Battle of Uhud
Companions who participated in the Battle of Uhud (3 AH / 625 CE).
18 companions
Abbad ibn Bishr ibn Waqsh ibn Zughbah
The friend of the Quran who prayed through three arrows and charged into the Garden of Death.
Abdullah ibn Abdullah ibn Ubayy ibn Salul
The devoted Muslim son of Islam's greatest hypocrite — who offered to execute his own father to protect the Prophet ﷺ.
Abdullah ibn Mas'ud
The shepherd boy who became the Quran's first public voice and the Prophet's closest companion in conduct and character.
Abu Bakr al-Siddiq
The first man to believe, the last one to be outpaced in any good — the ultimate companion of the Prophet ﷺ.
Al-Arqam ibn Abi Al-Arqam
The teenager who opened his home and gave Islam its first school.
Ali ibn Abi Talib
The lion of Allah — first youth to embrace Islam, raised in the Prophet's household, and the embodiment of courage, knowledge, and undying love.
Bilal ibn Rabah
The man whose voice announced every prayer, and whose footsteps the Prophet ﷺ heard in Paradise.
Fatima bint Muhammad
The beloved daughter of the Prophet ﷺ — his mirror in character, his comfort in sorrow, and the first of his companions to follow him in death.
Hind bint Abi Umayyah ibn al-Mughirah
The noblewoman who endured three migrations, a forced separation from her family, and devastating grief — and became the wisest counsellor of the Prophet ﷺ
Khabbab ibn al-Aratt
The enslaved boy who was the first to bleed for Islam — and lived to show Umar his scarred back in the court of the Caliphate.
Sa'd ibn Abi Waqas
The archer of Islam, whose prayers were never turned away, and whose arrows were the first shed in defence of the faith.
Safiyyah bint Abdul Muttalib
The lion-hearted aunt of the Prophet ﷺ — a poet, a warrior, and an ummah unto herself.
Suhaib ibn Sinan ibn Malik al-Rumi
The Arab who became Roman, then became one of the first Muslims — and gave up everything he owned for the sake of one journey.
Talha ibn Ubaydillah
The walking martyr whose hands caught arrows so the Prophet ﷺ would not fall.
Umm Ayman (Baraka bint Tha'laba)
The only person who was present at both the birth and the death of the Prophet ﷺ.
Uthman ibn Affan
The man so modest that the angels themselves were shy in his presence.
Zayd ibn al-Haritha
The beloved of the beloved — the only companion named by name in the Quran.
Zubayr ibn al-Awwam
The Prophet's own disciple — the first sword drawn in defence of Islam.