Rassid dynasty

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Rassid dynasty
Yemen
Founded897
FounderAl-Hadi ila'l-Haqq Yahya
Current headAgeel bin al-Badr
Final rulerMuhammad al-Badr
Titles
  • Imam of Yemen
  • King of Yemen
Deposition26 September 1962
(abdicated 1 December 1970)

The

medieval period, up to the 16th century. The Rassid branch that came to power with imam al-Mansur al-Qasim
(r. 1597-1620) is known as Qasimids (Al al-Qasimi).

Establishment of the imamate

Sa'dah
in 910/11 CE

The imams based their legitimacy on descent from the Islamic prophet

Shia brand. The efforts of al-Hadi eventually became the basic guidelines for the religious as well as political characteristics of Yemeni Zaydism. Al-Hadi, however, was not able to consolidate his rule in all of Yemen. He could not even create an enduring state in the highlands, due to the strong localism persisting in the region. There were revolts as well as segments of the population that did not accept his and his successors' pretensions to religio-political rule.[4]

Although he did not succeed in establishing any permanent administrative infrastructure, al-Hadi's descendants became the local aristocracy of the northern highlands, and it is from among them that most of the imams of Yemen were selected for the next one thousand years. Occasionally the imams were drawn from other lines descending from Muhammad.[5]

Yemen throughout most of that period was only rarely a unified political entity; in fact, what was included within its frontiers varied widely, and it has not been governed consistently or uniformly by any single set of rulers except for brief periods. It existed as a part of a number of different political systems/ruling dynasties between the ninth and sixteenth centuries, after which it became a part of the Ottoman Empire.

Rivalries with other dynasties

After Imam al-Hadi's death in 911, his sons took over the imamate in turn, although it was not hereditary but rather elective among the descendants of Muhammad. From the 11th to the early 17th centuries, however, the imams were usually not chosen from the sons of the former imam, but rather circulated among the various Rassid branches. Meanwhile, a multitude of smaller dynasties and families established themselves in the highlands, as well as in

Isma'ili Shiʿism
.

Beginning with the conquest of Yemen by the family of

Mamluks, from 1517 to 1538, when the Ottoman Empire took the Yemeni Tihama.[7]

During most of this period, the dynasties and their rulers were primarily engaged in familial, regional, and occasionally sectarian disputes. Ironically, the

Rasulids, who eventually concentrated their rule in southern Yemen for precisely that reason, were the dynasty under which the region experienced the greatest economic growth and political stability.[8]

For part of the medieval era the Zaydiyyah imams were eclipsed by the lowland dynasties, and for long periods there would be no imam at all (especially in 1066-1138 and 1171-1187). From the end of the thirteenth century the political fortunes of the Zaydiyya imams revived somewhat. They were able to hold their own against the Rasulids and Tahirids and sometimes expand their territory. Often, however, and especially after 1436, the imamate was split between several contenders.

Comparatively little is known about the medieval Zaydi imams and their efforts to establish themselves and develop some form of administration (including tax collection), or their success in promoting Zaydi goals during this period. From the available evidence, there was very little continuity and a great deal of competition among the Zaydi families and clans. For example, in a presumably representative two-hundred-year period from the thirteenth to the fifteenth centuries, there appear to have been more than twenty different candidates for the imamate, representing more than ten distinct clans.

The Qasimid state

The rule of Al-Mutawakkil Isma'il 1675 AD

Eventually the Europeans entered the

Mocha
. Unlike in the previous practice, the Qasimids ruled as a hereditary dynasty.

The power of the

Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen
.

Modern history

For the next 44 years

North Yemen was ruled by two powerful imams. al-Mutawakkil Yahya Muhammad Hamid ad-Din and his son Ahmad bin Yahya created a kingdom there much as the kings of England and France had done centuries earlier. The two imams strengthened the state and secured its borders. They used the imamate to insulate Yemen and revitalize its Islamic culture and society at a time when traditional societies around the world were declining under imperial rule. While Yemen under the two imams seemed almost frozen in time, a small but increasing number of Yemenis became aware of the contrast between an autocratic society they saw as stagnant and the political and economic modernization occurring in other parts of the world. This produced an important chain of events: the birth of the nationalist Free Yemeni Movement in the mid-1940s, an aborted 1948 revolution in which Imam Yahya was killed, a failed 1955 coup against Imam Ahmad, and finally, the 1962 takeover in which imam Muhammad al-Badr was deposed by a group of Egyptian supported and financed Sunni officers and the Yemen Arab Republic (YAR) was proclaimed under the leadership of Abdullah al-Sallal.[10]

