Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

The “Age of Consent” in Islam is puberty (rather than some random number) because that is when we can start reproducing…

…However Muslims should also follow the laws of their respective lands.

Every girl is different, some are still pre-pubescents/children at 13 and it would be absoloutley un-Islamic for them to have sex even though it would be legal in countries like Spain, on the other hand a few are early bloomers and become mature at 9-10 (my grandmother was 12-13 when she got married).

In warmer climates such as the Arabian desert girls mature a lot faster.

Race also plays a part in how fast someone matures.

In the Prophet’s PBUH time it was quite common for people (regardless of religion) to get married as soon they reached puberty.

People were not divided into school-age or work age in them days, you were an adult as soon as you reached puberty.

People were divided into three age groups; child (prebuscent), adult (starting at puberty) and old age (after menopause for women).

Even in todays society some girls are early bloomers and reach puberty at an early age, see the articles below.

Primary schoolgirls getting pregnant aged 10 - Telegraph

The girl in the article below looks 17/18 yet she is only 11… Maybe Mother Ayesha (R) also matured really fast.

This 11-year-old schoolgirl had a baby … on her wedding day | News Of The World

I don’t condone young-marriages in this day and age because the age of consent should be the same for everyone and most girls today do not reach puberty so early, Mother Aishah (R) was one of the few exceptions like the girls I mentioned above.

Also young people nowadays have to go to school/college before they can marry.

Also Muslims must abide by the laws of their lands which are there for a reason (stop perverts taking adavantage of naive girls outside marriage).

Re: Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

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Re: Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

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Re: Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

Contrary to popular explanation the age of consent to marriage has two conditions:

Physical maturity - i.e. puberty
Psychological maturity - demonstrated for example by the signs of the women showing shyness to the opposite gender, and can comprehend their committment in nikkah, etc.

Many girls in today's society who are physically mature lack in psychological maturity and hence should still be considered girls.

I see age issue in practical terms. I am father of a 9 year old daughter. I am a Muslim and Alhumdulillah try to best of my abilities to implement Islam in my life.

If some prophet I believe in comes to me and tells me that Allah has told me to ask the hand of your 6/9 year old daughter in holy matrimony . I will show that holy prophet the door.
My point being I do no believe in all those authentic ahadees which prove Hazar Aisah’s age to be 6 or 9 year at the time of her nikah to Holy Prophet(SAW).

Now someone will turnaround and ask what if your daughter was 15/16 will you agree , my answer would be if I was living in those days I would.

Marrying a 6/9 year old girl by a matured and grownup man is not prophetic deed in any day and age. To me my prophet(SAW) was infallible and would know the repercussions to the authenticity of religion he was preaching therefore he would not marry a child. Period.

Bukhari even has one authentic hadees which proves that holy prophet once became naked in public in his young age. I refuse the authenticity of that hadees. Because I believe in infallibility of my Holy Prophet(SAW) even when he was a baby . Allah will not let Allah’s prophet(SAW) to be fallible even if he (SAW) was young kid at the time of reconstruction of Kaba.

CRCC: Center For Muslim-Jewish Engagement: Resources: Religious Texts

*Volume 1, Book 8, Number 360: * Narrated Jabir bin 'Abdullah:
While Allah’s Apostle was carrying stones (along) with the people of Mecca for (the building of) the Ka’ba wearing an Izar (waist-sheet cover), his uncle Al-'Abbas said to him, “O my nephew! (It would be better) if you take off your Izar and put it over your shoulders underneath the stones.” So he took off his Izar and put it over his shoulders, but he fell unconscious and since then he had never been seen naked.

Re: Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

Every girl is different.

You daughter is probably still a child like most 9 year olds, but a few girls mature really fast.

E.g. the 11 year old girl in the article below who looks 18.

This 11-year-old schoolgirl had a baby … on her wedding day | News Of The World

Age 9 is not the age of consent in Islam rather puberty is because everyone matures at a different pace.

Mother Ayesha (R) probably also matured really fast like the girl in the article above.

In the Prophet’s PBUH day it was common for people to marry as soon as they reached puberty (this is quite common even today outside the western world) and age difference didn’t matter.

Why are you judging a different civilisation by the norms of your culture?

You can’t pick and choose Islam based on what is considered moral and proper by the standards of your changing society… You either believe in all the Authentic Ahadeeth or you don’t.

Re: Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

Why do parents like to fool themselves that their children are innocent little asexual celibate angels untill they reach 18 or 21?

