As indicated by most researchers of the Islamic convention, the part was uncovered in late Medinan period, in this manner, it is a Medinan sura. It is doubtlessly uncovered in 630 CE (or 9 AH), after the Conquest of Mecca and when Muhammad previously controlled the majority of Arabia. A minority conclusion, including that of the exegete Mahmud al-Alusi, says that the thirteenth refrain was uncovered in the Meccan period.[1] The customary Egyptian sequence puts the part as the 106th section by the request for disclosure (after Al-Mujadila), while the Nöldeke Chronology (by the orientalist Theodor Nöldeke) puts it as the 112th.[2]
Muslim history specialists, for example, Al-Waqidi and Ibn Ishaq, connected the disclosure of a few stanzas to the lead of a designation from the Banu Tamim when they were in Medina to meet with Muhammad.[3] According to Al-Waqidi, the Tamimites were arranging the arrival of Tamimite detainees in Muhammad's custody,[4] while as indicated by Ibn Ishaq they were moving Muhammad to a mufakhara (a flaunting challenge, a pre-Islamic Arabian practice).[3] As Muhammad was dozing, they experienced the private lofts of Muhammad and his spouses to look for him out.[5] Verses 2–4 (as indicated by Al-Waqidi) or section 4 (Ibn Ishaq) of this part depict the Tamimites' behavior,[6] while refrain 5 censures it and trains Muslims to be persistent when looking for crowd with Muhammad.[7] Al-Waqidi dated this occasion as month of Muharram 9 AH, while Ibn Ishaq's record suggested that it had occurred in Ramadan 9 AH or later
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