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Solomon in Islam

Sulaimān ibn Dāwūd (Arabic: سُلَيْمَان بْن دَاوُوْد, lit.'Solomon, son of David') was, according to the Quran, a malik (مَلِك, lit.'king') and nabī (نَبِيّ, lit.'prophet') of the Israelites. Generally, Islamic tradition holds that he was the third king of the Jewish people and a wise ruler of Israel.[1]


Sulaimān
سُلَيْمَان
Solomon
Hafiz - Right Side of a Double-page Illustrated Frontispiece Depicting King Solomon (Sulayman) Enthroned - Walters W6312B - Full Page
The right side of this double-page illustrated frontispiece from Walters manuscript W.631 depicts King Solomon (Sulayman) enthroned. He is surrounded by the beasts over which he reigns, including divs and birds, mostly likely the hoopoe. Angels are above. At some point in the manuscript's history, figures' faces seem to have been purposefully erased.
Born
Died
Jerusalem, United Kingdom of Israel
Resting placeAl-Ḥaram ash-Sharīf, Jerusalem
NationalityIsraelite
TitleKing of Israel
PredecessorDawud
SuccessorIlyas
Parent

In Islam, Solomon is regarded as one of the prophets of God who was bestowed with many divine gifts, including the ability to speak to both animals and jinn; he is also said to have enslaved the shayāṭīn (شياطين, lit.'devils') and the dīv (دیو, lit.'demons') with the support of a staff or ring given to him by God.[2]

Muslims further maintain that he remained a faithful monotheist throughout his life; reigned justly over the whole of the Israelite nation; was blessed with a level of kingship that was given to none before him nor after him; and fulfilled all of his commandments, being promised nearness to God in Jannah (جَنّة, lit.'Paradise') at the end of his life.[3] Since the rise of Islam, various Arab historians have regarded Solomon as one of the greatest rulers in history.[4]

Quran and interpretation

Judgment on the field

In the earliest narrative involving Sulaiman, the Quran (21:78) briefly alludes to a story that Sulaiman was in the company of his father, when two men came to ask David to judge between them regarding a ḥarth (حَرْث, field).[5] Later Muslim commentators expanded on the allusion, including Al-Tabari, Baidawi, and Ibn Kathir.[6][7][8] They said that the first of the two men said that he owned a vineyard of which he took great care the whole year through. But one day, when he was absent, the other man's sheep had strayed into the vineyard and devoured the grapes. He asked to be compensated for this damage.[9]: 62  Upon hearing the man's complaint, Solomon suggested that the owner of the sheep take the other man's vineyard to repair and cultivate until the vines returned to their former state, whereupon he should return it to its owner. At the same time, the owner of the vineyard would care for the sheep and benefit from their wool and milk until his land was returned to him, at which point he would return the sheep to their owner. This response shows Solomon's level of judgment, which, the Quran says,[10] would characterize Sulaiman throughout his life. Ḥikmah (Wisdom), according to Muslim tradition, would always be associated with Solomon, who would later even be referred to as Sulaimān al-Ḥakīm (سُلَيْمَان ٱلْحَكِيْم, "Sulaiman the Wise"). This story is adapted in the Kebra Nagast, but as a dispute adjudicated by a son of Sulaiman.

Solomon and the demons

The Quran narrates that the wind was made subservient to Solomon,[11] and he could control it at his own will, and that the jinn also came under Solomon's control. The jinn helped strengthen Solomon's reign. The devils (shayatin),[12] and demons were forced building for him monuments.[13] God also caused a miraculous ʿayn (عَيْن, 'fount' or 'spring') of molten qiṭr (قِطْر, 'brass' or 'copper') to flow for Solomon, to be used by the demons in their construction.[11]

When David died, Solomon inherited his position as the prophetic king of the Israelites. Solomon once permitted a woman to build a statue of her father. Later, she began to worship the statue and Solomon was rebuked for tolerating idolatry in his kingdom. As a punishment, God enabled one of the enslaved demons to steal Solomon's ring and take over his kingdom (Surah 38:34). He later repents his sin and gains control over the demons again, focusing on building the temple again.[14] He prayed to God to grant him a kingdom which would be unlike any after him.[15] God accepted Solomon's prayer and gave him what he pleased.