Sorry to burst your bubbles but pull your heads out..

I don't know how long ago you guys went to school but I know when I was at school girls as young as 11-12 (year 7 and 8 in secondary school) were doing it like the birds and the bees...

Trust me, nobody is asexual till they reach the magic number of 18.

It happens before then, it's natural, I could have done with a wife as soon as I reached puberty because I needed and wanted it, a wife would have saved me from a lot of haraam sh*t I got involved with (girls, even other guys you name it).. So how can you say it's was immoral of the Prophet PBUH in the conext of marriage?

In those days there were no schools or colleges, as soon as someone reached puberty their parents would say "larrki jawaan ho gai hai, iss ke haath peele kar do". It was the norm for Arab-Pagans, Jews, Christians and Muslims alike.

My own grandparents married as soon as they reached puberty because our people didn't have schools or colleges to go to.. men tended to the farms as soon as they reached puberty and women to the housework.

In Islam if we are baaligh (mature i.e. reached puberty) we can consumate our marriage...

If someone is not baaligh then their guardian can sign the marriage contact for them but the marriage can only be consumated once both the involved parties are baaligh and consent, if either doesn't consent then the marriage can be dissolved.

I don’t have the reference but I am certain I have read this somewhere in our history books. A fact which is conveniently ignored if one relies solely on the hadith regarding this matter. The Prophet SAW proposal for Aisha RA was not the first one. So the Prophet SAW marriage to Aisha RA did not even set the norm for this in the Arabian society of centuries ago. In fact the Prophet SAW in all his endeavors always kept the cultural norms of his society abreast and leveraged them to the extent possible to further the propagation of Islam. The only problem we have is in our historical literature we do not have other recorded examples of marriages within the same age group as Aisha RA but it is quite well-known that young age marriages were a norm of the society centuries ago and not just in Arabia.

Because to me Islam is a religion not a culture , Mohammed (SAW) was a prophet and infallible.

Imam Bukhari and others were not Prophets therefore they were not infallible and they made mistakes in recording ahadees.

Re: Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

just one question, what difference does it make if we knew the age or not ..cos this is something we WONT be asked on day of judgement… so why just even discuss such things when we dont really need to ..cos by us muslims discussing such things, gives the non muslims something to throw at islam ..:hmmm:

so to keep it short…its a hadith of the prophet SAW ‘‘it is a beauty of a person that he/she leaves that which does not concern him or her’’ ..simple as this.. and this is something which does not concern any of us.

Re: Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

It is our duty to defend actions and good name of our Holy Prophet SAW) and many people use this issue to defame our religion and our Holy Prophet(SAW)

:salam: Br. Mirch

We cannot take out events from our history simply because they are not in todays norm. Its our responsibility to defend what is true, and that being that todays norms cannot be the yardstick ofr judging the norms from centuries ago. Rather than deny something we should defend it by explaining why it wasn’t viewed as something abnormal centuries ago. We cannot expect that people from centuries ago had the same culture and habits as people from the 21st century do.

Your line of defense here is similar to what some of my non-muslim friends suggest to me everyone now and then regarding the 4 wives things. Since it is not todays norm to have more than one wife in most muslims countries why can’t we remove the verse related to it from the Quran. Similarly if the Prophet SAW was married to Aisha RA at a young age compared to todays norms, we can’t just purge that event but its just not applicable in todays societies.


Mirch such rubishness and nonsense is not going to prove anything.

1 - Why don't you prove using a science that they actually made those mistakes? Why is that every time when something in Islam is challenged by your west master, you people bring out such nonsensical arguments?

2 - If you use this line of argument then you cannot trust the Qur'an either because it were the same men who narrated to us. On what basis do you say that they made mistake on one thing but didn't for other?

:salam:

Brother we should not take such an approach when discussing things with each other. We cannot be unified when we address each other as such despite our difference in opinions.

You yourself make mistakes in many things and not in others.
Your this post is proof that you made many mistakes in judging me and posting your response which is far from the Islamic etiquette of a dialog.
You lost your patience , one mistake, you are calling me Western pawn , another mistake, You are calling my sincere beliefs and arguments rubishness and nonsense another mistake.

I would say again I believe in that Prophet Mohammed(SAW) was infallible ,and so were other prophets , every other person is fallible. That is why I believe in every word of Quran , Hadees on the other hand is subject to scrutiny no matter where it comes from.

