Arabia

The Arabian peninsula is an irregular rectangle of land close to 1.25 million square miles (3.2 million sq. km.) in extent, nestled between northeast Africa, the Fertile Crescent, and Iran. Comprising some of the harshest and most desolate regions on Earth, it has nevertheless played host to a long sequence of states reaching back into distant antiquity. Always a vitally significant region, as the homeland of Islam it's influence on modern world history is incalculable

Presently this covers: Abu Dhabi, 'Ad, Aden, Ajman, 'Akrabi, Alawi, Arabia, Asir, 'Awdhali, Awlaqi, Bahrain, Bayhan, Burayda, the Caliphate, the Carmathians, Dhu Jibla, Djarrahid Confederation, Dubai, Fadli, Fujaira, Gerrha, Gurat, al-Haasa, Hadramaut, Ha'il, Hejaz, al-Hijr, Hillah, Himyar, Hirah, al-Julanda, Kalba, Kathiri, Khardj, Kindah, Lahij, Lower Asir, Ma'an, Makan, Marib, Mascat, Mecca, Medina, Mukala, Najd, Najran, Nizwa, Oman, Qalhat, Qataban, Qatar, Qishn, Ras al-Khaimah, Saba (Sheba), Salihid Kgdm., San'a, Saudi Arabia, Say'un, Sharjah, Shihr, the Shi'ite Imams, Socotra, Suhar, at-Tababi'a, Tanukh, Tayma, Thamud, Umm al-Quwain, Upper Asir, 'Unayzah, Yemen, Zabid, Zu-Raidan.

 



ABU DHABI The largest of the Gulf Emirates lying between Oman to the east, and Qatar in the west. Abu Dhabi entered into a Protectorate status with Great Britain in 1892, and when this ended in 1971, the Emirate joined with most of its neighbors to form the United Arab Emirates; the Emir retains considerable autonomy within his own demesne. The city of Abu Dhabi currently serves as the capital of the Federation.


'AD An ancient district in what is now southwestern Oman, running from the sea up into the Dhofar Mountains and thence to the edge of the Rub` al-Khali. In the highlands are to be found scattered groves of the frankincense tree, source of what some regard as the finest of aromatic incenses. The region may also be roughly the locale where camels were first domesticated. 'Ad is known as the tribal Kingdom in which lay the city of Ubar, a major transshipment point for the frankincense trade in ancient times.


ADEN A port city in the far south of the Arabian Peninsula.


AJMANA Gulf Emirate now forming a part of the United Arab Emirates.


AKRABI A minor sultanate in southwestern Yemen, on the coast near Aden.


ALAWI A tribal sheikhdom north of Aden, wedged between Dhaba and Haushabi.


ARABIA The interior of the Arabian Peninsula, in modern times centered on the city of Riyadh.


ASIR Region in Saudi Arabia along the Red Sea, bordered on the north by Hejaz and the south by Yemen. The name Asir means "the Unreachable"; it is a mountainous region with a tradition of regional autonomy. In the 1830,s an emirate, nominally under Yemenite suzereinty, was created in Asir by Ahmad al-Idris, a Sayyid (descendent of Muhammad) from Morocco. Ahmad, who was on pilgrimage to Mecca, settled in the city of Sabija and declared himself both Emir and Imam of Asir.


'AWDHALI A tribal sheikhdom north of Fadli, in eastern Yemen.


AWLAQI A region in eastern Yemen, bordering the desert of the Hadramaut. It was traditionally divided between three separate polities: Note also the existence of another clan of the same dynasty...


BAHRAIN A small island nestled between the east Arabian coast and the peninsula of Qatar. In ancient times, this was the fabled land of Dilmun, noted among Sumerians for its wealth and as a source of spiritual authority. During the classical era, it was known as Tylos, and was famed as a source for pearls. The modern Emirate had a special protectorate relationship with Great Britain from 1861 to 1971.


BAYHAN al-QISAB An emirate in Yemen, 146 miles (235 km.) north-northeast of Aden. Bayhan was ruled by a Hashemite clan distantly related to the Sharifs of Mecca (who later became the kings of Jordan and Iraq). A protectorate of Britain from the early 1800's to 1967, after which it was incorporated into the People's Republic of South Yemen.


BURAYDA An emirate in central Arabia, roughly equidistant from Riyadh to the southeast and Ha'il to the northwest, and quite nearby 'Unayzah.


