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History of Yemen

The history of Yemen describes the cultures, events, and peoples of what is one of the oldest centers of civilization in the Near East.[1] Its relatively fertile land and adequate rainfall in a moister climate helped sustain a stable population, a feature recognized by the ancient Greek geographer Ptolemy, who described Yemen as Eudaimon Arabia (better known in its Latin translation, Arabia Felix) meaning "fortunate Arabia" or "Happy Arabia". Yemenis had developed the South Arabian alphabet by the 12th to 8th centuries BC, which explains why most historians date all of the ancient Yemeni kingdoms to that era.

Sabaean inscription addressed to the moon-god Almaqah, mentioning five South Arabian gods, two reigning sovereigns, and two governors, 7th century BC.

Between the 12th century BC and the 6th century AD, it was dominated by six successive civilizations which rivaled each other, or were allied with each other and controlled the lucrative spice trade: Ma'in, Qataban, Hadhramaut, Awsan, Saba, and Himyar.[2] Islam arrived in 630 AD, and Yemen became part of the wider Muslim realm.

Ancient history edit

With its long sea border between early civilizations, Yemen has long existed at a crossroads of cultures with a strategic location in terms of trade on the west of the Arabian Peninsula. Large settlements for their era existed in the mountains of northern Yemen as early as 5000 BC.[3] Little is known about ancient Yemen and how exactly it transitioned from nascent Bronze Age civilizations to more trade-focused caravan kingdoms.

 
Sabaean gravestone of a woman holding a stylized sheaf of wheat, a symbol of fertility in ancient Yemen

The Sabaean Kingdom came into existence from at least the 11th century BC.[4] There were four major kingdoms or tribal confederations in South Arabia: Saba, Hadramout, Qataban and Ma'in. Saba is believed to be biblical Sheba and was the most prominent federation.[5] The Sabaean rulers adopted the title Mukarrib generally thought to mean "unifier",[6] or a "priest-king".[7] The role of the Mukarrib was to bring the various tribes under the kingdom and preside over them all.[8] The Sabaeans built the Great Dam of Marib around 940 BC.[9] The dam was built to withstand the seasonal flash floods surging down the valley.

Between 700 and 680 BC, the Kingdom of Awsan dominated Aden and its surroundings. Sabaean Mukarrib Karib'il Watar I changed his ruling title to that of a king,[10] and conquered the entire realm of Awsan, expanding Sabaean rule and territory to include much of South Arabia.[11] Lack of water in the Arabian Peninsula prevented the Sabaeans from unifying the entire peninsula. Instead, they established various colonies to control trade routes.[12] Evidence of Sabaean influence is found in Eritrea and northern Ethiopia, where the South Arabian alphabet religion and pantheon, and the South Arabian style of art and architecture were introduced.[13][14][15] The Sabaeans created a sense of identity through their religion. They worshipped El-Maqah and believed themselves to be his children.[16] For centuries, the Sabaeans controlled outbound trade across the Bab-el-Mandeb, a strait separating the Arabian Peninsula from the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea from the Indian Ocean.[17]

By the 3rd century BC, Qataban, Hadramout and Ma'in became independent from Saba and established themselves in the Yemeni arena. Minaean rule stretched as far as Dedan,[18] with their capital at Baraqish. The Sabaeans regained their control over Ma'in after the collapse of Qataban in 50 BC. By the time of the Roman expedition to Arabia Felix in 25 BC, the Sabaeans were once again the dominating power in Southern Arabia.[19] Aelius Gallus was ordered to lead a military campaign to establish Roman dominance over the Sabaeans.[20] The Romans had a vague and contradictory geographical knowledge about Arabia Felix or Yemen. The Roman army of ten thousand men reached Marib, but was not able to conquer the city, according to Cassius Dio[21] and Pliny the Elder.[22][23][24] Strabo's close relationship with Aelius Gallus led him to attempt to justify his friend's failure in his writings. It took the Romans six months to reach Marib and sixty days to return to Egypt. The Romans blamed their Nabataean guide and executed him for treachery.[25] No direct mention in Sabaean inscriptions of the Roman expedition has yet been found.

 
A funerary stela featuring a musical scene, 1st century AD
 
Himyarite King Dhamar Ali Yahbur II

After the Roman expedition – perhaps earlier – the country fell into chaos and two clans, namely Hamdan and Himyar, claimed kingship, assuming the title King of Sheba and Dhu Raydan.[26] Dhu Raydan (i.e. Himyarites) allied themselves with Aksum in Ethiopia against the Sabaeans.[27] The chief of Bakil and king of Saba and Dhu Raydan, El Sharih Yahdhib, launched successful campaigns against the Himyarites and Habashat (i.e. Aksum), El Sharih took proud of his campaigns and added the title Yahdhib to his name, which means "suppressor"; he used to kill his enemies by cutting them to pieces.[28] Sana'a came into prominence during his reign as he built the Ghumdan Palace to be his place of residence.

 
The Himyarite Kingdom at its height in 525 AD
 
The Sasanian Empire at its greatest extent c. 620, under Khosrow II

The Himyarite annexed Sana'a from Hamdan c. AD 100.[29] Hashdi tribesmen rebelled against them, however, and regained Sana'a in around 180.[30] It was not until 275 that Shammar Yahri'sh conquered Hadramout and Najran and Tihama, thus unifying Yemen and consolidating Himyarite rule.[31][32] The Himyarites rejected polytheism and adhered to a consensual form of monotheism called Rahmanism.[33] In 354, Roman Emperor Constantius II sent an embassy headed by Theophilos the Indian to convert the Himyarites to Christianity.[34] According to Philostorgius, the mission was resisted by local Jews.[35] Several inscriptions have been found in Hebrew and Sabaean praising the ruling house in Jewish terms for helping and empowering the People of Israel.[36]

According to Islamic traditions, King As'ad The Perfect mounted a military expedition to support the Jews of Yathrib.[37] Abu Karib As'ad, as known from the inscriptions, led a military campaign to central Arabia or Najd to support the vassal Kinda against the Lakhmids.[38] However, no direct reference to Judaism or Yathrib was discovered from his lengthy reign. Abu Karib As'ad died in 445, having reigned for almost 50 years.[39] By 515, Himyar became increasingly divided along religious lines and a bitter conflict between different factions paved the way for an Aksumite intervention. The last Himyarite king Mu'di Karab Ya'fir was supported by Aksum against his Jewish rivals. Mu'di Karab was Christian and launched a campaign against the Lakhmids in Southern Iraq, with the support of other Arab allies of The Byzantine Empire.[40] The Lakhmids were a Bulwark of Persia, which was intolerant to a proselytizing religion like Christianity.[41]

After the death of Ma'adikarib Ya'fur around 521 AD, a Himyarite Jewish warlord called Dhu Nuwas rose to power. He began a campaign of violence against Christians under his control. Dhu Nawas executed Byzantine traders, converted the church in Zafar into a synagogue, and killed its priests, among other acts of conquest.[42][43] He marched toward the port city of Mocha, killing 14,000 and capturing 11,000.[44] Then he settled a camp in Bab-el-Mandeb to prevent aid flowing from Aksum. At the same time, Yousef sent an army under the command of another Jewish warlord, Sharahil Yaqbul, to Najran. Sharahil had reinforcements from the Bedouins of the Kinda and Madh'hij tribes, eventually wiping out the Christian community in Najran by means of execution and forced conversion to Judaism. Blady speculates that he was likely motivated by stories about Byzantine violence against Byzantine Jewish communities in his decision to begin his campaign of state violence against Christians existing within his territory.[45][42][46]

Christian sources portray Dhu Nuwas as a Jewish zealot, while Islamic traditions say that he marched around 20,000 Christians into trenches filled with flaming oil, burning them alive.[42] Himyarite inscriptions attributed to Dhu Nuwas himself show great pride in killing 27,000, enslaving 20,500 Christians in Ẓafār and Najran and killing 570,000 beasts of burden belonging to them as a matter of imperial policy.[47] It is reported that Byzantium Emperor Justin I sent a letter to the Aksumite King Kaleb, pressuring him to "...attack the abominable Hebrew."[44] A military alliance of Byzantine, Aksumite, and Arab Christians successfully defeated Dhu Nuwas around 525–527 AD and a client Christian king was installed on the Himyarite throne.[48]

 
Ruins of The Great Dam of Marib

Esimiphaios was a local Christian lord, mentioned in an inscription celebrating the burning of an ancient Sabaean palace in Marib to build a church on its ruins.[49] Three new churches were built in Najran alone.[49] Many tribes did not recognize Esimiphaios's authority. Esimiphaios was displaced in 531 by a warrior named Abraha, who refused to leave Yemen and declared himself an independent king of Himyar. Emperor Justinian I sent an embassy to Yemen. He wanted the officially Christian Himyarites to use their influence on the tribes in inner Arabia to launch military operations against Persia. Justinian I bestowed the dignity of king upon the Arab sheikhs of Kinda and Ghassan in central and north Arabia.[50] From early on, Roman and Byzantine policy was to develop close links with the powers of the coast of the Red Sea. They were successful in converting Aksum and influencing their culture. The results with regard to Yemen were rather disappointing.[50]

A Kindite prince called Yazid bin Kabshat rebelled against Abraha and his Arab Christian allies. A truce was reached once The Great Dam of Marib had suffered a breach.[51] Abraha died around 555–565 AD; no reliable sources regarding his death are available. The Sasanid empire annexed Aden around 570. Under their rule, most of Yemen enjoyed great autonomy except for Aden and Sana'a. This era marked the collapse of ancient South Arabian civilization, since the greater part of the country was under several independent clans until the arrival of Islam in 630.[52]

Middle Ages edit

Advent of Islam and the three Dynasties edit

 
Interior of the Great Mosque of Sana'a, the oldest mosque in Yemen

Prophet Mohammed sent his cousin Ali to Sana'a and its surroundings around 630. At the time, Yemen was the most advanced region in Arabia.[53] The Banu Hamdan confederation were among the first to accept Islam. Mohammed sent Muadh ibn Jabal as well to Al-Janad in present-day Taiz, and dispatched letters to various tribal leaders. The reason behind this was the division among the tribes and the absence of a strong central authority in Yemen during the days of the prophet.[54] Major tribes, including Himyar, sent delegations to Medina during the Year of delegations around 630–631. Several Yemenis had already accepted Islam, including Ammar ibn Yasir, Al-Ala'a Al-Hadrami, Miqdad ibn Aswad, Abu Musa Ashaari and Sharhabeel ibn Hasana. A man named 'Abhala ibn Ka'ab Al-Ansi expelled the remaining Persians and claimed to be a prophet of Rahman. He was assassinated by a Yemeni of Persian origin called Fayruz al-Daylami. Christians, who were mainly staying in Najran along with Jews, agreed to pay Jizya, although some Jews converted to Islam, such as Wahb ibn Munabbih and Ka'ab al-Ahbar.

The country was stable during the Rashidun Caliphate. Yemeni tribes played a pivotal role in the Islamic conquests of Egypt, Iraq, Persia, the Levant, Anatolia, North Africa, Sicily and Andalusia.[55][56][57] Yemeni tribes that settled in Syria, contributed significantly to the solidification of Umayyad rule, especially during the reign of Marwan I. Powerful Yemenite tribes like Kindah were on his side during the Battle of Marj Rahit.[58][59] Several emirates led by people of Yemeni descent were established in North Africa and Andalusia. Effective control over entire Yemen was not achieved by the Umayyad Caliphate. Imam Abd Allah ibn Yahya was elected in 745 to lead the Ibāḍī movement in Hadramawt and Oman. He expelled the Umayyad governor from Sana'a and captured Mecca and Medina in 746.[60] Ibn Yahya, known by his nickname Talib al-Haqq (Seeker of the Truth), established the first Ibadi state in the history of Islam but was killed in Taif in around 749.[60]

Muhammad ibn Ziyad founded the Ziyadid dynasty in Tihama around 818; the state stretched from Haly (In present-day Saudi Arabia) to Aden. They nominally recognized the Abbasid Caliphate but were in fact ruling independently from their capital in Zabid.[61] The history of this dynasty is obscure; they never exercised control over the highlands and Hadramawt, and did not control more than a coastal strip of the Yemen (Tihama) bordering the Red Sea.[62] A Himyarite clan called the Yufirids established their rule over the highlands from Saada to Taiz, while Hadramawt was an Ibadi stronghold and rejected all allegiance to the Abbasids in Baghdad.[61] By virtue of its location, the Ziyadid dynasty of Zabid developed a special relationship with Abyssinia. The chief of the Dahlak islands exported slaves as well as amber and leopard hides to the then ruler of Yemen.[63]

The first Zaidi imam, Yahya ibn al-Husayn, arrived to Yemen in 893. He was the founder of the Zaidi imamate in 897. He was a religious cleric and judge who was invited to come to Saada from Medina to arbitrate tribal disputes.[64] Imam Yahya persuaded local tribesmen to follow his teachings. The sect slowly spread across the highlands, as the tribes of Hashid and Bakil, later known as the twin wings of the imamate, accepted his authority.[65] Yahya established his influence in Saada and Najran; he also tried to capture Sana'a from the Yufirids in 901, but he failed miserably. In 904, the newly established Isma'ili followers invaded Sana'a. The Yufirid emir As'ad ibn Ibrahim retreated to Al-Jawf, and between 904 and 913, Sana'a was conquered no less than 20 times by Isma'ilis and Yufirids.[66] As'ad ibn Ibrahim regained Sana'a in 915. The country was in turmoil as Sana'a became a battlefield for the three dynasties as well as independent tribes.

The Yufirid emir Abdullah ibn Qahtan attacked and burned Zabid in 989, severely weakening the Ziyadid dynasty.[67] The Ziyadid monarchs lost effective power after 989, or even earlier than that. Meanwhile, a succession of slaves held power in Zabid and continued to govern in the name of their masters eventually establishing their own dynasty around 1022 or 1050 according to different sources.[68] Although they were recognized by the Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad, they ruled no more than Zabid and four districts to its north.[69] The rise of the Ismaili Shia Sulayhid dynasty in the Yemeni highlands reduced their history to a series of intrigues.

Sulayhid Dynasty edit

 
Jibla became the capital of the Sulayhid dynasty

The Sulayhid dynasty was founded in the northern highlands around 1040. At the time, Yemen was ruled by different local dynasties. In 1060, Ali ibn Mohammed Al-Sulayhi conquered Zabid and killed its ruler Al-Najah, founder of the Najahid dynasty, whose sons were forced to flee to Dahlak.[70] Hadramawt fell into Sulayhid hands after their capture of Aden in 1062.[71] By 1063, Ali had subjugated Greater Yemen.[72] He then marched toward Hejaz and occupied Makkah.[73] Ali was married to Asma bint Shihab, who governed Yemen with her husband.[74] The Khutba during Friday prayers was proclaimed in her husband's and her name. No other Arab woman had this honor since the advent of Islam.[74]

Ali al-Sulayhi was killed by Najah's sons on his way to Mecca in 1084. His son Ahmad al-Mukarram led an army to Zabid and killed 8,000 of its inhabitants.[75] He later installed the Zurayids to govern Aden. Ahmad al-Mukarram, who had been afflicted with facial paralysis resulting from war injuries, retired in 1087 and handed over power to his wife Arwa al-Sulayhi.[76] Queen Arwa moved the seat of the Sulayhid dynasty from Sana'a to Jibla, a small town in central Yemen near Ibb. Jibla was strategically near the Sulayhid dynasty source of wealth, the agricultural central highlands. It was also within easy reach of the southern portion of the country, especially Aden. She sent Ismaili missionaries to India where a significant Ismaili community was formed that exists to this day.[77] Queen Arwa continued to rule securely until her death in 1138.[77]

 
Queen Arwa al- Sulaihi Palace

Arwa al-Sulayhi is still remembered as a great and much loved sovereign, as attested in Yemeni historiography, literature, and popular lore, where she is referred to as Balqis al-sughra , that is "the junior queen of Sheba".[78] Although the Sulayhids were Ismaili, they never tried to impose their beliefs on the public.[79] Shortly after queen Arwa's death, the country was split between five competing petty dynasties along religious lines.[80] The Ayyubid dynasty overthrew the Fatimid caliphate in Egypt. A few years after their rise to power, Saladin dispatched his brother Turan Shah to conquer Yemen in 1174.[81]

Zurayid Dynasty edit

 
Zurayid Kingdom and the neighbouring polities

Al-Abbas & al-Mas'ūd sons of Karam Al-Yami from the Hamdan tribe started ruling Aden for the Sulayhids, when Al-Abbas died in 1083. His son Zuray, who gave the dynasty its name, proceeded to rule together with his uncle al-Mas'ūd. They took part in the Sulayhid leader al-Mufaddal's campaign against the Najahid capital Zabid and were both killed during the siege (1110).[82] Their respective sons ceased to pay tribute to the Sulayhid queen Arwa al-Sulayhi.[83] They were worsted by a Sulayhid expedition but queen Arwa agreed to reduce the tribute by half, to 50,000 dinars per year. The Zurayids again failed to pay and were once again forced to yield to the might of the Sulayhids, but this time the annual tribute from the incomes of Aden was reduced to 25,000. Later on they ceased to pay even that since Sulayhid power was on the wane.[84] After 1110 the Zurayids thus led a more than 60 years long independent rule in the city, bolstered by the international trade. The chronicles mention luxury goods such as textiles, perfume and porcelain, coming from places like North Africa, Egypt, Iraq, Oman, Kirman, and China. After the demise of queen Arwa al-Sulayhi in 1138, the Fatimids in Cairo kept a representation in Aden, adding further prestige to the Zurayids.[85] The Zurayids were sacked by the Ayyubids in 1174.

