Kingdom of Yemen

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Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen
)

Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen
المملكة المتوكلية اليمنية (
Arabic
)

al-Mamlakah al-Mutawakkilīyah al-Yamanīyah
1918–1970
Coat of arms of North Yemen
Coat of arms
Anthem: "Royal Salute"
(تحية ملكية)
The Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen before the Saudi–Yemeni War (1934)
The Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen after the Saudi–Yemeni War (1934)
StatusMember of the United Arab States (1958–1961)
CapitalSanaa (1918–1948)
Taiz (1948–1962)
Common languagesArabic
Religion
Zaydi Shia Islam (official)
GovernmentIslamic theocratic absolute monarchy
King-Imam 
• 1918–1948
Yahya Hamid ed-Din
• 1948–1962
Ahmad bin Yahya
• 1962–1970
Muhammad al-Badr
History 
• Independence from the Ottoman Empire
30 October 1918
• Admitted to the United Nations
30 September 1947
26 September 1962
1 December 1970
CurrencyNorth Yemeni rial
Time zoneUTC+3
Calling code967
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Yemen Vilayet
Idrisid Emirate of Asir
Baidah Sultanate
Yemen Arab Republic
Today part ofYemen

The Kingdom of Yemen (

Sana'a from 1918 to 1948, then Taiz from 1948 to 1962.[1] Yemen was admitted to the United Nations on 30 September 1947.[2] From 1962 to 1970, it maintained control over portions of Yemen until its final defeat in the North Yemen Civil War
.

Three days after the Ottoman Empire's decision to withdraw from Yemen following the 1918

Asir to Saudi Arabia. After this war, the Kingdom of Yemen began to pursue an isolationist policy. While Imam Yahya enjoyed legitimacy among the Zaydi tribes in the northern areas, the Sunni population in the coastal and southern regions were less inclined to accept his rule. To maintain power, he maintained authoritarian rule and appointed his sons to rule various provinces. Therefore, as a result of the growing discontent, Imam Yahya was assassinated in 1948 by revolutionaries who wanted to establish a constitutional government, but his son Ahmad bin Yahya, who was the crown prince at the time, seized power with the help of loyal Zaydi tribes. In 1958, Ahmed bin Yahya joined the United Arab States under pressure from Egyptian president Abdel Nasser. However, when Syria left the union in 1961, Yemen also left the union. After the death of Ahmed bin Yahya, one week after his son Muhammad al-Badr came to power, the soldiers under the leadership of Abdullah al-Sallal, supported by Egypt, staged a coup and established the Yemen Arab Republic. Al-Badr fled to the mountains and started a civil war
with the help of Zaydi tribes. Saudi Arabia supported al-Badr, while Egypt sent troops to support al-Sallal. After Egypt's defeat by Israel in 1967, negotiations began between royalists and republicans for a ceasefire, and in 1970, the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen was officially dissolved in exchange for royalists having influence in the government.

The Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen was an autocratic, theocratic kingdom governed by an absolute monarchy system. The country did not have an official language, the majority of the population spoke Arabic, and Yemenite Hebrew. Of the country, 90% were Arabs, ~10% were Afro-Arabs, and a small portion were Yemeni Jews before Operation Magic Carpet, which took place between 1949 and 1950. The population was ~55% Zaydi Muslim, ~45% Sunni Muslim, and a small portion was Jewish before Operation Magic Carpet. The Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen, a member of the United Nations and the Arab League, joined the United Arab States in 1958 and left in 1961.

Etymology

There are various sources about the etymology of Yemen. The term Yamnat is used in ancient South Arabian inscriptions to refer to the second Himyarite king. It is mentioned in the title of Shammar Yahrish. This term probably refers to the coastline between Aden and Hadhramaut.[3][4] Historically, Yemen encompassed a larger region stretching from northern Asir in Saudi Arabia to Dhufar in southern Oman. This region is called Greater Yemen.[5][6]

It is claimed that Yemen is derived from the name al-yamin (

Islamic geographers.[7][8][9] Other sources claim that Yemen comes from the root yamn or yumn, meaning happiness or blessed.[10][11]

While the rest of Arabia was called

Arabic: اليمن السعيد, lit.'Happy Yemen').[12]

History

Background

Ottoman soldiers and local Yemeni people
Ottoman soldiers with Yemeni locals

In 1849, the Ottoman Empire conquered the

Asir, he re-established the Ottoman authority in Yemen by taking Sana'a, the most important city of Yemen, during the governorship of Yemen to which he was appointed in 1872.[14] Ahmed Pasha not only established authority but also initiated construction works in Yemen. In addition to a castle, a mosque, and an imaret, he had a printing house established in San'a and a telegraph line was laid between San'a and Hudaydah. However, the Zaydis, who wanted their imams to rule Yemen, rebelled in 1889 because the Ottoman officials serving in the region were involved in corruption in administrative affairs.[15] Hejaz Governor Ahmed Feyzi Pasha, who was assigned to suppress the rebellion, from Hudaydah He advanced to Sana'a and Taiz and suppressed the rebellion in a short time. Not only was it difficult to suppress the rebellions in Yemen, but the poverty of the Yemeni people increased because reforms could not be made because they were costly to the Ottoman Empire. Since the discontent of the people could not be resolved, they rebelled even more.[16] Abdul Hamid II made some reforms to eliminate the authority of Imam Yahya and eased the tax burden of the poor in Yemen and built schools. He tried to put an end to the rebellions by appointing officers who spoke Arabic to Yemen. After the rebellions of 1882, 1896, 1902, 1904 and 1910. Shortly before World War II; In 1913, the Ottoman Empire was forced to cede some authority to Imam Yahya, who was officially the Zaydi imam. In return, Imam Yahya promised that he would not cooperate with Seyyid Idrisi against the Ottoman Empire.[17]
Then, Along with World War I, many wars took place in Yemen.

