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- Islamic_history_of_Yemen abstract "Islam came to Yemen around 630 during Muhammad's lifetime and the rule of the Persian governor Badhan. Thereafter, Yemen was ruled as part of Arab-Islamic caliphates, and became a province in the Islamic empire.Regimes affiliated to the Egyptian Shia caliphs occupied much of northern and southern Yemen throughout the 11th century, including the Sulayhids and Zurayids, but the country was rarely unified for any long period of time. Local control in the Middle Ages was exerted by a succession of families which included the Ziyadids (818-1018), the Najahids (1022-1158), the Egyptian Ayyubids (1174-1229) and the Turkoman Rasulids (1229-1454). The most long-lived, and for the future most important polity, was founded in 897 by Yayha bin Husayn bin Qasim ar-Rassi. They were the Zaydis of Sa'dah in the highlands of North Yemen, headed by imams of various Sayyid lineages. As ruling Imams of Yemen, they established a Shia theocratic political structure that survived with some intervals until 1962.After the introduction of coffee in the 16th century the town of al-Mukha (Mocha), on the Red Sea coast, became the most important coffee port in the world. For a period after 1517, and again in the 19th century, Yemen was a nominal part of the Ottoman Empire, although on both occasions the Zaydi Imams contested the power of the Turks and eventually expelled them.".
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen thumbnail Map_of_expansion_of_Caliphate.svg?width=300.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageExternalLink 3147.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageExternalLink hist.htm.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageExternalLink 0199222371.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageExternalLink index.php.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageExternalLink Geschichte.htm.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageExternalLink a.dam.at.marib.htm.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageExternalLink history.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageID "7005729".
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wikiPageRevisionID "600567733".
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen hasPhotoCollection Islamic_history_of_Yemen.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen subject Category:History_of_Islam.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen subject Category:History_of_Islam_by_country.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen subject Category:History_of_Yemen.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen subject Category:Islam_in_Yemen.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen comment "Islam came to Yemen around 630 during Muhammad's lifetime and the rule of the Persian governor Badhan. Thereafter, Yemen was ruled as part of Arab-Islamic caliphates, and became a province in the Islamic empire.Regimes affiliated to the Egyptian Shia caliphs occupied much of northern and southern Yemen throughout the 11th century, including the Sulayhids and Zurayids, but the country was rarely unified for any long period of time.".
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen label "História islâmica do Iêmen".
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen label "Islamic history of Yemen".
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen label "تاريخ اليمن الإسلامي".
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen sameAs História_islâmica_do_Iêmen.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen sameAs m.0g_xz7.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen sameAs Q4119142.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen sameAs Q4119142.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen wasDerivedFrom Islamic_history_of_Yemen?oldid=600567733.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen depiction Map_of_expansion_of_Caliphate.svg.
- Islamic_history_of_Yemen isPrimaryTopicOf Islamic_history_of_Yemen.