Abu Nuwayra al-Taghlibi (Arabic: أبو نويرة التغلبي) was a poet and warrior who fought alongside the Taghlib tribe during the events of the Basus War.
[1][2] Both men met at a border of water known as al-Ajoul that separated Syria and the Arabian Peninsula.
[1][2] They had a duel, and Abu Nuwayra managed to give Jassas a fatal injury.
[1][2] Monir Al-Balbaki believes that Jassas ibn Murrah died in 534 CE.
[4] The Muslim scholar Safiur Rahman Mubarakpuri states that despite their conversion to Christianity, the Arabs generally ignored the morals and etiquettes preached in Christianity (except for important fundamental aspects like monotheism and rejection of polytheism).