Construed allegorically, Solomon's loss of his ring to the demons, may be understood to represent a human losing its soul to demonic passion.[16] Attar of Nishapur writes: "If you bind the div (demon), you will set out for the royal pavilion with Solomon" and "You have no command over your self's kingdom, for in your case the div is in the place of Solomon".[17]

Unlike the Talmudic tradition, Solomon was unaware and never participated in idolatry.[18] Further, the Quran rejects that Solomon was a magician: "Solomon did not disbelieve, but the devils disbelieved, teaching men magic and ...". (2:102)

Solomon and the ant

Solomon was even taught the languages of various animals, such as ants. The Quran recounts that, one day, Solomon and his army entered a wādin-naml (وَادِ ٱلْنَّمْل, valley of the ant). On seeing Solomon and his army, a namlah (نَمْلَة, female ant) warned all the others to "get into your habitations, lest Solomon and his hosts crush you (under foot) without knowing it."[19] Immediately understanding what the ant said, Solomon, as always, prayed to God, thanking him for bestowing upon him such gifts[20] and further avoided trampling over the ant colonies.[9]: 63 [21] Solomon's wisdom, however, was yet another of the gifts he received from God, and Muslims maintain that Solomon never forgot his daily prayer, which was more important to him than any of his gifts.

Exegetical literature emphasizes the ant's wisdom and explains the meaning behind Solomon's gift to control the wind. According to Siracü'l-Kulub, the ant asks Solomon if he knows why he is called "Solomon" (Süleyman). Solomon says he does not, whereupon the ant goes on to explain: "Although your heart was sound (selim) and you know the circumstances of the next world, you have accepted a few pleasures of this world and have been deceived by its possession and kingship; therefore you are called Solomon." Afterwards the ant asks Solomon, if he knows why God has subdued the wind for him. Once again, Solomon says no and the ant answers: "He has subdued the wind for a reason: that which you have accepted is nothing. Just as the wind passes, the world's wealth and kingship pass too." Scholars like Fakhr al-Din Razi and al-Qurtubi elevated the ant to the rank of an exemplar for humans to follow.[22](p198)

Conquest of Saba'

 
Ruins of the Temple of Awwam at Ma'rib, the former capital of Saba' in what is now Yemen

Another important aspect of Solomon's kingship was the size of his army, which consisted of both men and jinn. Solomon would frequently assess his troops and warriors as well as the jinn and all the animals who worked under him. One day, when inspecting his troops, Solomon found the Hud-hud (هُدْهُد, Hoopoe) missing from the assembly.[23] Soon afterwards, however, the Hud-hud arrived at Solomon's court, saying "I have compassed (territory) which thou hast not compassed, and I have come to thee from Saba' with tidings true."[24] The Hud-hud further told Solomon that the people of Sheba worshiped the Sun, and that the woman who ruled the kingdom was highly intelligent and powerful. Solomon, who listened closely, chose to write a letter to the land of Sheba, through which he would try to convince the people of Sheba to cease their idolatrous worship of the Sun, and come to the worship of God. Solomon ordered the Hud-hud to give the letter to the Queen of Sheba (Bilqis), and then to hide and observe her reaction.[9]: 64  The Hud-hud accepted Solomon's orders, and flew straight back to Sheba to deliver the letter to the Queen. The Queen then called her ministers to court and read aloud to them the letter from Solomon stating to the people of Sheba: "In the name of Allah the Compassionate the Merciful, Be you not exalted against me, but come to me as Muslimīn (مُسْلِمِيْن)." She took counsel with her ministers and other court officials, saying "O my people, I know well that you are brave and mighty warriors, and that none on the face of Earth can stand against you, yet still would I know your minds upon this matter." The people of the court replied: "Yours is the power, O queen, and whatsoever your command, we shall obey it." At length, however, the Queen came to Solomon, announcing her submission to God.[25]

Solomon and the ifrit

While Bilqis' was journeying to Solomon's court, the king bid his servants deliver her throne thither before her arrival. An ifrit offered his services (Q27:38-40), but Solomon declined, entrusting this task instead to a manservant, who, being a pious fellow, prayed to God to move the throne for him. Marvellous to relate, his prayer was answered, the throne appearing in Solomon's palace by the power of God. When Bilqis arrived, Solomon asked her if she recognised her throne, but she, struggling to grasp the miracle God had wrought, gave the king an evasive answer, before finally adopting the faith of Solomon, won over by the evidence that the miracle was not that of a mere Ifrit but that of God himself. Solomon declined the ifrit's tempting offer, because he sought to rely solely upon God and not upon a demon or any other created being, and was rewarded for his piety with success in converting Bilqis to the true faith.[26]

