Age of Aishah (ra)
at time of her marriage
compiled by Zahid Aziz
(Note: The name spelt in this
article as Aishah is properly transliterated as ‛Ā’ishah)
Qualities of Aishah and her role in Islam
In any discussion on the age of Aishah (ra: may Allah be
pleased with her) at the time of her marriage with the Holy Prophet
Muhammad (may peace and the blessings of Allah be upon him), it
is of the greatest relevance to note the pivotal role she played
as a teacher, exponent and interpreter of the religion of Islam.
Aishah was an exceptionally intelligent and astute woman, a young
prodigy, and this was the main reason why she was got married to
the Holy Prophet, as is clearly proved by events after the Holy
Prophet’s life. She entered his household, shortly after his emigration
to Madina, just at the time when the teachings of Islam in all fields
of life for the Muslim community were starting to be revealed to
the Holy Prophet and demonstrated by him by his example and practice.
An intellectually gifted person was required who would have daily
contact with the Holy Prophet at the closest and most personal level,
so as to absorb the teachings that he was giving on all aspects
of life by his words and actions. Such a person would need to possess
the following qualities:
- an excellent, precise memory to retain a vast amount of detail
accurately,
- the understanding to grasp the significance and the principles
of the teachings,
- powers of reasoning, criticism and deduction to resolve problems
on the basis of those teachings,
- the skills to convey knowledge to a wide range of audience,
- and, finally, have the prospect of living for a considerable
period of time after the death of the Holy Prophet in order to
spread his message to distant generations.
That Aishah possessed all these qualities and carried out this mission
is an absolutely positive and undeniable, historical fact. After
the Holy Prophet’s death, she acted as a teacher and interpreter
of Islam, providing guidance to even the greatest of the male Companions
of the Holy Prophet Muhammad. They made a special point of going
to her to gain knowledge and seek her opinion. A vast number of
sayings and actions of the Holy Prophet are reported from her in
books of Hadith. She not only quoted his sayings and reported her
observations of events, but interpreted them to provide solutions
to questions. Whenever necessary, she corrected the views of the
greatest of the Companions of the Holy Prophet. She made rulings
and judgments on which Islamic law is based.
The following are two examples of what the Holy Prophet’s male
Companions said about her:
“Abu Musa said: Whenever there was any hadith that was difficult
[to understand] for us, the Companions of the Messenger of Allah,
and we asked Aishah we always found that she had knowledge about
that hadith.”
“Musa ibn Talha said: I never saw anyone more eloquent than Aishah.” [1]
In the famous compilation of the lives of saints in Islam, Tadhkirat-ul-Auliya, the author Farid-ud-Din Attar, who lived eight centuries ago, introduces the life of the early female saint Rabia of Basra
as follows:
“If anyone says, ‘Why have you included Rabia in the rank of
men?’, my answer is that the Prophet himself said, ‘God does not
regard your outward forms’. … Moreover, if it is proper to derive
two-thirds of our religion from Aishah, surely it is permissible
to take religious instruction from a handmaid of Aishah.” [2]
It is thus recognised, from the earliest times in Islam, that some
two-thirds of Islamic Sharia is based on reports and interpretations
that have come from Aishah.
In view of these exceptional qualities of Aishah and the towering
role played by her in the transmission of the teachings of Islam,
it is simply preposterous and outrageous to suggest that she was
the victim of some form of child and marital abuse. We ask in particular
the Christian and Jewish critics of Islam, who are reviling the
Holy Prophet Muhammad on the basis of his marriage with Aishah, whether
they can point out any example of a woman in their religions who played a role like that of Aishah in learning the religion from
its founder and becoming the teacher and instructor of all his followers,
including men, after his death.
Age of Aishah at time of marriage with Holy Prophet Muhammad
It is believed on the authority of some Hadith reports that the
marriage ceremony (known as nikah, amounting to betrothal)
of Aishah with the Holy Prophet Muhammad took place when she was
six years of age, and that she joined the Holy Prophet as his wife
three years later at the age of nine. We quote below from two such
reports in Bukhari.
