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Abdelmalik Eagle, who died suddenly in May last year at his home in Durham, was an active member of the Society and a much valued contributor to its Journal.
After leaving school, Abdelmalik did his national service in the army, which introduced him to Aden and Southern Arabia. In 1964, after…
From Tihamah to Aden with Ibn Battutah,
by Tim Mackinstosh-Smith
Tim Mackintosh-Smith is author of ‘ Yemen : Travels in Dictionary Land ’ (1997), and of two books about Ibn Battutah: ‘Travels with a Tangerine’ (2001), and ‘Hall of a Thousand Columns’ (2005); he is now writing a third volume.…
It is particularly sad that the first issue of this new British-Yemeni periodical should carry notice of the death of an outstanding Arabist and traveller, an intellectual giant who did more than any other to bring together the two countries, Britain and the Yemen.
Bob Serjeant was born in…
by Salma Samar al-Damluji
Dr Damluji returned to Yemen in February, after an absence of five years, to attend an international conference on mud-brick architecture convened in Seiyun by the University of Hadhramaut. She later travelled to Aden and Yafa’. Her publications on Yemen include: ‘A Yemen…
Their current situation and uncertain future
By Miranda Morris
Dr Miranda Morris is a distinguished linguist and ethnographer who has done extensive fieldwork in Oman and Yemen. She gave the following talk to a joint meeting of the Anglo-Omani and British- Yemeni Societies on 19 April 2007.
A group…
Geoffrey Clayton, who died in March 2009 after a brave battle against cancer, spent almost forty years in international banking, mainly in the Middle East but also in the Far East and Europe.
His career in the Middle East started in the late 1950s with the Eastern Bank in Bahrain. This was followed…
Sayf al-Islam al-Hassan was the third son of Imam Yahya and took a prominent part in Yemeni politics for four decades.
He was born in the village of al-Qafla in Hashid territory northwest of Sana’a in 1908. His mother was Sharifa Huriya, the daughter of Sayf al-Islam Muhammad al-Mutawakkil. He…
by Laila Noman
State education for Yemeni girls during the British occupation of South Yemen was almost non-existent outside the capital, Aden. In Aden itself, primary and intermediate schools for boys and girls existed in each small township of Steamer Point, Crater, Shaikh Othman, etc. The only…
Qadhi Ismail al-Akwa
in middle age.
Qadhi Ismail al-Akwa', one of the most influential Yemeni thinkers of the 20th and early 21st centuries, died in October 2008. His life's journey was shaped by gifts of birth and family, by national and international events, and by his own…
by BRIAN WHITAKER
Brian Whitaker is Middle East Editor of the Guardian newspaper. He writes regularly on Yemeni affairs and is a member of the Society.
The last 10 months have witnessed the most challenging period for Yemen since the 1994 war. In the immediate aftermath of September 11 there were…