This is my last post to respond to you , you are not capable of carrying out a sensible discussion. You have to have a lot of patience to do so.

wa’alaykum as-salam

Jazak Allah khayran for your advice and I will try to tone down myself. However, people like Mirch don’t deserve any benefit of doubt. His modernism and support of un-Islamic practices and ideology is too well known on this forum. His arguments in this very thread are proof of that! What I said is not far fetched and it is a legitimate question and argument. Why do people like Mirch question teachings of Islam only when they are challenged by the west? So if something is challenged by the west and they are not happy about it then we need to through it out of Islam. For example in this case, if the norm would have remained the same and west has not been intellectually corrupted do you think people like Mirch would question the authenticity of these narrations? Why don’t they question things like wiping bottom of jurab (socks) instead of top?

The core reason for such arguments is more deeper than these secondary arguments which they bring forward to confuse the average gullible Muslim.

This is already understood but this doesn’t support your argument. For you to say that I made mistake while doing A, you will have to prove that I did make a mistake while doing A. Here is your line of argument:

1 - Men are fallible.
2 - Men narrated ahadith
4 - Therefore, men made mistakes while narrating these ahadith.

Your premise #1 and conclusion are flawed! Just because men are fallible doesn’t mean that they made a mistake while narrating ahadith. One will have to prove that they did make a mistake in this regard. Each case must be observed indviually and a general rule cannot be applied, otherwise you are saying that men always make mistakes. If we agree with your conclusion then we can never say that what has been narrated to us is authentic, which by the way includes many other historical accounts and the Qur’an.

Why the same line of argument is not applied when it comes to the Qur’an? Let me make it simpler for you:

1 - Men are fallible
2 - Men narrated the Qur’an to us.
3 - Therefore, men made mistakes while narrating the Qur’an to us.

Are you willing to agree with 2nd conclusion? On what basis do you disagree? How do you know that for first conclusions they made a mistake but for 2nd they didn’t?

I am sorry for harsh comments but I simply cannot swallow such irrationality from hadith rejectors like yourself.

you can count my mistakes all you want but next time don’t attack me with a straw man.

only Allah knows whether they are sincere or not; I am simply taking the apparent meaning of your statements. As far whether I made a mistake or you simply not trying to understand things here is open to everyone!

Did Prophet Muhammad (sal-allahu alayhi wa salaam) come to your home to give you a copy of the Qur’an? Or did it come through some fallible men who are bound to make mistakes?

that is your double standard; you believe and trust one thing from person X but not the other. really!

No one is asking you to respond to me and discussions are entertained with those who try to use some rationale and not beat around the bush. I have dealt with you in the past and I know where this will go

AKB,
I live in this modern world and look at Islam , Quran , Hadees in the light of modern world requirements , education , skills , and teachings.
To me Islam is for all ages therefore it should meet and fulfill the challenges of times.

Since I see all other rantings futile, baseless and meaningless I will not address them.
You can go and live in those caves of Torabora and be happy in your utopia and your beliefs.

