grave. While researching the picture of the grave actually belonged to Him, I found that some of the pictures pointed out that the grave was the Prophet’s. But further along I found that one website pointed about that the grave did not belong to the Prophet . Because of the unsureness if the picture belongs to the grave of prophet Muhammad I will be removing that picture. Jazakullah khair to Arsalan for pointing that out.
MV: Aselamualaikum my dudes!
In an attempt of searching for something new to post, I found a picture of Prophet Muhammad’s sandal (on facebook of course). So a thought came in mind, well first I was just repeatedly thinking, “this is so cool”. Once that was over I started searching for other artifacts of the Prophet Muhammad . I found many but they were all scattered in different sites, so what I then planned to do was put a lot of them on my site, as they are truly “really cool”.
And also, for the first time ever a book has been released with over 600 pictures of belongings from including Prophet Muhammad and other Prophets!

This is so cool! Prophet Muhammad’s sandal.

Prophet Muhammad’s Sword
Muhammad’s(pbuh) letter to the Muqawqas, Topkapi Palace Museum, Istanbul

Prophet Muhammad’s Tooth

Prophet Muhammad’s Bow

Prophet Muhammad’s Cloths

Prophet Muhammad’s Footprint

Cave of Hira

The Prophet’s Grave

Various Belongings Read More......
Monday, November 15, 2010
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At last we turn a corner and see, in the western (strictly south-western) wall of the platform, the great Trilithon. 
This view from the quarry shows that the distance to the Baalbek acropolis is not huge - no more than a third of a mile. Nor is the elevation very different between the two points. Although we do not know the topography of the site at the time the wall was constructed, it does seem feasible that the stones might have been dragged up a ramp to the position where they now lie. Theoretically, then, the lifting of the stones would have been limited only to positional adjustments. 
Some archaeologists might well wish that Baalbek had been buried forever. For it is here that we find the largest dressed stone block in the world - the infamous Stone of the South, lying in its quarry just ten minutes walk from the temple acropolis. This huge stone weighs approximately 1,000 tons - almost as heavy as three Boeing 747 aircraft.[1]
The Temple of Venus can be dealt with briefly. Situated in what is now a field of rubble, its former elegance can no longer be seen, and only four of its ten columns remain standing. Being outside the fortified acropolis, this temple was swallowed up by an Arab town, to such an extent that the German Archaeological Mission had to remove five metres of debris to clear the first step of the monumental staircase at its entrance. The remains of the temple were dismantled and re-erected in the early 1930s, but they now threaten to collapse again.
We now enter the main acropolis via the Propylaea - what we see here is a reconstruction by the German archaeological expedition in 1905. The original staircase was destroyed by the Arabs to fortify the site and they dismantled the 12 granite columns which they re-used for defensive purposes. Only the bases of those columns survived, and they bore inscriptions identifying their Roman origin.
Having come through the entrance, we find ourselves in the middle of the impressive Hexagonal Courtyard, which is a unique feature for a temple of this period (it may well have been a concession by the Romans to local customs and traditions). Roman inscriptions are found here in abundance, but the purpose of the Hexagonal Courtyard remains unknown. 
On the other side of the Great Courtyard lies a truly monumental staircase leading up to a raised platform on which the Temple of Jupiter once stood. In this picture we can see the bases of the now fallen columns - the bases alone are 8 feet high. If we wished, we could climb these stairs and stand in awe beneath the six remaining columns, which rise to a spectacular height of 66 feet. But the best view of these columns comes not from this angle but from the nearby Temple of Bacchus.
This is the Temple of Bacchus, and it is undoubtedly the best preserved Roman temple in the world. Its 46 columns included 15 on each side and 8 on the ends, most of which are intact in this picture, although the eastern end here is clearly missing a few.
The southern side of the Temple of Bacchus, in contrast, has suffered badly. Here I am setting the scale of the infamous leaning column - a tourist favourite - which was probably felled by the earthquake of 1759. This massive column, formed of three parts, stands 60 feet high including the base and the capital. Incidentally, the drums are held together by dowels made of bronze, embedded in lead.
The main temple of Baalbek, however, was reserved for the chief deity himself - Iovi Optimo Maximo Heliopolitano 'Jupiter the Most High, the Most Great'. This is the view of what remains from the staircase we saw earlier. The destruction of this magnificent temple is thought to have begun with the earthquake of 526 or 551. Curiously, the chronicler Michael the Syrian records the popular belief that the temple was destroyed by fire from the sky.[3] Historians assume this is a misunderstanding and think that the fire was a consequence of the earthquake.
The last really big quake in 1759 brought down three columns, leaving only the six that we see here. The Temple was so utterly destroyed that it has never been possible to accurately reconstruct its ground plan, and little can be gleaned from visiting the site. 





