Obadah Ibn al-Samit witnessed the first and second obstacle from the companions sent by Umar ibn al-Khattab, may Allah be pleased with him . After the conquest of the Levant to teach the people, the Quran, the first of the Wali of the district of Palestine, and the Wali of the district of Jerusalem about 17 years ago, died in 34 Ah, and was buried in the Bab al-Rahma cemetery near the wall of the Al-Aqsa eastern mosque.

 

 

Shaddad Ibn AWS Ibn al-Mundhir Al-Ansari (may Allaah be pleased with him): one of the companions who lived in the city of Jerusalem, he was very pious and worshiped .he died in 58 ah, the son of seventy-five years, and was buried in the Bab al-Rahma cemetery. Abu Rayhana Al-azdi Allah said about him : Shimun Ibn Yazid was one of the zuhad companions, participated in the conquest of the Levant and lived in the city of Jerusalem, and used to spend people in the Al-Aqsa Mosque, and died in Jerusalem and was buried there.

Abu Abi bin Umm haraam (may Allah be pleased with him): Abdullah bin Amr bin Qais al-Ansari, his mother Umm haraam, daughter of melhan, aunt Anas Bin Malik and wife of Ubadah bin Al-Samit (may Allah be pleased with them), the last of the companions (may Allah be pleased with them) who died in Palestine, came to Jerusalem and died there.

 

 

Mas'ud Ibn Aws Al-Ansari Al-Khazraji (may Allaah be pleased with him): Abu Muhammad al-Najari, one of the companions who inhabited Jerusalem, died during the reign of Umar ibn al-Khattab (may Allaah be pleased with him), and was buried in the city of Jerusalem. The Infernal fingers of Allah (SWT) about him: Tamimi and Khuza'i were said by the companions who inhabited Jerusalem, and he was buried in it.

Salama Ibn Caesar al-Hadrami (may Allaah be pleased with him): it was said that his name was "Salama", he dwelt in Egypt, then he was guardian over Jerusalem and died there.

Abu talasa Al-haddasi and Allah about him: sahban Ibn Uthman, from the people of Palestine, Jerusalem. Abdullah ibn Abi Al-Jadaa and Allah about him: Abdullah ibn Abi Al-Jadaa Al-Tamimi, has companions who live in Jerusalem.

Fairuz Al-Daylami (may Allah be pleased with him): Yamani Al-Humairi, whose origin dates back to Persia, fought the false ANSI Lions who claimed prophecy, inhabited Egypt, then turned to the House of Jerusalem and died there .

The prophet (may Allaah be pleased with him) was preparing to go to Tabuk and witnessed it, participated in the conquest of the Levant, lived near Damascus, then moved to Palestine and landed in Jerusalem and died there, and died in the year 83 ah, when he was a hundred and five years old .

Abu al-Abbas Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Abdul-Jabbar al-Qudsi (may Allah have mercy on him): famous as Abu Thur, a sheikh and an ascetic imam, was arrested by the dear King Abu al-Fath Uthman ibn King Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi the village of Abu Thur near the gate of Hebron in Jerusalem in 594 Ah / 1197 ad, he died and was buried in the AL-thuri neighborhood in Jerusalem, and this neighborhood is attributed to him until today.

Ismail ibn Ali ibn al-Hassan: Shaykh al-Islam Taqi al-Din al-qalqshandi was born in 702 Ah In Egypt, resided in Jerusalem and was exported to spread science, studied and taught until he became a prominent scientist, died in Jerusalem on the 6th of Jumada al-Akhra in 778 ah, and was buried in the cemetery of Ma'man Allah .

Ahmad Bin Muhammad Bin Imad (753-815 Ah) (1352-1412 ad) : the son of the computer Wanderer, Egyptian and then Al - Maqdisi, one of the leading Shafi'i jurists and excelled in the sciences of mathematics and physics, invented new theories in arithmetic, algebra and interview, died in Jerusalem, and was buried in the cemetery of Ma'man Allah.

Ahmad Bin Jamal al-Din Yusuf Abu al-Abbas (may Allah have mercy on him): the famous son of Jamal Al-Ashqar Hanafi, a scholar of the Hanafi school, died in Jerusalem in 888 Ah / 1483 ad, and was buried in the cemetery of Ma'man Allah.

Al-Kamal ibn Abi Sharif Abu Al-Ma'ali al-Maqdisi, one of the leading scholars of Jerusalem, was nicknamed the "sheikh of Islam" for his excellence in science and uniqueness, and was known for piety and piety, one of his most prominent students was Mujir al-Din al-Hanbali, the author of the book of the venerable Anas, died in 906 ah, and was buried in the cemetery of Ma'man Allah in Jerusalem.

Mustafa Hamid Khalidi: he worked in teaching in Istanbul, held jobs in the judiciary, and in 1844 he returned to Jerusalem to occupy the position of Sharia judge, he died in Jerusalem in 1845 and was buried in the Bab al-Rahma cemetery near the companion Obadah bin Al-Samit .

The shrines of the late Muhammad Ali al-Hindi, Musa Kazim Al-Husseini, Abdul Qadir al-Husseini, Faisal al-Husseini and Ahmed Helmi Abdul Baqi.

 

The mausoleum of Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the "former" emir of Mecca, the ancestor of the Hashemite family.