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Bahila

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Qutayba ibn Muslim
Umayyad Caliphate Arab commander and governor (669-715/6)
Al-ʾAṣmaʿiyy
Al-Asmaʿi (, ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Qurayb al-Aṣmaʿī ; –828/833), or Asmai was an Arab philologist and one of three leading Arabic grammarians of the Basra school. At the court of the Abbasid caliph, Hārūn al-Rashīd, as polymath and prolific author on philology, poetry, genealogy, and natural science, he pioneered zoology studies in animal-human anatomical science. He compiled an important poetry anthology, the ''Asma'iyyat'', and was credited with composing an epic on the life of Antarah ibn Shaddad. A protégé of Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi and Abu 'Amr ibn al-'Ala', he was a contemporary and
Abu Umamah al-Bahili
Sahabah
Abd al-Rahman ibn Rabi'a
Arab general of the early Caliphate
Salman ibn Rabi'a
Military governor of Armenia (633–644)
Hawthara ibn Suhayl
Bedouin Arab administrator and military leader of the Umayyad Caliphate, in Egypt
Salm ibn Qutayba
Arab governor and military commander of Caliphate
Bahila
Bāhila () was an Arab tribe based in Najd (central Arabia). Part of the tribe was settled and part of it was semi-nomadic. The Bahila was first mentioned during the early years of Islam, in the mid-7th century. During that time, many Bahila tribesmen migrated to Syria and Basra. Many of those who went to Syria later moved to Khurasan as part of the Umayyad garrison there. As a sub-tribe of Qays, they fought alongside the Qaysi coalition against the Yamani tribes during the Umayyad era. The scholar al-Asma'i and the general Qutayba ibn Muslim both belonged to the tribe. The Bahila were last men
Ibrahim ibn Salm al-Bahili
abbasid governor of Yemen and official
Sa'id ibn Salm al-Bahili
abbasid governor of Yemen and official
Sahban Wa'il
Khatib