Ayyubid conquest edit

 
The Qadi of Sa'dah, Yemen, in 1200-1210, according to the Maqamat al-Hariri (BNF 3929)

Turan Shah conquered Zabid from the Mahdids in May 1174, then marched toward Aden in June and captured it from the Zurayids.[86] The Hamdanid sultans of Sana'a resisted the Ayyubid in 1175 and it was not until 1189 that the Ayyubids managed to definitely secure Sana'a.[87] The Ayyubid rule was stable in southern and central Yemen where they succeeded in eliminating the mini-states of that region, while Ismaili and Zaidi tribesmen continued to hold out in a number of fortresses.[87] The Ayyubids failed to capture the Zaydis stronghold in northern Yemen.[88] In 1191, Zaydis of Shibam Kawkaban rebelled and killed 700 Ayyubid soldiers.[89] Imam Abdullah bin Hamza proclaimed the imamate in 1197 and fought al-Mu'izz Ismail, the Ayyubid Sultan of Yemen. Imam Abdullah was defeated at first but was able to conquer Sana'a and Dhamar in 1198[90] al-Mu'izz Ismail was assassinated in 1202[91] Abdullah bin Hamza carried on the struggle against the Ayyubid until his death in 1217. After his demise, the Zaidi community was split between two rival imams. The Zaydis were dispersed and a truce was signed with the Ayyubid in 1219.[92] The Ayyubid army was defeated in Dhamar in 1226.[92] Ayyubid Sultan Mas'ud Yusuf left for Mecca in 1228 never to return.[93] Other sources suggest that he was forced to leave for Egypt instead in 1223.[94]

Rasulid Dynasty edit

 
Rasulid Kingdom around 1264 AD
 
Al-Qahyra (Cairo) Castle's Garden in Ta'izz, the capital of Yemen during the Rasulid's era

The Rasulid Dynasty was established in 1229 by Umar ibn Rasul. Umar ibn Rasul was appointed deputy governor by the Ayyubids in 1223. When the last Ayyubid ruler left Yemen in 1229, Umar stayed in the country as caretaker. He subsequently declared himself an independent king by assuming the title al-Malik Al-Mansur (the king assisted by Allah).[94] Umar established the Rasulid dynasty on a firm foundation and expanded its territory to include the area from Dhofar to Mecca[95] Umar first established himself at Zabid, then moved into the mountainous interior, taking the important highland centre Sana'a. However, the Rasulid capitals were Zabid and Ta'izz. He was assassinated by his nephew in 1249.[93] Omar's son Yousef defeated the faction led by his father assassins and crushed several counter-attacks by the Zaydi imams who still held on in the northern highland. It was mainly because of the victories which he scored over his rivals that he assumed the honorific title al-Muzaffar (the victorious).[96] After the fall of Baghdad to the Mongols in 1258, al-Muzaffar Yusuf I appropriated the title of caliph.[96] He chose the city of Ta'izz to become the political capital of the kingdom because of its strategic location and proximity to Aden.[97] Al-Muzaffar Yusuf I died in 1296 having reigned for 47 years.[96] When the news of his death reached the Zaydi imam Al-Mutawakkil al-Mutahhar bin Yahya he commented by saying:[96]

The greatest king of Yemen, the Muawiyah of the time, has died. His pens used to break our lances and swords to pieces.

 
Slave-market in the town of Zabid in Yemen. Illustration from the 1237 Maqamat al-Hariri produced in Baghdad by al-Wasiti (Arabe 5847)

The Rasulid state nurtured Yemen's commercial links with India and the Far East.[98] They profited greatly by the Red Sea transit trade via Aden and Zabid.[93] The economy also boomed due to the agricultural development programs instituted by the kings who promoted massive cultivation of palms.[93] It was during this period that coffee became a lucrative cash crop in Yemen.[99] The Rasulid kings enjoyed the support of the population of Tihama and southern Yemen while they had to buy the loyalty of Yemen's restive northern highland tribes.[93] The Rasulid sultans built numerous Madrasas in order to solidify the Shafi'i school of thought which is still the dominant school of jurisprudence amongst Yemenis today.[100] Under their rule, Ta'izz and Zabid became major international centers of Islamic learning.[93] The Kings themselves were learned men in their own right who not only had important libraries but who also wrote treatises on a wide array of subjects, ranging from astrology and medicine to agriculture and genealogy.[97]

The dynasty is regarded as the greatest native Yemeni state since the fall of the pre-Islamic Himyarite Kingdom.[101] Though the Rasulids were of Turkic descent[102] they claimed an ancient Yemenite origin to justify their rule. The Rasulids were not the first dynasty to create a fictitious genealogy for political purposes, nor were they doing anything out of the ordinary in the tribal context of Arabia.[103] By claiming descent from a solid Yemenite tribe, the Rasulid brought Yemen to a vital sense of unity in an otherwise chaotic regional milieu.[103] They had a difficult relationship with the Mamluks of Egypt because the latter considered them a vassal state.[97] Their competition centered over the Hejaz and the right to provide kiswa of the Ka'aba in Mecca.[97] The dynasty became increasingly threatened by disgruntled family members over the problem of succession, combined by periodic tribal revolts, as they were locked in a war of attrition with the Zaydi imams in the northern highlands.[93] During the last twelve years of Rasulid rule, the country was torn between several contenders for the kingdom. The weakening of the Rasulids provided an opportunity for the Banu Taher clan to take over and establish themselves as the new rulers of Yemen in 1454.[100]

Tahirid Dynasty edit

 
Tahirids in light green and Zaydi imams in dark green

The Tahirids were a local clan based in Rada'a. While they were not as impressive as their predecessors, they were still keen builders. They built schools, mosques and irrigation channels as well as water cisterns and bridges in Zabid and Aden, Rada'a, and Juban. Their best-known monument is the Amiriya Madrasa in Rada' which was built in 1504. The Tahiride were too weak either to contain the Zaydi Imams or to defend themselves against foreign attacks. The Mamluks of Egypt tried to attach Yemen to Egypt and the Portuguese, led by Afonso de Albuquerque, occupied Socotra and launched an unsuccessful four-day siege of Aden in 1513.[104][105] The Portuguese posed an immediate threat to the Indian Ocean trade; the Mamluks of Egypt therefore sent an army under the command of Hussein Al-Kurdi to fight the intruders.[106] The Mamluk sultan of Egypt sailed to Zabid in 1515 and began diplomatic talks with Tahiride Sultan 'Amir bin Abdulwahab for money that would be needed for jihad against the Portuguese. Instead of confronting the Portuguese, the Mamluks, who were running out of food and water, landed their fleet on the Yemen coastline and started to harass Tihama villagers for what they needed.[107] Realizing how rich the Tahiride realm was, they decided to conquer it.[107] The Mamluk army with the support of forces loyal to Zaydi Imam Al-Mutawakkil Yahya Sharaf ad-Din conquered the entire realm of the Tahiride but failed to capture Aden in 1517. The Mamluk victory turned out to be short-lived. The Ottoman Empire conquered Egypt, hanging the last Mamluk Sultan in Cairo.[107] It was not until 1538 that the Ottomans decided to conquer Yemen. The Zaydi Highland tribes emerged as national heroes[108] by offering a stiff, vigorous resistance to the Turkish occupation.[109]

Modern history edit

The Zaydis and Ottomans edit

 
Al Bakiriyya Ottoman Mosque in Sana'a, was built in 1597

The Ottomans had two fundamental interests to safeguard in Yemen: The Islamic holy cities of Mecca and Medina and the trade route with India in spices and textiles, both of which were threatened and the latter virtually eclipsed by the arrival of the Portuguese in the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea in the early part of the 16th century.[110] Hadım Suleiman Pasha, the Ottoman governor of Egypt, was ordered to command a fleet of 90 ships to conquer Yemen. The country was in a state of incessant anarchy and discord as Hadım Suleiman Pasha described it by saying:[111]

Yemen is a land with no lord, an empty province. It would be not only possible but easy to capture, and should it be captured, it would be master of the lands of India and send every year a great amount of gold and jewels to Constantinople.

 
Arabian boduis farm couple, possibly Yemeni (Códice Casanatense, c. 1540)

Imam al-Mutawakkil Yahya Sharaf ad-Din ruled over the northern highlands including Sana'a while Aden was held by the last Tahiride Sultan 'Amir ibn Dauod. Hadım Suleiman Pasha stormed Aden in 1538, killing its ruler and extended Ottoman's authority to include Zabid in 1539 and eventually Tihama in its entirety.[112] Zabid became the administrative headquarters of Yemen Eyalet.[113] The Ottoman governors did not exercise much control over the highlands; they held sway mainly in the southern coastal region, particularly around Zabid, Mocha and Aden.[114] Out of 80,000 soldiers sent to Yemen from Egypt between 1539 – 1547, only 7,000 survived.[115] The Ottoman accountant-general in Egypt remarks:[115]

We have seen no foundry like Yemen for our soldiers. Each time we have sent an expeditionary force there, it has melted away like salt dissolved in water.

The Ottoman sent yet another expeditionary force to Zabid in 1547 while Imam al-Mutawakkil Yahya Sharaf ad-Din was ruling the highlands independently. Imam al-Mutawakkil Yahya chose his son Ali to succeed him, a decision that infuriated his other son al-Mutahhar ibn Yahya.[116] Al-Mutahhar was lame and therefore not qualified for the Imamate.[116] He urged Oais Pasha, the Ottoman colonial governor in Zabid, to attack his father.[117] Indeed, Ottoman troops supported by tribal forces loyal to Imam al-Mutahhar stormed Ta'izz and marched north toward Sana'a in August 1547. The Turks officially made Imam al-Mutahhar a Sanjak-bey with authority over 'Amran. Imam al-Mutahhar assassinated the Ottoman colonial governor and recaptured Sana'a but the Ottomans led by Özdemir Pasha, forced al-Mutahhar to retreat to his fortress in Thula. Özdemir Pasha effectively put Yemen under Ottoman rule between 1552 and 1560. He garrisoned the main cities, built new fortresses and rendered secure the main routes.[118] Özdemir died in Sana'a in 1561 to be succeeded by Mahmud Pasha.

Mahmud Pasha was described by other Ottoman officials as corrupt and unscrupulous governor, he used his authority to take over a number of castles some of which belonged to the former Rasulid Kings.[116] Mahmud Pasha killed a Sunni scholar from Ibb.[119] The Ottoman historian claimed that this incident was celebrated by the Zaydi Shia community in the northern highlands.[119] Disregarding the delicate balance of power in Yemen by acting tactlessly, he alienated different groups within Yemeni society, causing them to forget their rivalries and unite against the Turks.[118] Mahmud Pasha was displaced by Ridvan Pasha in 1564. By 1565, Yemen was split into two provinces: the highlands under the command of Ridvan Pasha and Tihama under Murad Pasha. Imam al-Mutahhar launched a propaganda campaign in which he claimed contact with prophet Mohammed in a dream advising him to wage jihad against the Ottomans.[120] Al-Mutahhar led the tribes to capture Sana'a from Ridvan Pasha in 1567. When Murad tried to relieve Sana'a, highland tribesmen ambushed his unit and slaughtered all of them.[121] Over 80 battles were fought, the last decisive encounter took place in Dhamar around 1568 in which Murad Pasha was beheaded and had his head sent to al-Mutahhar in Sana'a.[121][122] By 1568, only Zabid remained under the possession of the Turks.[122]

 
Ruins of Thula fortress in 'Amran, where al-Mutahhar ibn Yaha barricaded himself against Ottoman attacks.

Lala Kara Mustafa Pasha, the Ottoman governor of Syria, was ordered by Selim II to suppress the Yemeni rebels,[123] the Turkish army in Egypt was reluctant to go to Yemen however.[123] Mustafa Pasha sent a letter with two Turkish shawishes hoping to persuade al-Mutahhar to give an apology and say that he did not promote any act of aggression against the Ottoman army, and claim that the ignorant Arabians according to the Turks, acted on their own.[124] Imam al-Mutahhar refused the Ottoman offer. Mustafa Pasha sent an expeditionary force under the command of Uthman Pasha, the expeditionary force was defeated with great casualties.[125] Sultan Selim II was infuriated by Mustafa's hesitation to go Yemen, he executed a number of sanjak-beys in Egypt and ordered Sinan Pasha to lead the entire Turkish army in Egypt to reconquer Yemen.[126] Sinan Pasha was a prominent Ottoman General of Albanian origin.[122] In 1570, he reconquered Aden, Ta'izz, and Ibb, and he besieged Shibam Kawkaban for 7 months until a truce was reached.[127] Imam al-Mutahhar was pushed back but could not be entirely overcome.[128] After al-Mutahhar's demise in 1572, the Zaydi community was not united under an imam; the Turks took advantage of their disparity and conquered Sana'a, Sa'dah and Najran in 1583.[129] Imam al-Nasir Hassan was arrested in 1585 and exiled to Constantinople, thereby putting an end to the Yemeni rebellion.[122]

The Zaydi tribesmen in the northern highlands, particularly those of Hashid and Bakil, were a constant irritant to Turkish rule in Arabia.[130] Justifying their presence in Yemen as a triumph for Islam, the Ottomans accused the Zaydis of being infidels.[131] Hassan Pasha was appointed governor of Yemen, which enjoyed a period of relative peace from 1585 to 1597. Pupils of al-Mansur al-Qasim suggested that he claim the immamate and fight the Turks. He declined at first but was infuriated by the promotion of the Hanafi school of jurisprudence at the expense of Zaydi Islam. He proclaimed the Imamate in September 1597, which was the same year the Ottoman authorities inaugurated al-Bakiriyya Mosque.[129] By 1608, Imam al-Mansur (the victorious) regained control over the highlands and signed a 10-year truce with the Ottomans.[132] When Imam al-Mansur al-Qasim died in 1620 his son Al-Mu'ayyad Muhammad succeeded him and confirmed the truce with the Ottomans. In 1627, the Ottomans lost Aden and Lahej. 'Abdin Pasha was ordered to suppress the rebels but failed and had to retreat to Mocha.[129] After Al-Mu'ayyad Muhammad expelled the Ottomans from Sana'a in 1628, only Zabid and Mocha remained under Ottoman possession. Al-Mu'ayyad Muhammad captured Zabid in 1634 and allowed the Ottomans to leave Mocha peacefully.[133] The reasons behind Al-Mu'ayyad Muhammad's success were the tribes' possession of firearms and the fact that they were unified behind him.[134]

 
Zaidi State under the rule of Al-Mutawakkil Isma'il (1675)
 
Mocha was Yemen's busiest port in the 17th and 18th century.

In 1632, Al-Mu'ayyad Muhammad sent an expeditionary force of 1000 men to conquer Mecca.[135] The army entered the city in triumph and killed its governor.[135] The Ottomans were not ready to lose Mecca after Yemen, so they sent an army from Egypt to fight the Yemenites.[135] Seeing that the Turkish army was too numerous to overcome, the Yemeni army retreated to a valley outside Mecca.[136] Ottoman troops attacked the Yemenis by hiding at the wells that supplied them with water. This plan proceeded successfully, causing the Yemenis over 200 casualties, most from thirst.[136] The tribesmen eventually surrendered and returned to Yemen.[137] Al-Mu'ayyad Muhammad died in 1644. He was succeeded by Al-Mutawakkil Isma'il, another son of al-Mansur al-Qasim, who conquered Yemen in its entirety, from Asir in the north to Dhofar in the east.[138][139][140][141] During his reign and that of his successor, Al-Mahdi Ahmad (1676–1681), the Imamate implemented some of the harshest discriminatory laws (Ar. ghiyar) against the Jews of Yemen, which culminated in the expulsion of all Jews to a hot and arid region in the Tihama coastal plain. The Qasimid state was the strongest Zaydi state to ever exist.

During that period, Yemen was the sole Coffee producer in the world.[142] The country established diplomatic relations with the Safavid dynasty of Persia, the Ottomans of Hejaz, the Mughal Empire in India and Ethiopia. The emperor Fasilides of Ethiopia sent three diplomatic missions to Yemen, but relations did not develop into a political alliance as Fasilides had hoped, due to the rise of powerful feudalists in the country.[143] In the first half of the 18th century, the Europeans broke Yemen's monopoly on coffee by smuggling out coffee trees and cultivating them in their own colonies in the East Indies, East Africa, the West Indies and Latin America.[144] The imammate did not follow a cohesive mechanism for succession, and family quarrels and tribal insubordination led to the political decline of the Qasimi dynasty in the 18th century.[145] In 1728 or 1731 the chief representative of Lahej declared himself an independent Sultan in defiance of the Qasimid Dynasty and conquered Aden thus establishing the Sultanate of Lahej. The rising power of the fervently Islamist Wahhabi movement on the Arabian Peninsula cost the Zaidi state its coastal possessions after 1803. The imam was able to regain them temporarily in 1818, but new intervention by the Ottoman viceroy of Egypt in 1833 again wrested the coast from the ruler in Sana'a. After 1835 the imamate changed hands with great frequency and some imams were assassinated. After 1849 the Zaidi polity descended into chaos that lasted for decades.[146]

Great Britain and the nine regions edit

 
Saint Mary's Garrison church in Aden was built by the British in 1850 and is currently abandoned.
 
Postage stamp of the Kathiri state of Sai'yun with portrait of Sultan Jafar bin Mansur. Kathiri is Kingdom of Hadhramaut Protected/Controlled British Empire.
 
Flag of the Colony of Aden.
 
Queen Elizabeth II and Gulf of Aden at Yemen 35 cent Stamp.

The British were looking for a coal depot to service their steamers en route to India. It took 700 tons of coal for a round-trip from Suez to Bombay. East India Company officials decided on Aden. London tried to reach an agreement with the Zaydi imam of Sana'a permitting them a foothold in Mocha; and when unable to secure their position, they extracted a similar agreement from the Sultan of Lahej, enabling them to consolidate a position in Aden.[147][148]

An incident played into British hands when, while passing Aden for trading purposes, one of their sailing ships sank and Arab tribesmen boarded it and plundered its contents. The British India government dispatched a warship under the command of Captain Stafford Bettesworth Haines to demand compensation.[148] Haines bombarded Aden from his warship in January 1839. The ruler of Lahej, who was in Aden at the time, ordered his guards to defend the port, but they failed in the face of overwhelming military and naval power. The British managed to occupy Aden and agreed to compensate the sultan with an annual payment of 6000 riyals.[148] The British evicted the Sultan of Lahej from Aden and forced him to accept their "protection".[148] In November 1839, 5000 tribesmen tried to retake the town but were repulsed and 200 were killed. The British realized that Aden's prosperity depended on their relations with the neighboring tribes, which required that they rest on a firm and satisfactory basis.[149]

The British government concluded "protection and friendship" treaties with nine tribes surrounding Aden, whereas they would remain independent from British interference in their affairs as long as they do not conclude treaties with foreigners (non-Arab colonial powers).[150] Aden was declared a free zone in 1850. With emigrants from India, East Africa and Southeast Asia, Aden grew into a "world city". In 1850, only 980 Arabs were registered as original inhabitants of the city.[151] The English presence in Aden put them at odds with the Ottomans. The Turks asserted to the British that they held sovereignty over the whole of Arabia, including Yemen as successor of Mohammed and the chief of the universal Caliphate.[152]

Ottoman return edit

 
The Ottoman Grand Vizier and Wāli (Governor) of Yemen Ahmed Muhtar Pasha

The Ottomans were concerned about the British expansion from India to the Red Sea and Arabia. They returned to the Tihama in 1849 after an absence of two centuries.[153] Rivalries and disturbances continued among the Zaydi imams, between them and their deputies, with the ulema, with the heads of tribes, as well as with those who belonged to other sects. Some citizens of Sana'a were desperate to return law and order to Yemen and asked the Ottoman Pasha in Tihama to pacify the country.[154] Yemeni merchants knew that the return of the Ottomans would improve their trade, for the Ottomans would become their customers.[155] An Ottoman expedition force tried to capture Sana'a but was defeated and had to evacuate the highlands.[156] The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 strengthened the Ottomans' decision to remain in Yemen.[157] In 1872, military forces were dispatched from Constantinople and moved beyond the Ottoman stronghold in the lowlands (Tihama) to conquer Sana'a. By 1873 the Ottomans succeeded in conquering the northern highlands. Sana'a became the administrative capital of Yemen Vilayet.

