Shaharah Explained

Shaharah
Native Name:شهارة
Settlement Type:Village
Pushpin Map:Yemen
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Yemen
Subdivision Type1:Governorate
Subdivision Name1:'Amran
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Shaharah
Timezone:Yemen Standard Time
Utc Offset:+3
Coordinates:16.1836°N 43.7033°W
Elevation M:2600

Shaharah (Arabic: شهارة) is a large mountain village and seat of Shaharah District of the 'Amran Governorate, Yemen. The village "lies at 2600 metres and overlooks mountainous bulging swells to the south and shimmering hot plains to the north." It lies on top a sharp mountain of the same name, Jabal Shaharah,[1] which is a spur of Jabal al-Ahnum, with its sides and top under extensive cultivation.[2] The village consists of several old stone houses and a cistern. The area is noted for its limestone arch footbridge, constructed in the 17th century by a local lord to connect two villages across a deep gorge.[3] [4]

Although historically Hashid territory, Shaharah and al-Ahnum is today Bakil territory.[5] Shaharah has three gates: Bab al-Nahr, Bab al-Nasr, and Bab al-Saraw.[5] The historical fortress of Shaharat al-Fish is located to the east.[5] The town is also called Shaharat al-Ra's due to its location at the mountain's summit.[5]

History

The town is associated with the pre-Islamic king As'ad al-Kamil.[5] The amir Dhu'l-Sharafayn Muhammad ibn Ja'far, son of the imam al-Qasim ibn 'Ali al-'Ayyani (who died in 1085), made Shaharah his capital and was later buried here.[5] The town was historically also known as Shaharat al-Amir after him.[5] Another former name for the town was Mi'attiq.[5]

The 10th-century author al-Hamdani mentions Shaharah as a mountain and fortress, and it appears in historical sources throughout the Middle Ages and early modern period.[2] It was historically a center of learning and was home to several prominent jurists, scholars, and poets.[5] It was especially important during the Yemeni-Ottoman conflicts of the 16th and 17th centuries, when it served as one of the most important strongholds in Yemen's western mountains.[2] The Ottomans made multiple attempts to capture Shaharah, but they only succeeded once - in 1587 (995 AH) under the governor Mustafa Asim Pasha.[5] Al-Mansur al-Qasim, the Zaydi Imam of Yemen, died at Shaharah in 1620 CE (1029 AH).[2] Shaharah had served as his capital, and the town's congregational mosque is attributed to him.[5] The poet Zaynab bint Muhammad al-Shahariyyah, who died in 1702 (1114 AH), was from Shaharah; her poetry was never compiled into a diwan but has "a respectable place in Yemeni literature".[5]

The Ottomans attempted to besiege Shaharah in 1905 but were unsuccessful.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Mackintosh-Smith, Tim. Yemen. 13 April 2012. 8 December 2011. John Murray. 978-1-84854-696-7. 92.
  2. Book: Wilson . Robert T.O. . Gazetteer of Historical North-West Yemen . 1989 . Georg Olms AG . Germany . 206 . 7 February 2021.
  3. Web site: Bridge. Lonely Planet. 13 April 2012.
  4. Book: Walker. Jenny. Butler. Stuart. Oman, UAE & Arabian Peninsula. registration. 13 April 2012. 1 October 2010. Lonely Planet. 978-1-74179-145-7. 464.
  5. Book: Smith . G.R. . Bosworth . C.E. . van Donzel . E. . Heinrichs . W.P. . Lecomte . G. . The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. IX (SAN-SZE) . 1997 . Brill . Leiden . 90-04-10422-4 . 201 . 13 June 2022 . SHAHĀRA.