Humaydah Explained

Group:Banu Humaydah
Population:30,000.[1]
Popplace:Bareq, Al-Majardah
Langs:Arabic
Rels:Islam

Humaydah (also transliterated as Humaidah, Arabic: حميضة), is an Arab tribe,[2] a subgroup of the Bariq tribe of the Qahtanite people. They were a powerful house which governed the city of Bareq until the Ibn Saud invasion and lived peacefully beside al-Ali.[3]

Kinahan Cornwallis Said (1916):" Humeidah. Live in the western part of the district along the Muhail-Qunfudah road from Dhahab to 'Aqabet es-Suhul and extend down the 'Aqabah to Ghar el- Hindi. Consisting of 7,000 men, of whom 4,000 are nomads٫Their Chief Sheikh is Mohammed Ibn Haiazah.»

Naval Intelligence Handbooks (1916): "The most important tribe is the Humeidah, numbering 7,000 men, of whom 4,000 are nomads. They occupy the western part of the district, and the Muha'il- Qunfudah road from Dhahab to Ghar el-Hindi is in their territory. They quarrel with the Al Isba'i and are divided amongst themselves, the villagers favouring the Turks, the nomads Idrisi. Taken as a whole the tribes support Idrisi, with the exception of the settled Humeidah, and pay him taxes. They are peaceful and pleasure-loving, and by no means fond of war. At the same time they are not above harrying small Turkish convoys.»

Wilfred Thesiger (1946): "This desolate country continued until we reached the wadi khat and the cultivated lands of the Humaidha tribe at barik who resemble the 'Amara and live in well-built, flat-roofed, stone houses. These sedentary tribes own a few camels, some cattle, and fair-sized herds of sheep and goats. They are however essentially cultivators who grow dhurra or "dukhn" (bull-rush millet), either on small plains irrigated by the floods or on the silt of the stream beds.»

Origin

Banu Humaydah trace their origin to Humaydah b. al-Harith b. Awf b. Amr b. Sa'd b. Thailbh b. Kinanah b. Bariq . They lived in Bareq with the other Bariq tribes, Al-Musa ibn Ali, Al- Isb'ai and Al-Jabali.[4] [5]

Humaydah branches

Influential people of Bariq

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bariqi, Aḥmad ibn Marīf . Qabā'il Bāriq al-mu'āṣirah min al-'aṣr al-Jāhilī ilá al-'aṣr al-ḥadīth.
  2. Book: Ibn Durayd, Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan. Kitāb Jamharat al-lughah. 1988. Bayrūt, Lubnān . Dār al-ʻIlm lil-Malāyīn . 20489173.
  3. Book: al-Bariqi, Mahmood Aal-Shobaily . Al-Shariq: fi tarikh wa jughrāfīat bilād Bāriq. 2001 . Republished 2001. Maktabat al-Malik Fahd al-Wataniyah. 9960-39969-9 . 279.
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=zFkxAAAAIAAJ&q=+bariq Subcontractor's monograph on Saudi Arabia page 60
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=-OMJAQAAIAAJ&q=Baraq+Humaidah+ Gazetteer of Arabia: a geographical and tribal history of the Arabian Peninsula
  6. https://books.google.com/books?id=X4bVAAAAMAAJ&q=Hajri+ A Handbook of Arabia: Volume I. General p416