“It is reported from Aishah that she said: The Prophet entered
into marriage with me when I was a girl of six … and at the time
[of joining his household] I was a girl of nine years of age.”
“Khadija died three years before the Prophet departed to Medina.
He stayed [alone] for two years or so. He married Aishah when she
was a girl of six years of age, and he consummated that marriage
when she was nine years old.” [3]
As to the authenticity of these reports, it may be noted that the
compilers of the books of Hadith did not apply the same stringent
tests when accepting reports relating to historical matters as they
did before accepting reports relating to the practical teachings
and laws of Islam. The reason is that the former type of report
was regarded as merely of academic interest while the latter type
of report had a direct bearing on the practical duties of a Muslim
and on what was allowed to them and what was prohibited. Thus the
occurrence of reports such as the above about the marriage of Aishah
in books of Hadith, even in Bukhari, is not necessarily a proof
of their credibility.
Determination of the true age of Aishah
It appears that Maulana Muhammad Ali was the first Islamic scholar
directly to challenge the notion that Aishah was aged six and nine,
respectively, at the time of her nikah and consummation of
marriage. This he did in, at least, the following writings: his
English booklet Prophet of Islam, his larger English book Muhammad, the Prophet, and in the footnotes in his voluminous
Urdu translation and commentary of Sahih Bukhari entitled Fadl-ul-Bari, these three writings being published in the 1920s and 1930s.
In the booklet Prophet of Islam, which was later incorporated
in 1948 as the first chapter of his book Living Thoughts of the
Prophet Muhammad, he writes in a lengthy footnote as follows:
“A great misconception prevails as to the age at which Aishah
was taken in marriage by the Prophet. Ibn Sa‘d has stated in the Tabaqat that when Abu Bakr [father of Aishah] was approached
on behalf of the Holy Prophet, he replied that the girl had already
been betrothed to Jubair, and that he would have to settle the
matter first with him. This shows that Aishah must have been approaching
majority at the time. Again, the Isaba, speaking of the
Prophet’s daughter Fatima, says that she was born five years before
the Call and was about five years older than Aishah. This shows
that Aishah must have been about ten years at the time of her betrothal
to the Prophet, and not six years as she is generally supposed
to be. This is further borne out by the fact that Aishah herself
is reported to have stated that when the chapter [of the Holy
Quran] entitled The Moon, the fifty-fourth chapter, was
revealed, she was a girl playing about and remembered certain
verses then revealed. Now the fifty-fourth chapter was undoubtedly
revealed before the sixth year of the Call. All these considerations
point to but one conclusion, viz., that Aishah could not have been
less than ten years of age at the time of her nikah, which
was virtually only a betrothal. And there is one report in the Tabaqat that Aishah was nine years of age at the time of nikah. Again it is a fact admitted on all hands that the nikah of Aishah took place in the tenth year of the Call
in the month of Shawwal, while there is also preponderance of
evidence as to the consummation of her marriage taking place in
the second year of Hijra in the same month, which shows that full
five years had elapsed between the nikah and the consummation.
Hence there is not the least doubt that Aishah was at least nine or ten years of age at the time of betrothal, and fourteen
or fifteen years at the time of marriage.” [4] (Bolding is mine.)
To facilitate understanding dates of these events, please note
that it was in the tenth year of the Call, i.e. the tenth year after
the Holy Prophet Muhammad received his calling from God to his mission
of prophethood, that his wife Khadija passed away, and the approach
was made to Abu Bakr for the hand of his daughter Aishah. The hijra or emigration of the Holy Prophet to Madina took place three years
later, and Aishah came to the household of the Holy Prophet in the
second year after hijra. So if Aishah was born in the year
of the Call, she would be ten years old at the time of the nikah and fifteen years old at the time of the consummation of the marriage.