Death

 
Throne of Sulaiman in the Masjid Al-Aqsa (Temple Mount), Old City of Jerusalem

The Quran relates that Solomon died while he was leaning upon his staff and that he remained standing, propped up by it, until a little creature – ant or worm – gnawed at it, until, finally, it gave way – and only then did his body collapse.

Then, when We decreed (Solomon's) death, nothing showed them his death except a little worm of the earth, which kept (slowly) gnawing away at his staff: so when he fell down, the Jinn saw plainly that if they had known the unseen, they would not have tarried in the humiliating Penalty (of their Task).

— Qurʾan, Surah 34 (Sabaʾ), Ayah 14[27]

As he remained upright, propped on his staff, the jinn thought he was still alive and supervising them.

They realized the truth only when God sent a creature to crawl out of the ground and gnaw at Solomon's staff, until his body collapsed. This verse is understood to teach the audience that jinn do not know the unseen (Al-Ghaib) – had they known it, they would not have remained toiling like fools in the service of a dead man.[28]

Mahammaddim in the Song of Solomon

As inspired by verses of the Quran, some Muslims[which?] believed that Muhammad (Arabic: مُحَمَّد, consonant letters: m-ħ-m-d) is mentioned in the Song of Songs (5:16) as 'Mahammaddim' (Hebrew: מַחֲמַדִּים, consonant letters: m-ħ-m-d-y-m), even though the latter word is translated as "desirable" or "lovely" by Jews.[29]

Solomon and Jamshid

 

Jamshid was the fourth king of the world, according to the Shāhnāma of the poet Firdausī. Like Solomon, he was believed to have had command over all the angels and demons of the world, and was both king and high priest of Hormozd (middle Persian for Ahura Mazda). He was responsible for many great inventions that made life more secure for his people: the manufacture of armor and weapons, the weaving and dyeing of clothes of linen, silk and wool, the building of houses of brick, the mining of jewels and precious metals, the making of perfumes and wine, the art of medicine, the navigation of the waters of the world in sailing ships. He Jamshid had now become the greatest monarch the world had ever known. He was endowed with the royal farr (Avestan: khvarena), a radiant splendor that burned about him by divine favor.

Due to similarities between the two wise monarchs, some traditions conflate the two. For example, Solomon was associated with ruling over the southwestern Iran in the works of al-Balkhi. Persepolis was believed to be the seat of Solomon and described as "playground of Solomon" by scholars such as Mas'udi, Muqaddasi and Istakhri. Other Muslim authors have opposed the belief that Solomon once ruled in Iran, arguing that any similarities between the lives and deeds of Solomon and Jamshid are purely coincidental, the two being distinct and separate personages.[30][31] The latter view has been vindicated by scholarship in the field of Indo-European mythology, which has demonstrated conclusively that the character Jamshid derives from the early Zoroastrian deity Yima,[32][33] whereas Quranic and Biblical scholarship support a measure of historicity for the wise prophet king.[34]

See also

References to Solomon in the Quran

  • Appraisals for Solomon: 2:102, 6:84, 21:81–82, 27:15–16, 27:18–23, 27:36–39, 27:44, 34:12–13, 38:30–31, 38:35–40
  • Solomon's preaching: 4:163, 27:25, 27:31, 27:44
  • Solomon judged: 21:78–79
  • Fitnah to Solomon: 38:32–34
  • Solomon and the Queen of Sheba: 27:28–31, 27:34–44
  • The Kingdom of Sheba: 27:23, 34:15, 34:18
  • Solomon's death: 34:14