               **DID                    AYESHA MARRY MUHAMMAD (P.B.U.H), THE PROPHET OF ISLAM, AT THE                    AGE OF 6? **

                                  *                   By Abdul H. Fauq*

                                     The                      Quran has not given names and other details of Prophet's wives                      but it has confirmed that all marriages of the Prophet (pbuh)                      were lawful (33:50). The age of Hadrat Ayisha(r), wife of                      the prophet, is disputed on the basis of a calligraphic error                      in history books. Narrated history, however sacred, is not                      above scrutiny, particularly where dignity and honour of the                      prophet is at stake. The following article is an attempt to                      dig out reality from the same history.
               Rev.                      Jerry Vines while speaking to the Pastors’ Conference of the                      Southern Baptist Convention, St. Louis, Missouri on June 10,                      2002, called the Prophet of Islam, Muhammad (pbuh) a pedophile                      and demon-possessed.  The Muslims all over the world                      were deeply offended by his remarks, as were many people of                      other faiths.  While certainly both of these allegations                      about the person of the Prophet of Islam can be effectively                      rebutted, the author of this article proposes to present the                      Qur’anic concept of marriageable age as well as an in-depth                      analysis of the issue of Ayesha’s age at the time of her marriage                      with the Messenger of Allah (pbuh).  This critique is                      based on many historical reports as documented in the history                      books of Islam. 
                                  First, I would like to point                    out that according to the faith of Islam the vast majority of                    the Muslims professes, there are two sources of the Divine                    Guidance--the Qur’an and the Sunnah.  The Quran is the actual                    Word of Allah (God) revealed by the archangel Gabriel to                    Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) over a period of 23 years during the                    period 610-632 A.D in the Arabian Peninsula.  The Qur’an that                    was revealed as Guidance and Light (17:9) for all mankind was                    written and properly documented by some forty scirbes during                    the lifetime of the Prophet.  There is historical as well as                    the Qur’anic internal evidence to that effect (80:11-16 and                    25:5) as well as God’s personal guarantee against any possible                    corruption in the Scripture (15:9).  Additionally, the Qur’an                    was not only written and documented but it was committed to                    memory in its entirety during the lifetime of the Prophet (pbuh).                     This noble tradition of memorization of the Qur’an continues                    to this day.  One can find hundreds of thousands of                    individuals around the world who know the entire Qur’an by                    heart.  It is noteworthy that although there are several sects                    in Islam, the Qur’an remains perfectly preserved to the letter                    in its original Arabic language and recited, understood and                    referred to for explanations by all sects the same way.  Thus,                    while the interpretations may vary, the original Arabic text                    has remained the same without sectarian bias. 
                                  The Qur’an enjoined Muhammad                    (and all believers) to strictly follow the Quran (6:106;                    10:109; 33:2) and it stands witness to the fact that Muhammad                    and his followers did exactly that all their lives (7:203;                    46:9; 6:50).  In fact, Muhammad himself was warned in rather                    stern terms not to go against the Qur’anic teachings (17:39,                    10:94-95, 69:40-48).  Furthermore, the Qur’an declares                    Muhammad (pbuh) to be a man of highest moral standards (68:4;                    33:21) and the best exemplar for humanity.  The Qur’an enjoins                    the believers in scores of verses to follow Muhammad’s                    teachings and accept him as a final authority in all their                    affairs.  
                                  The Second generally accepted                    source of Islamic faith is the *Sunnah*.  The *Sunnah*                    is the summation of Islamic teachings related to faith and                    code of conduct as personally practiced and perpetuated by                    Muhammad (pbuh) for all believers to implement and follow in                    their personal lives as well as in proper Islamic governance.                     The Sunnah protocols related to articles of Islamic faith and                    rituals are continuous from the day of the Prophet but a great                    many others are largely derived from a huge body of                    compilations of oral narrations referred to as *Hadith*.                    The *Hadith*, commonly known as *traditions* of the                    Prophet, consists of many books of compilations of reported                    accounts of Muhammad’s sayings, actions, and tacit approvals.                     There are six books of *Hadith* (*Sihah Sita*) that                    are considered authentic by the main stream Sunni Muslims.                     There is also a different set of four *Hadith* books for                    the Shia Muslim community.  All these books were written                    200-300 years after the death of Muhammad (pbuh).  The                    documentation of these books proceeded based on collection of                    hundreds of thousands of stories from the then living people                    who transmitted accounts or stories about Muhammad or his                    companions as they heard from earlier generations.  Thus, the                    process of oral transmission (word of mouth) made the basis of                    all these collections.  This process commonly known as *                   ‘Isnaad’* or ‘chain of narration’ comprised a chain of 4-6                    or more narrators in time going back to the companions of                    Muhammad and to Muhammad himself over a period of 250-300 or                    more years.  These accounts seek to portray the Muslim culture                    and history during the lifetime of the Prophet of Islam.                    Nonetheless, it must be pointed out that the only true                    surviving book, call it Islamic history or Divine Guidance,                    that was memorized by thousands of Companions of the Prophet                    and written in a completely and carefully documented form is                    none other than the Qur’an itself.  The first non-Qur’anic                    history book, ‘Seerat Rasoolallah’ (Seerah), by Ibn Ishaq (d.                    767 A.D) was written more than 90 years after the death of                    Muhammad.  That book of history was also based on oral                    transmissions.  Ibn Ishaq was severely criticized by some                    notable scholars of Islam such as Malik bin Anas, the                    originator of the Maliki                    School                    of though in Islamic jurisprudence mainly practiced in                    Africa. 
                                  The majority of Muslims                    considers two of the six *Hadith* books, those authored                    by Al-Bukhari (d. 870 A.D) and Al-Muslim (d. 875 A.D) most                    authentic after the Qur’an despite the fact that they were                    written 200-300 years after the advent of Islam.  These                    scholars of Islam exercised great caution in selecting what                    they called *correct* traditions and proceeded with                    purest of intentions but one must not lose sight of the fact                    that they still collected ‘narrations’ from living people who                    were not primary or even secondary and tertiary sources of the                    accounts of the life and sayings of Muhammad (pbuh) and his                    companions.  Some Islamic historians (and/or exegetes of the                    Qur’an) whose books about early Islamic history are considered                    of high importance and who derive their history of early Islam                    from Ibn Ishaq’s *Seerah* include Tabari (d. 923 ), Ibn                    Katheer, Ibn Hisham (d. 827 A.D) and Ibn Hajar Al-asqalani, to                    name a few. 
                                  The introduction given above                    of the two sources of Islam (the Qur’an and the *Sunnah/Hadith*)                    is necessary for the reader to understand the issue at                    hand---the age of Ayesha, the third wife of Prophet Muhammad                    at the time of her marriage. 
               **                   How does the Qur’an define                    ‘marriageable age’? **