Later research
Research subsequent to the time of Maulana Muhammad Ali has shown
that she was older than this. An excellent short work presenting
such evidence is the Urdu pamphlet Rukhsati kai waqt Sayyida
Aishah Siddiqa ki umar (The age of Lady Aishah at the time
of the start of her married life) by Abu Tahir Irfani.[4a] Points 1 to 3 below have been brought to light in this pamphlet.
1. The famous classical historian of Islam, Ibn Jarir Tabari,
wrote in his ‘History’:
“In the time before Islam, Abu Bakr married two women. The first
was Fatila daughter of Abdul Uzza, from whom Abdullah and Asma
were born. Then he married Umm Ruman, from whom Abdur Rahman and
Aishah were born. These four were born before Islam.” [5]
Being born before Islam means being born before the Call.
2. The compiler of the famous Hadith collection Mishkat
al-Masabih, Imam Wali-ud-Din Muhammad ibn Abdullah Al-Khatib,
who died 700 years ago, has also written brief biographical notes
on the narrators of Hadith reports. He writes under Asma’, the
older daughter of Abu Bakr:
“She was the sister of Aishah Siddiqa, wife of the Holy
Prophet, and was ten years older than her. … In 73 A.H. … Asma
died at the age of one hundred years.” [6]
This would make Asma 28 years of age in 1 A.H., the year of the Hijra, thus making Aishah 18 years old in 1 A.H. So Aishah
would be 19 years old at the time of the consummation of her marriage,
and 14 or 15 years old at the time of her nikah. It would
place her year of birth at four or five years before the
Call.
3. The same statement is made by the famous classical commentator
of the Holy Quran, Ibn Kathir, in his book Al-bidayya wal-nihaya:
“Asma died in 73 A.H. at the age of one hundred years. She was
ten years older than her sister Aishah.” [7]
Apart from these three evidences, which are presented in the Urdu
pamphlet referred to above, we also note that the birth of Aishah
being a little before the Call is consistent with the opening words
of a statement by her which is recorded four times in Bukhari. Those
words are as follows:
“Ever since I can remember (or understand things) my parents
were following the religion of Islam.” [8]
This is tantamount to saying that she was born sometime before her parents accepted Islam but she can only remember them practising
Islam. No doubt she and her parents knew well whether she was born
before or after they accepted Islam, as their acceptance of Islam
was such a landmark event in their life which took place just after
the Holy Prophet received his mission from God. If she had been
born after they accepted Islam it would make no sense for
her to say that she always remembered them as following Islam. Only
if she was born before they accepted Islam, would it make
sense for her to say that she can only remember them being Muslims,
as she was too young to remember things before their conversion.
This is consistent with her being born before the Call, and being
perhaps four or five years old at the time of the Call, which was
also almost the time when her parents accepted Islam.
Two further evidences cited by Maulana Muhammad Ali
In the footnotes of his Urdu translation and commentary of Sahih
Bukhari, entitled Fadl-ul-Bari, Maulana Muhammad Ali had
pointed out reports of two events which show that Aishah could not have been born later than the year of the Call. These are as follows.
1. The above mentioned statement by Aishah in Bukhari, about
her earliest memory of her parents being that they were followers
of Islam, begins with the following words in its version in Bukharis Kitab-ul-Kafalat. We quote this from the English translation
of Bukhari by M. Muhsin Khan:
“Since I reached the age when I could remember things, I have
seen my parents worshipping according to the right faith of Islam.
Not a single day passed but Allahs Apostle visited us both
in the morning and in the evening. When the Muslims were persecuted,
Abu Bakr set out for Ethiopia as an emigrant.” [9]
Commenting on this report, Maulana Muhammad Ali writes:
“This report sheds some light on the question of the age of Aishah.