References

  1. ^ Glasse, Cyril (1988). Concise Encyclopedia of Islam. p. 374.
  2. ^ Law and Tradition in Classical Islamic Thought: Studies in Honor of Professor Hossein Modarressi. (2013). Vereinigtes Königreich: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 249
  3. ^ Quran 38:40
  4. ^ Walker, J. and Fenton, P. (2012). "Sulaymān b. Dāwūd". In P. Bearman; Th. Bianquis; C.E. Bosworth; E. van Donzel; W.P. Heinrichs (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (2nd ed.). Brill. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_7158.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  5. ^ Quran 21:78
  6. ^ Helewa, Sami (2017-11-01). Models of Leadership in the Adab Narratives of Joseph, David, and Solomon: Lament for the Sacred. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-1-4985-5267-7.
  7. ^ Hubbard, David Allan (1956). The literary sources of the Kebra Nagast (Thesis thesis). University of St Andrews. hdl:10023/544.
  8. ^ Wheeler, Brannon (2002-06-01). Prophets in the Quran: An Introduction to the Quran and Muslim Exegesis. A&C Black. ISBN 978-1-4411-0405-2.
  9. ^ a b c Azzam, L. "David and Solomon". Lives of the Prophets. Suhail Academy. pp. 62–64.
  10. ^ Quran 21:79
  11. ^ a b Quran 34:12
  12. ^ Lebling, Robert (2010). Legends of the Fire Spirits: Jinn and Genies from Arabia to Zanzibar. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-0-857-73063-3.
  13. ^ Quran 34:13
  14. ^ Shalev-Eyni, Sarit. "Solomon, his demons and jongleurs: The meeting of Islamic, Judaic and Christian culture". Al-Masaq 18.2 (2006): 145–160.
  15. ^ Quran 38:35
  16. ^ Moiseeva Anna Vladimirovna Prophet Sulaimān V Klassische Persische Poesie: Semantik Und Struktur Des Bildes . Orientalistik. Afrikanistik. 2020. Nr. 3. URL: https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/prorok-sulaym-n-v-klassicheskoy-persidskoy-poezii-semantika-i-struktura-obraza (retrieved 14 October 2021).
  17. ^ Hamori, Andras. On the Art of Medieval Arabic Literature. USA: Princeton University Press, 2015. p. 158
  18. ^ Shalev-Eyni, Sarit. "Solomon, his demons and jongleurs: The meeting of Islamic, Judaic and Christian culture". Al-Masaq 18.2 (2006): 155.
  19. ^ Quran 27:18
  20. ^ Quran 27:19
  21. ^ Deen, Mawil Y. Izzi (1990). (PDF). In Engel JR; JG Engel (eds.). Ethics of Environment and Development. Bellhaven Press, London. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-14.
  22. ^ Peacock, A.C.S. (2019). Islam, Literature and Society in Mongol Anatolia. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108582124. ISBN 9781108582124. S2CID 211657444.
  23. ^ "Qur'an, 27: 15 – 19".
  24. ^ Quran 27:22
  25. ^ "Qur'an, 27: 15 – 44".
  26. ^ Die Dschinn, Teufel und Engel im Koran [microform] by Eichler, Paul Arno, 1889-Publication date 1928 Topics Koran Publisher Leipzig : Klein Collection microfilm; additional_collections Digitizing sponsor Internet Archive Contributor Internet Archive Language German Microfilm Addeddate 2007-02-13 00:12:26 Foldoutcount 0 Identifier MN40251ucmf_1 Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t4zg6hn3v Openlibrary_edition OL14024173M Openlibrary_work OL10715783W Page 9 Ppi 400
  27. ^ Quran 34:14
  28. ^ Islam: A Worldwide Encyclopedia [4 Volumes]. (2017). USA: ABC-CLIO. p. 1477
  29. ^ Richard S. Hess; Gordon J. Wenham (1998). "Teaching the Old Testament in the Context of Islam". Make the Old Testament Live: From Curriculum to Classroom. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 138–139. ISBN 978-0-8028-4427-9. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  30. ^ Eva Orthmann, Anna Kollatz The Ceremonial of Audience: Transcultural Approaches Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 11.11.2019 isbn 978-3-847-00887-3 p. 155
  31. ^ M. Cook, N. Haider, I. Rabb, A. Sayeed Law and Tradition in Classical Islamic Thought: Studies in Honor of Professor Hossein Modarressi Springer, 06.01.2013 isbn 978-1-137-07895-7 p. 256
  32. ^ Daryaee, Touraj, and Soodabeh Malekzadeh. "King Huviška, Yima, and the Bird: Observations on a Paradisiacal State". In: Central Asia and Iran – Greeks, Parthians, Kushans and Sasanians. Edited by Edward Dąbrowa. Jagiellonian University Press, 2015. p. 108.
  33. ^ N. Oettinger, Before Noah: Possible Relics of the Flood myth in Proto-Indo-Iranian and Earlier, [in:] Proceedings of the 24th Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference, ed. S.W. Jamison, H.C. Melchert, B. Vine, Bremen 2013, p. 169–183
  34. ^ Finkelstein, Israel; Silberman, Neil Asher (2001). The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-2338-6.

