Jabr ibn Maktum ibn Laheeb Mahjoub ibn Bahij ibn Thebian ibn Muhammad ibn Amer ibn Suhaib ibn Imran ibn Hussein ibn Abdullah ibn Jahsh ibn Hazum ibn Ayyadh ibn Ghalib ibn Faris ibn Karam ibn Ikrimah ibn Thawr ibn Amr
Jubur (Arabic: الجبور) is an IraqiArab tribe. Part of the tribe settled in Hawija and Kirkuk in the eighteenth century. Al-Jiburi, along with the 'Azza, Dulaim, Janabi and Obaidi federations, are sub-groups of the Zubaydi tribe, which is one of the Arabian tribal groups of Iraq. Several prominent figures have emerged from the Al-Jubouri tribe. Ahmed Abdullah al-Jubouri is an Iraqi politician from Salah ad-Din Governorate who has served as the Governor of Salah ad-Din and held various political positions at both provincial and national levels. Najim Abdullah al-Jubouri is a senior Iraqi military officer and politician, best known for his role as the Governor of Nineveh and for leading military operations during the liberation of Mosul from the Islamic State (ISIS). Kamel Abdulwahed Al-Jubouri is a well-known figure within the tribe, recognized for his influence and leadership in tribal affairs.
Religion
The Jubour tribe is mostly Sunni Muslim. They were originally completely Sunni Muslim until the 19th century when few of them started to convert to Shia Islam, especially in the mid-Euphrates region of southern Iraq.[2][3]