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Sealed Nectar Halaman 8 | Maktabah Reza Ervani
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Maktabah Reza Ervani



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Judul Kitab : Sealed Nectar- Detail Buku
Halaman Ke : 8
Jumlah yang dimuat : 228

RULERSHIP AND PRINCESHIPAMONG THE ARABS
When talking about the Arabs before Islam,we deem it necessary to draw a mini-picture of the history  of rulership, princeship, sectarianism and the religious dominations of the Arabs, so as to facilitate the  understanding of emergent circumstances when Islam appeared.
When the sun of Islam rose, rulers of Arabia were of two kinds: crowned kings, who were in fact not  independent; and heads of tribes and clans, who enjoyed the same authorities and privileges  possessed  by crowned kings and were mostly independent, though some of whom could have shown some kind  of  submission to a crowned king. The crowned kings were only those of Yemen, Heerah and Ghassan. All  other rulers of Arabia were non-crowned.
RULERSHIP IN YEMEN:
The folks of Sheba were one of the oldest nations of the pure Arabs, who lived in Yemen. Excavations  at
“Or” brought to light their existence twenty five centuries B.C. Their civilization flourished, and their  domain spread eleven centuries B.C.
It is possible to divide their ages according to the following estimation:
1. The centuries before 650 B.C., during which their kings were called “Makrib Sheba”. Their capital  was “Sarwah”, also known as “Khriba”, whose ruins lie in a spot, a day’s walk from the western  side of “Ma’rib”. During this period, they started building the “Dam of Ma’rib” which had great  importance in the history of Yemen. Sheba was also said to have had so great a domain that  they had colonies inside and outside Arabia.
2. From 650 B.C. until 115 B.C. During this era, they gave up the name “Makrib” and assumed the  designation of “Kings of Sheba”. They also made Ma’rib their capital instead of Sarwah. The ruins  of Ma’rib lie at a distance of sixty miles east of San‘a.
3. From 115 B.C. until 300 A.D. During this period, the tribe of Himyar conquered the kingdom of
Sheba and took Redan for capital instead of Ma’rib. Later on, Redan was called “Zifar”. Its ruins  still lie on Mudawwar Mountain near the town of “Yarim”. During this period, they began to  decline and fall. Their trade failed to a very great extent, firstly, because of the Nabetean domain  over the north of Hijaz; secondly, because of the Roman superiority over the naval trade routes  after the Roman conquest of Egypt, Syria and the north of Hijaz; and thirdly, because of the  inter-tribal warfare. Thanks to the three above-mentioned factors, families of Qahtan were  disunited and scatteredout.
4. From 300 A.D. until Islam dawned on Yemen. This period witnessed a lot of disorder and turmoil.
The great many and civil wars rendered the people of Yemen liable to foreign subjection and  hence loss of independence. During this era, the Romans conquered ‘Adn and even helped the
Abyssinians (Ethiopians) to occupy Yemen for the first time in 340 A.D., making use of the  constant intra-tribal conflict of Hamdan and Himyar. The Abyssinian (Ethiopian) occupation of
Yemen lasted until 378 A.D., whereafter Yemen regained its independence. Later on, cracks  began to show in Ma’rib Dam which led to the Great Flood (450 or 451 A.D.) mentioned in the
Noble Qur’ân. This was a great event which caused the fall of the entire Yemeni civilization and  the dispersal of the nations living therein.
In 523, Dhu Nawas, a Jew, despatched a great campaign against the Christians of Najran in order to  force them to convert into Judaism. Having refused to do so, they were thrown alive into a big ditch  where a great fire had been set. The Qur’ân referred to this event:
“Cursed were the people of the ditch.” 85:4
This aroused great wrath among the Christians, and especially the Roman emperors, who not only  instigated the Abyssinians (Ethiopians) against Arabs but also assembled a large fleet which helped  the
Abyssinian (Ethiopian) army, of seventy thousand warriors, to effect a second conquest of Yemen in
525 A.D., under the leadership of Eriat, who was granted rulership over Yemen, a position he held  until  he was assassinated by one of his army leaders, Abraha, who, after reconciliation with the king of
Abyssinia, took rulership over Yemen and, later on, deployed his soldiers to demolish Al-Ka‘bah, and ,  hence, he and his soldiers came to be known as the “Men of the Elephant”.
After the “Elephant” incident, the people of Yemen, under the leadership of Ma‘dikarib bin Saif Dhu
Yazin Al-Himyari, and through Persian assistance, revolted against the Abyssinian (Ethiopian)  invaders,  restored independence and appointed Ma‘dikarib as their king. However, Ma‘dikarib was assassinated


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