Hafar al-Batin explained

Official Name:Hafar al-Batin
Settlement Type:City
Nickname:Capital of the Spring
Pushpin Map:Saudi Arabia
Coordinates:28.4342°N 45.9636°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Saudi Arabia
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Eastern Province
Established Title:Established
Established Date:638 CE (17 AH)
Established Title2:Joint Saudi Arabia
Established Date2:1925
Leader Title:Manager of Municipality
Leader Name:Muhammad Hmoud AlShaie’a[1]
Leader Title1:City Governor
Leader Name1:Abdulmuhsen Al-Otaishan
Leader Title2:Deputy Governor
Leader Name2:Musliet Abdulaziz AlZugaibi
Leader Title3:Provincial Governor
Leader Name3:Saud bin Nayef Al Saud
Unit Pref:Metric
Population Total:387,096
Population As Of:2022[2]
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Metro:467,007 (Hafar al-Batin Governorate)
Timezone:AST
Utc Offset:+3
Timezone Dst:AST
Utc Offset Dst:+3
Postal Code Type:Postal Code
Postal Code:31991
Area Code:+966-1-3-7

Hafar al-Batin (Arabic: حفر الباطن ), also frequently spelled Hafr al-Batin, is a city in the Hafar al-Batin Governorate, Eastern Province, Saudi Arabia. It is located 430 km north of Riyadh, 94.2 km from the Kuwait border, and about 74.3 from the Iraq border. The city lies in the dry valley of the Wadi al-Batin, which is part of the longer valley of the river Wadi al-Rummah (now dry), which leads inland toward Medina and formerly emptied into the Persian Gulf.

History

water issue

The name of Hafar al-Batin (Arabic: حفر الباطن, "the inner hole") is derived from its location; the water hole in the desert..

In the 1st Islamic century after hijrah or 638 CE, Hafar al-Batin was just a highway oasis in the desert that pilgrims passed while traveling to Mecca for Hajj. It falls on the route from Asia towards the Red Sea. It's an ancient desert trail that delivered silk and metals coming from China towards Mecca and Jeddah. The new formed Muslim Caliphate moved in immediately and gained hold of the area.At the time of Islam's arrival, there was little water available in the area, so the pilgrims travelled from Iraq to Mecca on a long route without much water. During the reign of Uthman (644 - 656 CE), many pilgrims complained about the lack of water, and Abu-Musa al-Asha'ari, a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad was placed in charge of the area and responded by digging new wells along the route. He ended up leaving a heavy impact on the oasis which eventually turned it into a desert stop. His descendants also resided in the area afterwards in which became a small town.

Ancient importance

Haffar al-batin is an ancient home to many nomadic Arab inhabitants. Although it lacked water on an industrial level, it had its own strategic feature.Keeping this region dry was a critical move by the Arabs to prevent foreign armies, especially the Persians, from entering the inner derest. It was a natural barrier to foreign threats. The Arabs had camels and guides; others didn't which kept it safe for traveling Arabs and bedouins. Striking oil while digging wells is common in this region and the local Arabs knew the water ways; others didn't. This is what stopped Hulegu Khan's army from advancing towards Mecca in the 1200's. Due to its tough climate, his expeditionary officers reasoned that it was impossible for the 300 thousand man army to go south of Basra, thus they had to go north hoping to go around the Fertile Crescent which turned out to be quagmire on the long run.

Recent history

The Suhail Arab clan make up some of Haffar al-batin population along with many other Sunni Arabs such as Anizah and Shammar.The region was part of Kuwait before the Uqair Protocol of 1922 in which it was given to Saudi Arabia.[3] The Saudi Arabia Ministry of Housing announced in August 2020 that they would be including Hafr Al Batin in its program to increase residential ownership by its citizens. The ministry will be providing 759 plots in Hafr Al Batin alone.[4]

Infrastructure

Diagonal Highway 85 to the Levant crosses the ancient desert trail towards Buraydah and Taif, now Highway 50, and meet downtown Haffar al-batin. There is a distillation plant in the area, along with and electric substation and an army base to serve the area. The city has an industrial park for heavy manufacturing plants. Local population is about half a million residents along with a considerable foreign class.

Population

In 2010, Hafar al-Batin, had more than 35 villages in its suburban area and the total population reached 400,993 to 600,000

Transportation

Airport

For full international service, the city is served by King Fahd International Airport with driving distance of 450 km.

Nonetheless, Hafar al-Batin has two airports: One with limited domestic flights (Qaisumah) airport about 20 km in the southeast, and one for military use only (King Khaled Military City Airport) about 70 km in the southwest.

Roads

All the downtown roads of Hafar al-Batin are paved. It is connected with an international network of roads, connecting Saudi Arabia with Kuwait in the East and connecting the North with the Eastern Province.

Districts

Climate

The weather in Hafar al-Batin ranges from -2- in winter nights to 40- during summer days. The climate in general is hot and dry, and it rains only during winter months.

Köppen-Geiger climate classification system classifies its climate as hot desert (BWh).[5]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: رئيس بلدية محافظة حفر الباطن محمد حمود الشايع - اخبارية محافظة حفر الباطن . 2012-05-22 . 2012-04-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120427030601/http://www.hafrnews.com/albums.php?action=show&id=32 . dead .
  2. Web site: Hafar al-Batin (Eastern Region, Saudi Arabia) - Population Statistics, Charts, Map, Location, Weather and Web Information . 2024-02-05 . www.citypopulation.de.
  3. Web site: opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com . Put It in Neutral. May 2012.
  4. Web site: Saudi's Sakani launches 5 housing plans to provide 2,009 plots of land. 2020-09-10. Construction Week Online Middle East. en.
  5. Web site: Climate: Hafar al-Batin - Climate graph, Temperature graph, Climate table . Climate-Data.org . 2014-02-23 .