Imam Yahya period (1918-1948)

Yemen in 1919
Imam Yahya and his troops in Sana'a

As the fronts turned into a stalemate in the First World War, Imam Yahya, the Zaydi imam of the time, became worried about what would happen to himself and Yemen. In order to avoid any harm to himself, Imam Yahya began to think of leaving

Mudros Armistice of the Ottoman Empire.[19] After this situation, Imam Yahya entered Sana'a and declared the independence of Yemen, and 3 days after independence, Imam Yahya declared himself the ruler of the Zaydi Emirate of Yemen.[20][21] According to the armistice, the Ottoman Empire was to withdraw from all of Yemen, but the governor of the city, Mahmut Nedim Bey, and the commander of the 40th Division, Galib Bey, did not comply with this order for 45 days. Corps Commander Ahmet Tevfik Pasha paid a small amount of the soldiers' overdue salaries from the Provincial coffers. Imam Yahya stated that he would not object if the corps decided to surrender the Corps units, and he requested that some of the weapons and ammunition in the troops be given to him as a precaution against possible attacks in the future, but some commanders objected to this.[22] Taiz Operations Regional Commander Ali Sait Pasha took the initiative and went to Aden and met with the British. Since Ahmet Tevfik Pasha took the time to evacuate Yemen, the British ordered VII. The corps and Yahya's delegation sat at the table with the British, but no result came out of this negotiation.[23] The resistance continued for 1 more month, then VII. The Corps and the 40th Division handed over most of their ammunition to Imam Yahya and sold the rest to the tribes to provide subsistence to the soldiers. On January 23, 1919, the last Ottoman force surrendered to the British.[citation needed] Although most of the officers had left, Mahmud Nedim Bey and 200 Ottoman officers were still detained by Imam Yahya in Sana'a.[23][24][25] The civil servants who stayed in Yemen repeatedly wrote letters to the governments of Istanbul and Ankara for the payment of their salaries until the Treaty of Lausanne was signed.[26] In a letter dated October 13, 1923, he stated that it was appropriate and necessary for the Yemenis to establish their own administration, that it was not possible to meet the financial demands, but that the necessary experts or civil servants were needed for organization. It was written that Turkey could help, provided that their salaries were paid by the Yemeni administration. They held important positions such as Mahmut Nedim the governor of Sana'a and Ragıp Pasha the minister of foreign affairs.[27][28] Imam Yahya wanted Mahmud Nedim Bey, whose official duty ended after the Treaty of Lausanne, to stay in Yemen. However, Mahmud Nedim Bey returned to Turkey in 1924.[29] Then he tried to bring the remaining Turks to Turkey. In 1926, some civil servants returned to Turkey. The Turks who remained in Yemen intermarried with the locals, and most of them were later presumed dead by those in Turkey.[30]

Residence of Imam Yahya Dârü'l-Hajar
Dar al Hajar, The Imam's royal residence

Imam Yahya wanted to realize the

Hudaydah, Imam Yahya attacked Aden again in 1922. 50 km before Aden, British Air Force had to retreat because Imam Yahya's army was under heavy bombardment.[37][38]

In order to gain more control over the tribes in Yemen, he waged war against the rebellious Hashid and Bakil tribes in 1922.[39] Since Imam Yahya knew about the brutality of crown Prince Ahmed bin Yahya, he appointed him as a commander in the rebellions. After many clashes between the Hashid bandits and the Victorious Army, the Hashid tribe was defeated. By the order of Prince Ahmed bin Yahya, the army plundered the Hashid tribe and raped many people.[40] After this incident, Imam Yahya ordered the crown Prince Ahmed bin Yahya to arrest the chiefs and sheikhs of the Hashid tribes, collect the captives, and also ask the Hashid tribe to cover the war damages. He ordered him to collect a small amount of taxes and to demolish the houses of those who refused. The arrested Hashid sheikhs and tribal leaders were sent to Ghamdan prison. Everyone except the children was tortured and killed.[41]

Arabia map in 1925

In 1924, al-Jawf and Bayda tribes rebelled. Thereupon, Imam Yahya sent the New Army led by Sayyid

Najran.[47]

Imam Yahya's children, 1930s

Imam Yahya, British in South Yemen to put pressure on the 's and to draw a borderline between two occupying powers [a] in a land that does not belong to them[b]' and started to raid the Aden Protectorate. In response, the British began bombing Yemen, especially Taiz and Ibb.[48][49] Since Yemen did not have an air force and air defense system, Yemen could not react and suffered too many casualties. That's why the imam had to stop the raids. Later, Ali Nasır el-Kardey set out with a tribal union to capture Shabwa, which lies to the south of Violet Line.[50] Without conflict, the tribes submitted to Imam Yahya. After the tribes in Shabwa came under the yoke of the imam, the British started bombing the tribes in Shabwa. The real reason they bombed the tribes was to further shake the Imam's shaken authority.[51]

The country that first recognized Imam Yahya as the king of all Yemen became the Kingdom of Italy with the Italo-Yemeni Treaty signed in 1926. Thus, the Imam is especially important in Arab geography.

Saudi-Yemeni War

Display of the war on the map(click on it if it is not working.)
  Kingdom of Yemen
  Saudi Arabia

The Idrisis rebelled against Saudi Arabia and Saudi Arabia soon suppressed the rebellion. Emir Idrisi took refuge in Yemen. That's why Yemen-Saudi Arabia relations began to become tense. Imam Yahya did not comply with the agreement and attacked Najran.[52] Imam Yahya demanded that the administration in Asir be left to al-Idrisi. When an agreement could not be reached with the ambassadors sent by Saudi Arabia, the ambassadors were imprisoned.