The Ottomans learned from their previous experience and worked on the disempowerment of local lords in the highland regions. They even attempted to secularize the Yemeni society; Yemenite Jews came to perceive themselves in Yemeni nationalist terms.[158] The Ottomans appeased the tribes by forgiving their rebellious chiefs and appointing them to administrative posts. They introduced a series of reforms to enhance the country's economic welfare. On the other hand, corruption was widespread in the Ottoman administration in Yemen. This stemmed from the fact that only the worst of the officials were appointed because those who could avoid serving in Yemen did so.[159] The Ottomans had reasserted control over the highlands for temporary duration.[153] The so-called Tanzimat reforms were considered heretic by the Zaydi tribes. In 1876, the Hashid and Bakil tribes rebelled against the Ottomans, and the Turks had to appease them with gifts to end the uprising.[160]

The tribal chiefs were difficult to appease and an endless cycle of violence curbed the Ottoman efforts to pacify the land. Ahmed Izzet Pasha proposed that the Ottoman army should evacuate the highlands and confined itself to Tihama and not to be unnecessarily burdened with continuing military operation against the Zaydi tribes.[159] The hit-and-run tactics of the northern highlands tribesmen wore out the Ottoman military. They resented the Turkish Tanzimat and defied all attempts to impose a central government upon them.[157] The northern tribes united under the leadership of the House of Hamidaddin in 1890. Imam Yahya Hamidaddin led a rebellion against the Turks in 1904, the rebels disrupted the Ottoman ability to govern.[161] The revolts between 1904 and 1911 were especially damaging to the Ottomans, costing them as much as 10,000 soldiers and £500,000 per year.[162] The Ottomans signed a treaty with imam Yahya Hamidaddin in 1911. Under the treaty, imam Yahya was recognized as an autonomous leader of the Zaydi northern highlands. The Ottomans continued to rule Shafi'i areas in the mid-south until their departure in 1918.

Idrisid Emirate and Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen edit

 
Imam Yahya hamid ed-Din's house in Sana'a

Imam Yahya hamid ed-Din al-Mutawakkil was ruling the northern highlands independently since 1911. After the Ottoman departure in 1918 he sought to recapture the lands of his Qasimid ancestors. He dreamed of Greater Yemen stretching from Asir to Dhofar. These schemes brought him into conflict with the de facto rulers in the territories claimed, namely the Idrisids, Ibn Saud and the British government in Aden.[163] The Zaydi imam did not recognize the Anglo-Ottoman border agreement of 1905 on the grounds that it was made between two foreign powers occupying Yemen.[164] The border treaty effectively divided Yemen into "north" and "south".[165] In 1915 the British signed a treaty with the Idrisids guaranteeing their security and independence if they would fight against the Turks.[166] In 1919, Imam Yahya moved southward to liberate the nine British protectorates. The British responded by moving quickly towards Tihama and occupying Al Hudaydah. Then they handed it over to their Idrisi allies.[167] Imam Yahya attacked the southern protectorates again in 1922. The British bombed Yahya's tribal forces using aircraft to which the tribes had no effective counter.[168]

In 1925, Imam Yahya captured Al Hudaydah from the Idrisids.[169] He continued to follow and attack the Idrisids until Asir fell under the control of the Imam's forces, forcing the Idrisids to request an agreement that would enable them to administer the region in the name of the Imam.[169] Imam Yahya refused the offer on the grounds that the Idrisis were of a Moroccan descent. According to Imam Yahya, the Idrisids, along with the British, were nothing but recent intruders and ought to be driven out of Yemen permanently.[170] In 1927, when Imam Yahya's forces were 50 km away from Aden, Ta'izz and Ibb were bombed by the British for five days, and the Imam had to pull back.[168] Small Bedouin forces mainly from the Madh'hij confederation of Marib, attacked Shabwah but were bombed by the British and had to retreat.

The Italian Empire was the first to recognize Imam Yahya as the King of Yemen in 1926. Furthermore, the Italians in 1926 and 1927 aimed at taking control of the Farasan Islands.[171] Italy had colonies of its own in the region: Eritrea and Somaliland, both of low profitability. There was expectation that increased ties with Yemen would fuel increased trade with the colonies and bring the region into the Italian sphere of influence. The Kingdom of Yemen at this point had its eye on annexing Aden and Imam Yahya also had aspirations for a Greater Yemen, with the possible help from Italy.

This created a great deal of anxiety for the British, who interpreted it as clear recognition of Imam Yahya's claim to sovereignty over Greater Yemen which included the Aden protectorate and Asir.[172]

The Idrisids turned to Ibn Saud seeking his protection from Yahya. In 1932, however, the Idrisids broke their accord with Ibn Saud and went back to Imam Yahya seeking help against Ibn Saud himself, who had begun liquidating their authority and expressed his desire to annex those territories into his own Saudi domain.[173][174] Imam Yahya demanded the return of all Idrisi dominion.[173] That same year, a group of Hejazi liberals fled to Yemen and plotted to expel Ibn Saud from the former Hashemite Kingdom of Hejaz which was conquered by the Saudis seven years earlier. Ibn Saud appealed to Britain for aid.[175] The British government sent arms and airplanes.[175] The British were anxious that Ibn Saud's financial difficulties may encourage the Italian Empire to bail him out.[173] Ibn Saud suppressed the Asiri rebellion in 1933, after which the Idrisids fled to Sana'a.[175] Negotiations between the Imam Yahya and Ibn Saud proved fruitless. After a military confrontation, Ibn Saud announced a ceasefire in May 1934.[175] Imam Yahya agreed to release Saudi hostages and the surrender of the Idrisis to Saudi custody. Imam Yahya ceded the three provinces of Najran, Asir and Jazan for 20 years[176] and signed another treaty with the British government in 1934. The Imam recognized the British sovereignty over Aden protectorate for 40 years.[177] Yahya submitted to the Saudi and British demands out of fear for Al Hudaydah. According to Bernard Reich, Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at George Washington University, Yahya could have done better by reorganizing the Zaidi tribes of the northern highlands as his ancestors did against the Turks and British intruders and turn the lands they captured into another graveyard.[178]

Although the imamate lost Asir, it was able to put down rebel tribes in the north using Iraq-trained Yemeni troops. With the country, now established within clearly defined territory, finally pacified, the urban nationalists began to assert themselves. These nationalists had long practiced non-Zaidi traditions (especially Shafi'i), and were centered in the coastal province of Tahama, the city of Ta'izz and the British-occupied Aden. Many had been students in Cairo and had acquired connections with the Muslim Brotherhood and Algerian nationalists. Muslim Brotherhood operatives in Yemen aligned themselves with the urban opposition and supported Zaidi prince Abdullah bin Ahmad al-Wazir, who joined those actively seeking to overthrow Imam Yahya. On February 17, 1948, the opposition revolted in Sana'a and killed Imam Yahya. Crown prince Ahmad was able to rally northern tribes and retake the capital, quelling the revolt after a brief siege on March 12, 1948.[179]

Imam Ahmad reversed the isolationist policies of his father and opened Yemen's economy and society to the outside world. It went as the theocratic and largely medieval Imamate which became the first Arab state to accept Soviet aid. Beginning in 1955 Yemen entered into various treaties of friendship and from 1957 began receiving large amounts of Soviet arms as well as Soviet and Chinese military advisers. When the imam went abroad owing to illness, crown prince Muhammad al-Badr led a pro-Soviet party and communist activity increased. When the Imam returned in 1959, brutal repression ensued and communists were expelled.[180]

In April 1956 Yemen joined a defensive pact with Syria and Egypt, and in February 1958 it federated with the United Arab Republic. In parallel, clan violence erupted in Yemen and Aden, claiming hundreds of lives over 1956–60. The defensive pact move was conceived as a defensive measure against republican agitation, which urban nationalists still engaged in from British-occupied Aden. So long as Yemen was federated with the UAR, republicans would be deprived any assistance from Egyptian President Nasser. Although the federation lasted only for three years, crown prince al-Badr continued to portray himself as an Arab patriot, often railing against "reactionary Arab monarchs."[181]

Two states edit

 
Abdullah as-Sallal, North Yemen President and Dana Adams Schmidt.

Arab nationalism influenced some circles that pushed for the modernization of the Mutawakkilite monarchy. This became apparent when Imam Ahmad bin Yahya died in 1962. He was succeeded by his son, but army officers attempted to seize power, sparking the North Yemen Civil War.[182] The Hamidaddin royalists were supported by Saudi Arabia, Britain, and Jordan (mostly with weapons and financial aid, but also with small military forces), whilst the republicans were backed by Egypt. Egypt provided the republicans with weapons and financial assistance but also sent a large military force to participate in the fighting. Israel covertly supplied weapons to the royalists in order to keep the Egyptian military busy in Yemen and make Nasser less likely to initiate a conflict in Sinai. After six years of civil war, the republicans were victorious (February 1968) and formed the Yemen Arab Republic.[183]

The revolution in the north coincided with the Aden Emergency, which hastened the end of British rule in the south. On 30 November 1967, the state of South Yemen was formed, comprising Aden and the former Protectorate of South Arabia. This socialist state was later officially known as the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen and a programme of nationalisation was begun.[184]

Relations between the two Yemeni states fluctuated between peaceful and hostile. The South was supported by the Eastern bloc. The North, however, wasn't able to get the same connections. In 1972, the two states fought a war. The war was resolved with a ceasefire and negotiations brokered by the Arab League, where it was declared that unification would eventually occur. In 1978, Ali Abdallah Saleh was named as president of the Yemen Arab Republic.[185] After the war, the North complained about the South's help from foreign countries, which included Saudi Arabia.[186] In 1979, fighting erupted between the North and the South. There were renewed efforts to unite the two states.[185]

In 1986, thousands died in the South, when a civil war erupted between supporters of former president Abdul Fattah Ismail and his successor, Ali Nasser Muhammad. Ali Nasser Muhammad fled the country and was later sentenced to death for treason.[185]

Unification edit

In 1990, the two governments reached a full agreement on the joint governing of Yemen, and the countries were merged on 22 May 1990 with Saleh as president.[185] The President of South Yemen, Ali Salim al-Beidh, became vice-president.[185] A unified parliament was formed and a unity constitution was agreed upon.[185] In the 1993 parliamentary election, the first held after unification, the General People's Congress won 122 of 301 seats.[187]: 309 

After the invasion of Kuwait crisis in 1990, Yemen's president opposed military intervention from non-Arab states.[188] As a member of the United Nations Security Council for 1990 and 1991, Yemen abstained on a number of UNSC resolutions concerning Iraq and Kuwait[189] and voted against the "use of force resolution". The vote outraged the U.S.[190] Saudi Arabia expelled 800,000 Yemenis in 1990 and 1991 to punish Yemen for its opposition to the war.[191]

Following food riots in major towns in 1992, a new coalition government made up of the ruling parties from both the former Yemeni states was formed in 1993. However, vice-president al-Beidh withdrew to Aden in August 1993 and said he would not return to the government until his grievances were addressed. These included northern violence against his Yemeni Socialist Party, as well as the economic marginalization of the south.[192] Negotiations to end the political deadlock dragged on into 1994. The government of Prime Minister Haydar Abu Bakr Al-Attas became ineffective due to political infighting[193]

An accord between northern and southern leaders was signed in Amman, Jordan on 20 February 1994, but this could not stop the civil war.[194][citation needed] During these tensions, both the northern and southern armies (which had never integrated) gathered on their respective frontiers.[195] The May – July 1994 civil war in Yemen resulted in the defeat of the southern armed forces and the flight into exile of many Yemeni Socialist Party leaders and other southern secessionists.[citation needed] Saudi Arabia actively aided the south during the 1994 civil war.[196]

Saleh became Yemen's first directly elected president in the 1999 presidential election, winning 96.2% of the vote.[187]: 310  The only other candidate, Najeeb Qahtan Al-Sha'abi, was the son of Qahtan Muhammad al-Shaabi, a former President of South Yemen. Though a member of Saleh's General People's Congress (GPC) party, Najeeb ran as an independent.[197]

In June 2000, the Treaty of Jeddah was signed, defining the border with Saudi Arabia.

In October 2000, seventeen U.S. personnel died after a suicide attack on the U.S. naval vessel USS Cole in Aden which was subsequently blamed on al-Qaeda. After the September 11 attacks on the United States, President Saleh assured U.S. President George W. Bush that Yemen was a partner in his War on Terror. In 2001, there was violence surrounding a referendum which apparently supported extending Saleh's rule and powers.

The Shia insurgency in Yemen began in June 2004 when dissident cleric Hussein Badreddin al-Houthi, head of the Zaidi Shia sect, launched an uprising against the Yemeni government. The Yemeni government alleged that the Houthis were seeking to overthrow it and to implement Shī'a religious law. The rebels counter that they are "defending their community against discrimination" and government aggression.[198]

In 2005, at least 36 people were killed in clashes across the country between police and protesters over rising fuel prices.

In the 2006 presidential election, held on 20 September, Saleh won with 77.2% of the vote. His main rival, Faisal bin Shamlan, received 21.8%.[199][200] Saleh was sworn in for another term on 27 September.[201]

A suicide bomber killed eight Spanish tourists and two Yemenis in the province of Marib in July 2007. There was a series of bomb attacks on police, official, diplomatic, foreign business and tourism targets in 2008. Car bombings outside the U.S. embassy in Sana'a killed 18 people, including six of the assailants in September 2008. In 2008, an opposition rally in Sana'a demanding electoral reform was met with police gunfire.

Al Qaeda edit

In January 2009, the Saudi and Yemeni al-Qaeda branches merged to form Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is based in Yemen, and many of its members were Saudi nationals who had been released from Guantanamo Bay.[202] Saleh released 176 al-Qaeda suspects on condition of good behaviour, but terrorist activities continued.

The Yemeni army launched a fresh offensive against the Shia insurgents in 2009, assisted by Saudi forces. Tens of thousands of people were displaced by the fighting. A new ceasefire was agreed upon in February 2010. However, by the end of the year, Yemen claimed that 3,000 soldiers had been killed in renewed fighting. The Shia rebels accused Saudi Arabia of providing support to salafi groups to suppress Zaidism in Yemen.[203] Saleh's government used Al-Qaeda in its wars against the insurgent Houthis clan.[204]

Some news reports have suggested that, on orders from U.S. President Barack Obama, U.S. warplanes fired cruise missiles at what officials in Washington claimed were Al Qaeda training camps in the provinces of Sana'a and Abyan on 17 December 2009.[205] Instead of hitting Al-Qaeda operatives, it hit a village killing 55 civilians.[206] Officials in Yemen said that the attacks claimed the lives of more than 60 civilians, 28 of them children. Another airstrike was carried out on 24 December.[207]

The U.S. launched a series of drone attacks in Yemen to curb a perceived growing terror threat due to political chaos in Yemen.[208] Since December 2009, U.S. strikes in Yemen have been carried out by the U.S. military with intelligence support from CIA.[209] The drone strikes are protested by human-rights groups who say they kill innocent civilians and that the U.S. military and CIA drone strikes lack sufficient congressional oversight, including the choice of human targets suspected of being threats to America.[210] Controversy over U.S. policy for drone attacks mushroomed after a September 2011 drone strike in Yemen killed Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan, both U.S. citizens.[211] Another drone strike in October 2011 killed Anwar's teenage son, Abdulrahman al-Awlaki.

In 2010 the Obama administration policy allowed targeting of people whose names are not known. The U.S. government increased military aid to $140 million in 2010.[212] U.S. drone strikes continued after the ousting of President Saleh.[213]

Government instability 2011–present edit

The Yemeni Crisis began with the 2011–12 revolution against President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who had led Yemen for more than two decades.[214][215] After Saleh left office in early 2012 as part of a mediated agreement between the Yemeni government and opposition groups, the government led by Saleh's former vice president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, struggled to unite the fractious political landscape of the country and fend off threats both from Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and Houthi militants that had been waging a protracted insurgency in the north for years.[216][217] In 2014, Houthi fighters swept into the capital of Sana'a and forced Hadi to negotiate a "unity government" with other political factions. The rebels continued to apply pressure on the weakened government until, after his presidential palace and private residence came under attack from the militant group, Hadi resigned along with his ministers in January 2015. The following month, the Houthis declared themselves in control of the government, dissolving Parliament and installing an interim Revolutionary Committee led by Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, a cousin of Houthi leader Abdul-Malik al-Houthi.[218][219] However, Hadi escaped to Aden, where he declared he remains Yemen's legitimate president, proclaimed the country's temporary capital, and called on loyal government officials and members of the military to rally to him.[220][221]

2011 revolution edit

 
Protest in Sana'a, 3 February 2011

The 2011 Yemeni revolution followed other Arab Spring mass protests in early 2011. The uprising was initially against unemployment, economic conditions, and corruption, as well as against the government's proposals to modify the constitution of Yemen so that Saleh's son could inherit the presidency.

