ISIS BRIDE Shamima Begum named her newborn son Jarrah in honour of a historic jihadi warlord, a historian has claimed.

The whining teen jihadi has been slammed on social media for choosing a name that doesn't show that she wants to "return to Britain in peace".

12 Credit: Sky News

The 19-year-old, who has already had two children - a boy and a girl who die while living among the terror group in Syria – gave birth to a second son at the weekend.

She told Sky News: "It's a boy. I named him after my old son [who died] - that's what my husband wanted."

Although Begum has urged her family in the UK, who she ran away from in 2015, to not “give up on trying to get me back”, it emerged yesterday that she has named the child Jarrah.

Historian and author Tom Holland said: “If she’d wanted to signal that she was returning to Britain in peace, she might have considered naming her baby after someone other than Abu Ubaidah ibn al-Jarrah.

“[He was] a general from the early days of the Arab conquests chiefly famed for beating the c*** out of infidels.”

While another woman holds her newborn son in the Syrian refugee camp, Shamima Begum talks to Sky News about her hopes for her baby

It has been suggested the name Jarrah means "able fighter" or "one who wounds" although other sources claim it means "surgeon".

12 An unimpressed Tom Holland tweets that the teen's choice of name doesn't gel with her push to return to the UK Credit: Twitter

Despite Mr Holland's claims, other scholars have a completely different interpretation and dispute his idea that Begum named her baby after a Jihadi warlord.

They say Begum would have actually used 'Abu Ubaidah' if she wanted to name him after ‘Abu Ubaidah ibn al-Jarrah’.

Michael Mumisa, a scholar at Cambridge University, also claimed the idea that Abu Ubaidah was "famed for beating the cr*p out of infidels" is a misunderstanding of the lives of key figures in history and out of context with the society they lived in.

In Begum's interview with Sky News, the ISIS Briton said she had “a good time” in Syria – and insisted horrific beheadings were "okay as Islamically, that is allowed”.

The teen jihadi also said that while she had no regrets about living with the terror group, she had to leave as the caliphate was under attack and her "situation got difficult".

Sky correspondent John Sparks interviewed the teen “hours” after she gave birth in a Syrian refugee camp, as she repeated her contentious wish to return to the UK.

12 Beheadings are an 'okay' form of punishment for Begum

Asked about conditions while living amidst fellow jihadis, after running away from Britain with two schoolmates to Syria in early 2015, she said “it was nice” at first.

Begum initially found life among the terrorists was “like how they showed it in the [propaganda] videos, like, ‘come, make a family together’.”

But, life got tougher for her, as the teen explained that “things got harder, you know. When we lost Raqqa, we had to keep moving and moving. The situation got difficult.”

This prompted her to have second thoughts about life among the militants, particularly after the death of her son – and she “realised” she had to escape.

Despite the difficulties, she told Sky News that she had no regrets about living among ISIS, as she was “living under Islamic law” and was thus able to “have your own family, do anything”.

12 She told correspondent John Sparks that she was 'okay' with people having their heads chopped off Credit: Sky News

When asked about whether she was fully aware of the brutal way in which the terror group operated, including beheading people, Begum admitted: "Yeah, I knew about those things and I was okay with it.

"Because you know, I started becoming religious just before I left. From what I heard, Islamically that is all allowed, so I was okay with it."

Begum told the correspondent that she didn't question the terrorists' brutal methods "at all".

Asked to talk about her newborn, she said: “It's a boy. I named him after my old son [who died] - that's what my husband wanted."

The ISIS bride has no complaints about living conditions at the refugee camp, describing conditions as “okay” as she “gets fed and I have a heater".

However, Begum admitted that she was finding it “kind of difficult going around doing stuff yourself, especially now I have a child”.

Former Brit ISIS bride Tania Joya says Shamima Begum should be asking for 'mercy' and 'forgiveness' rather than sympathy

12 Shamima Begum said that she 'started becoming religious' before leaving the UK for war-torn Syria Credit: Sky News

Also, because of a lack of funds, the teen said it would be a stretch to care for her baby at the camp, explaining, “For people without money, it's hard to get around with the amount of things they give us.”

But, she was finding life easier than when she was living in the last pocket of the Islamic State group’s territory in Baghuz – where US-backed Kurdish forces have been launching an assault on the Syrian side of the Iraqi border.

Begum said that while she’s “not starving”, she does have a roof over her head – “whereas before I was sleeping outside”.

The teen said that “everyone” had been getting sick in Baghuz because of a lack of medical care, adding, “my kids died because of sickness, so, yeah.”

Begum reckons she deserves "sympathy" from Britons after giving birth in a Syria refugee camp - even though she doesn't regret joining the barbaric terror group.

The Brit jihadi has been begging to return home to the UK, insisting, "I was just a housewife."

12 The ISIS bride was speaking after giving birth to a baby boy at the weekend Credit: Sky News

12 Shamima Begum gave birth in a Syrian refugee camp - and wants to return to the UK Credit: Anthony Loyd / The Times / News Licensing

Begum also claims she "never did anything dangerous" and whined how "I can't live in this camp forever."

The runaway schoolgirl said she wasn't fazed by seeing severed heads in the bin, claiming it "made her stronger."

She said she had been seduced to run away by ISIS videos online.

And speaking to Sky News while sitting next to her newborn son, she said people "should have sympathy towards me for everything I have been through".

The ISIS bride added: "I didn't know what I was getting into when I left.

"I was hoping that maybe for the sake of me and my child they'd let me come back.

"Because I can't live in this camp forever, it's just not possible.