The United Kingdom signed friendship treaties with both sides to remain neutral[53] but still provided aircraft and weapons aid to Saudi Arabia before the war.[54] The British maintained Yemen's independence for forty years. and although Imam Yahya did not accept the Violet line, he promised not to attack Aden in exchange for border negotiations.[55][56]

In March 1934,

al-Hudaydah. After capturing it, they began to plunder the city. When they threatened to plunder the traders from the Dominion of India, they gave up plundering when soldiers from the Royal Navy
arrived to restore order. Famine began to occur in Sana'a. The imam denied rumors that his son was killed while escaping.

Yemeni troops entering Hudaydah, 1934
Hudeidia, 1934

Yemen is stuck in the city of Sana'a. Neither British nor Italian forces were expected to intervene in the region.[60] Ibn Saud demanded the imam's abdication, five-year control of the border region and the exile of the former Emir of Asir from Yemen, but Imam Yahya did not accept. Although the Saudis had better weapons, especially tanks, they did not fall to San because Saudi Arabia's soldiers could not adapt to the mountainous region and Yemeni soldiers were more experienced. Ibn Saud decided to make an agreement with Yemen because he was not in a position to continue the war and there was a possibility of a new Muslim Brotherhood rebellion.12 May 1934' Peace talks started in. Ibn Saud claimed that he was not interested in Yemeni lands. He gave up his demand for Imam Yahya's abdication and demanded a 20-year ceasefire.[citation needed] The present-day Yemen-Saudi Arabia border was determined with the Taif Treaty signed on 14 June 1934.[61] Kingdom of Yemen; He had to leave Najran, Asir and Jizan to the Kingdom of Hejaz and Nejd.[62][63] End Saudi troops left Yemen on July 7.[64]

Historian Hans Kohn writing in Foreign Affairs Magazine noted that some European observers tended to view this conflict as actually a clash of British and Italian interests. He evaluated that although Saudis have ties with England and Yemen with Italy, ultimately the rivalry between the two emirates will not feed the rivalry between the two countries.

Post-war

Failure to recognize the southern border of his kingdom with the British Aden Protectorate (later People's Democratic Republic of Yemen) negotiated by Yahya's ulema, despite the Treaty of Friendship at Sana'a, From time to time it caused conflicts with the British.[citation needed] On October 15, 1937, the Italian-Yemen Treaty was extended.

World War II and after

Although Imam Yahya was anti-British and close to the

Axis powers, to which the Kingdom of Italy belonged, II. He pursued a isolationist
policy throughout World War II. Although it did not participate in the war, it faced famines in Yemen like Türkiye. In 1943, a major famine occurred in Yemen. Although it was suggested to the Imam to open the state's reserves, he did not accept it.

In 1944, the poet Muhammad Mahmud Al-Zubayri, nicknamed the "Father of the Revolution" in the North, returned to Yemen from Egypt, but soon fled to the south and founded the Great Yemen Assembly.[65]

In 1945, Yemen became a founding member of the Arab League.

On March 4, 1946, President Harry Truman recognized the Kingdom of Yemen as a sovereign state in a letter to Imam Yahya, the king of Yemen.[66]

Ibrahim bin Yahya When his father, Imam Yahya, fell ill in the city of al-Rawda in 1946, he contacted several commanders and tribal leaders and arranged for the Dar Al-Hajar, al-Salalah in the city of Sana'a. He planned to seize power by capturing important points such as the Palace and arresting his father and brother Ali bin Yahya. He showed his plan to people he trusted, such as the poet Ahmed bin Muhammad al-Shami, but no one supported him.[67] Because he was worried that his plan would go to his father, he faked being sick and started rumors that he was going crazy and having epileptic seizures in order to escape from Yemen. Since doctors could not find a solution, they advised his father to be sent to Ethiopia. They left Yemen with Professor Ahmed al-Burak, who knew English well, to be their translator. After staying in Asmara for a while, they went to the city of Aden and Ibrahim joined the Ahrar Party, which was established against his father's rule.[68]

On September 30, 1947, Yemen joined the United Nations. In the mid-20th century, most

Yemeni Jews left Yemen and emigrated to the newly established Israel
.

In 1948, nearly 100 members of the Free Yemen Society were arrested for distributing leaflets against authoritarian rule.[69]

A small expeditionary force was sent to the

1948 Arab-Israeli War.[70]

Al-Waziri Coup

Abdullah al-Wazir, March 1948

In order to seize power, the Al-Wazirids ambushed Imam Yahya on 17 February 1948 in Savad Hizyaz, south of Sana'a.[71] Ali Kardey's group opened fire on the convoy, which had to stop because of a stone placed in the middle of the road, and Imam Yahya, his grandson and two soldiers were killed.[72] It was said that 50 bullets were found in Imam's body.[73] Then the Al-Waziris appointed Abdullah al-Wazir to rule the kingdom. Al-Wazir declared constitutionalism and established a provisional Shura Council. There were sixty prominent scholars and jurists in the parliament, led by İbrahim bin Yahya.

The new government was formed, headed by Ali bin Abdullah, who also included Ahmed Muhammad. Numan as the Minister of Agriculture, Sheikh Muhammad Ahmed Numan as the Minister of Internal Affairs, Muhammad Mahmud al-Zubari as the Minister of Education and Judge Abdullah Al-Agbari as the Minister of State, Hussein Abdul Qadir as the Minister of Defense, Servant Galib al-Wajih as the Minister of Finance, Judge Ahmed al-Agbari as the Minister of Education. Carafi took office as Minister of Economy and Mining and Mr. Ahmed al-Mutaa as Minister of Trade and Industry. Prince Ali bin Yahya Hamideddin was appointed as Minister of State and Judge. Hasan al-Omari was appointed Minister of State.

