Muhammad: Break with the Jews
[237] Tabari, History, vol. 7, p. 105; Sahih Bukhari, vol. 5, pp. 228 f.
[238] The account in Waqidi says that these were Jewish allies of
`Abdullah b. Ubayy; Wellhausen, Medina, p. 106.
[239] Waqidi gives the Muslim killed as 74; Wellhausen, Medina, p. 138.
[240] Guillaume, Muhammad, pp. 370 f; Ibn Sa`d, Classes, vol. 2, 1,
pp. 42 f; Tabari, History, vol. 7, pp. 105 f; Wellhausen, Medina, pp. 101 f.
[241] Guillaume, Muhammad, p. 390; Ibn Sa`d, Classes, vol. 2, 1, pp. 57 f;
Tabari, History, vol. 7, pp. 138 f.
[242] Rudolph, Koran, p. 73, n. 1.
[243] Owing to `Umar's belief that Muhammad was not dead after his last
illness in 11 AH, some Western scholars thought that this and other
Qur'anic passages regarding Muhammad's mortality where later additions to
the text of the Qur'an; Nöldeke and Schwally, GQ, vol. 2, pp. 81 f.
[244] This accusation was made with respect to the spoils from Badr;
Nöldeke and Schwally, GQ, vol. 1, p. 193, reference (among others) Waqidi
- see Wellhausen, Medina, p. 67.
[245] Guillaume, Muhammad, p. 263; Wellhausen, Medina, p. 146. Cf.
Qur'an 47:40.
[246] Jeffery, Vocabulary, p. 138.
[247] See Appendix F, p. 415.