… The mention of the persecution of Muslims along with the emigration
to Ethiopia clearly shows that this refers to the fifth or the
sixth year of the Call. … At that time Aishah was of an age to
discern things, and so her birth could not have been later than
the first year of the Call.” [10]
Again, this would make her more than fourteen at the time
of the consummation of her marriage.
2. There is a report in Sahih Bukhari as follows:
“On the day (of the battle) of Uhud when (some) people retreated
and left the Prophet, I saw Aishah daughter of Abu Bakr and Umm
Sulaim, with their robes tucked up so that the bangles around
their ankles were visible hurrying with their water skins (in
another narration it is said, ‘carrying the water skins on their
backs’). Then they would pour the water in the mouths of the people,
and return to fill the water skins again and came back again to
pour water in the mouths of the people.” [11]
Maulana Muhammad Ali writes in a footnote under this report:
“It should also be noted that Aishah joined the Holy Prophet’s
household only one year before the battle of Uhud. According to
the common view she would be only ten years of age at this time,
which is certainly not a suitable age for the work she did on
this occasion. This also shows that she was not so young at this
time.” [12]
If, as shown in the previous section above, Aishah was nineteen at the time of the consummation of her marriage, then she would
be twenty years old at the time of the battle of Uhud. It may be
added that on the earlier occasion of the battle of Badr when some
Muslim youths tried, out of eagerness, to go along with the Muslim
army to the field of battle, the Holy Prophet Muhammad sent them
back on account of their young age (allowing only one such youngster,
Umair ibn Abi Waqqas, to accompany his older brother the famous
Companion Sa‘d ibn Abi Waqqas). It seems, therefore, highly unlikely
that if Aishah was ten years old the Holy Prophet would have allowed
her to accompany the army to the field of battle.
We conclude from all the evidence cited above that Aishah (may Allah
be pleased with her) was nineteen years old when she joined
the Holy Prophet as his wife in the year 2 A.H., the nikah or
betrothal having taken place five years previously.
The Bible on marriage of young girls with much older men
As it is Christian evangelists and other believers in the Bible
who have been bitterly reviling the Holy Prophet Muhammad on account
of his marriage with Aisha, we put to them the practices of the
great patriarchs and prophets that are recorded in the Bible itself
in this connection. The main accusations regarding the marriage
of Aishah are that she was too young in age while the Holy Prophet
was a much older man, being fifty years of age, and that consent
to marriage was either not obtained from her or she was not capable
of giving it.
Abraham
In the book of Genesis in the Bible it is recorded about Abraham:
“Now Sarai, Abram’s wife, had borne him no children. But she
had an Egyptian maidservant named Hagar; so she said to Abram,
‘The Lord has kept me from having children. Go, sleep with my
maidservant; perhaps I can build a family through her.’ Abram
agreed to what Sarai said. So after Abram had been living in Canaan
ten years, Sarai his wife took her Egyptian maidservant Hagar
and gave her to her husband to be his wife. He slept with Hagar,
and she conceived. … So Hagar bore Abram a son, and Abram gave
the name Ishmael to the son she had borne. Abram was eighty-six
years old when Hagar bore him Ishmael.” (Genesis, chapter
16, verses 1–4, and 15–16, New International Version. Bolding
is mine.)
Firstly, it is evident that as Abraham (who then had the name Abram)
was 86 years old, Hagar must have been some fifty years younger
than him, and probably even younger, to bear a child. Secondly,
the Bible speaks of Sarai giving her maidservant Hagar to
Abraham. So Hagar’s consent was not obtained but rather she was
commanded by Sarai to go and become Abraham’s wife.
David
The first book of Kings in the Bible begins as follows:
“When King David was old and well advanced in years, he could
not keep warm even when they put covers over him. So his servants
said to him, ‘Let us look for a young virgin to attend
the king and take care of him. She can lie beside him so
that our lord the king may keep warm.’ Then they searched throughout
Israel for a beautiful girl and found Abishag, a Shunammite, and
brought her to the king. The girl was very beautiful; she took
care of the king and waited on him, but the king had no intimate
relations with her.” (1 Kings, chapter 1, verses 1–4, New International
Version. Bolding is mine.)