Sana'a, with Bab al-Yaman visible in the background

"Our father, Imam Yahya Hamideddin, passed away. Ahmed al-Wazir was elected imam and I am the chairman of the Council," written by Ibrahim bin Yahya to Cairo newspapers from Aden. The telegram was sent. Abdullah bin Yahya, who was in London at the time of the coup, denied his father's death and added cryptically: "The circumstances are complex and it is understandable that some exaggerated news is coming out of Yemen."[74]

This coup was not welcomed by Arab countries. Especially the Saudis and the remaining Arab kings did not recognize the new government. After the coup, his son Ahmad bin Yahya traveled around North Yemen, gathered the tribes and Saudi Arabia behind him, and besieged Sana'a with the tribes he gathered.[75] He took control of the city a few weeks later. He allowed the tribes he took behind him to plunder the capital. The sack of Sana'a lasted seven days and is assumed to have involved around 250,000 tribesmen.[73] On 8 April 1948, Abdullah al-Wazir was executed by beheading. Approximately 5000 people died during the coup.[76]

George Washington University According to Professor of Political Science and International Relations Bernard Reich, Imam Yahya, like his ancestors, could have done better and organized the Zaydi tribes in the northern plateaus against the Turks and British invaders, uniting Yemen and turning it into another cemetery.[77]

Ahmed bin Yahya period (1948-1962)

After Imam Yahya was killed in the coup in 1948[78] son of Imam Ahmed bin Yahya came to power. His reign was marked by renewed friction with the United Kingdom over the British presence in the south, which stood in the way of its aspirations for increased development, openness and the creation of Greater Yemen. Ahmed bin Yahya was a little more forward-thinking and more open to foreign relations than his father. Yet his regime, like his father's, was autocratic; His approval was required even in the most ordinary situations.[79] Due to Ahmed bin Yahya's strictness and fierceness, the Yemenis described him as Ahmed Ya Jinah (أحمد يا جناه) at that time, and because of this trait, his father was the one who appointed him. He gave him the task of suppressing the rebellions – especially in Hashid and Tihame.[80]

Ahmed bin Yahya, like his father Imam Yahya, had the idea of a Greater Yemen.[79] In the 1950s, after not recognizing British rule in Southern Arabia, he established a British-Ottoman border that served to separate Yemen from the Aden Protectorate. A series of border clashes took place along the Violet Line.[81] The British won the conflict.

In 1952, Imam Ahmed banned listening to the radio in public places.

In March 1955, a coup by a group of military officers and two of Ahmed's brothers deposed the king for a time. However, the coup was quickly suppressed. Ahmed bin Yahya faced increasing pressure from the Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, who was supported by Arab nationalists and pan-Arabists, and in April 1956 He also signed a mutual defense agreement with Egypt. In March 1958, Yemen joined the United Arab States. However, this confederation disintegrated shortly after Syria withdrew from the United Arab Republic in September 1961 and from the United Arab States in December 1961. After these events, relations between Yemen and Egypt deteriorated.

In 1959, the Soviet Red Cross and Red Crescent Society sent 10,000 tons of wheat to help Yemen overcome the effects of drought.

North Yemen Civil War (1962-1970)

State of the war in 1967
A royalist camp in Yemen in 1962
Expeditionary Egyptian Troops in the North Yemen Civil War

Imam Ahmed died in September 1962 and was succeeded by his son Muhammad al-Badr. Inspired by Abd al-Nasir, Egyptian-trained officers led by the commander of the royal guard, Abdullah al-Sallal, deposed Muhammad al-Badr the year he came to power, took control of Sanaa, and founded the Yemen Arab Republic. This incident sparked the North Yemen Civil War. The Imam then fled to the Saudi Arabia border and launched a counter-attack with the support of the Zaidi tribes in the north to regain control, which soon escalated the civil war.[82]

Red Cross delegate Andre Rocher with Prince Abdullah bin Al-Hassan

Soviets recognized the

chemical weapons in late 1965.[84] On December 11, 1966, two people died and thirty-five people were injured due to fifteen tear gas bombs. On January 5, 1967, 140 people died and 130 people were injured in the gas attack on Kitaf village, the headquarters of Prince Hasan bin Yahya. After these events, the United Kingdom and the United States put pressure on Egypt. Egypt did not accept the allegations and suggested that the reported incidents were probably caused by napalm, not gas. The Red Cross was alarmed and issued a statement expressing concern in Geneva on 2 June. The University of Bern Institute of Forensic Medicine, based on the report of the Red Cross, concluded that the gas was probably halogen derivatives – phosgene, mustard gas, levitite, chloride or cyanogen bromide-. Gas attacks stopped 3 weeks after the Six-Day War. An estimated 1,500 people died and 2,000 were injured due to chemical attacks. Conflicts continued until 1967, when Egyptian troops withdrew. By 1968, after a final royalist siege of Sana'a, an agreement was reached with the Saudis at the Islamic conference in 1970, and the first permanent constitution was adopted on December 30, 1970, consolidating the Republican regime.[85][86]
More than 100,000 people died on both sides during the conflict. Egyptian historians call this civil war "Egypt's Vietnam War" due to the guerrilla warfare tactics used by the monarchists.

Instability and decline

coup d'état in 1948, but his son, Imam Ahmad bin Yahya, regained power several months later. His reign was marked by growing development and openness, as well as renewed friction with the United Kingdom over the British presence in the south, which stood in the way of his aspirations to create a Greater Yemen. Imam Ahmad was slightly more forward-thinking than his father and was more open to foreign contacts. Nonetheless, his regime, like his father's, was autocratic and semi-medieval in character; even the most mundane measures required his personal approval.[87]

In March 1955, a coup by a group of officers and two of Ahmad's brothers briefly deposed the king but was quickly suppressed. Ahmad faced growing pressures, supported by the Arab nationalist and pan-Arabist objectives of the President of Egypt, Gamal Abdel Nasser, and, in April 1956, he signed a mutual defense pact with Egypt. In March 1958, Yemen joined the United Arab Republic (a federation of Egypt and Syria formed in February 1958) in a confederation known as the United Arab States. However, this confederation was dissolved in December 1961, soon after Syria withdrew from the United Arab Republic and the United Arab States in September 1961. Relations between Egypt and Yemen subsequently deteriorated.

