Najran Province is a province in southern Saudi Arabia, covering 360,000àkmò and located along the border with Yemen. Its capital is Najran. The province is primarily inhabited by the Yam tribe, and most of its population follows Ismaili Shia Islam.
There are various stories about the origins of the name Najran. Some of these stories attribute it to a wooden piece around which a door's henge rotates. Others say that the city was named after its first settler, Najran bin Zaidan bin Saba'a bin Ya'rub bin Qahtan.
Similar to other ancient place names in Arabia, NajrÃÂn may have originally been the name of the whole oasis, including all towns and villages. The old name of the ruins now known as "al-Ukhdà «d", which may have been the central town, probably corresponds to Ramat.
According to Greek and Roman sources, NajrÃÂn was a focal point of the Incense Route. All routes that left ancient Yemen to the north or west had to meet at NajrÃÂn, where the routes branched into two general directions: ones leading north through the ḤijÃÂz towards Egypt and the Levant, and those leading to the northeast towards Gerrha near the Persian Gulf.
The Roman prefect of Egypt Aelius Gallus led a costly, arduous, and ultimately unsuccessful expedition to conquer Arabia Felix, and won a battle near NajrÃÂn in 25 BC. He occupied the city and used it as a base from which to attack the Sabaean capital at Ma'rib. This is according to Strabo, who called it 'Negrana'.
When the Ḥimyarites conquered the Sabeans in AD 280, they probably also took control of NajrÃÂn. Sometime during the 3rd century, the people of NajrÃÂn sided with the Abyssinians, who sent a governor named Sqlmqlm in inscriptions. The Ḥimyar King Ilsharah Yahdib crushed this rebellion.
The north Arabian Lakhmid king Imruâ al-Qays ibn 'Amqu attacked NajrÃÂn in AD 328. Under the influence of Axum, the Christians in NajrÃÂn thrived and started an alliance with Aksum again at the beginning of the 6th century.
The town of NajrÃÂn was already an important centre of arms manufacture during the lifetime of Muhammad. However, it was more famous for leather rather than iron.
Christianity was likely introduced into NajrÃÂn, as in the rest of South Arabia, in the 5th century AD or perhaps a century earlier. According to the Arab Muslim historian Ibn IsḥÃÂq, NajrÃÂn was the first place where Christianity took root in South Arabia. According to contemporary sources, after seizing the throne of the Ḥimyarites in ca. 518 or 523, Dhà « NuwÃÂs, a Jewish king, attacked the mainly Christian Aksumite garrison at Zafar, capturing it and burning its churches. He then moved against NajrÃÂn, a Christian and Aksumite stronghold. After accepting the city's capitulation, he massacred those inhabitants who would not renounce Christianity. Estimates of the death toll from this event range up to 20,000 in some sources. A surviving letter (where he is called Dimnon) written by Simeon, the bishop of Beth Arsham in 524 AD, recounts Dhà « NuwÃÂs's persecution in NajrÃÂn (modern al-Ukhdà «d in Saudi Arabia). The massacre is also recounted in a celebratory manner in an inscription (Ja 1028) commissioned by one of the army commanders of Dhu Nuwas.
According to the Siyar of ash-Shaybani, the Christians of NajrÃÂn made an agreement to pay Muhammad an annual tribute of 2,000 pieces of clothing, in return for which they were promised protection. The agreement was renewed under the caliphs Abà « Bakr and Umar ibn al-Khattab. In 641, however, the Christians of NajrÃÂn were accused of usury and ordered to leave the city. Under the reign of the Caliph âÂÂUmar, the Christian community of NajrÃÂn was deported to Mesopotamia, where they settled near Kufa in a place they called NajÃÂnëya. In the following period, NajrÃÂn lost its importance. According to the report of Ibn al-Mujavir, however, Jews and Christians still made up two thirds of the population of Najran in the 13th century.
NajrÃÂn had a Jewish community dating back to pre-Islamic times, historically affiliated with the Banu al-Harith, who were Yemenite Jews that had conquered the city and ruled until the Christian invasion of Yemen. With the Saudi conquest of NajrÃÂn in 1934, persecution increased, and some 200 Jews of NajrÃÂn fled south to Aden between September and October 1949. The Saudi king ibn Saud demanded their return, but the Yemeni king Aḥmad bin Yaḥyá refused because these refugees were Yemenite Jews. After settling in the Ḥashid Camp (also called Mahane Geula) they were airlifted to Israel as part of the larger Operation Magic Carpet.