                                  There are several *Hadith*                    reports that Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) married his third wife                    Ayesha when she was 6 year old and consummated her marriage                    when she was 9.  If this is true, then it must be consistent                    with the Qur’an that tells us that Muhammad himself followed                    the Qur’an before he asked others to follow it.  The Qur’an                    does not assign a definite number to the age at which a man or                    a woman becomes ‘adult’ or ready to marry.  However, there is                    a clear definition of the marriageable age as per 4:6: 
                                  [an-Nisa' 4:6] Make trial of                    orphans until they reach the age of marriage; if then ye find                    sound judgment in them, release their property to them; 
                                  This verse is taking about                    two concepts here: First of all, the trustee of a property                    should first test the ability of the grown up orphan to see if                    he or she is capable of managing his or her own affairs well.                     Second, the Qur’an provides guidelines for the trustee as to                    the time at which the property of the orphans is to be handed                    over--it is the time when the orphan has attained adulthood or                    marriageable age and that he or she has attained a good degree                    of mental maturity.  Thus, the Qur’an gives a clear definition                    of adulthood or marriageable age as the one when one has                    attained a good measure of mental maturity.  This should raise                    the question:  Does a 6- or 9-year old have that level of                    quality of sound judgment?  The answer is a resounding NO.  If                    Muhammad married a 6 year old girl (and consummated her                    marriage at age 9), one wonders if he actually followed the                    Qur’anic guidelines regarding this issue.  Please recall that                    the Qur’an states that Muhammad is a model for all mankind and                    that he himself followed the Qur’an in its entirety while                    ordering the same for his devout followers.   
                                  The Qur’anic guidelines as                    described clearly in 4:6 tell us that Muhammad could not have                    married a young girl of age 6 or 9.  There are other verses                    where the marriage bond has been described as “solemn                    covenant/solid contract---*Meethaqan ghaleezan”* (4:21).                     It is mighty revealing to me that in 4:21 for husband-wife                    relationship the same composition “*meethaqan ghaleezan” *                   has been used for the covenant that Allah took from all the                    prophets including our own prophet (33:7).  Not only that, the                    same expression was also used when Allah took covenant from                    the Jews not to violate the Sabbath (4:154).  Thus, according                    to the Qur'an 'tying the knot' is going for a "*Meethaqan                    Ghaleezan*" (a solemn covenant of mutual trust and                    faithfulness for each other).  This a definition of marriage,                    which later, when developed and nourished, gives rise to love,                    tranquillity and mutual feelings of caring (30:21), as well as                    to our offspring as comfort of our eyes (25:74). 
                                  These verses, as far as the                    author of this article is concerned, should suffice and bury                    the issue of the age of Ayesha’s marriage with the Prophet of                    Allah (pbuh) for good.  Ayesha could not have been 6 years of                    age because: 
                                  **1. **She could not have                    been an adult woman capable of making her own sound decisions,                    and,
                                  **2.** She could not have                    entered into a ‘solemn covenant’ at the age of 6 with a                    55-year old man.  This defies all reasons for a productive and                    meaningful union. 
                                  **3. **The Prophet,                    according to the Qur’an, is a model for all humanity.  The                    Qur’an tells us that he was at the highest of moral pedestal.                     Even if child marriages were common in his community, he could                    not have gone for it because it went against the Qur’anic                    injunctions of 4:6 and 4:21. 
                                  Nonetheless, since the charge                    of paedophilia by Rev. Vines rested solely on some Hadith                    reports and not on any of the Qur’anic verses, the attention                    is now turned to those Hadith accounts and many other                    observations related to Ayesha’s age, and their in-depth                    analysis. 
               **                   Was Ayesha really 6 years old                    when she married Muhammad?** 
                                  A few comments about                    Muhammad’s marriages are in order. Muhammad married his first                    wife, Khadijah, several years before his announcement as a                    prophet of Islam.  Khadijah was a reasonably well-to-do woman                    of Makkah and was 15 years his senior.  Muhammad was 25 and                    Khadijah was 40 at the time of their marriage. This loving and                    caring monogamous relationship continued for 25 years until                    her death.  Muhammad, now over 50 years of age, married a                    relatively aged woman by the name of Saudah.  It is thus                    important to note here that Muhammad’s twenty five prime youth                    years were spent in purely monogamous relationship with a lady                    15 years his senior. This speaks volumes about this man’s                    piety and loyalty in spousal matters as well as about the fact                    that his later marriages could not have been motivated by any                    human wild sexual desires. In 620-621 A.D, he and his devout                    companions migrated from Makkah to Medina. Then a couple of                    years later, he married Ayesha, a daughter of his closest                    companion, Abu Bakr, in the 3rd Hijrah (Islamic                    calendar--623-24 A.D).  This information coming from diverse                    historical and Hadith sources is widely agreed upon and                    therefore can be, a priori, considered authentic.  Based on                    this information, and a host of other related bits and pieces                    detailed below, it can be shown that Ayesha could have been at                    least 16-19 of age at the time of her marriage with Muhammad (pbuh).                     The following is the detail of the analysis of these                    historical and Hadith accounts. 
                                  **1.**                    Several books of Hadith (Al-Bukhari                    and Al-Muslim, Abu Dawood, among others) and Islamic history (Tabari,                    among others) report that Ayesha was married to the Prophet at                    6 but her marriage was not consummated until she was 9.                     Although, this information is widely quoted and found in many                    Hadith and history books, it must be noted that most of this                    information has come from a single person, Hisham bin Urwah,                    who is the last narrator of this Hadith *Isnaad* (chain                    of narration) on the authority of his father.  Thus, this                    Hadith is primarily a single Hadith.  Some other narratives                    mention the same Hadith but their narration has been found                    weak and unacceptable. In general, a Hadith has more                    credibility if it is narrated by more people independently                    from diverse chains of narrators.  In this case, there is                    basically only one source.
                                  2.                    Despite the abundance of                    information available during the 71 years that Hisham bin                    Urwah lived and taught in Medina, it is rather odd that that                    no one else—not even his famous pupil Malik ibn Anas---reported                    Ayesha’s age from Hisham in Medina.  Furthermore, all the                    narrators of this Hadith were Iraqis.  Hisham is reported to                    have moved to Iraq in his later years. An extensive list of                    biographical sketches of all narrators including these Iraqis                    is available in some books.
                                  3.                    Yaqub ibn Shaibah is reported                    to have said, “narratives reported by Hisham are reliable                    except those that are reported through the people of Iraq".                     Malik ibn Anas (d. 795), a student of Hisham in fact                    discredited all narratives of Hisham that were reported                    through people of Iraq.
              