Imam Ahmad died in September 1962 and was succeeded by his son, Crown Prince

Abdullah as-Sallal, deposed him the same year he was crowned, took control of Sana'a, and created the Yemen Arab Republic (YAR). This sparked the North Yemen Civil War and created a new front in the Arab Cold War, in which Egypt assisted the YAR with troops and supplies to combat forces loyal to the imamate, while the monarchies of Saudi Arabia and Jordan
supported Badr's royalist forces in opposing the newly formed republic. Conflict continued periodically until 1967 when Egyptian troops were withdrawn. By 1968, following a final royalist siege of Sana'a, most of the opposing leaders had reached a reconciliation, and Saudi Arabia recognized the republic in 1970.

Politics

The Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen is a unitary state where absolute monarchy is implemented. The Zaydis, who were in power, had the understanding of imamate. Because of the understanding of imamate, Imams of Yemen were interested in politics until the September 26 Revolution. The assembly, consisting of 10 sayyids, elected the imam who would take over after the imam's death. Even during the periods when they were under the Mamluks and the Ottomans, their words were mentioned in Yemen, especially in the mountains of North Yemen, where the Zaydi sect was more concentrated. In 1926, Imam Yahya transitioned to the dynastic principle by appointing his son as crown prince. Thus, the imamship was passed from father to son, rather than those who met the conditions. This created hostility from some of the Sayyid class, who had an important role in the appointment of the imam in the Zaydi tradition.[47]

Foreign relations

Yemeni diplomats at the United Nations meeting, Paris, 1948
The Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen was a member of international organizations such as Arab League (1945), United Nations (1947). Since South Yemen was under the auspices of the United Kingdom at that time, it represented the whole of Yemen.
Harry S. Truman talking to Hasan bin Yahya
In line with its power, the Kingdom of Yemen often pursued a policy of isolationist.

[citation needed] It took steps to strengthen the newly established Yemen and gain international recognition for its state.[citation needed] On September 2, 1926, Yemen was recognized internationally and diplomatic contacts with the Soviet Union took place in Ankara. He established a partnership relationship with Imam Yahya Mussolini by signing the San'a Treaty in 1926.[88] Thus, the Kingdom of Italy accepted Imam Yahya as the king of all Yemen.[89][90] In addition, it provided diplomatic support against Saudi Arabia, which had ambitions over the Kingdom of Yemen.[90] On October 15, 1937, this treaty was extended again. Relations were also developed with the Soviet Union by signing the Soviet-Yemen Friendship and Trade Treaty.[91][92] The northern border was determined by signing the Taif Treaty with Saudi Arabia in 1934 and other relations such as trade were developed.[93] The Taif Treaty would be renewed every 20 years and its validity would be confirmed in 1995.[94][95]

Relations between the United Kingdom, which controlled Aden, and the Kingdom of Yemen, which wanted to control all of Yemen, were generally tense.[82] Even Imam Yahya stated in his letters that "the British", He wrote, "their real desire and main goal is to disintegrate and disperse Islam, so that they can dominate us and make us slaves." was being done. After 1928, the aggressive policies carried out against the British were changed and San'a Friendship Treaty was signed with the United Kingdom.[96][97] An aggressive attitude towards the United Kingdom was not taken until 1948. This attitude changed during the reign of Ahmed bin Yahya, and in the 1950s he declared that he did not recognize the sovereignty of the United Kingdom in Southern Arabia and entered into border conflicts.[citation needed]

Muhammad al-Badr and the Chinese diplomat signing the Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation, 1958

On March 4, 1946, the president of the United States Harry Truman recognized the Kingdom of Yemen as a sovereign state in a letter to Imam Yahya.[citation needed] In addition, relations with the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China were strengthened. A lot of aid was provided by these countries. A double-header occurred after the September 26 Revolution turned into a civil war. The Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China and Egypt recognized the Yemen Arab Republic, while Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom recognized the Mutawakkillite Kingdom of Yemen.[98] Since Saudi Arabia provided budgetary support to the royalists, they became dependent on them. At the end of the agreement made in 1970, everyone recognized the Yemen Arab Republic.[citation needed]

Administrative divisions

The Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen has a unitary structure in terms of administration. Local governments have limited powers. The largest administrative units of the country are

San'a until 1948, after which it became Taiz
.

The Ottoman Empire left

Zamar sanjak and connected it directly to Sana'a. Afterward, he turned Saada into a separate sanjak and established the sanjak of "Liva al-Sham". The Zabid region was attached to the Zamar sanjak and Abdullah al-Wazir was appointed as its head. When Abdullah al-Wazir left for another job, a separate sanjak was made in 1938 by adding land from the Taiz sanjak to the Imam Yahya Ibb region. He appointed Hasan bin Yahya as his leader. It was added to the sanjak of Ibb by taking a part from Hübeyşiyye and Riyaşiyye mihlaf from Rada
district.

During the reign of Ahmed bin Yahya, he founded the Mahwit sanjak by uniting the Kawkaban, Tavila, Hafaş, and Melhan regions. Finally, Yemen was divided into 8 sanjaks.

Army

Sana Military School

The Yemeni army consists of two parts: the Ground Forces and the Air Force. While some of the army was paid professional soldiers, the rest were tribal soldiers called in during wartime.

Before Yemen became independent, it had the authority to govern the tribes thanks to the prestige of the Imams, but these troops were not regular. The first regular Yemeni army dates back to the late 19th century, when the Ottoman Empire began recruiting tribal soldiers to form four gendarmerie battalions and three cavalry regiments.

