Bishr ibn Hasan

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Bishr ibn Hasan
Born
Died10 October, 680 AD
Parent
RelativesAl-Husayn (uncle)
Hasan (brother)
Qasim (brother)
Talha (brother)
Abd Allah (brother)
Abu Bakr (brother)
Fatima (sister)
FamilyFamily of Ali

Bishr ibn al-Ḥasan (Arabic: بشر بن الحسن) was a great-grandson of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. He was the son of second Shia Imam Hasan ibn Ali.[1][2] He is considered to be one of the martyrs of the Battle of Karbala,[3][4][5] although no record describes the circumstances surrounding his death by enemy forces.[6][7]

The first mention of Bishr ibn al-Hasan being killed at Karbala was by Shia scholar Ibn Shahrashub. Of Hasan ibn Ali's twenty sons, seven participated in the battle, among them Bishr ibn al-Hasan.[8] All but one brother was killed during the battle. In his account of their deaths, Shahrashub writes on Bishr: "... and it has been said that Bishr has been martyred, too."[9]

Among Bishr ibn al-Hasan's brothers who were present at the event of Ashura were Amr (who was killed in the event at Karbala when he was a child),[10] Hasan (better known as 'Hasan al-Muthanna'), Qasim (who was also considered to be killed at Karbala), Abd Allah (Abd Allah al-Asghar).[11][12]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Imam Hasan's son tebyan.net Retrieved 9 Oct 2018
  2. ^ The soldiers of Imam Hussain (a.s.) yjc.ir
  3. ^ The martyrs of Karbala Archived 2018-10-07 at the Wayback Machine porseman.org Retrieved 7 Oct 2018
  4. ^ The children of Imam Hasan (a.s.) imamhussain.org Retrieved 7 Oct 2018
  5. ^ Beshr ibn Hsana ashoora.ir Retrieved 7 Oct 2018
  6. ^ Ale Abi Talib Alaihe-Salam, V. 4, P. 122
  7. ^ Dehdashti Behbahani, Mohammad Baqer, Al-Dam'ah al-Sakeba, V. 5, P. 20
  8. ^ Imam Hasan's gallant sons in Karbala ganjineh.valiasr-aj.com Retrieved 10 Oct 2018
  9. ^ Ibn Shahrasub, Ali ibn Hussain, Manaqeb Ale Abi Talib (a.s.), V. 4, P. 122
  10. ^ Kharazmi, Maghtal al-Hussain, V. 2, P. 48
  11. ^ Imam Hasan's children Archived 2019-06-15 at the Wayback Machine porseshkadeh.com
  12. ^ Imam Hasan[permanent dead link] ahl-ul-bait.org Retrieved 8 Oct 2018