of the Karbala massacre, with a red
headband reading, "O Ruqayya!" Husayn denounced the accession of the
Umayyad caliph Yazid ibn Mu'awiya in 680 CE. When pressed by Yazid's agents to pledge his allegiance, Husayn first left his hometown of
Medina for
Mecca and later set off for Kufa, accompanied by his family and a small group of supporters. They were intercepted near the city and massacred by the Umayyad forces, who first surrounded them for some days and cut off their access to the nearby
Euphrates. After the battle, the women and children were taken captive and marched to Kufa and then the capital
Damascus. The earliest account of the death in captivity of a daughter of Husayn appears in by Imad al-Din al-Tabari without giving her name. He writes that the women had hidden the death of Husayn from his young children until they were brought to the palace of Yazid. There a daughter of Husayn, aged four, woke up crying one night and asked for her father, saying she had just seen him distressed and anguished in her dream. The women's cry awakened Yazid who then learned from his men about its cause. Yazid ordered Husayn's head to be taken to the child. The shock left the child ill and she died in the coming days. The source of al-Tabari was the non-extant by the Sunni scholar Qasim ibn Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Ma'muni. The
Sufi scholar
Husayn Kashifi () gives a similar account in his martyrology , again without naming the child, this time sourced from , a book by Najm al-Din Qasim Madhmakini about the first four caliphs, Husayn, and his elder brother
Hasan (). The main difference between the two versions is that the child dies on the same night in the latter version, and this is what the later sources report. Some later sources also identify this child as Ruqayya or Zubayda. A common narrative in the
Qajar-era ritual remembrance of the events in Karbala was that Ruqayya saw her father in a dream and prayed to be allowed to join her. She died soon after and her death was regarded as a form of martyrdom which thus released her from her suffering at the hands of the Umayyads. Some modern sources identify as Sakina this young child of Husayn who is said to have died in captivity in Damascus. == Shrine ==