A Yemen cannon in the 1920s

After the Ottoman Empire withdrew from Yemeni territory and Imam Yahya had full control in Yemen, Yemeni brigades in the Ottoman Empire, including the Taiz Brigade at first, began to side with Imam Yahya.[47] Remnants of the Ottoman period Knowing that the Yemeni Brigades would not be enough to defend Yemen in the Arabian Peninsula, Imam Yahya increased the size of his army. 8 brigades were established: Sana'a, Zamar, Taiz, Ibb, Hudeyde, Mehvit, Liva el Sham and Haci.

Land Forces

Since the Kingdom of Yemen was a relatively small country, and after the Ottoman withdrawal from Yemen in 1918, a lot of confusion occurred due to attempts to reform and develop the army without having a sufficient level of officers and doctrine. Theoretical rather than practical aspects dominated the training, and some officers were promoted based on their closeness to Imam Yahya, not on their intelligence or education. It caused a flaw in education because some of them tried to give military training even though they had no military experience.[99]

Although it is complicated, Imam Yahya has a large army compared to his region due to his military experience and authority in the region.[100] The Land Army is divided into 5 branches.[101]

  • Ukfa Troops
    Imamate Guards (Ukfa troops): These were military units assigned to protect the Imam. To be accepted into this union, one had to show outstanding success and prove that he was loyal to the Imam. It consisted of an average of 5,000 soldiers.[102]
Military march of the Victorious Army
  • Victorious Army: It was founded in 1919, and its first soldiers were former Yemeni soldiers of the Ottoman Empire. When the army was first established; The arsenals were filled with a large number of approximately 400,000 rifles of various types, in addition to light and heavy artillery batteries of different calibers and weights. Every year, each tribe had to send a specified number of soldiers to the state. Each tribe contained a scribe who reported the behavior, rewards, and misdeeds of the tribe's members. If a soldier stole or left the army without permission, the tribal leader had to compensate the imam for the damage.[103] In addition to subjugating rebellious tribes, carrying out military operations and protecting imams, princes and public officials in the state, the army also carries out operations such as maintaining authority and collecting taxes.[104][105][106][107]
Tribesmen in Sana'a
  • Defense Army: It was established in 1937 due to the inadequacy of the Victorious Army. After losing a significant part of Yemen following the war with the Saudis and the British, Imam Yahya came to the conclusion that his army needed modernization and better training conditions. After the failure of the reform attempts in the Victorious Army and the emergence of complaints among the officers, and under the pressure of the intellectuals, Imam Yahya decided to "establish a new army, which is a regular Defense Army based on compulsory service for all gun owners, regardless of age." The following is the case: After the fall of the Kingdom of Hejaz Lieutenant General Hasan Tahsin al-F akîr came to Yemen and assisted Imam Yahya as a military advisor from 1930 to 1944. Defense during aid He played a major role in establishing the Army.{{efn|Born, raised and educated in Damascus; A commander who did military service in the Ottoman army}} Unlike the Victorious Army, training was based on experience rather than theory, but this training period was still not enough for the soldiers to master military training, combat skills and military training.[108] It consisted of all Yemenis with compulsory military service. After being drafted into the army, they received training periodically for 10 years.
  • National Army: An independent army similar to the Victorious and Defending armies. Its commander was Colonel Muhammed Hamid.
  • Barani Army (Tribal Army): They were irregular units that served voluntarily. It consisted of infantry and cavalry, who usually served for 1–2 years and brought their own rifles and supplies. Yemen has always relied primarily on tribal supporters in its wars against its rivals. These tribes generally live in the northern, northwestern and eastern regions. These types of warriors are classified as "traditional national armies", which are led by tribal chiefs and have no regular formation.[109]

Air Force

Yemen Mutawakkilite Kingdom Fighter Plane
Yemen Air Force Medallion
Plan of Junkers A35 acquired by Yemen
The first group of aviation students affiliated with the Yemeni army that were sent to Italy in 1926.

With the help of the Germans and Italians, the Yemeni Air Force was established in 1926. Imam Yahya contacted the Kingdom of Italy to provide aircraft to his country because the

Socialist Republic of Czechoslovakia in 1957 for 24 Ilyushin Il-10 attack aircraft.[112] However, due to the lack of support materials and spare parts, none of these planes could be flown.[c] In the same period, 2 Mil Mi-1 and 4 Mil Mi-4 helicopters from the Soviet Union; Ilyushin Il-14 transport aircraft were purchased and a Soviet flight school was opened in Yemen. Flight schools were equipped with 10 Czechoslovak-made Zlín Z-26 training aircraft.[113]

Army Modernization

Artillery Training camp in 1958

When the Kingdom of Yemen was first established, the Ottoman Empire invested more in the Balkans than in the Arabian Peninsula and Anatolia, apart from agriculture. There was nothing. The weapons they stole from the Ottomans[114] and they had no weapons other than the rifles they bought from the Kingdom of Italy and the United Kingdom. For this, Imam Yahya ordered the establishment of an ammunition factory in the early 1920s with the help of Yugoslav (or German) and Austria.

After the defeat in the Saudi-Yemeni war in 1934, the Imam saw the need to modernize and expand the armed forces. from Italy; He purchased 6 light tanks, 2,000 rifles, four anti-aircraft guns, 4 cannons, and some communication equipment. A few rifles and communication equipment were received from the Kingdom of Iraq. Italy also opened a flight school in Sana'a.[115]

al-Badr inspecting one of the tanks

Despite the pressure exerted by Western countries, including the United States and the United Kingdom, on the armament of Yemen, Imam Muhammad al-Badr was determined to strengthen the Yemeni army. An agreement was signed with Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser to bring some military experts and officers from Egypt. In addition, the From the Eastern Bloc signed agreements with some countries, especially the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, and China, on the supply of weapons to Yemen, their maintenance, and the training of Yemeni soldiers. As a result of the agreements, 34 light tanks, 50 100mm caliber tanks, 100 field guns, 70 personnel carriers, one armored vehicle, and 70 transport trucks were purchased.[116] This agreement is considered a big step in the history of the Yemeni army. These reforms continued until the revolution broke out on September 26, 1962:

  • In 1957, the Military Academy was reopened and new military schools were opened in Sana'a and Taiz.
  • In 1958, the Aviation College, Petty Officer School, Artillery Training camp, and the new Military Academy were established.
  • In 1959, the Police College was established in Taiz.[d]
  • Instructors were brought for the soldiers from the Soviet Union and Egypt.
  • New unions established:
    • Al-Badr Regiment: The first armored unit in the Yemeni army.
    • National Army: An army similar to the Victorious and Defensive army.
    • Yemen command: A general command subordinate to al-Badr for direct control of the army.