              (Tehzibu'l-tehzib, by Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani, Arabic,                    Dar Ihya al-turath al-Islami, one of the most well known books                    on the life and reliability of the narrators of the traditions                    of the Prophet (pbuh), vol 11, pg 48 - 51).
                                  **4. **It                    is reported that Hisham bin Urwah’s memory suffered in his                    later years to the extent that some of the traditions reported                    from Hisham bin Urwah could not be trusted for authenticity.
                                  (Mizanu'l-ai`tidal, by Al-Zahbi                    , Arabic, a book on the life sketches of the narrators of the                    Hadith, Al-Maktabatu'l-athriyyah, Sheikhupura, Pakistan, Vol                    4, pg 301).
                                  **5.**                    Even though Ayesha is                    reported to have been born about eight years before Hijrah                    (around 614 A.D.), one can find another narrative in Bukhari (kitabu'l-tafseer)                    whereby Ayesha is reported to have said that she was a ‘young                    girl’ at the time of revelation of the 54th chapter                    of the Qur'an which came 9 years before Hijrah (around 612 A.D).                     Thus, according to this tradition, Ayesha was a young girl (*Jariyah*—as                    she calls herself and not an infant in which case she would be                   *sibyah*).  Additionally, this narrative stands in direct                    contrast to the one reported on Ayesha’s age by Hisham bin                    Urwah.  This puts Ayesha’s age significantly higher than 9 as                    reported by Hisham bin Urwah—possibly 15 or even higher.                    Obviously, if this narrative is held to be true, it is in                    clear
              contradiction with the narratives reported by Hisham
              ibn Urwah. There is no compelling reason as to why this                    tradition should be considered less accurate vis-à-vis                    Hisham’s narrative).
              