THE CALIPHATE The success of the prophet Mohammed in redefining Middle-Eastern and, indeed, world history is well known. When he died, control over the political and religious forces he had unleashed was given to Successors (Al Khalifah). The office is difficult to define, in part because its nature has shifted drastically over time. Despite its beginnings, the Caliphs have never achieved universal hegemony over the Muslim world; the Shiite movement was merely the earliest and best established group of non-adherents. Nevertheless, the Caliphs have exerted a tremendous influence over events. Here is a master list, with comments as to the various phases that have evolved over the centuries.

THE PROPHET, AND HIS ELECTED SUCCESSORS

UMMAYAD The Caliphate becomes formally hereditary in the Ummayad clan, a move unrecognized by adherents to 'Ali, a schism which defines Sunni (Ummayad) and Shia (Aliid) Islam. ABBASID The capital of the Caliphs was transferred to the newly built city of Baghdad, in central Mesopotamia. Following the violent overthrow of the Ummayad House, a member of the dynasty escaped and, after wandering North Africa for several years, re-established his House at Cordoba, in Spain. He retained claim to Caliphate status, thus creating a rival. Other rivals appeared in Africa at a later time; the Fatamids established control over much of North Africa and eventually seized Egypt for a time; they, too, claimed the Caliphate. From 861, the Caliphs were increasingly isolated from any real control over their lands or office, and by the 10th century, the City of Light was a half-ruined edifice at the mercy of whatever conqueror was strong enough to take it; see Mesopotamia for details. By the mid 12th century, however, the conquerors had wasted themselves in internecine warfare, and the Abbasids enjoyed a final century of power and splendour. In the second quarter of the 13th century, though, the Muslim world was shattered by the unstoppable onslaught of the Mongols, and in 1258 Baghdad was leveled and the population slaughtered... Here is an express, to return to pages you may have come here from: Afghanistan, Albarracin, Algeciras, Algeria, Almeria,Alpuente, Amida, Antioch, Aragon, Arcos, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Badajoz, Barcelona, Bokhara, Castile, Cordoba, Cyprus, Egypt, Galicia,Georgia, Gibralter, Granada, Iran, Israel, Jaen, Jordan, Leon, Libya, Majorca, Malaga, Marida, Morocco, Murcia, Portugal, Rhodes, Saragossa, Seville, Spain, Syria, Toledo, Tunisia, Valencia

With the destruction of Baghdad by the Horde of Hulugu in 1258, the first era of the Imperial Caliphate comes to an end. What followed were a line of Successors, still of the ABBASID House, based in Egypt, whose functions were purely clerical, under the secular dominion of the Mamluqs.

With the conquest of Egypt by the Ottoman Empire, the Turkish Sultans abrogated to themselves the title of Caliph, thus inaugurating the final phase of the office. With the dissolution of the Ottoman State in the early 20th century, the office of Caliph fell vacant, and has thus far not been revived.


DHU JIBLAA locale in central Yemen, the main base for a tribal confederacy, Ismai'li Shi'ites and adherents of the Fatimid claimants to the Caliphate.


DJARRAHID CONFEDERACYA Bedouin tribe of Yemeni extraction, centered in northwestern Arabia but with no fixed boundaries. They were at times clients of the Fatimids and/or the Byzantines, and at other times at fierce odds with same; their primary occupation centered around attempts to win prestige and wealth via pillaging and devious plots. During the late 900's they occupied large sections of southern Palestine, and were for a time based in Ramla (modern-day central Israel, between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem). I include them largely as examples of the sort of predatory tribal groups occupying much of the Arabian Penisula from time immemorial.


DUBAI A large and important Emirate on the Gulf coast, now forming a part of the United Arab Emirates.


FADLI Sultanate in southwestern Yemen, it's capital at Umm 'Aslah (Asala, Barqah), on the coast some 42 miles (68 km.) northeast from Aden city. A British protectorate from the early 1800's, it was one of the more autonomous kingdoms of the Western Aden Protectorate.


FUJAIRAH The easternmost of the United Arab Emirates, fronting on the strip of coastline along the Gulf of Oman.