In March 2011, police snipers opened fire on the pro-democracy camp in Sana'a, killing more than 50 people. In May, dozens were killed in clashes between troops and tribal fighters in Sana'a. By this point, Saleh began to lose international support. In October 2011, Yemeni human rights activist Tawakul Karman won the Nobel Peace Prize and the UN Security Council condemned the violence and called for a transfer of power. On 23 November 2011, Saleh flew to Riyadh, in neighbouring Saudi Arabia, to sign the Gulf Co-operation Council plan for political transition, which he had previously spurned. Upon signing the document, he agreed to legally transfer the office and powers of the presidency to his deputy, Vice President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi.

Hadi took office for a two-year term upon winning the uncontested presidential elections in February 2012, in which he was the only candidate standing.[222] A unity government – including a prime minister from the opposition – was formed. Al-Hadi would oversee the drafting of a new constitution, followed by parliamentary and presidential elections in 2014.[needs update]

2012 edit

Saleh returned in February 2012. In the face of objections from thousands of street protesters, parliament granted him full immunity from prosecution. Saleh's son, General Ahmed Ali Abdullah Saleh continues to exercise a strong hold on sections of the military and security forces.

AQAP claimed responsibility for the February 2012 suicide attack on the presidential palace which killed 26 Republican Guards on the day that President Hadi was sworn in. AQAP was also behind the suicide bombing which killed 96 soldiers in Sana'a three months later. In September 2012, a car bomb attack in Sana'a killed 11 people, a day after a local al-Qaeda leader Said al-Shihri was reported killed in the south.

By 2012, there has been a "small contingent of U.S. special-operations troops" – in addition to CIA and "unofficially acknowledged" U.S. military presence – in response to increasing terror attacks by AQAP on Yemeni citizens.[223] Many analysts have pointed out the former Yemeni government role in cultivating terrorist activity in the country.[224] Following the election of new president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, the Yemeni military was able to push Ansar al-Sharia back and recapture the Shabwah Governorate.

Houthi takeover, Civil War and Saudi intervention edit

 
Current (November 2021) political and military control in ongoing Yemeni Civil War (2014–present)
  Controlled by the Government of Yemen (under the Presidential Leadership Council since April 2022) and allies
  Controlled by Houthis-led Supreme Political Council

In 2014, the Houthi movement, which had been waging an insurgency against the Yemeni government since 2004, began a gradual takeover of Yemen, defeating government forces in the Battle of Amran and the Battle of Sana'a (2014). Their advance continued throughout Yemen, prompting the start of the Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen. The Houthis attacked Aden on 25 March 2015, beginning the Battle of Aden (2015). Despite Saudi airstrikes, the Houthis managed to take advance into the Tawahi, Khormaksar, and Crater districts. The tide turned on 14 July, when an anti-Houthi counteroffensive managed to trap the Houthis on the peninsula. By 6 August 2015, the Hadi government had captured 75% of Taiz, and the Lahij insurgency had expelled Houthis from the Lahij Governorate. Hadi fortunes dissipated on 16 August, when Houthi forces successfully counterattacked and forced the Hadi forces to retreat from Al-Salih Gardens and the Al-Dabab Mountain region. Hadi forces attributed this reverse to a lack of military equipment.[225] In Hadramaut, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) managed to take over Mukalla after winning the Battle of Mukalla (2015), and in December 2015 they took over Zinjibar and Jaar.

2016 saw the Hadi government defeat Houthi forces in the Battle of Port Midi, and retake Mukalla from AQAP in the Battle of Mukalla (2016). In January 2017, the United States carried out the Raid on Yakla, in a failed attempt to obtain new intelligence regarding AQAP.[226] In December, the Hadi Government began the Al Hudaydah offensive. In June 2018, the Hadi Government began an attack on the city of Hudaydah itself, starting the Battle of Al Hudaydah, which is considered the largest battle in the war since the start of the Saudi intervention.[227]

In December 2017, former president and strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh was killed. He had been an ally of the Houthis since 2014 until just before his death.[228]

The war in Yemen also resulted in cholera and famine. (See Famine in Yemen (2016–present) and 2016–18 Yemen cholera outbreak)

After losing the support of the Saudi-led coalition, Yemen's President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi resigned and Presidential Leadership Council took power in April 2022.[229]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Arabian Peninsula, 1000 B.C.–1 A.D. | Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art". from the original on 2008-07-24. Retrieved 2008-01-20.
  2. ^ "Arabian Peninsula, 2000–1000 B.C. | Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art". from the original on 2007-11-03. Retrieved 2008-01-20.
  3. ^ Daniel McLaughlin Yemen: The Bradt Travel Guide p. 4
  4. ^ Kenneth Anderson Kitchen (2003). On the Reliability of the Old Testament. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 594. ISBN 0802849601.
  5. ^ Geoffrey W. Bromiley (1979). The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Vol. 4. Wm. B. Eerdmans. p. 254. ISBN 0802837840.
  6. ^ Nicholas Clapp (2002). Sheba: Through the Desert in Search of the Legendary Queen. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 204. ISBN 0618219269.
  7. ^ P. M. Holt; Peter Malcolm Holt; Ann K. S. Lambton; Bernard Lewis (21 April 1977). The Cambridge History of Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 7.
  8. ^ Daniel McLaughlin. (2007). Yemen: The Bradt Travel Guide p. 5
  9. ^ Jerry R. Rogers; Glenn Owen Brown; Jürgen Garbrecht (1 January 2004). Water Resources and Environmental History. ASCE Publications. p. 36. ISBN 0784475504.
  10. ^ Werner Daum (1987). Yemen: 3000 Years of Art and Civilization in Arabia Felix. Pinguin-Verlag. p. 73. ISBN 3701622922.
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  13. ^ George Hatke (2013). Aksum and Nubia: Warfare, Commerce, and Political Fictions in Ancient Northeast Africa. NYU Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-0814762837.
  14. ^ Teshale Tibebu (1995). The making of modern Ethiopia: 1896–1974. Lawrenceville, NJ: Red Sea Press. p. xvii. ISBN 1569020019.
  15. ^ Peter R. Schmidt (2006). Historical Archaeology in Africa: Representation, Social Memory, and Oral Traditions. Rowman Altamira. p. 281. ISBN 0759114153.
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  17. ^ D. T. Potts (2012). A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. John Wiley & Sons. p. 1047. ISBN 978-1405189880.
  18. ^ Avraham Negev; Shimon Gibson (2005). Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land. Continuum. p. 137. ISBN 0826485715.
  19. ^ Lionel Casson (2012). The Periplus Maris Erythraei: Text with Introduction, Translation, and Commentary. Princeton University Press. p. 150. ISBN 978-1400843206.
  20. ^ Peter Richardson (1999). Herod: King of the Jews and Friend of the Romans. Continuum. p. 230. ISBN 0567086755.
  21. ^ Cassius Dio LIII, 29
  22. ^ Pliny the Elder, Nat. Hist. vi. 32.
  23. ^ See also Charles Merivale, History of the Romans under the Empire, ch. 4; H. Krüger, Der Feidzug des Aelius Gallus nach dem glucklichen Arabien unter Kaiser Augustus, 1862.
  24. ^ Hârun Yahya (1999). Perished Nations. Global Yayincilik. p. 115. ISBN 1897940874.
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  26. ^ Clifford Edmund Bosworth (1989). The Encyclopedia of Islam. Vol. 6. Brill Archive. p. 561. ISBN 9004090827.
  27. ^ Stuart Munro-Hay (2002). Ethiopia, the Unknown Land: A Cultural and Historical Guide. I.B.Tauris. p. 236. ISBN 1860647448.
  28. ^ G. Johannes Botterweck; Helmer Ringgren (1979). Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament. Vol. 3. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 448. ISBN 0802823270.
  29. ^ Jawād ʻAlī (1968) [Digitized 17 February 2007]. الـمـفـصـّل في تـاريـخ العـرب قبـل الإسـلام [Detailed history of Arabs before Islam] (in Arabic). Vol. 2. Dār al-ʻIlm lil-Malāyīn. p. 482.
  30. ^ Albert Jamme (1962). Inscriptions From Mahram Bilqis (Marib). Baltimore. p. 392.
  31. ^ Dieter Vogel; Susan James (1990). Yemen. APA Publications. p. 34.
  32. ^ Klaus Schippmann (2001). Ancient South Arabia: from the Queen of Sheba to the advent of Islam. Markus Wiener Publishers. pp. 52–53. ISBN 1558762361.
  33. ^ Francis E. Peters (1994). Muhammad and the Origins of Islam. SUNY Press. p. 48. ISBN 0791418758.
  34. ^ Scott Johnson (1 November 2012). The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-0195336931.
  35. ^ Shlomo Sand (2010). The Invention of the Jewish People. Verso. p. 193. ISBN 9781844676231.
  36. ^ Y. M. Abdallah (1987). The Inscription CIH 543: A New Reading Based on the Newly-Found Original in C. Robin & M. Bafaqih (Eds.) Sayhadica: Recherches Sur Les Inscriptions De l'Arabie Préislamiques Offertes Par Ses Collègues Au Professeur A.F.L. Beeston. Paris: Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner S.A. pp. 4–5.
  37. ^ Raphael Patai; Jennifer Patai (1989). The Myth of the Jewish Race. Wayne State University Press. p. 63. ISBN 0814319483.
  38. ^ Uwidah Metaireek Al-Juhany (2002). Najd before the Salafi reform movement: social, political and religious conditions during the three centuries preceding the rise of the Saudi state. Ithaca Press. p. 171. ISBN 0863724019.
  39. ^ Scott Johnson (1 November 2012). The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. p. 266. ISBN 978-0195336931.
  40. ^ Scott Johnson (1 November 2012). The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. p. 282. ISBN 978-0195336931.
  41. ^ Irfan Shahîd (1989). Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fifth Century. Dumbarton Oaks. p. 65. ISBN 0884021521.
  42. ^ a b c Ken Blady (2000). Jewish Communities in Exotic Places. Jason Aronson. p. 9. ISBN 1-4616-2908-X. Even more dramatic was the conversion of Abu-Kariba's grandson, Zar'a, who reigned from C.E. 518 to 525. Legend ascribes his conversion to his having witnessed a rabbi extinguish a fire worshipped by some Arab magi, merely by reading a passage from the Torah over it. 12 After changing his religion, he assumed the name Yusef Ash'ar, but gained notoriety in history by his cognomen Dhu Nuwas ("Lord of the Curls," possibly because he wore his peot long). For some years Dhu Nuwas was successful in staving off Ethiopian incursions and preserving Jewish Himyar's independence. Informed by some Jewish advisors in Tiberias of atrocities perpetrated against Jews in Roman lands, the overzealous proselyte decided on a course of revenge: He executed some Byzantine Christian merchants who were traveling through Himyar on their way to Ethio-pia. This outrage led to a rebellion among his Christian subjects in the city of Nejiran, which Dhu Nuwas suppressed with great cruelty. He is said to have cast twenty thousand Christians into pits filled with flaming oil. " The massacre and forced conversions of thousands of Christians at Nejiran infuriated Constantine, the Byzantine emperor. As he was occupied in a war with Persia, Constantine sent ambassadors to his Ethiopian Christian ally, King Caleb, entreating him to intervene on behalf of their Arabian coreligionists. With a formidable force of sixty thousand men (some say one hundred twenty thousand), Caleb crossed the Red Sea and attacked the Jewish king. In a fierce battle in 525 c.E. the invaders won a decisive victory. His queen captured and his capital laid waste, Dhu Nuwas chose to escape what was sure to be a cruel death by riding horseback off a cliff into the sea.
  43. ^ Greenslade, W. G. (1932). "The Martyrs of Nejran". The Muslim World. 22 (3): 265. doi:10.1111/j.1478-1913.1932.tb02885.x. ISSN 0027-4909. He turned the church in his capital (Ẓafār) into a synagogue, and killed all the priests and other leading Christians, especially the Abyssinians who had been in control of the church. Then he moved on to Nejran, with the intention of subduing that city, where Christianity was stronger than in any other centre of south Arabia.
  44. ^ a b Scott Johnson (1 November 2012). The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. p. 282. ISBN 978-0-19-533693-1.
  45. ^ Eric Maroney (2010). The Other Zions: The Lost Histories of Jewish Nations. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 94. ISBN 978-1-4422-0045-6.
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  48. ^ P. Yule (2013). "A Late Antique Christian king from Ḥimyar, southern Arabia, Antiquity, 87". Antiquity Bulletin. Antiquity Publications: 1134. ISSN 0003-598X.; D. W. Phillipson (2012). Foundations of an African Civilisation: Aksum and the Northern Horn, 1000 BC – 1300 AD. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. 204. ISBN 978-1-84701-041-4.
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  51. ^ Scott Johnson (1 November 2012). The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. p. 285. ISBN 978-0195336931.
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  82. ^ The chronology of the Zurayid rulers is uncertain for the most part; dates furnished by Ayman Fu'ad Sayyid, Masadir ta'rikh al-Yaman fial 'asr al-islami, al Qahira 1974, are partly at odds with those given by H.C. Kay, Yaman: Its early Medieval history, London 1892; one source seems to indicate that they were independent as early as 1087.
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  90. ^ Mohammed Abdo Al-Sururi (1987). الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدول المستقلة [political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States] (in Arabic). University of Sana'a. p. 354.
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  107. ^ a b c Steven C. Caton Yemen p. 59 ABC-CLIO, 2013 ISBN 159884928X
  108. ^ Abdul Ali (1996). Islamic Dynasties of the Arab East: State and Civilization During the Later Medieval Times. M.D. Publications Pvt. Ltd. p. 94. ISBN 8175330082.
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  114. ^ Jane Hathaway (2012). A Tale of Two Factions: Myth, Memory, and Identity in Ottoman Egypt and Yemen. SUNY Press. p. 83. ISBN 978-0791486108.
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References edit

  • Original text from U.S. State Dept. Country Study
  • (1): DAUM, W. (ed.): Yemen. 3000 years of art and civilisation in Arabia Felix., Innsbruck / Frankfurt am Main / Amsterdam [1988]. pp. 53–4.
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2006-08-23)
  • Timeline of Art History of Arabia including Yemen (The Metropolitan Museum of Art).
  • Das Fenster zum Jemen (German)
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2012-02-05)
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2008-02-12)

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2004-09-13)
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2008-02-12)
  • Yemenite Virtual Museum at the Library of Congress Web Archives (archived 2002-09-30) – excellent site with many pictures.
  • Encyclopedia of the Nations, Asia and Oceania, Yemen