              (Sahih Bukhari, kitabu'l-tafsir, Arabic, Bab Qaulihi Bal al-sa`atu                    Maw`iduhum wa'l-sa`atu adha' wa amarr).
                                  6.                    According to many narratives,                    Ayesha participated in the battles of Badr and Uhud.  No one                    older than 15 was allowed to accompany the Prophet’s army in                    the battle of Uhud.  This applied across the board to all                    participants, men and women alike. The battle of Uhud took                    place around the 2nd  Hijrah, a time line close to                    her marriage with the Prophet.  Obviously, she was at least                    older than 15 at that time.
              
              **7.** A narrative regarding Ayesha's                    participation in the battle of `Uhud is given in Bukhari, (Kitabu'l-jihad                    wa'l-siyar, Arabic, Bab Ghazwi'l-nisa' wa qitalihinna                    ma`a'lrijal; that all boys under 15 were sent back is given in                    Bukhari, Kitabu'l-maghazi, Bab ghazwati'l-khandaq wa                    hiya'l-ahza'b, Arabic).
                                  8.                    Most historians have                    consensus on the age of one of the oldest female companions of                    the Prophet, namely, Asma, the elder sister of Ayesha that was                    ten years older than Ayesha. It is also reported in                    Taqri'bu'l-tehzi'b as well as Al-bidayah wa'l-nihayah that                    Asma died in 73 Hijrah when she was 100 years old. Clearly, if                    Asma was 27 or 28 years old at the time of Hijrah, Ayesha was                    17 at the time of Hijrah and 19 at the time of consummation of                    her marriage with Muhammad.
              
              (For Asma being 10 years older than Ayesha, see                    A`la'ma'l-nubala', Al-Zahabi, Vol 2, Pg 289, Arabic,                    Mu'assasatu'l-risalah, Beirut, 1992.  Ibn Kathir confirms this                    fact,  [Asma] was elder to her sister [Ayesha] by ten years"                    (Al-Bidayah wa'l-nihayah, Ibn Kathir, Vol 8, Pg 371, Arabic,                    Dar al-fikr al-`arabi, Al-jizah, 1933).  For Asma being 100                    years old, see Al-Bidayah wa'l-nihayah, Ibn Kathir, Vol 8, Pg                    372, Arabic, Dar al-fikr al-`arabi, Al-jizah, 1933).  Ibn                    Hajar al-Asqalani also has the same information:  "She [Asma (ra)]                    lived a hundred years and died in 73 or 74 AH."                    Taqribu'l-tehzib, Ibn Hajar Al-Asqalani, Pg 654, Arabic, Bab                    fi'l-nisa', al-harfu'l-alif, Lucknow).
                                  9.                    Tabari informs in his                    treatise on Islamic history that Abu Bakr had four children                    and all four were born during the pre Islamic period.  The                    pre-Islamic period ended in 610 A.D, a fact that makes Ayesha                    to be at least 14 years of age at the time of her marriage                    around 613-624 A.D.
                                  Tarikhu'l-umam wa'l-mamlu'k,                    Al-Tabari, Vol 4, Pg 50, Arabic, Dara'l-fikr, Beirut, 1979).
                                  **10.**                    Ibn Hisham, the historian,                    reports that Ayesha (ra) accepted Islam quite some time before                    `Umar ibn al-Khattab which only means that Ayesha (ra)                    accepted Islam close to the time of first revelation (around                    610 A.D). This means she must have been at least a young girl                    at that time.  Assuming she was barely 6 or 7 at that time                    this information puts the age of Ayesha at 20 or more at the                    time of her marriage with Muhammad (623-624 A.D.), (Al-Sirah                    al-Nabawiyyah, Ibn Hisham, vol 1, Pg 227 – 234 and 295,                    Arabic, Maktabah al-Riyadh al-hadithah, Al-Riyadh).
                                  **11.**                    Tabari reports that before                    migrating to Habashah, Abu Bakr planned to hand over his                    daughter, Ayesha to Mut’am’s son to whom she was engaged.  But                    fearing persecution by the Quraish, Mut’am refused and his son                    divorced Ayesha.  The migration to Habashah happened 8 years                    before Hijra.  Obviously, at the time she was ready to take on                    responsibilities as a wife (possibly 9 or 10 years of age).                     If she married Muhammad in the 2nd Hijrah (623-624                    A.D), she could not be less than 19 years of age (a secondary                    reference for this argument is: Tehqiq e umar e Siddiqah e                    Ka'inat, Habib ur Rahman Kandhalwi, Urdu, Pg 38, Anjuman Uswa                    e hasanah, Karachi, Pakistan).
                                  **12.**                    A famous Sunni imam, Ahmad                    ibn Hanbal, reports in His *Musnad*, that after the death                    of Khadijah, Khaulah came to the Prophet (pbuh) and advised                    him to marry again.  She had two propositions for the                    Prophet:  Either Muhammad could marry a virgin (*bikr*),                    or he could go for woman who had already been married (*thayyib*)".                    Khaulah named Ayesha for a virgin (*bikr*). It is common                    knowledge that the term *bikr * in the Arabic language                    refers to a well formed lady and not to a 9 year old, playful,                    immature lass.  If she were nine, the word used by Khaulah                    would have been *jariyah *and not *bikr.*
                                  (*Musnad,* Ahmad ibn                    Hanbal, Vol 6, Pg 210, Arabic, Dar Ihya al-turath al-`arabi,                    Beirut).
              
