Yazid: Difference between revisions

610 bytes added ,  12 September 2019
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{{infobox person
| name          = Yazid
| native_name        =یزید بن معاویة بن أبی سفیان
| image          =
| known_for          = 2nd Caliph of the Umayyad Caliphate
| birth_date  = 25 AH (646)
| birth_place =Mecca (present-day Saudi Arabia)
| father        = Mu'awiya I
| mother        = Maysun bint Bahdal
| relatives          =
| spouse            =Umm Khalid Fakhita bint Abi Hisham, Umm Kulthum bint Abd Allah ibn Amir
| children          =
| death_date  = 14 Rabi ul-Awwal 64 AH (12 November 683)
| death_place = Mu'awiya II, Khaled, Atikah
| resting_place      =
}}
'''Yazid b. Muʿawiya''' was the second [[Umayyad]] caliph (r. 60-4/680-3). He was named as his successor by his father,  [[Muʻawiya|Muʿawiya]]. His mother was Maysun, a sister of the Kalbi leader Ibn Bahdal. The Banu Kalb were strong in the southern regions of Syria, and Muʿawiya appointed Yazid as his successor in preference to an older half-brother, ʿAbd Allah, born of a Qurashi mother. Yazid’s kunya, Abu Khalid, refers to one of his own younger sons, Khalid b. Yazid. During his father’s caliphate, Yazid commanded expeditions (sawaʾif see Saʾifa . 1.) against the Byzantines and participated in an attack upon Constantinople (in 49/669 or 50/670) that is mentioned in both Muslim and non-Muslim sources. He had apparently nominated his eldest son Muʿawiya as his successor, but the latter received only limited acceptance as caliph and died within months.
'''Yazid b. Muʿawiya''' was the second [[Umayyad]] caliph (r. 60-4/680-3). He was named as his successor by his father,  [[Muʻawiya|Muʿawiya]]. His mother was Maysun, a sister of the Kalbi leader Ibn Bahdal. The Banu Kalb were strong in the southern regions of Syria, and Muʿawiya appointed Yazid as his successor in preference to an older half-brother, ʿAbd Allah, born of a Qurashi mother. Yazid’s kunya, Abu Khalid, refers to one of his own younger sons, Khalid b. Yazid. During his father’s caliphate, Yazid commanded expeditions (sawaʾif see Saʾifa . 1.) against the Byzantines and participated in an attack upon Constantinople (in 49/669 or 50/670) that is mentioned in both Muslim and non-Muslim sources. He had apparently nominated his eldest son Muʿawiya as his successor, but the latter received only limited acceptance as caliph and died within months.


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