history, yemen, history, yemen, describes, cultures, events, peoples, what, oldest, centers, civilization, near, east, relatively, fertile, land, adequate, rainfall, moister, climate, helped, sustain, stable, population, feature, recognized, ancient, greek, ge. The history of Yemen describes the cultures events and peoples of what is one of the oldest centers of civilization in the Near East 1 Its relatively fertile land and adequate rainfall in a moister climate helped sustain a stable population a feature recognized by the ancient Greek geographer Ptolemy who described Yemen as Eudaimon Arabia better known in its Latin translation Arabia Felix meaning fortunate Arabia or Happy Arabia Yemenis had developed the South Arabian alphabet by the 12th to 8th centuries BC which explains why most historians date all of the ancient Yemeni kingdoms to that era Sabaean inscription addressed to the moon god Almaqah mentioning five South Arabian gods two reigning sovereigns and two governors 7th century BC Between the 12th century BC and the 6th century AD it was dominated by six successive civilizations which rivaled each other or were allied with each other and controlled the lucrative spice trade Ma in Qataban Hadhramaut Awsan Saba and Himyar 2 Islam arrived in 630 AD and Yemen became part of the wider Muslim realm Contents 1 Ancient history 2 Middle Ages 2 1 Advent of Islam and the three Dynasties 2 2 Sulayhid Dynasty 2 3 Zurayid Dynasty 2 4 Ayyubid conquest 2 5 Rasulid Dynasty 2 6 Tahirid Dynasty 3 Modern history 3 1 The Zaydis and Ottomans 3 2 Great Britain and the nine regions 3 3 Ottoman return 3 4 Idrisid Emirate and Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen 4 Two states 5 Unification 5 1 Al Qaeda 5 2 Government instability 2011 present 5 2 1 2011 revolution 5 2 2 2012 5 2 3 Houthi takeover Civil War and Saudi intervention 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksAncient history editMain articles Ancient history of Yemen Sabaeans Qataban Minaeans and Himyarite Kingdom With its long sea border between early civilizations Yemen has long existed at a crossroads of cultures with a strategic location in terms of trade on the west of the Arabian Peninsula Large settlements for their era existed in the mountains of northern Yemen as early as 5000 BC 3 Little is known about ancient Yemen and how exactly it transitioned from nascent Bronze Age civilizations to more trade focused caravan kingdoms nbsp Sabaean gravestone of a woman holding a stylized sheaf of wheat a symbol of fertility in ancient Yemen The Sabaean Kingdom came into existence from at least the 11th century BC 4 There were four major kingdoms or tribal confederations in South Arabia Saba Hadramout Qataban and Ma in Saba is believed to be biblical Sheba and was the most prominent federation 5 The Sabaean rulers adopted the title Mukarrib generally thought to mean unifier 6 or a priest king 7 The role of the Mukarrib was to bring the various tribes under the kingdom and preside over them all 8 The Sabaeans built the Great Dam of Marib around 940 BC 9 The dam was built to withstand the seasonal flash floods surging down the valley Between 700 and 680 BC the Kingdom of Awsan dominated Aden and its surroundings Sabaean Mukarrib Karib il Watar I changed his ruling title to that of a king 10 and conquered the entire realm of Awsan expanding Sabaean rule and territory to include much of South Arabia 11 Lack of water in the Arabian Peninsula prevented the Sabaeans from unifying the entire peninsula Instead they established various colonies to control trade routes 12 Evidence of Sabaean influence is found in Eritrea and northern Ethiopia where the South Arabian alphabet religion and pantheon and the South Arabian style of art and architecture were introduced 13 14 15 The Sabaeans created a sense of identity through their religion They worshipped El Maqah and believed themselves to be his children 16 For centuries the Sabaeans controlled outbound trade across the Bab el Mandeb a strait separating the Arabian Peninsula from the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea from the Indian Ocean 17 By the 3rd century BC Qataban Hadramout and Ma in became independent from Saba and established themselves in the Yemeni arena Minaean rule stretched as far as Dedan 18 with their capital at Baraqish The Sabaeans regained their control over Ma in after the collapse of Qataban in 50 BC By the time of the Roman expedition to Arabia Felix in 25 BC the Sabaeans were once again the dominating power in Southern Arabia 19 Aelius Gallus was ordered to lead a military campaign to establish Roman dominance over the Sabaeans 20 The Romans had a vague and contradictory geographical knowledge about Arabia Felix or Yemen The Roman army of ten thousand men reached Marib but was not able to conquer the city according to Cassius Dio 21 and Pliny the Elder 22 23 24 Strabo s close relationship with Aelius Gallus led him to attempt to justify his friend s failure in his writings It took the Romans six months to reach Marib and sixty days to return to Egypt The Romans blamed their Nabataean guide and executed him for treachery 25 No direct mention in Sabaean inscriptions of the Roman expedition has yet been found nbsp A funerary stela featuring a musical scene 1st century AD nbsp Himyarite King Dhamar Ali Yahbur II After the Roman expedition perhaps earlier the country fell into chaos and two clans namely Hamdan and Himyar claimed kingship assuming the title King of Sheba and Dhu Raydan 26 Dhu Raydan i e Himyarites allied themselves with Aksum in Ethiopia against the Sabaeans 27 The chief of Bakil and king of Saba and Dhu Raydan El Sharih Yahdhib launched successful campaigns against the Himyarites and Habashat i e Aksum El Sharih took proud of his campaigns and added the title Yahdhib to his name which means suppressor he used to kill his enemies by cutting them to pieces 28 Sana a came into prominence during his reign as he built the Ghumdan Palace to be his place of residence nbsp The Himyarite Kingdom at its height in 525 AD nbsp The Sasanian Empire at its greatest extent c 620 under Khosrow II The Himyarite annexed Sana a from Hamdan c AD 100 29 Hashdi tribesmen rebelled against them however and regained Sana a in around 180 30 It was not until 275 that Shammar Yahri sh conquered Hadramout and Najran and Tihama thus unifying Yemen and consolidating Himyarite rule 31 32 The Himyarites rejected polytheism and adhered to a consensual form of monotheism called Rahmanism 33 In 354 Roman Emperor Constantius II sent an embassy headed by Theophilos the Indian to convert the Himyarites to Christianity 34 According to Philostorgius the mission was resisted by local Jews 35 Several inscriptions have been found in Hebrew and Sabaean praising the ruling house in Jewish terms for helping and empowering the People of Israel 36 According to Islamic traditions King As ad The Perfect mounted a military expedition to support the Jews of Yathrib 37 Abu Karib As ad as known from the inscriptions led a military campaign to central Arabia or Najd to support the vassal Kinda against the Lakhmids 38 However no direct reference to Judaism or Yathrib was discovered from his lengthy reign Abu Karib As ad died in 445 having reigned for almost 50 years 39 By 515 Himyar became increasingly divided along religious lines and a bitter conflict between different factions paved the way for an Aksumite intervention The last Himyarite king Mu di Karab Ya fir was supported by Aksum against his Jewish rivals Mu di Karab was Christian and launched a campaign against the Lakhmids in Southern Iraq with the support of other Arab allies of The Byzantine Empire 40 The Lakhmids were a Bulwark of Persia which was intolerant to a proselytizing religion like Christianity 41 After the death of Ma adikarib Ya fur around 521 AD a Himyarite Jewish warlord called Dhu Nuwas rose to power He began a campaign of violence against Christians under his control Dhu Nawas executed Byzantine traders converted the church in Zafar into a synagogue and killed its priests among other acts of conquest 42 43 He marched toward the port city of Mocha killing 14 000 and capturing 11 000 44 Then he settled a camp in Bab el Mandeb to prevent aid flowing from Aksum At the same time Yousef sent an army under the command of another Jewish warlord Sharahil Yaqbul to Najran Sharahil had reinforcements from the Bedouins of the Kinda and Madh hij tribes eventually wiping out the Christian community in Najran by means of execution and forced conversion to Judaism Blady speculates that he was likely motivated by stories about Byzantine violence against Byzantine Jewish communities in his decision to begin his campaign of state violence against Christians existing within his territory 45 42 46 Christian sources portray Dhu Nuwas as a Jewish zealot while Islamic traditions say that he marched around 20 000 Christians into trenches filled with flaming oil burning them alive 42 Himyarite inscriptions attributed to Dhu Nuwas himself show great pride in killing 27 000 enslaving 20 500 Christians in Ẓafar and Najran and killing 570 000 beasts of burden belonging to them as a matter of imperial policy 47 It is reported that Byzantium Emperor Justin I sent a letter to the Aksumite King Kaleb pressuring him to attack the abominable Hebrew 44 A military alliance of Byzantine Aksumite and Arab Christians successfully defeated Dhu Nuwas around 525 527 AD and a client Christian king was installed on the Himyarite throne 48 nbsp Ruins of The Great Dam of Marib Esimiphaios was a local Christian lord mentioned in an inscription celebrating the burning of an ancient Sabaean palace in Marib to build a church on its ruins 49 Three new churches were built in Najran alone 49 Many tribes did not recognize Esimiphaios s authority Esimiphaios was displaced in 531 by a warrior named Abraha who refused to leave Yemen and declared himself an independent king of Himyar Emperor Justinian I sent an embassy to Yemen He wanted the officially Christian Himyarites to use their influence on the tribes in inner Arabia to launch military operations against Persia Justinian I bestowed the dignity of king upon the Arab sheikhs of Kinda and Ghassan in central and north Arabia 50 From early on Roman and Byzantine policy was to develop close links with the powers of the coast of the Red Sea They were successful in converting Aksum and influencing their culture The results with regard to Yemen were rather disappointing 50 A Kindite prince called Yazid bin Kabshat rebelled against Abraha and his Arab Christian allies A truce was reached once The Great Dam of Marib had suffered a breach 51 Abraha died around 555 565 AD no reliable sources regarding his death are available The Sasanid empire annexed Aden around 570 Under their rule most of Yemen enjoyed great autonomy except for Aden and Sana a This era marked the collapse of ancient South Arabian civilization since the greater part of the country was under several independent clans until the arrival of Islam in 630 52 Middle Ages editSee also Islamic history of Yemen Advent of Islam and the three Dynasties edit Main articles Yufirids Ziyadid Dynasty and Imams of Yemen nbsp Interior of the Great Mosque of Sana a the oldest mosque in Yemen Prophet Mohammed sent his cousin Ali to Sana a and its surroundings around 630 At the time Yemen was the most advanced region in Arabia 53 The Banu Hamdan confederation were among the first to accept Islam Mohammed sent Muadh ibn Jabal as well to Al Janad in present day Taiz and dispatched letters to various tribal leaders The reason behind this was the division among the tribes and the absence of a strong central authority in Yemen during the days of the prophet 54 Major tribes including Himyar sent delegations to Medina during the Year of delegations around 630 631 Several Yemenis had already accepted Islam including Ammar ibn Yasir Al Ala a Al Hadrami Miqdad ibn Aswad Abu Musa Ashaari and Sharhabeel ibn Hasana A man named Abhala ibn Ka ab Al Ansi expelled the remaining Persians and claimed to be a prophet of Rahman He was assassinated by a Yemeni of Persian origin called Fayruz al Daylami Christians who were mainly staying in Najran along with Jews agreed to pay Jizya although some Jews converted to Islam such as Wahb ibn Munabbih and Ka ab al Ahbar The country was stable during the Rashidun Caliphate Yemeni tribes played a pivotal role in the Islamic conquests of Egypt Iraq Persia the Levant Anatolia North Africa Sicily and Andalusia 55 56 57 Yemeni tribes that settled in Syria contributed significantly to the solidification of Umayyad rule especially during the reign of Marwan I Powerful Yemenite tribes like Kindah were on his side during the Battle of Marj Rahit 58 59 Several emirates led by people of Yemeni descent were established in North Africa and Andalusia Effective control over entire Yemen was not achieved by the Umayyad Caliphate Imam Abd Allah ibn Yahya was elected in 745 to lead the Ibaḍi movement in Hadramawt and Oman He expelled the Umayyad governor from Sana a and captured Mecca and Medina in 746 60 Ibn Yahya known by his nickname Talib al Haqq Seeker of the Truth established the first Ibadi state in the history of Islam but was killed in Taif in around 749 60 Muhammad ibn Ziyad founded the Ziyadid dynasty in Tihama around 818 the state stretched from Haly In present day Saudi Arabia to Aden They nominally recognized the Abbasid Caliphate but were in fact ruling independently from their capital in Zabid 61 The history of this dynasty is obscure they never exercised control over the highlands and Hadramawt and did not control more than a coastal strip of the Yemen Tihama bordering the Red Sea 62 A Himyarite clan called the Yufirids established their rule over the highlands from Saada to Taiz while Hadramawt was an Ibadi stronghold and rejected all allegiance to the Abbasids in Baghdad 61 By virtue of its location the Ziyadid dynasty of Zabid developed a special relationship with Abyssinia The chief of the Dahlak islands exported slaves as well as amber and leopard hides to the then ruler of Yemen 63 The first Zaidi imam Yahya ibn al Husayn arrived to Yemen in 893 He was the founder of the Zaidi imamate in 897 He was a religious cleric and judge who was invited to come to Saada from Medina to arbitrate tribal disputes 64 Imam Yahya persuaded local tribesmen to follow his teachings The sect slowly spread across the highlands as the tribes of Hashid and Bakil later known as the twin wings of the imamate accepted his authority 65 Yahya established his influence in Saada and Najran he also tried to capture Sana a from the Yufirids in 901 but he failed miserably In 904 the newly established Isma ili followers invaded Sana a The Yufirid emir As ad ibn Ibrahim retreated to Al Jawf and between 904 and 913 Sana a was conquered no less than 20 times by Isma ilis and Yufirids 66 As ad ibn Ibrahim regained Sana a in 915 The country was in turmoil as Sana a became a battlefield for the three dynasties as well as independent tribes The Yufirid emir Abdullah ibn Qahtan attacked and burned Zabid in 989 severely weakening the Ziyadid dynasty 67 The Ziyadid monarchs lost effective power after 989 or even earlier than that Meanwhile a succession of slaves held power in Zabid and continued to govern in the name of their masters eventually establishing their own dynasty around 1022 or 1050 according to different sources 68 Although they were recognized by the Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad they ruled no more than Zabid and four districts to its north 69 The rise of the Ismaili Shia Sulayhid dynasty in the Yemeni highlands reduced their history to a series of intrigues Sulayhid Dynasty edit Main article Sulayhid dynasty nbsp Jibla became the capital of the Sulayhid dynasty The Sulayhid dynasty was founded in the northern highlands around 1040 At the time Yemen was ruled by different local dynasties In 1060 Ali ibn Mohammed Al Sulayhi conquered Zabid and killed its ruler Al Najah founder of the Najahid dynasty whose sons were forced to flee to Dahlak 70 Hadramawt fell into Sulayhid hands after their capture of Aden in 1062 71 By 1063 Ali had subjugated Greater Yemen 72 He then marched toward Hejaz and occupied Makkah 73 Ali was married to Asma bint Shihab who governed Yemen with her husband 74 The Khutba during Friday prayers was proclaimed in her husband s and her name No other Arab woman had this honor since the advent of Islam 74 Ali al Sulayhi was killed by Najah s sons on his way to Mecca in 1084 His son Ahmad al Mukarram led an army to Zabid and killed 8 000 of its inhabitants 75 He later installed the Zurayids to govern Aden Ahmad al Mukarram who had been afflicted with facial paralysis resulting from war injuries retired in 1087 and handed over power to his wife Arwa al Sulayhi 76 Queen Arwa moved the seat of the Sulayhid dynasty from Sana a to Jibla a small town in central Yemen near Ibb Jibla was strategically near the Sulayhid dynasty source of wealth the agricultural central highlands It was also within easy reach of the southern portion of the country especially Aden She sent Ismaili missionaries to India where a significant Ismaili community was formed that exists to this day 77 Queen Arwa continued to rule securely until her death in 1138 77 nbsp Queen Arwa al Sulaihi Palace Arwa al Sulayhi is still remembered as a great and much loved sovereign as attested in Yemeni historiography literature and popular lore where she is referred to as Balqis al sughra that is the junior queen of Sheba 78 Although the Sulayhids were Ismaili they never tried to impose their beliefs on the public 79 Shortly after queen Arwa s death the country was split between five competing petty dynasties along religious lines 80 The Ayyubid dynasty overthrew the Fatimid caliphate in Egypt A few years after their rise to power Saladin dispatched his brother Turan Shah to conquer Yemen in 1174 81 Zurayid Dynasty edit Main article Zurayids nbsp Zurayid Kingdom and the neighbouring polities Al Abbas amp al Mas ud sons of Karam Al Yami from the Hamdan tribe started ruling Aden for the Sulayhids when Al Abbas died in 1083 His son Zuray who gave the dynasty its name proceeded to rule together with his uncle al Mas ud They took part in the Sulayhid leader al Mufaddal s campaign against the Najahid capital Zabid and were both killed during the siege 1110 82 Their respective sons ceased to pay tribute to the Sulayhid queen Arwa al Sulayhi 83 They were worsted by a Sulayhid expedition but queen Arwa agreed to reduce the tribute by half to 50 000 dinars per year The Zurayids again failed to pay and were once again forced to yield to the might of the Sulayhids but this time the annual tribute from the incomes of Aden was reduced to 25 000 Later on they ceased to pay even that since Sulayhid power was on the wane 84 After 1110 the Zurayids thus led a more than 60 years long independent rule in the city bolstered by the international trade The chronicles mention luxury goods such as textiles perfume and porcelain coming from places like North Africa Egypt Iraq Oman Kirman and China After the demise of queen Arwa al Sulayhi in 1138 the Fatimids in Cairo kept a representation in Aden adding further prestige to the Zurayids 85 The Zurayids were sacked by the Ayyubids in 1174 Ayyubid conquest edit Main article Ayyubid Dynasty nbsp The Qadi of Sa dah Yemen in 1200 1210 according to the Maqamat al Hariri BNF 3929 Turan Shah conquered Zabid from the Mahdids in May 1174 then marched toward Aden in June and captured it from the Zurayids 86 The Hamdanid sultans of Sana a resisted the Ayyubid in 1175 and it was not until 1189 that the Ayyubids managed to definitely secure Sana a 87 The Ayyubid rule was stable in southern and central Yemen where they succeeded in eliminating the mini states of that region while Ismaili and Zaidi tribesmen continued to hold out in a number of fortresses 87 The Ayyubids failed to capture the Zaydis stronghold in northern Yemen 88 In 1191 Zaydis of Shibam Kawkaban rebelled and killed 700 Ayyubid soldiers 89 Imam Abdullah bin Hamza proclaimed the imamate in 1197 and fought al Mu izz Ismail the Ayyubid Sultan of Yemen Imam Abdullah was defeated at first but was able to conquer Sana a and Dhamar in 1198 90 al Mu izz Ismail was assassinated in 1202 91 Abdullah bin Hamza carried on the struggle against the Ayyubid until his death in 1217 After his demise the Zaidi community was split between two rival imams The Zaydis were dispersed and a truce was signed with the Ayyubid in 1219 92 The Ayyubid army was defeated in Dhamar in 1226 92 Ayyubid Sultan Mas ud Yusuf left for Mecca in 1228 never to return 93 Other sources suggest that he was forced to leave for Egypt instead in 1223 94 Rasulid Dynasty edit Main article Rasulid dynasty nbsp Rasulid Kingdom around 1264 AD nbsp Al Qahyra Cairo Castle s Garden in Ta izz the capital of Yemen during the Rasulid s eraThe Rasulid Dynasty was established in 1229 by Umar ibn Rasul Umar ibn Rasul was appointed deputy governor by the Ayyubids in 1223 When the last Ayyubid ruler left Yemen in 1229 Umar stayed in the country as caretaker He subsequently declared himself an independent king by assuming the title al Malik Al Mansur the king assisted by Allah 94 Umar established the Rasulid dynasty on a firm foundation