The first five years of President Al-Sallal's rule, from 1962 to 1967, comprised the first chapter in the history of North Yemen. Marked by the revolution that began it, this period witnessed a lengthy civil war between Yemeni republican forces, based in the cities and supported by Egypt, and the royalist supporters of the deposed imam, backed by Saudi Arabia and Jordan. In 1965 Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser met with King Faisal of Saudi Arabia to consider a possible settlement to the civil war. The meeting resulted in an agreement whereby both countries pledged to end their involvement and allow the people of North Yemen to choose their own government. Subsequent peace conferences were ineffectual, however, and fighting flared up again in 1966.[11]

By 1967 the war had reached a stalemate, and the republicans had split into opposing factions concerning relations with Egypt and Saudi Arabia. In late 1967 Al-Sallal’s government was overthrown and he was replaced as president by

Abdul Rahman al-Iryani. Fighting continued until 1970, when Saudi Arabia halted its aid to royalists and established diplomatic ties with North Yemen. Al-Iryani effected the long-sought truce between republican and royalist forces, and presided over the adoption of a democratic constitution in 1970. The last ruling Rassid descendant Muhammad al-Badr, greatly disappointed by the Saudi recognition of the republic, emigrated to London where he died in 1996.[12]

In June 1974 military officers led by Colonel Ibrahim al-Hamdi staged a bloodless coup, claiming that the government of Al-Iryani had become ineffective. The constitution was suspended, and executive power was vested in a command council, dominated by the military. Al-Hamdi chaired the council and attempted to strengthen and restructure politics in North Yemen. Al-Hamdi was assassinated in 1977, and his successor, former Chief of Staff Ahmed Hussein al-Ghashmi, was killed in June 1978.[13] The lengthy tenure of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who ruled North Yemen from 1978 until it merged with South Yemen in 1990, proved more stable. Saleh strengthened the political system, while an influx of foreign aid and the discovery of oil in North Yemen held out the prospect of economic expansion and development.[14]

List of imams

See also

References

General
  • Harris, Walter B. (1893). A Journey Through the Yemen and Some General Remarks Upon That Country. Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and Sons. pp. 374–375.
    OCLC 5044217
    .
  • Imam Zaid bin Ali Cultural Foundation, مؤسسة الإمام زيد بن علي الثقافية :: استعراض الكتاب (in Arabic).
Specific
  1. ^ Jane Hathaway, A Tale of Two Factions; Myth, Memory, and identity in Ottoman Egypt and Yemen. New York 2003, pp. 79-81.
  2. ^ H.C. Kay, Yaman: Its early medieval history, London 1892, p. 185.
  3. ^ Encyklopädie des Islam, Vol. 3, Leiden 1936, p. 1216.
  4. ^ Cornelis van Arendonk, Les débuts de l'imamat zaidite au Yemen. Leiden 1960
  5. ^ Enzyklopädie des Islam, Vol. III, Leiden 1936, p. 1216
  6. ^ H.C. Kay, Yaman: Its early medieval history. London 1892
  7. ^ For the chronology of these, see Peter Truhart, Regents of nations, Vol. 3, München 2003, pp. 1090-1.
  8. ^ Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. VIII, Leiden 1995, pp. 455-7.
  9. ^ Vincent Steven Wilhite, Guerilla war, counterinsurgency, and state formation in Ottoman Yemen, PhD Thesis, Ohio State University 2003, p. 130.
  10. ^ Paul Dresch, A history of modern Yemen, Cambridge 2000, pp. 28-88, http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/samples/cam031/00029266.pdf
  11. ^ "North Yemen Civil War (1962-1970)".
  12. ^ "History of Yemen - Key Figures in Yemen's history". Archived from the original on 24 June 2011.
  13. ^ An account of the political history up to the late 1970s can be found in Robert W. Stookey, Yemen: The Politics of the Yemen Arab Republic. Boulder 1978.
  14. ^ Paul Dresch, A history of modern Yemen, Cambridge 2000, pp. 151-214.

Further reading

  • A.M.H.J. Stokvis, Manuel d'histoire, de généalogie et de chronologie de tous les états du globe, Vol I-III. Leiden 1888-93.
  • Peter Truhart, Regents of Nations. München 2003
  • E. de Zambaur, Manuel de généalogie et de chronologie de l'histoire de l'islam. Hannover 1927.