Online Encyclopedia

HADRAMUT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 800 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

HADRAMUT  , a

See also:
district on the south coast of
See also:
Arabia, bounded W. by
See also:
Yemen, E. by
See also:
Oman and N. by the Dahna
See also:
desert . The
See also:
modern
See also:
Arabs restrict the name to the coast between Balhaf and Sihut, and the valley of the
See also:
Wadi Hadramut in the interior; in its wider and commonly accepted signification it includes also the Mahra and Gara coasts extending eastwards to Mirbat; thus defined, its limits are between 14° and 18° N. and 470 30' to 55° E., with a
See also:
total length of 550 M. and a breadth of 150 M . The coastal plain is narrow, rarely exceeding 10 m. in width, and in places the hills extend to the seashore . The
See also:
principal ports are Mukalld and Shihr, both considerable towns, and Kusair and Raida, small fishing villages; inland there are a few villages near the
See also:
foot of the hills, with a limited
See also:
area of cultivation irrigated by springs or wells in the hill torrent beds . Behind the littoral plain a range of mountains, or rather a high plateau, falling steeply to the south and more gently to the north, extends continuously from the Yemen highlands on the west to the mouth of the Hadramut valley, from which a similar range extends with hardly a break to the border of Oman . Its crest-
See also:
line is generally some 30 M. from the coast, and its
See also:
average height between 4000 and 5000 ft . A number of wadis or ravines cutting deeply into the plateau run northward to the main Wadi Hadramut, a broad valley lying nearly east and west, with a total length from its extreme western heads on the Yemen highlands to its mouth near Sihut of over 500 M . Beyond the valley and steadily encroaching on it lies the
See also:
great desert extending for 300 M. to the
See also:
borders of
See also:
Nejd . The most
See also:
westerly
See also:
village in the main valley is Shabwa, in ancient days the capital, but now almost buried by the advancing desert .
See also:
Lower down the first large villages are Henan and Ajlania, near which the wadis `Amd, Duwan and el `
See also:
Ain unite, forming the W . Kasr . In the W .

Duwan and its branches are the villages of Haura, el Hajren, Kaidun and al Khureba . Below Haura for some 6o m. there is a

succession of villages with fields, gardens and date groves; several tributaries join on either side, among which the W.
See also:
bin
See also:
Ali and W . Adim from the south contain numerous villages . The principal towns are Shibam, al Ghurfa, Saiyun, Tariba, el Ghuraf,
See also:
Tarim, formerly the chief place, `Ainat and el Kasm . Below the last-named place there is little cultivation or settled population . The shrines of Kabr Salih and Kabr Hud are looked on as specially sacred, and are visited by numbers of pilgrims . The former, which is in the Wadi
See also:
Ser about 20 M . N.W. of Shibam, was explored by Theodore Bent in 1894; the tomb itself is of no
See also:
interest, but in the neighbourhood there are extensive ruins with Himyaritic inscriptions on the stones . Kabr Hud is in the main valley some distance east of Kasm; not far from it is Bir Borhut, a natural grotto, where fumes of burning
See also:
sulphur issue from a number of volcanic vents; al-Masudi mentions it in the loth century as an active
See also:
volcano . Except after heavy rain, there is no
See also:
running
See also:
water in the Hadramut valley, the cultivation therefore depends on artificial irrigation from wells . The principal crops are wheat, millet, indigo,
See also:
dates and
See also:
tobacco; this latter, known as Hamumi tobacco, is of excellent quality . Hadramut has preserved its name from the earliest times; it occurs in Genesis as Hazarmaveth and Hadoram, sons of Joktan; and the old Greek geographers mention Adramytta and Chadramotites in their accounts of the
See also:
frankincense country .

The numerous ruins discovered in the W . Duwan and Adim, as well as in the main valley, are evidences of its former prosperity and

See also:
civilization . The
See also:
people, known as Hadrami (plural Hadarim), belong generally to the south Arabian stock, claiming descent from Ya'
See also:
rab bin Kahtan . There is, however, a large number of Seyyids or descendants of the Prophet, and of townsmen of
See also:
northern origin, besides a considerable class of
See also:
African or mixed descent .
See also:
Van den Berg estimates the total population of Hadramut (excluding the Mahra and Gara) at 150,000, of which he locates 50,000 in the valley between Shibam and Tarim, 25,000 in the W . Duwan and its tributaries, and 25,000 in Mukalla, Shihr and the coast villages, leaving 50,000 for the non-agricultural population scattered over the rest of the country, probably an excessive estimate . The Seyyids, descendants of Ilosain, grandson of Mahomet, form a numerous and highly respected aristocracy . They are divided into families, the chiefs of which are known as Munsibs, who are looked on as the religious leaders of the people, and are even in some cases venerated as saints . Among the leading families are the Sheikh
See also:
Abu Bakr of Ainat, the el-Aidrus of Shihr and the Sakkaf of Saiyun . They do not bear arms, nor occupy themselves in trade or
See also:
manual labour or even agriculture; though owning a large proportion of the
See also:
land, they employ slaves or hired labourers to cultivate it . As compared with the other classes, they are well educated, and are strict in their observance of religious duties, and owing to the respect due to their descent, they exercise a strong influence both in temporal and spiritual affairs . The tribesmen, as in Arabia generally, are the predominant class in the population; all the adults carry aims; some of the tribes have settled towns and villages, others lead a nomadic
See also:
life, keeping, however, within the territory which is recognized as belonging to the tribe .

