Banu Sa'd ibn Zayd Manat
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Banu Sa'd ibn Zayd Manat بنو سعد بن زيد منات | |
|---|---|
| Adnanite Arabs | |
Banner of Banu Sa'd ibn Zayd Manat | |
| Ethnicity | Arab |
| Nisba | Al-Sa'di |
| Location | Arabian Peninsula |
| Descended from | Sa'd ibn Zayd Manat |
| Religion | Paganism, later Islam |
Banu Sa'd ibn Zayd Manat (Arabic: بنو سعد بن زيد مناة) is a pre-Islamic Arab tribe. It is considered one of the main three branches of Tamim, the other two are Banu Hanzalah and 'Amr ibn Tamim.[1]
The tribe members trace their lineage to Sa'd ibn Zayd Manat ibn Tamim ibn Murr ibn 'Id ibn Amr ibn Ilyas ibn Mudar ibn Nizar ibn Ma'ad ibn Adnan.
Sa'd ibn Zayd Manat had seven sons: Ka'b, 'Amr, al-Harith, 'Awafa, Jashm, Malik and 'Abshams.[2]
There are also sub-clans to the Banu Sa'd ibn Zayd Manat:
- Banu al-Haram
- Banu Hamman
- Banu al-A'raj
- Banu Qurai'
- Banu Bahdala
- Banu Barniq
- Banu 'Utarid