Mashhad al-Saqt: Difference between revisions

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==The Name of Mashhad al-Saqt==
==The Name of Mashhad al-Saqt==
As the [[caravan of captives]] was on their way to [[Yazid]]’s court, one of the wives of [[Hussain ibn Ali|Imam Hussain]] had a miscarriage. That is reason this place is named Mashhad al-Saqt meaning the place of miscarriage.  
As the [[Caravan of Captives|caravan of captives]] was on their way to [[Yazid]]’s court, one of the wives of [[Hussain ibn Ali|Imam Hussain]] had a miscarriage. That is reason this place is named Mashhad al-Saqt meaning the place of miscarriage.  


==Story==
==Story==

Latest revision as of 13:34, 15 November 2020

Mashhad al-Saqt (Arabic: مَشهَدالسِّقْطْ) located three hundred meters from Mashhad al-Nuqta, near Aleppo, Syria, is among places where Shi’a visit. According to Shi’ite tradition, it is the place where one of Imam Hussain’s widows had a miscarriage. It is believed that the miscarried baby was named Muhsin, although there is no historical source to testify this name.

An interior view of the Darih of Mashhad al-Siqt, Aleppo, Syria

The Name of Mashhad al-Saqt[edit | edit source]

As the caravan of captives was on their way to Yazid’s court, one of the wives of Imam Hussain had a miscarriage. That is reason this place is named Mashhad al-Saqt meaning the place of miscarriage.

Story[edit | edit source]

While the caravan of captives stopped for a rest, a wife of Imam had a miscarriage. It is believed that there used to be a useful mineral in that area, but when its residents felt elated upon seeing the captives, Zainab invoked Allah’s curse against them; therefore, that mineral lost its useful qualities.[1]

History of Construction[edit | edit source]

In Tarikh of Ibn Abu Tay, it is cited that this place was originally called Mashhad al-Tarh where Sayf al-Dawla al-Hamdani used to sit and watch horse races. However, when he learned about the story of miscarriage, he ordered the construction of a mausoleum.

Source[edit | edit source]

Reference[edit | edit source]

  1. Karbala and Beyond, P. 119.