So there seems nothing wrong, according to the Bible, in procuring a young virgin, again apparently without her consent, whose
duties include lying with the elderly king in bed. The intention
was certainly for sexual enjoyment, otherwise there was no necessity
of looking for a young, beautiful virgin. A much older woman, perhaps
a widow, could have performed all these duties, including lying
with the king to keep him warm.
Mary and Joseph
The most famous marriage in Christianity is no doubt that of Mary,
Jesus mother, with Joseph. While the following details are
not in the canonical Gospels in the Bible, it appears from other
early Christian writings (known as apocryphal writings) that Mary
was twelve years old when the temple elders decided to find
a husband for her. They selected the husband by drawing lots, and
Joseph whom they chose was an elderly man, being according to some
accounts ninety years old. The husband was selected and Mary
was handed over to him, and she played no part in his selection.
These accounts are summed up in the Catholic Encyclopedia, 1913
edition, which is available online, as follows:
“It will not be without interest to recall here, unreliable though
they are, the lengthy stories concerning St. Joseph’s marriage
contained in the apocryphal writings. When forty years of age,
Joseph married a woman called Melcha or Escha by some, Salome
by others; they lived forty-nine years together and had six children
… A year after his wife’s death, as the priests announced through
Judea that they wished to find in the tribe of Juda a respectable
man to espouse Mary, then twelve to fourteen years of age,
Joseph, who was at the time ninety years old, went up to Jerusalem
among the candidates; a miracle manifested the choice God had
made of Joseph …” [13] (Bolding is mine.)
Although these apocryphal accounts are not now accepted by many
Christians, and the Catholic Encyclopedia says that they “are void
of authority”, yet it also speaks of their influence as follows:
“they nevertheless acquired in the course of ages some popularity;
in them some ecclesiastical writers sought the answer to the well-known
difficulty arising from the mention in the Gospel of the Lord’s
brothers; from them also popular credulity has, contrary to all
probability, as well as to the tradition witnessed by old works
of art, retained the belief that St. Joseph was an old man at
the time of marriage with the Mother of God.”
However, these accounts are accepted by the Eastern churches. The
Ukrainian Orthodoxy speaks of Joseph as follows:
“Early sources, which include apocryphal writings as well as
those of early Christian fathers, say he was a widower with four
sons as well as daughters when he undertook to be betrothed to
the young orphan maid Mary,
Joseph did so with a great deal
of misgiving because of his age
” [14]
We give below, as Appendix, a quotation from
one of these apocryphal books, The Infancy Gospel of James, describing how Mary’s husband was selected.
While the Western Christian churches may not accept these accounts
as authentic, the Eastern churches in Europe do accept that Mary
was 12 years old and Joseph a widower 90 years old when they married.
Moreover, there is nothing in the Gospels of the New Testament to
contradict these accounts, and the Gospel stories are not at all
inconsistent with these ages for Mary and Joseph.
References
[1]. Tirmidhi, Abwab-ul-Manaqib, i.e. Chapters on Excellences, under Virtues of Aishah. See this chapter in Arabic with English translation at this link, where these reports can be identified as Arabic reference Book 49, Hadith 4257 and 4258.
[2]. Muslim Saints and Mystics, abridged English translation
of Tadhkirat-ul-Auliya, by A.J. Arberry, p. 40.
[3]. Bukhari, Book of Qualities of the Ansar, chapter:
‘The Holy Prophet’s marriage with Aishah, and his coming to Madina
and the consummation of marriage with her’, hadith serial numbers 3894 and 3896. In Muhsin Khans
translation, see these reports at these links: 3894 and 3896; the book from Bukhari is at this link, where these reports are in chapter 44.
