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The Four Rightly Guided Caliphs

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Explore the lives and legacies of the four Rashidun Caliphs who led the Muslim community after Prophet Muhammad.

Collection Type
series
Included Readings
5 articles
Estimated Time
75 minutes

📖 Reading Tip

This is a series collection. For the best experience, read the articles in the order presented below, as each builds upon the previous one.

Articles in This Collection

1

Step 1

Abu Bakr al-Siddiq

person

The first Rashidun Caliph (632-634 CE) and closest companion of Prophet Muhammad. Known as 'Al-Siddiq' (The Truthful), he preserved Islamic unity during the critical period after the Prophet's death, defeated the Ridda rebellions, compiled the Quran, and initiated the Islamic conquests beyond Arabia.

Rashidun Caliphate573-634 CE / 51 BH - 13 AHRead article →
2

Step 2

Umar ibn al-Khattab

person

The second Rashidun Caliph (634-644 CE), known as 'Al-Faruq' (The Criterion). Under his leadership, the Islamic empire expanded dramatically, conquering the Sassanian Empire and much of the Byzantine Empire, while establishing sophisticated administrative and legal systems.

Rashidun Caliphate584-644 CE / 40 BH - 23 AHRead article →
3

Step 3

Uthman ibn Affan

person

The third Rashidun Caliph (644-656 CE), known for standardizing the Quran and expanding the Islamic navy. A wealthy merchant from the Umayyad clan, he was one of the earliest converts to Islam and married two daughters of Prophet Muhammad.

Rashidun Caliphate576-656 CE / 47 BH - 35 AHRead article →
4

Step 4

Ali ibn Abi Talib

person

The fourth and final Rashidun Caliph (656-661 CE), cousin and son-in-law of Prophet Muhammad. Known for his courage, eloquence, and commitment to justice. His caliphate was marked by civil wars (First Fitna) that led to the permanent division of the Muslim community.

Rashidun Caliphate601-661 CE / 23 BH - 40 AHRead article →
5

Step 5

Rashidun Caliphate

dynasty

The first four Caliphs of Islam (632-661 CE), known as the 'Rightly-Guided Caliphs,' who succeeded Prophet Muhammad and established the foundations of Islamic civilization through unprecedented territorial expansion, administrative innovation, and preservation of Islamic teachings.

Rashidun Caliphate632-661 CE / 11-40 AHRead article →