solomon, islam, this, article, uncritically, uses, texts, from, within, religion, faith, system, without, referring, secondary, sources, that, critically, analyze, them, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, references, reliable, secondary, sources, wi. This article uncritically uses texts from within a religion or faith system without referring to secondary sources that critically analyze them Please help improve this article by adding references to reliable secondary sources with multiple points of view December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sulaiman ibn Dawud Arabic س ل ي م ان ب ن د او و د lit Solomon son of David was according to the Quran a malik م ل ك lit king and nabi ن ب ي lit prophet of the Israelites Generally Islamic tradition holds that he was the third king of the Jewish people and a wise ruler of Israel 1 ProphetSulaimanس ل ي م ان SolomonHafiz Right Side of a Double page Illustrated Frontispiece Depicting King Solomon Sulayman Enthroned Walters W6312B Full PageThe right side of this double page illustrated frontispiece from Walters manuscript W 631 depicts King Solomon Sulayman enthroned He is surrounded by the beasts over which he reigns including divs and birds mostly likely the hoopoe Angels are above At some point in the manuscript s history figures faces seem to have been purposefully erased BornJerusalem United Kingdom of IsraelDiedJerusalem United Kingdom of IsraelResting placeAl Ḥaram ash Sharif JerusalemNationalityIsraeliteTitleKing of IsraelPredecessorDawudSuccessorIlyasParentDawud father In Islam Solomon is regarded as one of the prophets of God who was bestowed with many divine gifts including the ability to speak to both animals and jinn he is also said to have enslaved the shayaṭin شياطين lit devils and the div دیو lit demons with the support of a staff or ring given to him by God 2 Muslims further maintain that he remained a faithful monotheist throughout his life reigned justly over the whole of the Israelite nation was blessed with a level of kingship that was given to none before him nor after him and fulfilled all of his commandments being promised nearness to God in Jannah ج ن ة lit Paradise at the end of his life 3 Since the rise of Islam various Arab historians have regarded Solomon as one of the greatest rulers in history 4 Contents 1 Quran and interpretation 1 1 Judgment on the field 1 2 Solomon and the demons 1 3 Solomon and the ant 1 4 Conquest of Saba 1 5 Solomon and the ifrit 1 6 Death 2 Mahammaddim in the Song of Solomon 3 Solomon and Jamshid 4 See also 5 References to Solomon in the Quran 6 ReferencesQuran and interpretation EditJudgment on the field Edit In the earliest narrative involving Sulaiman the Quran 21 78 briefly alludes to a story that Sulaiman was in the company of his father when two men came to ask David to judge between them regarding a ḥarth ح ر ث field 5 Later Muslim commentators expanded on the allusion including Al Tabari Baidawi and Ibn Kathir 6 7 8 They said that the first of the two men said that he owned a vineyard of which he took great care the whole year through But one day when he was absent the other man s sheep had strayed into the vineyard and devoured the grapes He asked to be compensated for this damage 9 62 Upon hearing the man s complaint Solomon suggested that the owner of the sheep take the other man s vineyard to repair and cultivate until the vines returned to their former state whereupon he should return it to its owner At the same time the owner of the vineyard would care for the sheep and benefit from their wool and milk until his land was returned to him at which point he would return the sheep to their owner This response shows Solomon s level of judgment which the Quran says 10 would characterize Sulaiman throughout his life Ḥikmah Wisdom according to Muslim tradition would always be associated with Solomon who would later even be referred to as Sulaiman al Ḥakim س ل ي م ان ٱل ح ك ي م Sulaiman the Wise This story is adapted in the Kebra Nagast but as a dispute adjudicated by a son of Sulaiman Solomon and the demons Edit The Queen of Sheba The Quran narrates that the wind was made subservient to Solomon 11 and he could control it at his own will and that the jinn also came under Solomon s control The jinn helped strengthen Solomon s reign The devils shayatin 12 and demons were forced building for him monuments 13 God also caused a miraculous ʿayn ع ي ن fount or spring of molten qiṭr ق ط ر brass or copper to