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Little
is known about Aden during the early centuries of the Islamic history.
Historians report that, Ali al-Suleyhi added Aden and its hinterland to
his sphere of influence during the early years of the Suleyhi kingdom.
When Arwa Bint Ahmed was married to Ali's son al Mukarram, she received
as a dowry a yearly revenue from Aden, amounting to 100,000 gold dinars
(the high amount sheds light on the prosperity of the port). Aden was by
this time ruled by the Bani Zurrey. The rule of the Bani Zurrey ended in
1174 when the Ayyubites, arriving from Egypt conquered most of Yemen.
When
the Portuguese sailor Vasco da Gama discovered the route around the Cape
of Good Hope in 1497 AD, he had opened a new chapter in the history of
the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean. Only sixteen
years later, another Portuguese captain Affonso d'Albuquerque had
comprehended the strategic significance of Aden and tried to conquer it.
But in vain. Aden was a well fortified city under the rule of the Bani
Taher.
Alarmed
by the presence of the Portuguese, the Egyptian Mamlukes occupied the
Yemeni Tihama, but failed to conquer Aden like the Portuguese before. It
was by treachery that Aden finally fell into the hands of Pasha al-Khadim,
Commander of the fleet of Suleman the Magnificent in 153B AD. The same
year marked the beginning of the first occupation of Yemen by the Ottoman
Turks.
The
first European to give a first hand description on Aden at the beginning
of the 16th century, was the Italian Ludovico di Varthema. He writes:
"Aden is such mighty and powerful that I have hardly seen another
city of its might during my life . . . . all big ships anchor at the port
coming from India Ethiopia or Persia".
Aden's
modern history begins with the occupation of the harbour by the British
Captain Stafford Bettesworth Haines from the Indian Navy in 1839. Under
Turkish Occupation and later under the rule of the Sultan of Lahej, Aden
had declined to a small fishing village with only 1289 inhabitants.
However, within a few years, the population increased again to some
20,000 inhabitants. Aden remained under British rule until 1967. It then
became the capital of the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen in
November 30, 1967 - Now, Aden is the commercial capital of The Republic
of Yemen.
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