Some groups of NajrÃÂn Jews escaped to Cochin, as they had a very good relationship with its rulers and maintained trade connections with Paradesi Jews.
The Ismailis, a religious and ethnic minority with historic roots in NajrÃÂn Province of southwestern Saudi Arabia, face increasing threats to their identity as a result of official discrimination. Official discrimination in Saudi Arabia against IsmÃÂûëlës encompasses government employment, religious practices, and the justice system. Government officials exclude IsmÃÂûëlës from decision making and publicly disparage their faith.
With the arrival of Mishûal bin SuÃ»à «d as the governor of NajrÃÂn in 1996, tensions between local authorities and the Ismaûili population increased, culminating in a watershed confrontation between armed Ismaûili demonstrators and police and army units outside NajrÃÂn's Holiday Inn hotel on April 23, 2000. Three months earlier, police had closed all Tayyibi Ismaûili mosques on a religious holiday. On April 23, after security forces and religious morality police arrested an IsmÃÂûëlë cleric, a large demonstration took place outside the Holiday Inn, where Governor Mishûal resided. After the governor refused for hours to meet the petitioners, an exchange of fire between security forces and armed demonstrators left two IsmÃÂûëlës dead and, according to some government accounts, killed one policeman as well. Believing their religious identity to be under attack, IsmÃÂûili men erected defences around Khushaywah, the seat of the Ismaûili religious leader Da'i al-Mutlaq. Khushaywah, which includes the Maná¹£à «rah Mosque complex, was also the spiritual capital of Sulaymani Ismaûilis, a community with followers in India and Pakistan as well as Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The army surrounded the Ismaûili positions and placed the city under its control. The standoff ended later the same day without further bloodshed.
Najran Province comprises six governorates, with Najran serving as the seat of the province. The governorates are categorized into Category A and Category B based on the availability of services. The province had seven governorates until 2014, when Al-Kharkhir Governorate was abolished and merged into Sharurah Governorate.
The province is governed by a governor (Emir) appointed by the King of Saudi Arabia, assisted by a deputy governor.
Najran Province is served by two airports: Najran Regional Airport, located in Najran, which serves as the provinceâÂÂs main airport, and Sharurah Domestic Airport in Sharurah, serving the provinceâÂÂs largest governorate.
Najran, a fertile valley in what is now southwestern Saudi Arabia at the foot of mountains bordering the vast stretch of desert known as the Empty Quarter, was traditionally home to Christian and Jewish communities, in addition to Sulaymani Ismailis and Zaidis. Christians have been absent from Najran for some centuries, and the remaining Jewish community is Yemenite Jews that migrated to Najran and have left in 1949, following the establishment of the state of Israel. Najran's Zaidi community in 2008 numbers around 2,000.
The 2004 Saudi census put the number of inhabitants in Najran at around 408,000. Sulaymani Ismailis, widely believed to constitute a large majority of the Najrani population, share an identity based on historical, cultural, and religious roots. In Najran city, the Khushaiwa compound, with its Mansura mosque complex, is the spiritual capital of the Sulaymani branch of the Ismaili sect, one of two major strands of contemporary Ismailism. Most Ismailis in Najran belong to one of two tribes: Yam and the Hamdan. There are also some Sunnis of the Yam tribe, both recent converts as well as those who have adhered to Sunni Islam for centuries.
Najran is known for being home to an ancient settlement of Christians in the Arabian peninsula. They signed the "Najran Pact" in the 7th century with the Islamic prophet, Muhammad, promising them fair treatment as "protected subjects" (dhimmi) of the newly conquered territories. The village is now abandoned.
Najran Province is home to four football clubs, with the main venue being Prince Hathloul bin Abdulaziz Sports City Stadium. Al-Okhdood Club, based in Najran, and Sharurah Club, based in Sharurah, were founded in 1976. Najran S.FC, also based in Najran, was founded in 1978. Habona Club, based in Habona, was founded in 1994.