They are divided into sections or families, each headed by a chief or abu (lit.

See also:
father), while the head of the tribe is called the mukaddam or sultan; the authority of the chief depends largely on his personality: he is the leader in peace and in war, but the tribesmen are not his subjects; he can only
See also:
rule with their support . The most powerful tribe at
See also:
present in Hadramut is the Kaiti, a branch of the Yafa tribe whose settlements lie farther west . Originally invited by the Seyyids to protect the settled districts from the attacks of marauding tribes, they have established themselves as practically the rulers of the country, and now possess the coast district with the towns of Shihr and Mukalla, as well as Haura, Hajren and Shibam in the interior . The head of the
See also:
family has accumulated great
See also:
wealth, and risen to the highest position in the service of the
See also:
nizam of Hyderabad in India, as Jamadar, or
See also:
commander of an Arab levy composed of his tribesmen, numbers of whom go abroad to seek their fortune . The Kathiri tribe was formerly the most powerful; they occupy the towns of Saiyun, Tarim and el-Ghuraf in the richest
See also:
part of the main Hadramut valley . The chiefs of both the Kaiti and Kathiri are in
See also:
political relations with the
See also:
British government, through the
See also:
resident at
See also:
Aden (q.v.) . The 'Amudi in the W . Duwan, and the
See also:
Nandi, Awamir and Tamimi in the main valley, are the principal tribes possessing permanent villages; the Saiban, Hamumi and Manahil occupy the mountains between the main valley and coast . The townsmen are the
See also:
free inhabitants of the towns and villages es distinguished from the Seyyids and the tribesmen: they do not carry arms, but are the working members of the community, merchants, artificers, cultivators and servants, and are entirely dependent on the tribes and chiefs under whose
See also:
protection they live . The servile class contains a large African element, brought over formerly when the slave trade flourished on this coast; as in all
See also:
Mahommedan countries they are well treated, and often rise to positions of
See also:
trust . As already mentioned, a large number of Arabs from Hadramut go abroad; the Kaiti tribesmen take service in India in the irregular troops of Hyderabad; emigration on a large scale has also gone on, to the Dutch colonies in
See also:
Java and
See also:
Sumatra, since the beginning of the 19th century . According to the census of 1885, quoted by Van den Berg in his Report published by the government of the Dutch East Indies in 1886, the number of Arabs in those colonies actually born in Arabia was 2500, while those born in the colonies exceeded 20,000; nearly all of the former are from the towns in the Hadramut valley between Shibam and Tarim .

Mukalla and Shihr have a considerabletrade with the Red

Sea and Persian Gulf ports, as well as with the ports of Aden, Dhafar and Muscat; a large share of this is in the hands of Parsee and other British
See also:
Indian traders who have established themselves in the Hadramut ports . The principal imports are wheat, rice,
See also:
sugar, piece goods and hard-
See also:
ware . The exports are small; the chief items are honey, tobacco and sharks' fins . In the towns in the interior the principal
See also:
industries are
See also:
weaving and dyeing . The Mahra country adjoins the Hadramut proper, and extends along the coast from Sihut eastwards to the east of Kamar
See also:
Bay, where the Gara coast begins and stretches to Mirbat . The sultan of the Mahra, to whom Sokotra also belongs, lives at Kishin, a poor village consisting of a few scattered houses about 30 m. west of
See also:
Ras Fartak . Sihut is a similar village 20 m. farther west . The mountains rise to a height of 4000 ft. within a short distance of the coast, covered in places with trees, among which are the myrrh- and frankincense-bearing shrubs . These gums, for which the coast was celebrated in ancient days, are still produced ; the best quality is obtained in the Gara country, on the northern slope of the mountains . Dhafar and the mountains behind it were visited and surveyed by Mr Bent's party in 1894 . There are several thriving villages on the coast, of which el-Hafa is the principal
See also:
port of export for frankincense; 9000 cwt. is exported annually to Bombay . Ruins of Sabaean buildings were found by J .

T . Bent in the neighbourhood of Dhafar, and a remarkable

See also:
cove or small harbour was discovered at Khor Rori, which he identified with the ancient port of Moscha .

End of Article: HADRAMUT
[back]
JAMES HADLEY (1821–1872)
[next]
HADRIA [mod. Atri (q.v.)]

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.