Kawkaban
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Shibam Kawkaban ( ar, شبام كَوْكَبَان, Shibām Kawkabān) is a double town in
Shibam Kawkaban District Shibam Kawkaban District ( ar, مـديـريـة شـبـام كـوكـبـان) is a district of the Al Mahwit Governorate, Yemen. As of 2003, the district had a population of 39,163 inhabitants. See also * Middle East * Shibam District * Sou ...
, Al Mahwit Governorate,
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 ...
, located 38 km west-northwest of Sanaa, the national capital. It consists of two distinct adjoining towns, Shibam ( ar, شبام, Shibām ) and Kawkaban ( ar, كَوْكَبَان, Kawkabān). Shibam is sometimes also called "Shibam Kawkaban" in order to distinguish it from other towns called Shibam. Shibam is a market town at the edge of a large agricultural plain; above it is the fortress-town of Kawkaban, at the summit of the cliffs to the southwest. Kawkaban is a sizeable town in its own right, and is known for its lavish tower-houses. Because of the fertile surrounding farmland, the defensive strength of the Kawkaban fortress, and the city's closeness to Sanaa, Shibam Kawkaban has been strategically important throughout Yemen's history. It contains a fortified citadel about above sea level. It is built upon a precipitous hilltop, walled from the north and fortified naturally from the other directions. It was the capital of the Yuʿfirids Muslim dynasty (847-997) and it was a capital of Bani Sharafaddin in the 9th 15th century. It was also home to a Jewish community, until its demise in the mid-20th century. The city affords a good prospect of the surrounding countryside. The word kawkabān in Arabic means "two planets". The city features several old mosques: ''al Madrasa'', ''al Mansoor'', ''al Sharefa'' and ''Harabat''. The old market is in the middle of the city. Old rainwater reservoirs can also be seen in the fortified town, named ''Meseda'', ''Alasdad'', and ''Sedalhamam''.


Names

According to the 10th-century writer Abu Muhammad al-Hasan al-Hamdani, there were four towns in Yemen named Shibam. To distinguish this Shibam from the others, it is sometimes suffixed as ''Shibam Kawkaban''. Other historically used epithets include ''Shibam Aqyan'', ''Shibam Ḥimyar'', ''Shibam Yaḥbus'', and ''Shibam Yuʿfir''. According to al-Hamdani, the town had originally been called ''Yuḥbis'', and had taken the name "Shibam" after a man of the Banu Hamdan tribe who had settled there. As for the name "Aqyan", it comes from the name of the Banu Dhu Kabir Aqyan dynasty which ruled the surrounding area in pre-Islamic times. The name ''Shibām'', which is somewhat common in Yemen, appears to refer to a peak or other elevated place. Landberg's ''Glossaire datînois'' records that in the Dathina region, there are words ''shabama'' (meaning "to be high") and ''shibām'' (meaning "height"). The places named Shibam are all located by peaks or cliffs, so the name is an appropriate one. As for Kawkaban, al-Hamdani says it is named after a man named Kawkaban b. Dhi Sabal b. Aqyan, of the tribe of Himyar, but Robert T.O. Wilson says this eponym is "probably contrived". Wilson notes that al-Hamdani did mention another place called Kawkaban, which he said got its name "because it was adorned with silver bands."


History

The earliest mentions of Shibam Kawkaban are in 3rd-century inscriptions which identify it as the center of the Dhu Hagaran Shibam tribe. The town is known as Shibam Kawkaban because it is on a mountain called Kawkaban. It was also known as Shibam Yaḥbis, Shibam Ḥimyar and Shibam Aqyan. The Yuʿfirids Muslim dynasty (847-997) that emerged in the Yemen is originally from Shibam Kawkaban. Shibam Kawkaban became their capital. According to al-Hamdani, Shibam was the center of the historical mikhlaf of 'Aqyan. He wrote that the town had 30 mosques in his day and was inhabited by members of the Banu Fahd branch of the tribe of Himyar. Beginning in the 1500s, Shibam Kawkaban was a stronghold of the
Alid The Alids are those who claim descent from the '' rāshidūn'' caliph and Imam ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib (656–661)—cousin, son-in-law, and companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad—through all his wives. The main branches are the (inclu ...
Sharaf al-Din dynasty, which produced two Zaydi Imams of Yemen. In the early 20th century, the mountain village was visited by German explorer and photographer, Hermann Burchardt, who wrote in May 1902: "Kawkaban, a now completely deserted town that still 40 years ago counted 30,000 inhabitants, but now hardly holds a few hundred; talso has its Jewish quarter, where still some families live." Of the city's more popular citizens was the renowned Jewish poet, Zechariah Dhahiri. As of the 1975 census, Shibam Kawkaban was home to about 2,000 people. In February 2016 as part of the Yemeni Civil War fighter jets from U.S.-backed, Saudi-led coalition struck the town citadel killing seven residents and destroying the historic gateway as well as the 700-year-old houses.‘Why is the world so quiet?’ Yemen suffers its own cruel losses, far from Aleppo.
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Climate

Kawkaban has a distinct moderate
semi-arid climate A semi-arid climate, semi-desert climate, or steppe climate is a dry climate sub-type. It is located on regions that receive precipitation below potential evapotranspiration, but not as low as a desert climate. There are different kinds of semi ...
under the
Köppen climate classification The Köppen climate classification is one of the most widely used climate classification systems. It was first published by German-Russian climatologist Wladimir Köppen (1846–1940) in 1884, with several later modifications by Köppen, nota ...
(''BSh''). Due to its outstanding elevation that nears , the town receives larger diurnal ranges and more precipitation compared to the capital nearby Sanaa. The plentiful rainfall is a direct result to its exposed location (not shielded by any natural barriers) being on top of a mountain and its rugged terrain; both factors leading to occasional orographic lifts rising from nearby slopes.


See also

* Shibam Hadramawt


Notes


References

{{Yemen-geo-stub Populated places in Al Mahwit Governorate Twin cities