              **13.** Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani has reported that                    Fatimah, Muhammad’s daughter, was five years older than Ayesha                    and that Fatimah  was born when the Prophet was 35 years old.                    Thus, Ayesha, according to Ibn Hajar, was born when Muhammad                    was 40 and consummated her marriage when he was 54 or 55.                     That makes Aysha at least 15-16 years of age.
                                  (Al-isabah fi                    tamyizi'l-sahabah, Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani, Vol 4, Pg 377,                    Arabic, Maktabatu'l-Riyadh al-haditha, al-Riyadh,1978)
                                  **                   Finally**, it must be pointed out that Ayesha’s age at the                    time of her marriage has never been an issue.  If it were, his                    enemies must have picked up on this issue as they did to him                    on some other issues. Also, the reader must note that none of                    these Hadith reports concerning Ayesha’s controversial age of                    marriage with the Prophet goes back to the Prophet himself.                     In other words, it is not the Prophet himself who said Ayesha                    was 6 or 9.  These reports came from a single individual and                    the Iraqis reported from him when he grew old and his memory                    started failing.
                                     **In**                      **conclusion**, this article is an attempt to prove that                      the books written 200-300 years after the death of Muhammad,                      while providing a good deal of historical information about                      him are not free from faulty, less than perfect and self-contradictory                      materials.  These should not be taken as the final word                      for a Muslim.  There is a Final Word for a Muslim and                      that is the Book of God, the Holy Qur’an—the book that defines                      the marriageable age for a man or woman when he or she attains                      soundness of judgment (Al-Qur’an 4:6). If Muhammad is a model                      for mankind, if he followed the Qur’an all his life, if Allah                      stands witness to his rock-solid character, there is no way                      that he could have taken a 6-9 year old, immature young, playful                      girl as a responsible wife.

Re: Age of Hazrat Ayesha at the time of marriage.

salam
its really hard to follow this thread can anyone summarize

which scholars say that aisha was 6 or 9 at the time of marriage
and which scholars say aisha was 16 or 20

:wsalam:

Hazrat Ayesha (RA) is daughter of Hazrat Abu Bakar Siddiqui (RA) and her mother name is ‘Um Roman’. She was 6six year old when nikkkah done before three years in the month of shawal, 10th year of prophecy with Prophet Muhammad :saw2:

In shawal hijri year 2, she entered in Madina Manawarah with Prophet Muhammad :saw2: and it was her first marriage among all other wives (RA) and she was more liked wife compairing to others.

Our Propeht :saw2: said: Kisi bivi ke lehaf mein mere upar vahi nazil nahi howi magar Hazrat Ayesha (RA) jab mere saath bistar-e-nabwat pr sooti to is haalat mein bhi mujeh pr vahi utarti rehti thi

(Bukhari Jild 1 page 532 Fazal Ayesha)