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by Jim Ellis
This article was published in the British Yemeni Society's journal, 2000. Itis an abridged version of a paper which Jim Ellisdrafted in 1993/94. It draws on his unique knowledge of the border area between Saudi Arabia and southern Yemen, before British withdrawal from the region in…
The ex-Minister for Oil and Mineral Development of the united Yemen, Salih bin Husainun, and his son Anwar were killed in fighting near Fuwa, a few miles west of Mukalla on the Hadhrami coast of Yemen on 4th July 1994.
Sayyid Salih Abubakr bin Husainun was born in a reed hut in about 1936 near…
Professor Charles Beckingham, Fellow of the British Academy, who died on 30 September 1998 aged 84 spent much of his academic career as Professor of Islamic Studies, first at Manchester University (1958-65), and then at SOAS, University of London (1965-81); during this latter period he served as…
Yahya al-Mutawakkil, who was killed in a road accident between Lahej and Aden on 13 January 2003, was a leading figure in the Yemen Arab Republic established after the 1962 revolution in north Yemen, and was to play an important role in the merger of North and South Yemen in 1990.
He was…
by JOHN SHIPMAN
At a Suffolk market auction a few years ago, Mrs Elizabeth Fitzpatrick spotted, and successfully bid for, a folio of pencil sketches (on board) of monuments in Marib and Timna. The sketches intrigued her because she had visited both places during a tour of Yemen. Earlier this…
Najla Abu-Talib came from two highly cultured and respected families descended from a long line of religious scholars: on her father’s side from the Abu-Talib, from the Rawdha district of Sana’a, and on her mother’s side from the Zabarah, from the old city of Sana’a; the late Mufti of Yemen, Sheikh…
Those who knew John Baldry during his Arabian days, but who lost touch with him thereafter, will be sad to hear that he died three years ago in Thailand. John earned his living as an English-language teacher, mostly for the British Council, but latterly for other employers. After working in Tunisia…
Ralph Daly, who died in Muscat where he and his wife, Elizabeth, had retired, spent most of his adult life in the Arab world, and a memorable part of it in what was then called the Aden Protectorate.
Born in Glasgow and educated at Sherborne, he was commissioned into the Welsh Guards, and fought…
By Alan Rushworth
This is an abridged version of an article published in ‘The Yemen Times’ on 26 February 2007. The author, a long-standing member of the Society, is a metallurgical engineer who has specialised in methods of quality control in the engineering industry.
Every year the British-Yemeni…
Ziad ‘Don’ Beydoun, Emeritus Professor at the American University of Beirut, died on 7 March 1998, aged 73. He spent much of his early career as a geologist in the southern part of Yemen and maintained a life-long interest in that country
Ziad’s father was Mutasarrif of Haifa in the last days of…