flow for Solomon to be used by the demons in their construction 11 When David died Solomon inherited his position as the prophetic king of the Israelites Solomon once permitted a woman to build a statue of her father Later she began to worship the statue and Solomon was rebuked for tolerating idolatry in his kingdom As a punishment God enabled one of the enslaved demons to steal Solomon s ring and take over his kingdom Surah 38 34 He later repents his sin and gains control over the demons again focusing on building the temple again 14 He prayed to God to grant him a kingdom which would be unlike any after him 15 God accepted Solomon s prayer and gave him what he pleased Construed allegorically Solomon s loss of his ring to the demons may be understood to represent a human losing its soul to demonic passion 16 Attar of Nishapur writes If you bind the div demon you will set out for the royal pavilion with Solomon and You have no command over your self s kingdom for in your case the div is in the place of Solomon 17 Unlike the Talmudic tradition Solomon was unaware and never participated in idolatry 18 Further the Quran rejects that Solomon was a magician Solomon did not disbelieve but the devils disbelieved teaching men magic and 2 102 Solomon and the ant Edit Solomon was even taught the languages of various animals such as ants The Quran recounts that one day Solomon and his army entered a wadin naml و اد ٱل ن م ل valley of the ant On seeing Solomon and his army a namlah ن م ل ة female ant warned all the others to get into your habitations lest Solomon and his hosts crush you under foot without knowing it 19 Immediately understanding what the ant said Solomon as always prayed to God thanking him for bestowing upon him such gifts 20 and further avoided trampling over the ant colonies 9 63 21 Solomon s wisdom however was yet another of the gifts he received from God and Muslims maintain that Solomon never forgot his daily prayer which was more important to him than any of his gifts Exegetical literature emphasizes the ant s wisdom and explains the meaning behind Solomon s gift to control the wind According to Siracu l Kulub the ant asks Solomon if he knows why he is called Solomon Suleyman Solomon says he does not whereupon the ant goes on to explain Although your heart was sound selim and you know the circumstances of the next world you have accepted a few pleasures of this world and have been deceived by its possession and kingship therefore you are called Solomon Afterwards the ant asks Solomon if he knows why God has subdued the wind for him Once again Solomon says no and the ant answers He has subdued the wind for a reason that which you have accepted is nothing Just as the wind passes the world s wealth and kingship pass too Scholars like Fakhr al Din Razi and al Qurtubi elevated the ant to the rank of an exemplar for humans to follow 22 p198 Conquest of Saba Edit Ruins of the Temple of Awwam at Ma rib the former capital of Saba in what is now Yemen Another important aspect of Solomon s kingship was the size of his army which consisted of both men and jinn Solomon would frequently assess his troops and warriors as well as the jinn and all the animals who worked under him One day when inspecting his troops Solomon found the Hud hud ه د ه د Hoopoe missing from the assembly 23 Soon afterwards however the Hud hud arrived at Solomon s court saying I have compassed territory which thou hast not compassed and I have come to thee from Saba with tidings true 24 The Hud hud further told Solomon that the people of Sheba worshiped the Sun and that the woman who ruled the kingdom was highly intelligent and powerful Solomon who listened closely chose to write a letter to the land of Sheba through which he would try to convince the people of Sheba to cease their idolatrous worship of the Sun and come to the worship of God Solomon ordered the Hud hud to give the letter to the Queen of Sheba Bilqis and then to hide and observe her reaction 9 64 The Hud hud accepted Solomon s orders and flew straight back to Sheba to deliver the letter to the Queen The Queen then called her ministers to court and read aloud to them the letter from Solomon stating to the people of Sheba In the name of Allah the Compassionate the Merciful Be you not exalted against me but come to me as Muslimin م س ل م ي ن She took counsel with her ministers and other court officials saying O my people I know well that you are brave and mighty warriors and that none on the face