"Ghaz\u0101la al-Har\u016Briyya () was the wife of Habib ibn-Yaz\u012Bd al-Har\u016Br\u012B, founder of the Har\u016Briyya sect of Kharijite Islam, which held that it is permissible to entrust the imamate to a woman if she is able to carry out the required duties. Ghaz\u0101la commanded troops, following in the footsteps of previous Muslim women like Juwayriyya bint al-\u1E24\u0101rith at the Battle of Yarmuk. In one battle, she put the famous Umayyad Iraqi general Hajj\u0101j ibn-Y\u016Bsuf to flight."@en . . . "Ghazala al-Haruriyya"@en . . . . . . . . . "Ghaz\u0101la al-Har\u016Briyya () was the wife of Habib ibn-Yaz\u012Bd al-Har\u016Br\u012B, founder of the Har\u016Briyya sect of Kharijite Islam, which held that it is permissible to entrust the imamate to a woman if she is able to carry out the required duties. Ghaz\u0101la commanded troops, following in the footsteps of previous Muslim women like Juwayriyya bint al-\u1E24\u0101rith at the Battle of Yarmuk. In one battle, she put the famous Umayyad Iraqi general Hajj\u0101j ibn-Y\u016Bsuf to flight. In 677 AD (77 AH), after having controlled the city of Kufa for a day, Ghaz\u0101la led her male warriors in prayer as well as recited two of the longest chapters from the Quran during the prayer in the Mosque"@en . . .