Army size before the revolution

Before the North Yemen Civil War, the Mutawakkili Kingdom of Yemen had a regular army of 40,447 men of various ranks.

  • Victorious Army: 22,090 personnel
  • Defense Army: 15,990 personnel
  • National Army: 1,396 personnel
  • al-Badr Regiment: 971 personnel

Geography

Yemen map

The Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen was an

Treaty of Taif and the Treaty of Friendship to Sanaa.[117]

The territory of the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen roughly resembles a square shape. It is 450 kilometers long and 490 kilometers wide. 17° and 13° with northern parallels 43° and 45° was located between the eastern meridians. The country consisted of approximately 195,000 km2 squares. It consisted almost entirely of land, with lakes making up an insignificant part.[117]

The mountains of Yemen are one of the highest mountains in the world. The plateaus in Yemen are the wettest areas in the region. Annual rainfall was over 22 inches. Most of the precipitation occurred during the summer months. Because it is a mountainous area, the temperature could approach freezing during the winter months. There are no permanent rivers, streams, lakes, etc. in Yemen. did not have. Most of the flash floods that frequently occurred in the region flowed into the Red Sea.[118] Desert climate in the country It was effective and dust and sand storms were seen throughout the year.

Demographics

Religion

North Yemen sect map
  Zaydi
  Sunni

Zaydis of the northern highlands have been politically and culturally dominant in Yemen for centuries. The existence of the Zaydis, which has continued until today since they moved to the Yemen region, which has a unique socio-cultural structure, and established a state, has been interrupted from time to time, following a politically ambiguous and unstable course. The first rebellions of the Sunni population, who did not accept the religious-political rule of the Zaydis, took place during the period of the Yemeni imam El-Hadi İla'l-Hakk Yahya.[119]

The sect of the areas controlled by the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen was approximately ~55% Zaydi and ~45% Sunni.[citation needed]

Yemeni Jews

Yemeni Jewish jeweler and his child Sana'a, 1937
Jewish family reading the psalms after lunch on the Sabbath

Judaism was the first Abrahamic religion to come to Yemen. Christianity was the majority religion in Yemen until its introduction to Islam. Until 1948, approximately 50,000 Yemeni Jews lived in the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen.[120] The Jews were exiled during the reign of Hasan, but later, due to economic reasons, the Jews who were craftsmen were settled in separate neighborhoods, isolated from the city and Muslims.[121] In the 18th Century, the Imams of Yemen enacted a law known as the Orphan Edict, which was based on their 18th-century legal interpretations and came into force at the end of that century.[122] According to this Edict, Yemeni imams are He was sentenced to take zimmi Jewish children, who were under 12 years old when he died, under the protection of Zaydi, hand them over to Muslim foster families, and instill Islamic teachings in them. This Edict was arranged in this way due to the understanding that the ruler should take care of orphans because the Prophet Muhammad of Islam was the father of orphans and advised to take care of orphans.[123] The reason for focusing on those under the age of 12 is because Muhammad bin Abdullah said, "Orphanhood ends after reaching puberty.".[124]

The Orphan Edict was ignored during Ottoman rule (1872–1918).[121] But in 1921, when Imam Yahya became fully dominant in Yemen, he reinstated this law.[122] British historian Tudor Parfitt likened this situation to "the brutal measures that introduced the compulsory conscription of Jewish children into the Tsarist army in Russia". At first, the edict was not implemented by the authorities as much as it could have been in the Ottoman Empire. In some places, the authorities turned a blind eye to the children running away and hiding, but since the imam was insistent on this issue, troops were sent to search for the escaped children in more central locations. Jewish community leaders suspected of hiding Jewish children were arrested and tortured in prisons.

One of the important people who was converted to Islam with the Orphan Edict was Abdurrahman el-Eryani, who was claimed to be of Jewish origin by Dorit Mizrahi, one of the writers of Mishpaha newspaper.[125] She was allegedly born Zekharia Hadad in 1910 to a Jewish family in Ibb. After his parents died due to an epidemic when he was eight years old, he and his 5-year-old sister were protected by the Orphan Edict. He was given to separate protective families with his brother and renamed Abdurrahman al-Eryani. Eryani later served as minister of religious endowments in the Yemen Arab Republic, becoming the only civilian to lead North Yemen.[126] However, an interview by YemenOnline, an online newspaper, with several members of the al-Eryani family In the interview, he denied the claim that Abdurrahman al-Eryani was Jewish. According to them, it is a distortion put forward by Israeli journalist Haolam Hazeh in 1967. Zekharia Haddad is actually Abdulrahim al-Haddat, the half-brother and bodyguard of Abdurrahman el-Eryani.[127]

Jews were considered

impure and therefore Jews were forbidden from touching a Muslim or Muslim's food.[128]

Economy

Transportation

Vizier Hasan bin Yahya driving a tractor in Italy in 1953.
A car license plate during the Kingdom of Yemen