of Earth can stand against you yet still would I know your minds upon this matter The people of the court replied Yours is the power O queen and whatsoever your command we shall obey it At length however the Queen came to Solomon announcing her submission to God 25 Solomon and the ifrit Edit While Bilqis was journeying to Solomon s court the king bid his servants deliver her throne thither before her arrival An ifrit offered his services Q27 38 40 but Solomon declined entrusting this task instead to a manservant who being a pious fellow prayed to God to move the throne for him Marvellous to relate his prayer was answered the throne appearing in Solomon s palace by the power of God When Bilqis arrived Solomon asked her if she recognised her throne but she struggling to grasp the miracle God had wrought gave the king an evasive answer before finally adopting the faith of Solomon won over by the evidence that the miracle was not that of a mere Ifrit but that of God himself Solomon declined the ifrit s tempting offer because he sought to rely solely upon God and not upon a demon or any other created being and was rewarded for his piety with success in converting Bilqis to the true faith 26 Death Edit Throne of Sulaiman in the Masjid Al Aqsa Temple Mount Old City of Jerusalem The Quran relates that Solomon died while he was leaning upon his staff and that he remained standing propped up by it until a little creature ant or worm gnawed at it until finally it gave way and only then did his body collapse Then when We decreed Solomon s death nothing showed them his death except a little worm of the earth which kept slowly gnawing away at his staff so when he fell down the Jinn saw plainly that if they had known the unseen they would not have tarried in the humiliating Penalty of their Task Qurʾan Surah 34 Sabaʾ Ayah 14 27 As he remained upright propped on his staff the jinn thought he was still alive and supervising them They realized the truth only when God sent a creature to crawl out of the ground and gnaw at Solomon s staff until his body collapsed This verse is understood to teach the audience that jinn do not know the unseen Al Ghaib had they known it they would not have remained toiling like fools in the service of a dead man 28 Mahammaddim in the Song of Solomon EditFurther information Muhammad and the Bible and Semitic root As inspired by verses of the Quran some Muslims which believed that Muhammad Arabic م ح م د consonant letters m ħ m d is mentioned in the Song of Songs 5 16 as Mahammaddim Hebrew מ ח מ ד ים consonant letters m ħ m d y m even though the latter word is translated as desirable or lovely by Jews 29 Solomon and Jamshid Edit Persepolis Iran Jamshid was the fourth king of the world according to the Shahnama of the poet Firdausi Like Solomon he was believed to have had command over all the angels and demons of the world and was both king and high priest of Hormozd middle Persian for Ahura Mazda He was responsible for many great inventions that made life more secure for his people the manufacture of armor and weapons the weaving and dyeing of clothes of linen silk and wool the building of houses of brick the mining of jewels and precious metals the making of perfumes and wine the art of medicine the navigation of the waters of the world in sailing ships He Jamshid had now become the greatest monarch the world had ever known He was endowed with the royal farr Avestan khvarena a radiant splendor that burned about him by divine favor Due to similarities between the two wise monarchs some traditions conflate the two For example Solomon was associated with ruling over the southwestern Iran in the works of al Balkhi Persepolis was believed to be the seat of Solomon and described as playground of Solomon by scholars such as Mas udi Muqaddasi and Istakhri Other Muslim authors have opposed the belief that Solomon once ruled in Iran arguing that any similarities between the lives and deeds of Solomon and Jamshid are purely coincidental the two being distinct and separate personages 30 31 The latter view has been vindicated by scholarship in the field of Indo European mythology which has demonstrated conclusively that the character Jamshid derives from the early Zoroastrian deity Yima 32 33 whereas Quranic and Biblical scholarship support a measure of historicity for the wise prophet king 34 See also EditBiblical narratives and the Quran Harut and Marut Legends and the Quran Qiṣaṣ al Anbiyaʾ Stories of the Prophets Queen of Sheba