[4]. Living Thoughts of the Prophet Muhammad, 1992 U.S.A.
edition, p. 30, note 40.
[4a]. This Urdu pamphlet was published by the Ahmadiyya Anjuman Ishaat
Islam, Bombay, India. A partial English translation is available
at this
Lahore Ahmadiyya website.
[5]. Tarikh Tabari, vol. 4, p. 50.
[6]. Mishkat al-Masabih, Edition with Urdu translation published
in Lahore, 1986, vol. 3, p. 300–301. Below is the image of the entry about Asma.
[7]. Vol. 8, p. 346.
[8]. Those four places in Sahih Bukhari are the following: Kitab-us-Salat, ch. ‘A mosque which is in the way but does not inconvenience people’ (hadith serial number 476); Kitab-ul-Kafalat, ch. ‘Abu Bakr under the protection of a
non-Muslim in the time of the Holy Prophet and his pact with him’ (hadith serial number 2297); Kitab Manaqib-ul-Ansar, ch. ‘Emigration of the Holy Prophet
and his Companions to Madina’ (hadith serial number 3905); and Kitab-ul-Adab, ch. ‘Should
a person visit everyday, or morning and evening’ (hadith serial number 6079).
[9]. Hadith serial number 2297. In Muhsin Khans translation, see this hadith at this link; the book from Bukhari is at this link, where this hadith is in chapter 4.
[10]. Fadl-ul-Bari, second footnote under hadith 2297.
[11]. Sahih Bukhari, Kitab-ul-Jihad wal-Siyar, Chapter: ‘Women in war and their fighting alongside men’, hadith serial number 2880. In Muhsin Khans translation, see this hadith at this link; the book from Bukhari is at this link, where this hadith is in chapter 65.
[12]. Fadl-ul-Bari, footnote under hadith 2880. [13]. In article St. Joseph, under letter J. Here is a link
to this article in the online Catholic Encyclopedia.
[14]. See this
link to the website of the Ukrainian Orthodoxy.
Appendix: The Infancy Gospel
of James, Chapter 8 verse 2 to Chapter 9 verse 11
“When she [Mary] turned twelve, a group of priests
took counsel together, saying, ‘Look, Mary has been in the temple
of the Lord twelve years. What should we do about her now, so
that she does not defile the sanctuary of the Lord our God?’ And
they said to the high priest, ‘You have stood at the altar of
the Lord. Go in and pray about her. And if the Lord God reveals
anything to you, we will do it.’ And the priest went in taking
the vestment with twelve bells into the holy of holies and prayed
about her. Suddenly, an angel of the Lord stood before him, saying,
‘Zachariah, Zachariah, depart from here and gather the widowers
of the people and let each one carry a staff. And the one whom
the Lord God points out with a sign, she will be his wife.’ So
the heralds went out to the whole surrounding area of Judea and
the trumpet of the Lord rang out and all the men rushed in.
Throwing down his axe, Joseph went out to meet
them. And after they had gathered together with their rods, they
went to the high priest. After receiving everyone’s rod, the high
priest went into the temple and prayed. When he was finished with
the prayer, he took the rods and went out and gave them to each
man, but there was no sign among them. Finally, Joseph took his
rod. Suddenly, a dove came out of the rod and stood on Joseph’s
head. And the high priest said, ‘Joseph! Joseph! You have been
chosen by lot to take the virgin into your own keeping.’ And
Joseph replied, saying, ‘I have sons and am old, while she is
young. I will not be ridiculed among the children of Israel.’
And the high priest said, ‘Joseph, fear the Lord your God and
remember what God did to Dathan and Abiron and Kore, how the earth
split open and swallowed them because of their rebellion. Now
fear God, Joseph, so that these things do not happen in your house.’
Fearing God, Joseph took her into his own possession.”
Translation by Shelly Matthews. For further
information and other translations of this gospel see the link: www.earlychristianwritings.com/infancyjames.html
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