Transportation has always been challenging and long due to Yemen's deserts and mountainous terrain. Except for a few roads built by the Ottoman Empire after its arrival in Yemen, there were not many roads in the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen. The repair of these roads was usually done by prisoners of war or prisoners. Although the Ottoman Empire brought some cars to Yemen, they took most cars with them when troops withdrew from Yemen in accordance with the Armistice of Mudros. The first automobile to arrive in Yemen was when Brigadier General Yakup brought a Ford model automobile as a gift while visiting Imam Yahya in 1923. Although this automobile was not welcomed at first because there were only horse-drawn carriages in Yemen until then, when Imam Yahya declared that the use of this foreign invention was permissible, princes, high-ranking officials, rich merchants, and high-ranking soldiers began to buy automobiles. The use of automobiles is prohibited except on main roads and ring roads. Heavy fines were imposed on those who used it. Until the early 1950s, only those with important government jobs and European merchants in Hudaydah had cars.[129][130]

Imam Yahya established a national transportation and transportation company for the villagers who went to the cities to sell goods and for transportation, but the expeditions of this company did not cover the whole of Yemen. In more mountainous regions where there were no expeditions, transportation was generally provided by caravans consisting of camels, mules, and donkeys, via paths. The bases of various brigades such as Liva al-Sham, Haci, Ma'rib, and Ibb were established at the points where these paths meet. Thus, the caravans could be protected from bandits.

During the Ottoman Empire, a railway connecting Hudaydah and Sana'a was built. While some repairs were being made in the port of Hudaydah by the French in 1908, an 8 km railway was built, but after the port was bombed by the Italians in 1912, it was closed to the railways in Yemen. Not much attention has been paid. Following the 1934 Sana'a Friendship Treaty, the United Kingdom presented Imam Yahya with the idea of connecting Aden and Sana'a by railway. According to Imam Yahya, "their real desire and main goal is to disintegrate and disperse Islam, so that they can dominate us and make us slaves".[131]

Gallery

  • A photograph of the Yemen Flag taken at the UN on September 20, 1947
  • Soviet planes that were not used because there were no pilots to fly them.
  • Imamate throne
  • Photo of a Yemen Airlines plane in the 1950s
    Photo of a Yemen Airlines plane in the 1950s
  • A weaver woman receiving weapons training during the North Yemen Civil War
  • Commander Muhammed Şaban and the Royal Guards, Taiz
  • A view from Sana'a Military School in 1958
    A view from Sana'a Military School in 1958
  • A Yemeni house in 1912
    A Yemeni house in 1912

Postage stamps

  • Postage stamp showing a road connecting Hodeidah to Sana'a
    Postage stamp showing a road connecting Hodeidah to Sana'a
  • A postage stamp made for Ahmad bin Yahya
    A postage stamp made for Ahmad bin Yahya
  • A stamp related to Yemen's accession to the United Nations
    A stamp related to Yemen's accession to the United Nations
  • United Arab States
  • A postage stamp related to the North Yemen Civil War
    A postage stamp related to the North Yemen Civil War
  • A postage stamp related to Hasan bin Yahya
    A postage stamp related to Hasan bin Yahya
  • Kingdom of Yemen postage stamp
    Kingdom of Yemen postage stamp
  • A stamp regarding Yemen's accession to the United Nations
    A stamp regarding Yemen's accession to the United Nations
  • Postage stamp commemorating the Mujahideen
    Postage stamp commemorating the Mujahideen
  • A stamp made for Muhammad al-Badr
    A stamp made for Muhammad al-Badr
  • A postage stamp related to the North Yemen Civil War
    A postage stamp related to the North Yemen Civil War
  • Dar al-Hajar, the residence of Imam Yahya
    Dar al-Hajar, the residence of Imam Yahya

Flags

  • Plain red flag (1918–23)
    Plain red flag (1918–23)
  • Flag with shahada (1923–1927)
    Flag with shahada (1923–1927)
  • Flag with five stars and sword (1927–1970)
    Flag with five stars and sword (1927–1970)
  • Yemen Kingdom Air Force flag
    Yemen Kingdom Air Force flag

See also

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  115. ^ a b The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times, by Reeva Spector Simon, Michael Menachem Laskier, Sara Reguer editors, Columbia University Press, 2003, page 392
  116. ^ Baqara: 83-177-215-220
  117. ^ Ebû Dâvûd, Vesâyâ, 6
  118. ^ /spages/1030121.html Our man in Sanaa: Ex-Yemen president was once trainee rabbi Archived 2 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine Haaretz
  119. ^ Abdul-Rahman al-Iryani, Ex-Yemen President, 89 – The New York Times, March 17, 1998.
  120. ^ "Haaretz Dreams". Archived from the original on 28 October 2014. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  121. ^ Jewish Communities in Exotic Places," by Ken Blady, Jason Aronson Inc., 2000, page 10
  122. ^ "المواصلات في زمن الإمام يحيى". اليمن الجمهوري (in Arabic). 9 September 2018. Archived from the original on 25 December 2022. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  123. ^ "الفرنسية "لوسيل فيفرييه" تروي جانباً من جحيم الإمامة في اليمن". اليمن الجمهوري (in Arabic). 17 May 2022. Archived from the original on 17 May 2022. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
  124. ^ Yemen-Turkey Relations in the Period of National Struggle, He did not welcome this idea and rejected it because it was Imam Yahya-Mustafa Kemal Pasha Correspondence p.27-28

Sources

  • History of Arabia, Encyclopædia Britannica (Macropædia Vol. 1). Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 1979, pp. 1043–1051.
  • Kingdom of Yemen at Flags of the World.

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ refers to the Ottoman Empire and the United Kingdom.
  2. ^ see. He entered ed-Dali in 1927 to announce that he did not recognize the Violet Line
  3. ^ The planes that could not be flown were most likely This are the planes in the photo.
  4. ^ Policemen who graduated from this College are the first policemen of Yemen.

External links