Dhamarÿalë Yuhabirr bin YÃÂsir Yuhaá¹£diq (á¸Âmrÿly Yhbr), was the king of Saba' and á¸Âu-RaydÃÂn from c. 135 to 175 CE. He ascended the Himyarite throne amidst clashes between Sabaþ and Ḥimyar. The earliest mention of Dhamarÿalë Yuhabirr appears in an inscription dated to 137. He ascends to the throne no later than 159.
In the middle of the 2nd century, Dhamarÿalë Yuhabirr and his son Tharan Yaub Yuhanim controlled Kingdom of Saba. During his rule, reports show repairs were made to the irrigation-works (dam) at Marib. Dhamarÿalë Yuhabirr handed his throne down to his son ThaþrÃÂn Yaÿub, who succeeded him around 175.
Bronze statues of the king Dhamar'alî Yuhabirr and Tha'rân were found in an-Nakhla al-Hamrâ in the Dhamar Governorate of Yemen. Sabaic inscriptions on Dhamar Ali's statue reads "the two kings of Sabaþ and á¸Âu-RaydÃÂn, placed what they granted to their vassals" and "Sòrḥsùmyd and Mgdm, of the family á¸Ârnḥ, in the hall of their palace".