Sultanate of Tarim

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Sultanate of Tarim
1916–1945
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Tarim
Sultanate of Tarim (Yemen)
Capital Tarim
Religion
Islam
Government Sultanate
Sultan 
 1916–1924
Muhsin ibn Ghalib al-Kathiri
History 
 Separated from Kathiri
1916
1926–1927
 Re-incorporated into Kathiri
1945
Today part of Yemen

The Sultanate of Tarim [1] was a state in Yemen created after a division of power within the Kathiri sultanate in 1916. [2] It was first ruled by Muhsin ibn Ghalib al-Kathiri. [1] Jam'iyat al-Haqq was responsible for civil affairs of Tarim. [2] In exchange for maintaining control of Tarim, the al-Kaf family gave the Kathiri sultanate a monthly stipend. [2] After Muhsin ibn Ghalib al-Kathiri's death at the end of 1924, his successor, sultan Salim, served only as a figurehead, with real power falling to an organization called "the league". [2] Opposition to the league's taxation system led to a civil war in 1926, when the Tamimi tribe revolted and surrounded Tarim. [2] The Kathiri sultanate sent 60 troops to aid the Tarimese sultan, and even though they were successful in breaking the siege, casualties convinced the Kathiri commander, Husayn b. Hamid al-Mihdhar, to withdraw. [2] Ultimately, the civil war ended with a peace agreement in 1927. [2] The sultanate was re-incorporated into Kathiri in March 1945. [1]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 "States of the Aden Protectorates". www.worldstatesmen.org. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Boxberger, Linda (1 February 2012). On the Edge of Empire: Hadhramawt, Emigration, and the Indian Ocean, 1880s–1930s. SUNY Press. p. 232. ISBN   9780791489352.