and expanded its territory to include the area from Dhofar to Mecca 95 Umar first established himself at Zabid then moved into the mountainous interior taking the important highland centre Sana a However the Rasulid capitals were Zabid and Ta izz He was assassinated by his nephew in 1249 93 Omar s son Yousef defeated the faction led by his father assassins and crushed several counter attacks by the Zaydi imams who still held on in the northern highland It was mainly because of the victories which he scored over his rivals that he assumed the honorific title al Muzaffar the victorious 96 After the fall of Baghdad to the Mongols in 1258 al Muzaffar Yusuf I appropriated the title of caliph 96 He chose the city of Ta izz to become the political capital of the kingdom because of its strategic location and proximity to Aden 97 Al Muzaffar Yusuf I died in 1296 having reigned for 47 years 96 When the news of his death reached the Zaydi imam Al Mutawakkil al Mutahhar bin Yahya he commented by saying 96 The greatest king of Yemen the Muawiyah of the time has died His pens used to break our lances and swords to pieces nbsp Slave market in the town of Zabid in Yemen Illustration from the 1237 Maqamat al Hariri produced in Baghdad by al Wasiti Arabe 5847 The Rasulid state nurtured Yemen s commercial links with India and the Far East 98 They profited greatly by the Red Sea transit trade via Aden and Zabid 93 The economy also boomed due to the agricultural development programs instituted by the kings who promoted massive cultivation of palms 93 It was during this period that coffee became a lucrative cash crop in Yemen 99 The Rasulid kings enjoyed the support of the population of Tihama and southern Yemen while they had to buy the loyalty of Yemen s restive northern highland tribes 93 The Rasulid sultans built numerous Madrasas in order to solidify the Shafi i school of thought which is still the dominant school of jurisprudence amongst Yemenis today 100 Under their rule Ta izz and Zabid became major international centers of Islamic learning 93 The Kings themselves were learned men in their own right who not only had important libraries but who also wrote treatises on a wide array of subjects ranging from astrology and medicine to agriculture and genealogy 97 The dynasty is regarded as the greatest native Yemeni state since the fall of the pre Islamic Himyarite Kingdom 101 Though the Rasulids were of Turkic descent 102 they claimed an ancient Yemenite origin to justify their rule The Rasulids were not the first dynasty to create a fictitious genealogy for political purposes nor were they doing anything out of the ordinary in the tribal context of Arabia 103 By claiming descent from a solid Yemenite tribe the Rasulid brought Yemen to a vital sense of unity in an otherwise chaotic regional milieu 103 They had a difficult relationship with the Mamluks of Egypt because the latter considered them a vassal state 97 Their competition centered over the Hejaz and the right to provide kiswa of the Ka aba in Mecca 97 The dynasty became increasingly threatened by disgruntled family members over the problem of succession combined by periodic tribal revolts as they were locked in a war of attrition with the Zaydi imams in the northern highlands 93 During the last twelve years of Rasulid rule the country was torn between several contenders for the kingdom The weakening of the Rasulids provided an opportunity for the Banu Taher clan to take over and establish themselves as the new rulers of Yemen in 1454 100 Tahirid Dynasty edit Main article Tahirids Yemen nbsp Tahirids in light green and Zaydi imams in dark green The Tahirids were a local clan based in Rada a While they were not as impressive as their predecessors they were still keen builders They built schools mosques and irrigation channels as well as water cisterns and bridges in Zabid and Aden Rada a and Juban Their best known monument is the Amiriya Madrasa in Rada which was built in 1504 The Tahiride were too weak either to contain the Zaydi Imams or to defend themselves against foreign attacks The Mamluks of Egypt tried to attach Yemen to Egypt and the Portuguese led by Afonso de Albuquerque occupied Socotra and launched an unsuccessful four day siege of Aden in 1513 104 105 The Portuguese posed an immediate threat to the Indian Ocean trade the Mamluks of Egypt therefore sent an army under the command of Hussein Al Kurdi to fight the intruders 106 The Mamluk sultan of Egypt sailed to Zabid in 1515 and began diplomatic talks with Tahiride Sultan Amir bin Abdulwahab for money that would be needed for jihad against the Portuguese Instead of confronting the Portuguese the Mamluks who were running out of food and water landed their fleet on the Yemen coastline and started to harass Tihama villagers for what they needed 107 Realizing how rich the Tahiride realm was they decided to conquer it 107 The Mamluk army with the support of forces loyal to Zaydi Imam Al Mutawakkil Yahya Sharaf ad Din conquered the entire realm of the Tahiride but failed to capture Aden in 1517 The Mamluk victory turned out to be short lived The Ottoman Empire conquered Egypt hanging the last Mamluk Sultan in Cairo 107 It was not until 1538 that the Ottomans decided to conquer Yemen The Zaydi Highland tribes emerged as national heroes 108 by offering a stiff vigorous resistance to the Turkish occupation 109 Modern history editSee also Modern history of Yemen The Zaydis and Ottomans edit See also Yemen Eyalet Yemeni Ottoman Conflicts and Yemeni Zaidi State nbsp Al Bakiriyya Ottoman Mosque in Sana a was built in 1597The Ottomans had two fundamental interests to safeguard in Yemen The Islamic holy cities of Mecca and Medina and the trade route with India in spices and textiles both of which were threatened and the latter virtually eclipsed by the arrival of the Portuguese in the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea in the early part of the 16th century 110 Hadim Suleiman Pasha the Ottoman governor of Egypt was ordered to command a fleet of 90 ships to conquer Yemen The country was in a state of incessant anarchy and discord as Hadim Suleiman Pasha described it by saying 111 Yemen is a land with no lord an empty province It would be not only possible but easy to capture and should it be captured it would be master of the lands of India and send every year a great amount of gold and jewels to Constantinople nbsp Arabian boduis farm couple possibly Yemeni Codice Casanatense c 1540 Imam al Mutawakkil Yahya Sharaf ad Din ruled over the northern highlands including Sana a while Aden was held by the last Tahiride Sultan Amir ibn Dauod Hadim Suleiman Pasha stormed Aden in 1538 killing its ruler and extended Ottoman s authority to include Zabid in 1539 and eventually Tihama in its entirety 112 Zabid became the administrative headquarters of Yemen Eyalet 113 The Ottoman governors did not exercise much control over the highlands they held sway mainly in the southern coastal region particularly around Zabid Mocha and Aden 114 Out of 80 000 soldiers sent to Yemen from Egypt between 1539 1547 only 7 000 survived 115 The Ottoman accountant general in Egypt remarks 115 We have seen no foundry like Yemen for our soldiers Each time we have sent an expeditionary force there it has melted away like salt dissolved in water The Ottoman sent yet another expeditionary force to Zabid in 1547 while Imam al Mutawakkil Yahya Sharaf ad Din was ruling the highlands independently Imam al Mutawakkil Yahya chose his son Ali to succeed him a decision that infuriated his other son al Mutahhar ibn Yahya 116 Al Mutahhar was lame and therefore not qualified for the Imamate 116 He urged Oais Pasha the Ottoman colonial governor in Zabid to attack his father 117 Indeed Ottoman troops supported by tribal forces loyal to Imam al Mutahhar stormed Ta izz and marched north toward Sana a in August 1547 The Turks officially made Imam al Mutahhar a Sanjak bey with authority over Amran Imam al Mutahhar assassinated the Ottoman colonial governor and recaptured Sana a but the Ottomans led by Ozdemir Pasha forced al Mutahhar to retreat to his fortress in Thula Ozdemir Pasha effectively put Yemen under Ottoman rule between 1552 and 1560 He garrisoned the main cities built new fortresses and rendered secure the main routes 118 Ozdemir died in Sana a in 1561 to be succeeded by Mahmud Pasha Mahmud Pasha was described by other Ottoman officials as corrupt and unscrupulous governor he used his authority to take over a number of castles some of which belonged to the former Rasulid Kings 116 Mahmud Pasha killed a Sunni scholar from Ibb 119 The Ottoman historian claimed that this incident was celebrated by the Zaydi Shia community in the northern highlands 119 Disregarding the delicate balance of power in Yemen by acting tactlessly he alienated different groups within Yemeni society causing them to forget their rivalries and unite against the Turks 118 Mahmud Pasha was displaced by Ridvan Pasha in 1564 By 1565 Yemen was split into two provinces the highlands under the command of Ridvan Pasha and Tihama under Murad Pasha Imam al Mutahhar launched a propaganda campaign in which he claimed contact with prophet Mohammed in a dream advising him to wage jihad against the Ottomans 120 Al Mutahhar led the tribes to capture Sana a from Ridvan Pasha in 1567 When Murad tried to relieve Sana a highland tribesmen ambushed his unit and slaughtered all of them 121 Over 80 battles were fought the last decisive encounter took place in Dhamar around 1568 in which Murad Pasha was beheaded and had his head sent to al Mutahhar in Sana a 121 122 By 1568 only Zabid remained under the possession of the Turks 122 nbsp Ruins of Thula fortress in Amran where al Mutahhar ibn Yaha barricaded himself against Ottoman attacks Lala Kara Mustafa Pasha the Ottoman governor of Syria was ordered by Selim II to suppress the Yemeni rebels 123 the Turkish army in Egypt was reluctant to go to Yemen however 123 Mustafa Pasha sent a letter with two Turkish shawishes hoping to persuade al Mutahhar to give an apology and say that he did not promote any act of aggression against the Ottoman army and claim that the ignorant Arabians according to the Turks acted on their own 124 Imam al Mutahhar refused the Ottoman offer Mustafa Pasha sent an expeditionary force under the command of Uthman Pasha the expeditionary force was defeated with great casualties 125 Sultan Selim II was infuriated by Mustafa s hesitation to go Yemen he executed a number of sanjak beys in Egypt and ordered Sinan Pasha to lead the entire Turkish army in Egypt to reconquer Yemen 126 Sinan Pasha was a prominent Ottoman General of Albanian origin 122 In 1570 he reconquered Aden Ta izz and Ibb and he besieged Shibam Kawkaban for 7 months until a truce was reached 127 Imam al Mutahhar was pushed back but could not be entirely overcome 128 After al Mutahhar s demise in 1572 the Zaydi community was not united under an imam the Turks took advantage of their disparity and conquered Sana a Sa dah and Najran in 1583 129 Imam al Nasir Hassan was arrested in 1585 and exiled to Constantinople thereby putting an end to the Yemeni rebellion 122 The Zaydi tribesmen in the northern highlands particularly those of Hashid and Bakil were a constant irritant to Turkish rule in Arabia 130 Justifying their presence in Yemen as a triumph for Islam the Ottomans accused the Zaydis of being infidels 131 Hassan Pasha was appointed governor of Yemen which enjoyed a period of relative peace from 1585 to 1597 Pupils of al Mansur al Qasim suggested that he claim the immamate and fight the Turks He declined at first but was infuriated by the promotion of the Hanafi school of jurisprudence at the expense of Zaydi Islam He proclaimed the Imamate in September 1597 which was the same year the Ottoman authorities inaugurated al Bakiriyya Mosque 129 By 1608 Imam al Mansur the victorious regained control over the highlands and signed a 10 year truce with the Ottomans 132 When Imam al Mansur al Qasim died in 1620 his son Al Mu ayyad Muhammad succeeded him and confirmed the truce with the Ottomans In 1627 the Ottomans lost Aden and Lahej Abdin Pasha was ordered to suppress the rebels but failed and had to retreat to Mocha 129 After Al Mu ayyad Muhammad expelled the Ottomans from Sana a in 1628 only Zabid and Mocha remained under Ottoman possession Al Mu ayyad Muhammad captured Zabid in 1634 and allowed the Ottomans to leave Mocha peacefully 133 The reasons behind Al Mu ayyad Muhammad s success were the tribes possession of firearms and the fact that they were unified behind him 134 nbsp Zaidi State under the rule of Al Mutawakkil Isma il 1675 nbsp Mocha was Yemen s busiest port in the 17th and 18th century In 1632 Al Mu ayyad Muhammad sent an expeditionary force of 1000 men to conquer Mecca 135 The army entered the city in triumph and killed its governor 135 The Ottomans were not ready to lose Mecca after Yemen so they sent an army from Egypt to fight the Yemenites 135 Seeing that the Turkish army was too numerous to overcome the Yemeni army retreated to a valley outside Mecca 136 Ottoman troops attacked the Yemenis by hiding at the wells that supplied them with water This plan proceeded successfully causing the Yemenis over 200 casualties most from thirst 136 The tribesmen eventually surrendered and returned to Yemen 137 Al Mu ayyad Muhammad died in 1644 He was succeeded by Al Mutawakkil Isma il another son of al Mansur al Qasim who conquered Yemen in its entirety from Asir in the north to Dhofar in the east 138 139 140 141 During his reign and that of his successor Al Mahdi Ahmad 1676 1681 the Imamate implemented some of the harshest discriminatory laws Ar ghiyar against the Jews of Yemen which culminated in the expulsion of all Jews to a hot and arid region in the Tihama coastal plain The Qasimid state was the strongest Zaydi state to ever exist During that period Yemen was the sole Coffee producer in the world 142 The country established diplomatic relations with the Safavid dynasty of Persia the Ottomans of Hejaz the Mughal Empire in India and Ethiopia The emperor Fasilides of Ethiopia sent three diplomatic missions to Yemen but relations did not develop into a political alliance as Fasilides had hoped due to the rise of powerful feudalists in the country 143 In the first half of the 18th century the Europeans broke Yemen s monopoly on coffee by smuggling out coffee trees and cultivating them in their own colonies in the East Indies East Africa the West Indies and Latin America 144 The imammate did not follow a cohesive mechanism for succession and family quarrels and tribal insubordination led to the political decline of the Qasimi dynasty in the 18th century 145 In 1728 or 1731 the chief representative of Lahej declared himself an independent Sultan in defiance of the Qasimid Dynasty and conquered Aden thus establishing the Sultanate of Lahej The rising power of the fervently Islamist Wahhabi movement on the Arabian Peninsula cost the Zaidi state its coastal possessions after 1803 The imam was able to regain them temporarily in 1818 but new intervention by the Ottoman viceroy of Egypt in 1833 again wrested the coast from the ruler in Sana a After 1835 the imamate changed hands with great frequency and some imams were assassinated After 1849 the Zaidi polity descended into chaos that lasted for decades 146 Great Britain and the nine regions edit See also Aden Protectorate Sultanate of Lahej and Aden Colony nbsp Saint Mary s Garrison church in Aden was built by the British in 1850 and is currently abandoned nbsp Postage stamp of the Kathiri state of Sai yun with portrait of Sultan Jafar bin Mansur Kathiri is Kingdom of Hadhramaut Protected Controlled British Empire nbsp Flag of the Colony of Aden nbsp Queen Elizabeth II and Gulf of Aden at Yemen 35 cent Stamp The British were looking for a coal depot to service their steamers en route to India It took 700 tons of coal for a round trip from Suez to Bombay East India Company officials decided on Aden London tried to reach an agreement with the Zaydi imam of Sana a permitting them a foothold in Mocha and when unable to secure their position they extracted a similar agreement from the Sultan of Lahej enabling them to consolidate a position in Aden 147 148 An incident played into British hands when while passing Aden for trading purposes one of their sailing ships sank and Arab tribesmen boarded it and plundered its contents The British India government dispatched a warship under the command of Captain Stafford Bettesworth Haines to demand compensation 148 Haines bombarded Aden from his warship in January 1839 The ruler of Lahej who was in Aden at the time ordered his guards to defend the port but they failed in the face of overwhelming military and naval power The British managed to occupy Aden and agreed to compensate the sultan with an annual payment of 6000 riyals 148 The British evicted the Sultan of Lahej from Aden and forced him to accept their protection 148 In November 1839 5000 tribesmen tried to retake the town but were repulsed and 200 were killed The British realized that Aden s prosperity depended on their relations with the neighboring tribes which required that they rest on a firm and satisfactory basis 149 The British government concluded protection and friendship treaties with nine tribes surrounding Aden whereas they would remain independent from British interference in their affairs as long as they do not conclude treaties with foreigners non Arab colonial powers 150 Aden was declared a free zone in 1850 With emigrants from India East Africa and Southeast Asia Aden grew into a world city In 1850 only 980 Arabs were registered as original inhabitants of the city 151 The English presence in Aden put them at odds with the Ottomans The Turks asserted to the British that they held sovereignty over the whole of Arabia including Yemen as successor of Mohammed and the chief of the universal Caliphate 152 Ottoman return edit See also Yemen Vilayet nbsp The Ottoman Grand Vizier and Wali Governor of Yemen Ahmed Muhtar Pasha The Ottomans were concerned about the British expansion from India to the Red Sea and Arabia They returned to the Tihama in 1849 after an absence of two centuries 153 Rivalries and disturbances continued among the Zaydi imams between them and their deputies with the ulema with the heads of tribes as well as with those who belonged to other sects Some citizens of Sana a were desperate to return law and order to Yemen and asked the Ottoman Pasha in Tihama to pacify the country 154 Yemeni merchants knew that the return of the Ottomans would improve their trade for the Ottomans would become their customers 155 An Ottoman expedition force tried to capture Sana a but was defeated and had to evacuate the highlands 156 The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 strengthened the Ottomans decision to remain in Yemen 157 In 1872 military forces were dispatched from Constantinople and moved beyond the Ottoman stronghold in the lowlands Tihama to conquer Sana a By 1873 the Ottomans succeeded in conquering the northern highlands Sana a became the administrative capital of Yemen Vilayet The Ottomans learned from their previous experience and worked on the disempowerment of local lords in the highland regions They even attempted to secularize the Yemeni society Yemenite Jews came to perceive themselves in Yemeni nationalist terms 158 The Ottomans appeased the tribes by forgiving their rebellious chiefs and appointing them to administrative posts They introduced a series of reforms to enhance the country s economic welfare On the other hand corruption was widespread in the Ottoman administration in Yemen This stemmed from the fact that only the worst of the officials were appointed because those who could avoid serving in Yemen did so 159 The Ottomans had reasserted control over the highlands for temporary duration 153 The so called Tanzimat reforms were considered heretic by the Zaydi tribes In 1876 the Hashid and Bakil tribes rebelled against the Ottomans and the Turks had to appease them with gifts to end the uprising 160 The tribal chiefs were difficult to appease and an endless cycle of violence curbed the Ottoman efforts to pacify the land Ahmed Izzet Pasha proposed that the Ottoman army should evacuate the highlands and confined itself to Tihama and not to be unnecessarily burdened with continuing military operation against the Zaydi tribes 159 The hit and run tactics of the northern highlands tribesmen wore out the Ottoman military They resented the Turkish Tanzimat and defied all attempts to impose a central government upon them 157 The northern tribes united under the leadership of the House of Hamidaddin in 1890 Imam Yahya Hamidaddin led a rebellion against the Turks in 1904 the rebels disrupted the Ottoman ability to govern 161 The revolts between 1904 and 1911 were especially damaging to the Ottomans costing them as much as 10 000 soldiers and 500 000 per year 162 The Ottomans signed a treaty with imam Yahya Hamidaddin in 1911 Under the treaty imam Yahya was recognized as an autonomous leader of the Zaydi northern highlands The Ottomans continued to rule Shafi i areas in the mid south until their departure in 1918 Idrisid Emirate and Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen edit Main article Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen nbsp Imam Yahya hamid ed Din s house in Sana a Imam Yahya hamid ed Din al Mutawakkil was ruling the northern highlands independently since 1911 After the Ottoman departure in 1918 he sought to recapture the lands of his Qasimid ancestors He dreamed of Greater Yemen stretching from Asir to Dhofar These schemes brought him into conflict with the de facto rulers in the territories claimed namely the Idrisids Ibn Saud and the British government in Aden 163 The Zaydi imam did not recognize the Anglo Ottoman border agreement of 1905 on the grounds that it was made between two foreign powers occupying Yemen 164 The border treaty effectively divided Yemen into north and south 165 In 1915 the British signed a treaty with the Idrisids guaranteeing their security and independence if they would fight against the Turks 166 In 1919 Imam Yahya moved southward to liberate the nine British protectorates The British responded by moving quickly towards Tihama and occupying Al Hudaydah Then they handed it over to their Idrisi allies 167 Imam Yahya attacked the southern protectorates again in 1922 The British bombed Yahya s tribal forces using aircraft to which the tribes had no effective counter 168 In 1925 Imam Yahya captured Al Hudaydah from the Idrisids 169 He continued to follow and attack the Idrisids until Asir fell under the control of the Imam s forces forcing the Idrisids to request an agreement that would enable them to administer the region in the name of the Imam 169 Imam Yahya refused the offer on the grounds that the Idrisis were of a Moroccan descent According to Imam Yahya the Idrisids along with the British were nothing but recent intruders and ought to be driven out of Yemen permanently 170 In 1927 when Imam Yahya s forces were 50 km away from Aden Ta izz and Ibb were bombed by the British for five days and the Imam had to pull back 168 Small Bedouin forces mainly from the Madh hij confederation of Marib attacked Shabwah but were bombed by the British and had to retreat The Italian Empire was the first to recognize Imam Yahya as the King of Yemen in 1926 Furthermore the Italians in 1926 and 1927 aimed at taking control of the Farasan Islands 171 Italy had colonies of its own in the region Eritrea and Somaliland both of low profitability There was expectation that increased ties with Yemen would fuel increased trade with the colonies and bring the region into the Italian sphere of influence The Kingdom of Yemen at this point had its eye on annexing Aden and Imam Yahya also had aspirations for a Greater Yemen with the possible help from Italy This created a great deal of anxiety for the British who interpreted it as clear recognition of Imam Yahya s claim to sovereignty over Greater Yemen which included the Aden protectorate and Asir 172 The Idrisids turned to Ibn Saud seeking his protection from Yahya In 1932 however the Idrisids broke their accord with Ibn Saud and went back to Imam Yahya seeking help against Ibn Saud himself who had begun liquidating their authority and expressed his desire to annex those territories into his own Saudi domain 173 174 Imam Yahya demanded the return of all Idrisi dominion 173 That same year a group of Hejazi liberals fled to Yemen and plotted to expel Ibn Saud from the former Hashemite Kingdom of Hejaz which was conquered by the Saudis seven years earlier Ibn Saud appealed to Britain for aid 175 The British government sent arms and airplanes 175 The British were anxious that Ibn Saud s financial difficulties may encourage the Italian Empire to bail him out 173 Ibn Saud suppressed the Asiri rebellion in 1933 after which the Idrisids fled to Sana a 175 Negotiations between the Imam Yahya and Ibn Saud proved fruitless After a military confrontation Ibn Saud announced a ceasefire in May 1934 175 Imam Yahya agreed to release Saudi hostages and the surrender of the Idrisis to Saudi custody Imam Yahya ceded the three provinces of Najran Asir and Jazan for 20 years 176 and signed another treaty with the British government in 1934 The Imam recognized the British sovereignty over Aden protectorate for 40 years 177 Yahya submitted to the Saudi and British demands out of fear for Al Hudaydah According to Bernard Reich Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at George Washington University Yahya could have done better by reorganizing the Zaidi tribes of the northern highlands as his ancestors did against the Turks and British intruders and turn the lands they captured into another graveyard 178 Although the imamate lost Asir it was able to put down rebel tribes in the north using Iraq trained Yemeni troops With the country now established within clearly defined territory finally pacified the urban nationalists began to assert themselves These nationalists had long practiced non Zaidi traditions especially Shafi i and were centered in the coastal province of Tahama the city of Ta izz and the British occupied Aden Many had been students in Cairo and had acquired connections with the Muslim Brotherhood and Algerian nationalists Muslim Brotherhood operatives in Yemen aligned themselves with the urban opposition and supported Zaidi prince Abdullah bin Ahmad al Wazir who joined those actively seeking to overthrow Imam Yahya On February 17 1948 the opposition revolted in Sana a and killed Imam Yahya Crown prince Ahmad was able to rally northern tribes and retake the capital quelling the revolt after a brief siege on March 12 1948 179 Imam Ahmad reversed the isolationist policies of his father and opened Yemen s economy and society to the outside world It went as the theocratic and largely medieval Imamate which became the first Arab state to accept Soviet aid Beginning in 1955 Yemen entered into various treaties of friendship and from 1957 began receiving large amounts of Soviet arms as well as Soviet and Chinese military advisers When the imam went abroad owing to illness crown prince Muhammad al Badr led a pro Soviet party and communist activity increased When the Imam returned in 1959 brutal repression ensued and communists were expelled 180 In April 1956 Yemen joined a defensive pact with Syria and Egypt and in February 1958 it federated with the United Arab Republic In parallel clan violence erupted in Yemen and Aden claiming hundreds of lives over 1956 60 The defensive pact move was conceived as a defensive measure against republican agitation which urban nationalists still engaged in from British occupied Aden So long as Yemen was federated with the UAR republicans would be deprived any assistance from Egyptian President Nasser Although the federation lasted only for three years crown prince al Badr continued to portray himself as an Arab patriot often railing against reactionary Arab monarchs 181 Two states editMain articles Yemen Arab Republic and South Yemen nbsp Abdullah as Sallal North Yemen President and Dana Adams Schmidt Arab nationalism influenced some circles that pushed for the modernization of the Mutawakkilite monarchy This became apparent when Imam Ahmad bin Yahya died in 1962 He was succeeded by his son but army officers attempted to seize power sparking the North Yemen Civil War 182 The Hamidaddin royalists were supported by Saudi Arabia Britain and Jordan mostly with weapons and financial aid but also with small military forces whilst the republicans were backed by Egypt Egypt provided the republicans with weapons and financial assistance but also sent a large military force to participate in the fighting Israel covertly supplied weapons to the royalists in order to keep the Egyptian military busy in Yemen and make Nasser less likely to initiate a conflict in Sinai After six years of civil war the republicans were victorious February 1968 and formed the Yemen Arab Republic 183 The revolution in the north coincided with the Aden Emergency which hastened the end of British rule in the south On 30 November 1967 the state of South Yemen was formed comprising Aden and the former Protectorate of South Arabia This socialist state was later officially known as the People s Democratic Republic of Yemen and a programme of nationalisation was begun 184 Relations between the two Yemeni states fluctuated between peaceful and hostile The South was supported by the Eastern bloc The North however wasn t able to get the same connections In 1972 the two states fought a war The war was resolved with a ceasefire and negotiations brokered by the Arab League where it was declared that unification would eventually occur In 1978 Ali Abdallah Saleh was named as president of the Yemen Arab Republic 185 After the war the North complained about the South s help from foreign countries which included Saudi Arabia 186 In 1979 fighting erupted between the North and the South There were renewed efforts to unite the two states 185 In 1986 thousands died in the South when a civil war erupted between supporters of former president Abdul Fattah Ismail and his successor Ali Nasser Muhammad Ali Nasser Muhammad fled the country and was later sentenced to death for treason 185 Unification editMain article Yemeni unification In 1990 the two governments reached a full agreement on the joint governing of Yemen and the countries were merged on 22 May 1990 with Saleh as president 185 The President of South Yemen Ali Salim al Beidh became vice president 185 A unified parliament was formed and a unity constitution was agreed upon 185 In the 1993 parliamentary election the first held after unification the General People s Congress won 122 of 301 seats 187 309 After the invasion of Kuwait crisis in 1990 Yemen s president opposed military intervention from non Arab states 188 As a member of the United Nations Security Council for 1990 and 1991 Yemen abstained on a number of UNSC resolutions concerning Iraq and Kuwait 189 and voted against the use of force resolution The vote outraged the U S 190 Saudi Arabia expelled 800 000 Yemenis in 1990 and 1991 to punish Yemen for its opposition to the war 191 Following food riots in major towns in 1992 a new coalition government made up of the ruling parties from both the former Yemeni states was formed in 1993 However vice president al Beidh withdrew to Aden in August 1993 and said he would not return to the government until his grievances were addressed These included northern violence against his Yemeni Socialist Party as well as the economic marginalization of the south 192 Negotiations to end the political deadlock dragged on into 1994 The government of Prime Minister Haydar Abu Bakr Al Attas became ineffective due to political infighting 193 An accord between northern and southern leaders was signed in Amman Jordan on 20 February 1994 but this could not stop the civil war 194 citation needed During these tensions both the northern and southern armies which had never integrated gathered on their respective frontiers 195 The May July 1994 civil war in Yemen resulted in the defeat of the southern armed forces and the flight into exile of many Yemeni Socialist Party leaders and other southern secessionists citation needed Saudi Arabia actively aided the south during the 1994 civil war 196 Saleh became Yemen s first directly elected president in the 1999 presidential election winning 96 2 of the vote 187 310 The only other candidate Najeeb Qahtan Al Sha abi was the son of Qahtan Muhammad al Shaabi a former President of South Yemen Though a member of Saleh s General People s Congress GPC party Najeeb ran as an independent 197 In June 2000 the Treaty of Jeddah was signed defining the border with Saudi Arabia In October 2000 seventeen U S personnel died after a suicide attack on the U S naval vessel USS Cole in Aden which was subsequently blamed on al Qaeda After the September 11 attacks on the United States President Saleh assured U S President George W Bush that Yemen was a partner in his War on Terror In 2001 there was violence surrounding a referendum which apparently supported extending Saleh s rule and powers The Shia insurgency in Yemen began in June 2004 when dissident cleric Hussein Badreddin al Houthi head of the Zaidi Shia sect launched an uprising against the Yemeni government The Yemeni government alleged that the Houthis were seeking to overthrow it and to implement Shi a religious law The rebels counter that they are defending their community against discrimination and government aggression 198 In 2005 at least 36 people were killed in clashes across the country between police and protesters over rising fuel prices In the 2006 presidential election held on 20 September Saleh won with 77 2 of the vote His main rival Faisal bin Shamlan received 21 8 199 200 Saleh was sworn in for another term on 27 September 201 A suicide bomber killed eight Spanish tourists and two Yemenis in the province of Marib in July 2007 There was a series of bomb attacks on police official diplomatic foreign business and tourism targets in 2008 Car bombings outside the U S embassy in Sana a killed 18 people including six of the assailants in September 2008 In 2008 an opposition rally in Sana a demanding electoral reform was met with police gunfire Al Qaeda edit In January 2009 the Saudi and Yemeni al Qaeda branches merged to form Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula AQAP Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is based in Yemen and many of its members were Saudi nationals who had been released from Guantanamo Bay 202 Saleh released 176 al Qaeda suspects on condition of good behaviour but terrorist activities continued The Yemeni army launched a fresh offensive against the Shia insurgents in 2009 assisted by Saudi forces Tens of thousands of people were displaced by the fighting A new ceasefire was agreed upon in February 2010 However by the end of the year Yemen claimed that 3 000 soldiers had been killed in renewed fighting The Shia rebels accused Saudi Arabia of providing support to salafi groups to suppress Zaidism in Yemen 203 Saleh s government used Al Qaeda in its wars against the insurgent Houthis clan 204 Some news reports have suggested that on orders from U S President Barack Obama U S warplanes fired cruise missiles at what officials in Washington claimed were Al Qaeda training camps in the provinces of Sana a and Abyan on 17 December 2009 205 Instead of hitting Al Qaeda operatives it hit a village killing 55 civilians 206 Officials in Yemen said that the attacks claimed the lives of more than 60 civilians 28 of them children Another airstrike was carried out on 24 December 207 The U S launched a series of drone attacks in Yemen to curb a perceived growing terror threat due to political chaos in Yemen 208 Since December 2009 U S strikes in Yemen have been carried out by the U S military with intelligence support from CIA 209 The drone strikes are protested by human rights groups who say they kill innocent civilians and that the U S military and CIA drone strikes lack sufficient congressional oversight including the choice of human targets suspected of being threats to America 210 Controversy over U S policy for drone attacks mushroomed after a September 2011 drone strike in Yemen killed Anwar al Awlaki and Samir Khan both U S citizens 211 Another drone strike in October 2011 killed Anwar s teenage son Abdulrahman al Awlaki In 2010 the Obama administration policy allowed targeting of people whose names are not known The U S government increased military aid to 140 million in 2010 212 U S drone strikes continued after the ousting of President Saleh 213 Further information al Qaeda insurgency in Yemen Government instability 2011 present edit Main article Yemeni Crisis 2011 present The Yemeni Crisis began with the 2011 12 revolution against President Ali Abdullah Saleh who had led Yemen for more than two decades 214 215 After Saleh left office in early 2012 as part of a mediated agreement between the Yemeni government and opposition groups the government led by Saleh s former vice president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi struggled to unite the fractious political landscape of the country and fend off threats both from Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and Houthi militants that had been waging a protracted insurgency in the north for years 216 217 In 2014 Houthi fighters swept into the capital of Sana a and forced Hadi to negotiate a unity government with other political factions The rebels continued to apply pressure on the weakened government until after his presidential palace and private residence came under attack from the militant group Hadi resigned along with his ministers in January 2015 The following month the Houthis declared themselves in control of the government dissolving Parliament and installing an interim Revolutionary Committee led by Mohammed Ali al Houthi a cousin of Houthi leader Abdul Malik al Houthi 218 219 However Hadi escaped to Aden where he declared he remains Yemen s legitimate president proclaimed the country s temporary capital and called on loyal government officials and members of the military to rally to him 220 221 2011 revolution edit Main article 2011 Yemeni revolution nbsp Protest in Sana a 3 February 2011 The 2011 Yemeni revolution followed other Arab Spring mass protests in early 2011 The uprising was initially against unemployment economic conditions and corruption as well as against the government s proposals to modify the constitution of Yemen so that Saleh s son could inherit the presidency In March 2011 police snipers opened fire on the pro democracy camp in Sana a killing more than 50 people In May dozens were killed in clashes between troops and tribal fighters in Sana a By this point Saleh began to lose international support In October 2011 Yemeni human rights activist Tawakul Karman won the Nobel Peace Prize and the UN Security Council condemned the violence and called for a transfer of power On 23 November 2011 Saleh flew to Riyadh in neighbouring Saudi Arabia to sign the Gulf Co operation Council plan for political transition which he had previously spurned Upon signing the document he agreed to legally transfer the office and powers of the presidency to his deputy Vice President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi Hadi took office for a two year term upon winning the uncontested presidential elections in February 2012 in which he was the only candidate standing 222 A unity government including a prime minister from the opposition was formed Al Hadi would oversee the drafting of a new constitution followed by parliamentary and presidential elections in 2014 needs update 2012 edit Saleh returned in February 2012 In the face of objections from thousands of street protesters parliament granted him full immunity from prosecution Saleh s son General Ahmed Ali Abdullah Saleh continues to exercise a strong hold on sections of the military and security forces AQAP claimed responsibility for the February 2012 suicide attack on the presidential palace which killed 26 Republican Guards on the day that President Hadi was sworn in AQAP was also behind the suicide bombing which killed 96 soldiers in Sana a three months later In September 2012 a car bomb attack in Sana a killed 11 people a day after a local al Qaeda leader Said al Shihri was reported killed in the south By 2012 there has been a small contingent of U S special operations troops in addition to CIA and unofficially acknowledged U S military presence in response to increasing terror attacks by AQAP on Yemeni citizens 223 Many analysts have pointed out the former Yemeni government role in cultivating terrorist activity in the country 224 Following the election of new president Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi the Yemeni military was able to push Ansar al Sharia back and recapture the Shabwah Governorate Houthi takeover Civil War and Saudi intervention edit nbsp Current November 2021 political and military control in ongoing Yemeni Civil War 2014 present Controlled by the Government of Yemen under the Presidential Leadership Council since April 2022 and allies Controlled by Houthis led Supreme Political Council Controlled by Ansar al Sharia Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Controlled by Southern Transitional Council Main articles Houthi takeover in Yemen Yemeni Civil War 2015 present and Saudi Arabian led intervention in YemenIn 2014 the Houthi movement which had been waging an insurgency against the Yemeni government since 2004 began a gradual takeover of Yemen defeating government forces in the Battle of Amran and the Battle of Sana a 2014 Their advance continued throughout Yemen prompting the start of the Saudi Arabian led intervention in Yemen The Houthis attacked Aden on 25 March 2015 beginning the Battle of Aden 2015 Despite Saudi airstrikes the Houthis managed to take advance into the Tawahi Khormaksar and Crater districts The tide turned on 14 July when an anti Houthi counteroffensive managed to trap the Houthis on the peninsula By 6 August 2015 the Hadi government had captured 75 of Taiz and the Lahij insurgency had expelled Houthis from the Lahij Governorate Hadi fortunes dissipated on 16 August when Houthi forces successfully counterattacked and forced the Hadi forces to retreat from Al Salih Gardens and the Al Dabab Mountain region Hadi forces attributed this reverse to a lack of military equipment 225 In Hadramaut Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula AQAP managed to take over Mukalla after winning the Battle of Mukalla 2015 and in December 2015 they took over Zinjibar and Jaar 2016 saw the Hadi government defeat Houthi forces in the Battle of Port Midi and retake Mukalla from AQAP in the Battle of Mukalla 2016 In January 2017 the United States carried out the Raid on Yakla in a failed attempt to obtain new intelligence regarding AQAP 226 In December the Hadi Government began the Al Hudaydah offensive In June 2018 the Hadi Government began an attack on the city of Hudaydah itself starting the Battle of Al Hudaydah which is considered the largest battle in the war since the start of the Saudi intervention 227 In December 2017 former president and strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh was killed He had been an ally of the Houthis since 2014 until just before his death 228 The war in Yemen also resulted in cholera and famine See Famine in Yemen 2016 present and 2016 18 Yemen cholera outbreak After losing the support of the Saudi led coalition Yemen s President Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi resigned and Presidential Leadership Council took power in April 2022 229 See also editHistory of Asia History of the Middle East List of rulers of Saba and Himyar Imams of Yemen List of presidents of Yemen Politics of Yemen South Arabia South Yemen Timeline of Yemeni historyNotes edit Arabian Peninsula 1000 B C 1 A D Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan Museum of Art Archived from the original on 2008 07 24 Retrieved 2008 01 20 Arabian Peninsula 2000 1000 B C Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan Museum of Art Archived from the original on 2007 11 03 Retrieved 2008 01 20 Daniel McLaughlin Yemen The Bradt Travel Guide p 4 Kenneth Anderson Kitchen 2003 On the Reliability of the Old Testament Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 594 ISBN 0802849601 Geoffrey W Bromiley 1979 The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Vol 4 Wm B Eerdmans p 254 ISBN 0802837840 Nicholas Clapp 2002 Sheba Through the Desert in Search of the Legendary Queen Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 204 ISBN 0618219269 P M Holt Peter Malcolm Holt Ann K S Lambton Bernard Lewis 21 April 1977 The Cambridge History of Islam Cambridge University Press p 7 Daniel McLaughlin 2007 Yemen The Bradt Travel Guide p 5 Jerry R Rogers Glenn Owen Brown Jurgen Garbrecht 1 January 2004 Water Resources and Environmental History ASCE Publications p 36 ISBN 0784475504 Werner Daum 1987 Yemen 3000 Years of Art and Civilization in Arabia Felix Pinguin Verlag p 73 ISBN 3701622922 The kingdoms of ancient South Arabia British Museum Archived from the original on 2013 12 03 Retrieved 7 February 2014 Jawad ʻAli 1968 Digitized 17 February 2007 المفص ل في تاريخ العرب قبل الإسلام Detailed history of Arabs before Islam in Arabic Vol 2 Dar al ʻIlm lil Malayin p 19 George Hatke 2013 Aksum and Nubia Warfare Commerce and Political Fictions in Ancient Northeast Africa NYU Press p 19 ISBN 978 0814762837 Teshale Tibebu 1995 The making of modern Ethiopia 1896 1974 Lawrenceville NJ Red Sea Press p xvii ISBN 1569020019 Peter R Schmidt 2006 Historical Archaeology in Africa Representation Social Memory and Oral Traditions Rowman Altamira p 281 ISBN 0759114153 Ali Aldosari 2007 Middle East Western Asia and Northern Africa Marshall Cavendish p 24 ISBN 978 0761475712 D T Potts 2012 A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East John Wiley amp Sons p 1047 ISBN 978 1405189880 Avraham Negev Shimon Gibson 2005 Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land Continuum p 137 ISBN 0826485715 Lionel Casson 2012 The Periplus Maris Erythraei Text with Introduction Translation and Commentary Princeton University Press p 150 ISBN 978 1400843206 Peter Richardson 1999 Herod King of the Jews and Friend of the Romans Continuum p 230 ISBN 0567086755 Cassius Dio LIII 29 Pliny the Elder Nat Hist vi 32 See also Charles Merivale History of the Romans under the Empire ch 4 H Kruger Der Feidzug des Aelius Gallus nach dem glucklichen Arabien unter Kaiser Augustus 1862 Harun Yahya 1999 Perished Nations Global Yayincilik p 115 ISBN 1897940874 Jan Retso 2013 The Arabs in Antiquity Their History from the Assyrians to the Umayyads Routledge p 402 ISBN 978 1136872822 Clifford Edmund Bosworth 1989 The Encyclopedia of Islam Vol 6 Brill Archive p 561 ISBN 9004090827 Stuart Munro Hay 2002 Ethiopia the Unknown Land A Cultural and Historical Guide I B Tauris p 236 ISBN 1860647448 G Johannes Botterweck Helmer Ringgren 1979 Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament Vol 3 Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 448 ISBN 0802823270 Jawad ʻAli 1968 Digitized 17 February 2007 الـمـفـصـ ل في تـاريـخ العـرب قبـل الإسـلام Detailed history of Arabs before Islam in Arabic Vol 2 Dar al ʻIlm lil Malayin p 482 Albert Jamme 1962 Inscriptions From Mahram Bilqis Marib Baltimore p 392 Dieter Vogel Susan James 1990 Yemen APA Publications p 34 Klaus Schippmann 2001 Ancient South Arabia from the Queen of Sheba to the advent of Islam Markus Wiener Publishers pp 52 53 ISBN 1558762361 Francis E Peters 1994 Muhammad and the Origins of Islam SUNY Press p 48 ISBN 0791418758 Scott Johnson 1 November 2012 The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press p 265 ISBN 978 0195336931 Shlomo Sand 2010 The Invention of the Jewish People Verso p 193 ISBN 9781844676231 Y M Abdallah 1987 The Inscription CIH 543 A New Reading Based on the Newly Found Original in C Robin amp M Bafaqih Eds Sayhadica Recherches Sur Les Inscriptions De l Arabie Preislamiques Offertes Par Ses Collegues Au Professeur A F L Beeston Paris Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner S A pp 4 5 Raphael Patai Jennifer Patai 1989 The Myth of the Jewish Race Wayne State University Press p 63 ISBN 0814319483 Uwidah Metaireek Al Juhany 2002 Najd before the Salafi reform movement social political and religious conditions during the three centuries preceding the rise of the Saudi state Ithaca Press p 171 ISBN 0863724019 Scott Johnson 1 November 2012 The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press p 266 ISBN 978 0195336931 Scott Johnson 1 November 2012 The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press p 282 ISBN 978 0195336931 Irfan Shahid 1989 Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fifth Century Dumbarton Oaks p 65 ISBN 0884021521 a b c Ken Blady 2000 Jewish Communities in Exotic Places Jason Aronson p 9 ISBN 1 4616 2908 X Even more dramatic was the conversion of Abu Kariba s grandson Zar a who reigned from C E 518 to 525 Legend ascribes his conversion to his having witnessed a rabbi extinguish a fire worshipped by some Arab magi merely by reading a passage from the Torah over it 12 After changing his religion he assumed the name Yusef Ash ar but gained notoriety in history by his cognomen Dhu Nuwas Lord of the Curls possibly because he wore his peot long For some years Dhu Nuwas was successful in staving off Ethiopian incursions and preserving Jewish Himyar s independence Informed by some Jewish advisors in Tiberias of atrocities perpetrated against Jews in Roman lands the overzealous proselyte decided on a course of revenge He executed some Byzantine Christian merchants who were traveling through Himyar on their way to Ethio pia This outrage led to a rebellion among his Christian subjects in the city of Nejiran which Dhu Nuwas suppressed with great cruelty He is said to have cast twenty thousand Christians into pits filled with flaming oil The massacre and forced conversions of thousands of Christians at Nejiran infuriated Constantine the Byzantine emperor As he was occupied in a war with Persia Constantine sent ambassadors to his Ethiopian Christian ally King Caleb entreating him to intervene on behalf of their Arabian coreligionists With a formidable force of sixty thousand men some say one hundred twenty thousand Caleb crossed the Red Sea and attacked the Jewish king In a fierce battle in 525 c E the invaders won a decisive victory His queen captured and his capital laid waste Dhu Nuwas chose to escape what was sure to be a cruel death by riding horseback off a cliff into the sea Greenslade W G 1932 The Martyrs of Nejran The Muslim World 22 3 265 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 1932 tb02885 x ISSN 0027 4909 He turned the church in his capital Ẓafar into a synagogue and killed all the priests and other leading Christians especially the Abyssinians who had been in control of the church Then he moved on to Nejran with the intention of subduing that city where Christianity was stronger than in any other centre of south Arabia a b Scott Johnson 1 November 2012 The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press p 282 ISBN 978 0 19 533693 1 Eric Maroney 2010 The Other Zions The Lost Histories of Jewish Nations Rowman amp Littlefield p 94 ISBN 978 1 4422 0045 6 P Yule 2013 A Late Antique Christian king from Ḥimyar southern Arabia Antiquity 87 Antiquity Bulletin Antiquity Publications 1134 ISSN 0003 598X D W Phillipson 2012 Foundations of an African Civilisation Aksum and the Northern Horn 1000 BC 1300 AD Boydell amp Brewer Ltd p 204 ISBN 978 1 84701 041 4 Ryckmans Jacques 1956 La Persecution des Chretiens Himyarites au Sixieme Siecle in French Leiden Istanbul NEDERLANDS HISTORISCH ARCHAEOLOGISCH INSTITUUT IN HET NABIJE OOSTEN Ry 508 le plus ancien des deux textes termine ici en mars avril le recit de la campagne par le bilan provisoire des operations effectuees jusque la 13 000 tues 9 500 prisonniers 280 000 tetes de betail Ry 508 4 6 Le texte termine la a la date du mois de ḏu Maḏraʾan entre juillet et septembre le recit des operations effectuees en mettant a jour le bilan global de la campagne Ry 507 8 9 on y releve 1 000 tues 1 500 prisonniers et 10 000 tetes de betail de plus que dans le bilan cloture a la date de Ry 508 P Yule 2013 A Late Antique Christian king from Ḥimyar southern Arabia Antiquity 87 Antiquity Bulletin Antiquity Publications 1134 ISSN 0003 598X D W Phillipson 2012 Foundations of an African Civilisation Aksum and the Northern Horn 1000 BC 1300 AD Boydell amp Brewer Ltd p 204 ISBN 978 1 84701 041 4 a b Angelika Neuwirth Nicolai Sinai Michael Marx 2010 The Quran in Context Historical and Literary Investigations Into the Quranic Milieu BRILL p 49 ISBN 978 9004176881 a b Scott Johnson 1 November 2012 The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press p 293 ISBN 978 0195336931 Scott Johnson 1 November 2012 The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press p 285 ISBN 978 0195336931 Scott Johnson 1 November 2012 The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press p 298 ISBN 978 0195336931 Sabarr Janneh Learning From the Life of Prophet Muhammad AuthorHouse p 17 ISBN 1467899666 Abd al Muhsin Madʼaj M Madʼaj The Yemen in Early Islam 9 233 630 847 A Political History p 12 Ithaca Press 1988 ISBN 0863721028 Wilferd Madelung The Succession to Muhammad A Study of the Early Caliphate p 199 Cambridge University Press 15 October 1998 ISBN 0521646960 Ṭabari 1992 The History of al Tabari Vol 12 The Battle of al Qadisiyyah and the Conquest of Syria and Palestine A D 635 637 A H 14 15 p 10 11 SUNY Press ISBN 0791407330 Idris El Hareir 2011 The Spread of Islam Throughout the World p 380 UNESCO ISBN 9231041533 Nejla M Abu Izzeddin 1993 The Druzes A New Study of Their History Faith and Society BRILL ISBN 9004097058 Hugh Kennedy 2013 The Armies of the Caliphs Military and Society in the Early Islamic State p 33 Routledge 17 June 2013 ISBN 1134531133 a b Andrew Rippin The Islamic World p 237 Routledge 23 October 2013 ISBN 1136803432 a b Paul Wheatley 2001 The Places Where Men Pray Together Cities in Islamic Lands Seventh Through the Tenth Centuries p 128 University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226894282 Kamal Suleiman Salibi 1980 A History of Arabia p 108 Caravan Books OCLC Number 164797251 Paul Lunde Alexandra Porter 2004 Trade and travel in the Red Sea Region proceedings of Red Sea project I held in the British Museum October 2002 Archaeopress p 20 ISBN 1841716227 in 976 77 AD the then ruler of Yemen received slaves as well as amber and leopard skins from the chief of the Dahlak islands off the coast from Massawa Stephen W Day 2012 Regionalism and Rebellion in Yemen A Troubled National Union p 31 Cambridge University Press ISBN 1107022150 Gerhard Lichtenthaler 2003 Political Ecology and the Role of Water Environment Society and Economy in Northern Yemen p 55 Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 0754609081 First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 p 145 BRILL 1993 ISBN 9004097961 E J Van Donzel 1994 Islamic Desk Reference p 492 BRILL ISBN 9004097384 Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدول المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 237 Henry Cassels Kay 1999 Yaman its early medieval history Adegi Graphics LLC p 14 ISBN 1421264641 J D Fage Roland Anthony Oliver 1977 The Cambridge History of Africa Volume 3 p 119 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521209811 William Charles Brice 1981 An Historical Atlas of Islam cartographic Material p 338 BRILL ISBN 9004061169 Farhad Daftary 2005 Ismailis in Medieval Muslim Societies A Historical Introduction to an Islamic Community p 92 I B Tauris ISBN 1845110919 Farhad Daftary 2007 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines p 199 Cambridge University Press ISBN 1139465783 a b Fatima Mernissi 1977 The Forgotten Queens of Islam p 14 U of Minnesota Press ISBN 0816624399 Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدو المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 237 Farhad Daftary 2005 Ismailis in Medieval Muslim Societies A Historical Introduction to an Islamic Community p 93 I B Tauris ISBN 1845110919 a b Steven C Caton 2013 Yemen p 51 ABC CLIO ISBN 159884928X Bonnie G Smith 2008 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History in Arabic Vol 4 Oxford University Press p 163 ISBN 978 0195148909 Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدو المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 414 Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدو المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 303 Alexander Mikaberidze 2011 Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 159 ISBN 978 1598843378 The chronology of the Zurayid rulers is uncertain for the most part dates furnished by Ayman Fu ad Sayyid Masadir ta rikh al Yaman fial asr al islami al Qahira 1974 are partly at odds with those given by H C Kay Yaman Its early Medieval history London 1892 one source seems to indicate that they were independent as early as 1087 H C Kay Yaman Its early medieval history London 1892 pp 66 67 El Khazreji The pearl strings Vol 1 Leyden amp London 1906 p 19 Robert W Stookey Yemen The politics of the Yemen Arab Republic Boulder 1978 p 96 Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدو المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 311 a b Farhad Daftary 2007 The Isma ilis Their History and Doctrines Cambridge University Press p 260 ISBN 978 1139465786 Josef W Meri 2004 Medieval Islamic Civilization Psychology Press p 871 ISBN 0415966906 Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدول المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 350 Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدول المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 354 Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدول المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 371 a b Mohammed Abdo Al Sururi 1987 الحياة السياسية ومظاهر الحضارة في اليمن في عهد الدول المستقلة political life and aspects of civilization in Yemen during the reign of Independent States in Arabic University of Sana a p 407 a b c d e f g Alexander D Knysh 1999 Ibn Arabi in the Later Islamic Tradition The Making of a Polemical Image in Medieval Islam SUNY Press pp 230 231 ISBN 1438409427 a b Abdul Ali 1996 Islamic Dynasties of the Arab East State and Civilization During the Later Medieval Times M D Publications Pvt Ltd p 84 ISBN 8175330082 Abdul Ali 1996 Islamic Dynasties of the Arab East State and Civilization During the Later Medieval Times M D Publications Pvt Ltd p 85 ISBN 8175330082 a b c d Abdul Ali 1996 Islamic Dynasties of the Arab East State and Civilization During the Later Medieval Times M D Publications Pvt Ltd p 86 ISBN 8175330082 a b c d Josef W Meri Jere L Bacharach 2006 Medieval Islamic Civilization L Z index Taylor amp Francis p 669 ISBN 0415966922 David J Wasserstein Ami Ayalon 2013 Mamluks and Ottomans Studies in Honour of Michael Winter Routledge p 201 ISBN 978 1136579172 Steven C Caton Yemen p 54 ABC CLIO 2013 ISBN 159884928X a b David J Wasserstein Ami Ayalon 2013 Mamluks and Ottomans Studies in Honour of Michael Winter Routledge p 201 ISBN 978 1136579172 Abdul Ali 1996 slamic Dynasties of the Arab East State and Civilization During the Later Medieval Times M D Publications Pvt Ltd p 94 ISBN 8175330082 Jane Hathaway 2003 A Tale of Two Factions Myth Memory and Identity in Ottoman Egypt and Yemen SUNY Press ISBN 0791458830 a b Daniel Martin Varisco 1993 The Unity of the Rasulid State under al Malik al Muzaffar Revue du monde musulman et de la Mediterranee volume 67 p 21 Broeze 28 October 2013 Gateways Of Asia Routledge p 30 ISBN 978 1 136 16895 6 Halil Inalcik Donald Quataert 1994 An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1914 Cambridge University Press p 320 ISBN 0521343151 Halil Inalcik Donald Quataert 1994 An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1914 Cambridge University Press p 320 ISBN 0521343151 a b c Steven C Caton Yemen p 59 ABC CLIO 2013 ISBN 159884928X Abdul Ali 1996 Islamic Dynasties of the Arab East State and Civilization During the Later Medieval Times M D Publications Pvt Ltd p 94 ISBN 8175330082 Bernard Haykel 2003 Revival and Reform in Islam The Legacy of Muhammad Al Shawkani Cambridge University Press p 30 ISBN 0521528909 Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Nahrawali 2002 Lightning Over Yemen A History of the Ottoman Campaign in Yemen 1569 71 OI B Tauris p 2 ISBN 1860648363 Giancarlo Casale 2010 The Ottoman Age of Exploration Oxford University Press p 43 ISBN 978 0199798797 Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Nahrawali 2002 Lightning Over Yemen A History of the Ottoman Campaign in Yemen 1569 71 البرق اليماني في الفتح العثماني in Arabic OI B Tauris p 88 ISBN 1860648363 Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Nahrawali 2002 Lightning Over Yemen A History of the Ottoman Campaign in Yemen 1569 71 البرق اليماني في الفتح العثماني in Arabic OI B Tauris p 88 ISBN 1860648363 Jane Hathaway 2012 A Tale of Two Factions Myth Memory and Identity in Ottoman Egypt and Yemen SUNY Press p 83 ISBN 978 0791486108 a b Robert W Stookey 1978 Yemen the politics of the Yemen Arab Republic Westview Press p 134 ISBN 0891583009 a b c Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Nahrawali 2002 Lightning Over Yemen A History of the Ottoman Campaign in Yemen 1569 71 البرق اليماني في الفتح العثماني in Arabic OI B Tauris p 95 ISBN 1860648363 R B Serjeant Ronald Lewcock 1983 Sana An Arabian Islamic City World of Islam Festival Pub Co p 70 ISBN 0905035046 a b Halil Inalcik Donald Quataert 1994 An Economic and Social History of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1914 Cambridge University Press p 333 ISBN 0521343151 a b Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Nahrawali 2002 Lightning Over Yemen A History of the Ottoman Campaign in Yemen 1569 71 البرق اليماني في الفتح العثماني 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port Reuters 2018 06 14 Archived from the original on 2019 01 31 Retrieved 2019 01 31 Ali Abdullah Saleh Yemen s former leader killed in Sanaa BBC News 4 December 2017 Archived from the original on 8 April 2019 Retrieved 6 October 2022 Yemen s President Hadi has effectively been sacked by Saudi Arabia Middle East Monitor 20 April 2022 Archived from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 6 October 2022 References editOriginal text from U S State Dept Country Study 1 DAUM W ed Yemen 3000 years of art and civilisation in Arabia Felix Innsbruck Frankfurt am Main Amsterdam 1988 pp 53 4 History of Yemen at the Wayback Machine archived 2006 08 23 Timeline of Art History of Arabia including Yemen The Metropolitan Museum of Art A Dam at Marib Das Fenster zum Jemen German Geschichte des Jemen German at the Wayback Machine archived 2012 02 05 History of Yemen at the Wayback Machine archived 2008 02 12 Further reading editAlessandro de Maigret Arabia Felix translated Rebecca Thompson London Stacey International 2002 ISBN 1 900988 07 0 Andrey Korotayev Ancient Yemen Oxford Oxford University Press 1995 ISBN 0 19 922237 1 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to History of Yemen A Dam at Marib state gov at the Wayback Machine archived 2004 09 13 History of Yemen at the Wayback Machine archived 2008 02 12 Yemenite Virtual Museum at the Library of Congress Web Archives archived 2002 09 30 excellent site with many pictures Encyclopedia of the Nations Asia and Oceania Yemen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Yemen amp oldid 1221430879, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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