GERRHA An ancient tribal kingdom in eastern Arabia. Flourishing in the First Millennium BCE along the northern edge of the Rub' al-Khali. It's inhabitants profited greatly from the frankincense trade, being transshippers of the resin from 'Ad, in the Dhofar Mountains south of the desert, to points north. Apparently migrating out of Mesopotamia sometime before 700 BCE, they were noted as brigands by land and pirates by sea when they were not shipping incense. Claudius Ptolemy mentions the town of "Gerra" in the Geographos (2nd cent CE). I have no names of the rulers of this people at this time.




GURATA Yemeni Kingdom; a relict of Saba remaining after the Himyarite conquest of the 1st/2nd century CE. See also Marib.


al-HAASA (Aasa)The east coast of Arabia, primarily the region opposite Qatar and Bahrain, but extending vaguely north along the coast toward Kuwait. Historically this area has held a high concentration of Shi'ites, as opposed to the generally Sunni populations in the rest of Saudi Arabia. An important town in the area is az-Zahran (Dhahran), site of recent Coalition bivouacs during Mesopotamian conflicts.


HADRAMAUT Geographically, the Hadramaut refers to a long valley in the interior of southwestern Arabia, but the term has come to also refer to all the districts both north and south of that valley; a large oblong region of wastes adjacent to the Rub` al-Khali, fronting on the coast, and extending from Oman in the northeast to Aden in the southwest.


HA'IL (also known as Jebal Shammar) An Emirate in central Arabia; the Rashidi were the principal rivals of the Saudi of Najd.


HEJAZ The western regions of the Arabian Peninsula, including the sacred cities of Mecca and Madinah.


al-HIJR (Lihyan, Mada'in Salih) An early kingdom in northwestern Arabia, 195 miles (313 km.) northwest of Medina and 68 miles (109 km.) south-southwest of Tayma, the 'Uwayrid lava fields lie 20 miles (32 km.) to the west. It is mentioned in the Quran, and in earlier times served as the southern capital of the Nabataean kingdom (with Petra as its northern capital).


HIRAH Based in south-central Mesopotamia (in the area around Kufa and ancient Babylon), on the Euphrates some 80 miles (130 km.) south of modern Baghdad, this state extended south along the west cost of the Persian Gulf as far as Qatar. A pre-Islamic Arab Kingdom, vassals of the Persians and utilized by them as frontier guards opposing the Byzantine clients in Ghassan; they were disrupted by their erstwhile patrons at the beginning of the 7th century, thus leaving a hole in Persian defences through which Muslim Arabs could pour a generation later.


KALBAAn ephemeral Emirate within the United Arab Emirates territory.


KHARDJ An emirate in central Arabia, founded in the late 1600's.


LAHIJ A small Sultanate located in interior just north of the port of Aden, on the main route to San'a, in Yemen. The region is an agricultural district, although somewhat arid in character.


MA'ANAn ancient state in southern Arabia, roughly adjacent to what is now northern Yemen.


MAHRA A sultanate in far eastern Yemen, adjacent to the Omani frontier to the east, and the Rub al-Khali wastes to the northeast. The capital was at Qishn, on the coast some 504 miles (810 km.) east-northeast of Aden.


MARIB A Yemeni Kingdom; a relict of old Saba after the conquest of central Yemen by Himyar. See also Gurat.


MECCA An ancient city in central Hejaz (western Saudi Arabia) - it is mentioned as a holy place in the Vedic Puranas as Makheshvara, site of a sacred Black Stone dedicated to a divinity the text identifies as Shiva. Home of the Prophet Muhammad, and site (along with Medina, to the north) of the establishment of Islam. As such, it is the holiest of pilgimages within the Muslim world, and visiting it is one of the five obligations enjoined upon all Muslims, if they are able. Politically, it has normally been within one or another of the Empires of the region, although it has always retained a high degree of autonomy under the Sharifs (descendents of Muhammad) who have governed the city and district.


MEDINA (al-Madinah, Yathrib) A city in western Arabia, 200 miles (322 km.) north of Mecca and 440 miles (708 km.) west of Riyadh, at the northern tip of the extensive Rahad lavafields. It is the second holiest city in Islam, and the burial place of the prophet Muhammad. Muhammad and his followers removed to Yathrib in September 622, following unstable conditions and persecutions in Mecca - from Yathrib, Muhammad's forces conquered Mecca and began Islamic expansion. Yathrib was soon renamed al-Madinat an-Nabi (the City of the Prophet).