Muhammad and a group of fourteen hundred…
March 628 CE
Muhammad and a group of fourteen hundred Muslims march peacefully towards Mecca in March 628, in an attempt to perform the Umrah (pilgrimage).
They are dressed as pilgrims, and bring sacrificial animals, hoping that the Quraysh, the powerful merchant tribe that controls Mecca and its Kaaba, will honor the Arabian custom of allowing converts to enter the city.
The Muslims had left Medina in a state of ihram, a premeditated spiritual and physical state that restricts their freedom of action and prohibits fighting.
This, along with the paucity of arms carried, indicates that the pilgrimage is intended to be peaceful.
Muhammad's people camp outside of Mecca, and Muhammad meets with a Meccan emissary.
After much negotiation, the two parties decide to resolve the matter through diplomacy rather than warfare, and a treaty is drawn up.
Called the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah, it helps to decrease tension between the two cities, affirms a ten-year peace, and authorizes Muhammad's followers to return the following year in a peaceful pilgrimage.
Some of his followers, however, are discontent at the terms to which Muhammad has agreed.