Bayhan District
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Bayhan District () is a
district A district is a type of administrative division that, in some countries, is managed by the local government. Across the world, areas known as "districts" vary greatly in size, spanning regions or counties, several municipalities, subdivision ...
of the
Shabwah Governorate Shabwah ( ar, شَبْوَة, Šabwa) is a governorate (province) of Yemen. Its main town is Ataq. During the Yemeni Civil War in 2015, the province became a battleground. The battle, known as the Shabwah Campaign, ended on August 15, 2015, af ...
in
Yemen Yemen (; ar, ٱلْيَمَن, al-Yaman), officially the Republic of Yemen,, ) is a country in Western Asia. It is situated on the southern end of the Arabian Peninsula, and borders Saudi Arabia to the north and Oman to the northeast and ...
. As of 2003, the district had a population of 48,347 inhabitants.


Location

Bayhan District covers . The district is just east of Harib and north of al-Baydha. It is bordered by North Yemen to the north west, the
Hadhramaut Hadhramaut ( ar, حَضْرَمَوْتُ \ حَضْرَمُوتُ, Ḥaḍramawt / Ḥaḍramūt; Hadramautic: 𐩢𐩳𐩧𐩣𐩩, ''Ḥḍrmt'') is a region in South Arabia, comprising eastern Yemen, parts of western Oman and southern Saud ...
to the southeast, and the
Rub' al Khali The Rub' al KhaliOther standardized transliterations include: / . The ' is the assimilated Arabic definite article, ', which can also be transliterated as '. (; ar, ٱلرُّبْع ٱلْخَالِي (), the "Empty Quarter") is the sand des ...
(Empty Quarter) to the northeast. It roughly corresponds to the Wadi Bayhan, which runs down from the Yemeni highlands in a northeast direction into the
Ramlat al-Sab`atayn Yemeni Desert. The Ramlat al-Sab'atayn ( ar, رملة السبعتين) is a desert region that corresponds with the northern deserts of modern Yemen ( Al-Jawf, Marib, Shabwah governorates) and southwestern Saudi Arabia (Najran province). Locat ...
desert. The Wadi persists for about from the mountain front. It crosses the Ramlat as Sab'atayn and emerges on the Jaww Kudayf Al 'Ubaylet. As of 1966 the only route into Bayhan accessible to motor vehicles was along the wadi. The district takes its name from the former
Emirate of Beihan Beihan or Bayhan ( '), officially the Emirate of Beihan ( '), was a state in the British Aden Protectorate and the Federation of South Arabia. Its capital was Suq Abdulla, now called Beihan. The Emirate was abolished in 1967 upon the founding ...
. The principal town is Beihan.


History

The Wadi Bayhan and neighboring Wadi Harib made up the
Qataban Qataban ( Qatabanian: , romanized: , ) was an ancient South Semitic-speaking kingdom of South Arabia (ancient Yemen) which existed from the early 1st millennium BCE till the late 1st or 2nd centuries CE. The kingdom of Qatabān was one of the si ...
trading state in ancient times. The Qataban state, which fell around 400 AD, lay on the
Frankincense Trail The Land of Frankincense is a site in Oman on the Incense Road. The site includes frankincense trees, Khor Rori and the remains of a caravan oasis, which were crucial to the medieval incense trade. The site was declared a UNESCO World Heritage ...
. It had a highly developed system of spate irrigation. There are records of the rise of a Jewish messiah near Bayhan during the reign of Sultan 'Amir ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab (1488-1517) of the Tahiride dynasty. The messianic pretender rode horses with saddles decorated in silver, and organized the people who gathered around him into a military force. The Sultan crushed the movement and killed many Jews around 1495 or 1500. More recently, Wadi Bayhan was the scene of clashes between the British and the Ottoman Turks, and then between the British and the Hamid al-Din imams. The
Hashimite The Hashemites ( ar, الهاشميون, al-Hāshimīyūn), also House of Hashim, are the royal family of Jordan, which they have ruled since 1921, and were the royal family of the kingdoms of Hejaz (1916–1925), Syria (1920), and Iraq (1921 ...
rulers of the Bayhan emirate were connected to the royal family of Jordan. They made a treaty of protection with Britain early in the 20th century, and an advisory agreement with the British in the 1940s. Sharif Husayn bin Ali Bayhan, the ruler of the emirate, sided with the royalists against the republicans in the
North Yemen Civil War The North Yemen Civil War ( ar, ثورة 26 سبتمبر, Thawra 26 Sabtambar, 26 September Revolution) was fought in North Yemen from 1962 to 1970 between partisans of the Mutawakkilite Kingdom and supporters of the Yemen Arab Republic. The ...
. In 1967 the emirate was abolished by the National Liberation Front. Sharif Husayn made an unsuccessful attempt to regain control of Bayhan by force in early 1968. From the late 1960s until the 1980s the Wadi Bayhan saw fighting between forces of the two Yemens.


Demographics

Bayhan traditionally had two main tribes, the Balharith and the Massabain. Sharif Haydar al-Habili, who became the first Arab commander of the FRA in June 1967 when it became the South Arabian Army, came from the Amirate of Bayhan. As of 2004 the district had 5,348 houses with 5,481 families. There were 24,863 males and 23,476 females for a total of 48,347. Population density was 78 people per square kilometer.


Traditional industry

Bayhan has long been a center for craft industries. Until relatively recently cotton and indigo were grown in fields in the Bayhan ''wadi'', and many villagers spun and wove cotton or dyed it with indigo. In the mid-20th century hundreds of people were employed in the dying industry in Bayhan, the main industry of the district. In the late 1980s there were still some dyers in Bayhan using natural indigo. The indigo, once cultivated, now grew wild. The leaves could be dried and then stored in sacks for years. Dyers could make up dye as needed, about monthly, in clay pots called from Habban, Shabwa.


References


Sources

* * * * * * {{Shabwah Governorate Districts of Shabwah Governorate