estabelecidas. Estavam envolvidos na ascensão da dinastia hamadânida no fim do século X, mas muitas vezes se rebelaram e participaram de disputas intra-dinásticas. No início do XI, o chefe quilabida assumiu a liderança da tribo e, em 1025, estabeleceu um emirado (principado) com sede em Alepo, que incluía grande parte da Mesopotâmia Ocidental e norte da Síria. A governou Alepo mais ou menos continuamente até 1080. The Banu Kilab (Arabic: بنو كِلاب, romanized: Banū Kilāb) was an Arab tribe in the western Najd (central Arabia) where they controlled the horse-breeding pastures of Dariyya from the mid-6th century until at least the mid-9th century. The tribe was divided into ten branches, the most prominent being the Ja'far, Abu Bakr, Amr, Dibab and Abd Allah. The Ja'far led the Kilab and its parent tribe of Banu Amir, and, at times, the larger Hawazin tribal confederation from the time of the Kilab's entry into the historical record, c. 550, until the advent of Islam, c. 630, except for two occasions when the larger Abu Bakr was at the helm. Under the Ja'far's leadership the Kilab defeated rival tribes and the Lakhmid kings and eventually became guards of the Lakhmid caravans to the annual fair in the Hejaz (western Arabia). The killing of a Ja'far chief as he escorted one such caravan led to the Fijar War between the Hawazin and the Quraysh of Mecca. The Kilab, or at least its chief, Amir ibn al-Tufayl, was involved in the massacre of Muslims at Bir Ma'una in 626 despite being under the protection of Amir's uncle Abu Bara. Amir's successor converted to Islam, followed by other tribesmen, including the prominent poet Labid and , who was dispatched by the Islamic prophet Muhammad on an expedition against a recalcitrant Kilabi clan. The Banu Amir played a minor role in the early Muslim conquests, but members of the Kilab later established themselves in the garrison towns of Iraq. Several, including Aslam ibn Zur'a and his family, were governors of Basra, Khurasan, and other eastern provinces under the Umayyad caliphs in 661–750. The Kilabi chief Zufar ibn al-Harith led the rebel Qays nomads of the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia) and Jund Qinnasrin (northern Syria). He obtained from the Umayyads privileges later inherited by his family, who were generally recognized as the preeminent leaders of the Qays. Zufar's grandson, Abu al-Ward, led an abortive Qaysi revolt against the Umayyads' Abbasid successors in 750. In 813 a Kilabi chief of the Qays in Damascus, Ibn Bayhas, crushed an Umayyad revolt against the Abbasids, after which he ruled Damascus for ten years. There were two more mass migrations of Kilabi tribesmen from Arabia to northern Syria in the 9th and 10th centuries, the last associated with the rebellious Qarmatian movement. Through their numerical strength, skilled swordsmanship, and Bedouin mobility, the Kilab became the dominant military force in northern Syria. Two Kilabi brothers were appointed governors of Aleppo under the Ikshidids of Egypt in 939 and the 940s, until they handed over power under pressure from rival Kilabi chiefs to the Hamdanid emir Sayf al-Dawla in 944. The Kilab often rebelled against the Hamdanids and participated in their intra-dynastic disputes. In the early 11th century, Salih ibn Mirdas assumed leadership of the Kilab and by 1025, he established an Aleppo-based emirate (principality) that spanned much of the western Jazira and northern Syria. His Mirdasid dynasty ruled Aleppo until 1080, with minor interruption. The Kilab were the core of the Mirdasid army and defended their realm, defeating the Byzantine emperor Romanos III at the Battle of Azaz in 1030 and fending off several Fatimid assaults in later years. Recurring internal divisions had sapped the tribe's strength by the reign of the last Mirdasid emir. The Kilab retained scattered fortresses and remained a major source of military recruitment for the Mirdasids' successors, but they lost their paramountcy to Turkmen groups which had begun entering northern Syria in significant numbers from the late 11th century. The Ayyubids confiscated the Kilab's last holdings in the region and put the tribe under the authority of an amir al-arab (state-sponsored commander of the Bedouin), an office held by the Al Fadl house of the rival Banu Tayy. Part of the Kilab migrated to Anatolia, reappearing in 1262 as auxiliaries of the Armenians in a raid against the Mamluks. In 1277 the tribe submitted to the Mamluk sultan Baybars in northern Syria. The Kilabi way of life in Syria resembled their pre-Islamic existence in Arabia. There were raids and counter-raids against neighboring tribes and between the tribe itself, characterized by individual duels and boasts of valor, and motivated by booty or revenge. Young tribesmen spent the springtime horse-racing and wine-drinking. Mass banquets were held for special occasions, such as weddings and circumcisions. The women of the Kilab in Syria generally enjoyed equality with the men of the tribe and a number of Kilabi women played prominent roles in Mirdasid politics. The Kilab in Syria were Twelver Shia Muslims, though the extent of their adherence to the faith was unclear. بنو كلاب هي قبيلة عربية كانت قد سادت على وسط الجزيرة العربية في أواخر عصر ما قبل الإسلام. لقد كانت فرعًا رئيسيًا لقبيلة بنو عامر بن صعصعة، وكانت بالتالي من شمال الجزيرة العربية أو القيسية. أثناء وبعد الفتح الإسلامي لسوريا، هاجر رجال قبائل بنو كلاب إلى شمال سوريا. قاد زعيمهم زفر بن الحارث الكلابي ثورة القيسية ضد الخلافة الأموية حتى حصل على السلام مع الأخير عام 691. حدثت هجرتان جماعيتان أخريان من رجال قبائل كلاب إلى شمال سوريا في القرنين التاسع والعاشر، وكانت الموجة الأخيرة مرتبطة بقحط الجزيرة العربيه. من خلال قوتهم العددية، المبارزة الماهرة والتنقل البدوي، ظهر بنو كلاب باعتباره القوة العسكرية المهيمنة في السهوب الصحراوية شمال تدمر وحول حلب وحمص على حساب القبائل الراسخة وشبه المستقرة. لقد شاركوا في صعود الدولة الحمدانية في أواخر القرن العاشر، لكنهم غالبًا ما تمردوا وشاركوا في نزاعات داخل الأسرة الحاكمة. في أوائل القرن الحادي عشر، تولى رئيس الكلابي صالح بن مرداس قيادة القبيلة وبحلول عام 1025 أنشأ إمارة مقرها في حلب تضمنت معظم مناطق غرب بلاد ما بين النهرين وشمال سوريا. حكمت المرداسيون حلب أكثر أو أقل باستمرار حتى 1080. Banu Kilab (/: Banū Kilāb) adalah sebuah suku Arab yang mendominasi tengah Arabia pada akhir era pra-Islam. Ini adalah cabang besar dari suku . Pada saat dan setengah penaklukan Suriah oleh Muslim, suku Kulabi bermigrasi ke utara Suriah. Kepala suku mereka Zufar bin al-Harith al-Kilabi memimpin pemberontakan Qais melawan Kekhalifahan Umayyah sampai ia berdamai pada 691.
dbp:authorLink
Clifford Edmund Bosworth
dbp:descended
Kilab ibn Rabi'a ibn Amir ibn Sa'sa
dbp:nisba
Kilābī
dbp:parentTribe
dbr:Banu_Amir
dbp:pp
159
gold:hypernym
dbr:Tribe
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Banu_Kilab?oldid=1113131683&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
105509
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Banu_Kilab