Sulayman Surat an Naml Chapter of the Ant The Kingdom of SolomonReferences to Solomon in the Quran EditAppraisals for Solomon 2 102 6 84 21 81 82 27 15 16 27 18 23 27 36 39 27 44 34 12 13 38 30 31 38 35 40 Solomon s preaching 4 163 27 25 27 31 27 44 Solomon judged 21 78 79 Fitnah to Solomon 38 32 34 Solomon and the Queen of Sheba 27 28 31 27 34 44 The Kingdom of Sheba 27 23 34 15 34 18 Solomon s death 34 14References Edit Glasse Cyril 1988 Concise Encyclopedia of Islam p 374 Law and Tradition in Classical Islamic Thought Studies in Honor of Professor Hossein Modarressi 2013 Vereinigtes Konigreich Palgrave Macmillan p 249 Quran 38 40 Walker J and Fenton P 2012 Sulayman b Dawud In P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam SIM 7158 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Quran 21 78 Helewa Sami 2017 11 01 Models of Leadership in the Adab Narratives of Joseph David and Solomon Lament for the Sacred Lexington Books ISBN 978 1 4985 5267 7 Hubbard David Allan 1956 The literary sources of the Kebra Nagast Thesis thesis University of St Andrews hdl 10023 544 Wheeler Brannon 2002 06 01 Prophets in the Quran An Introduction to the Quran and Muslim Exegesis A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 4411 0405 2 a b c Azzam L David and Solomon Lives of the Prophets Suhail Academy pp 62 64 Quran 21 79 a b Quran 34 12 Lebling Robert 2010 Legends of the Fire Spirits Jinn and Genies from Arabia to Zanzibar I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 857 73063 3 Quran 34 13 Shalev Eyni Sarit Solomon his demons and jongleurs The meeting of Islamic Judaic and Christian culture Al Masaq 18 2 2006 145 160 Quran 38 35 Moiseeva Anna Vladimirovna Prophet Sulaiman V Klassische Persische Poesie Semantik Und Struktur Des Bildes Orientalistik Afrikanistik 2020 Nr 3 URL https cyberleninka ru article n prorok sulaym n v klassicheskoy persidskoy poezii semantika i struktura obraza retrieved 14 October 2021 Hamori Andras On the Art of Medieval Arabic Literature USA Princeton University Press 2015 p 158 Shalev Eyni Sarit Solomon his demons and jongleurs The meeting of Islamic Judaic and Christian culture Al Masaq 18 2 2006 155 Quran 27 18 Quran 27 19 Deen Mawil Y Izzi 1990 Islamic Environmental Ethics Law and Society PDF In Engel JR JG Engel eds Ethics of Environment and Development Bellhaven Press London Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 14 Peacock A C S 2019 Islam Literature and Society in Mongol Anatolia Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108582124 ISBN 9781108582124 S2CID 211657444 Qur an 27 15 19 Quran 27 22 Qur an 27 15 44 Die Dschinn Teufel und Engel im Koran microform by Eichler Paul Arno 1889 Publication date 1928 Topics Koran Publisher Leipzig Klein Collection microfilm additional collections Digitizing sponsor Internet Archive Contributor Internet Archive Language German Microfilm Addeddate 2007 02 13 00 12 26 Foldoutcount 0 Identifier MN40251ucmf 1 Identifier ark ark 13960 t4zg6hn3v Openlibrary edition OL14024173M Openlibrary work OL10715783W Page 9 Ppi 400 Quran 34 14 Islam A Worldwide Encyclopedia 4 Volumes 2017 USA ABC CLIO p 1477 Richard S Hess Gordon J Wenham 1998 Teaching the Old Testament in the Context of Islam Make the Old Testament Live From Curriculum to Classroom Wm B Eerdmans Publishing pp 138 139 ISBN 978 0 8028 4427 9 Retrieved 4 April 2013 Eva Orthmann Anna Kollatz The Ceremonial of Audience Transcultural Approaches Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht 11 11 2019 isbn 978 3 847 00887 3 p 155 M Cook N Haider I Rabb A Sayeed Law and Tradition in Classical Islamic Thought Studies in Honor of Professor Hossein Modarressi Springer 06 01 2013 isbn 978 1 137 07895 7 p 256 Daryaee Touraj and Soodabeh Malekzadeh King Huviska Yima and the Bird Observations on a Paradisiacal State In Central Asia and Iran Greeks Parthians Kushans and Sasanians Edited by Edward Dabrowa Jagiellonian University Press 2015 p 108 N Oettinger Before Noah Possible Relics of the Flood myth in Proto Indo Iranian and Earlier in Proceedings of the 24th Annual UCLA Indo European Conference ed S W Jamison H C Melchert B Vine Bremen 2013 p 169 183 Finkelstein Israel Silberman Neil Asher 2001 The Bible Unearthed Archaeology s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 2338 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Solomon in Islam amp oldid 1141329337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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