Khawla bint al-Azwar is depicted as a warrior who fought in major campaigns, including the Battle of Yarmouk, at times disguised, at times leading attacks, and often performing acts that appear extraordinary even by the standards of seasoned fighters.But who was she, really?This book approaches these questions through multiple lenses:Military Analysis: Reconstructing battles, tactics, and constraintsGuerrilla Warfare Theory: Evaluating irregular combat strategiesHistoriography: Examining the reliability and bias of sourcesPsychology and Myth: Understanding how and why such figures endureIt also goes further—introducing simulations, counterfactual scenarios, and probability-based assessments to test the plausibility of events attributed to her.The goal is not to provide a simple answer.Rather, it is to offer a structured way of thinking about complex historical figures—where certainty is limited, but inquiry remains essential.In studying Khawla, we are not only examining a warrior.We are examining the boundary between history and meaning.