| Sana'a صنعاء Ṣan‘ā’ |
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![]() Sana'a
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| Coordinates: 15°20′54″N 44°12′23″E / 15.34833°N 44.20639°ECoordinates: 15°20′54″N 44°12′23″E / 15.34833°N 44.20639°E | |
| Country | |
| Admin. division | San‘a’ Governorate |
| Government | |
| - Type | Local |
| - Mayor: Abdulrahman al-Akwaa& | Ahmed Al-Douaid |
| Elevation | 7,218 ft (2,200 m) |
| Population (2004) | |
| - City | 1,747,627 |
| - Metro | 2,167,961 |
| Time zone | GMT |
| - Summer (DST) | 3+ (UTC) |
Sana'a (Arabic: صنعاء, alternate spellings Sanaa or Ṣan‘ā’) (IPA: [sˤanʕaːʔ]) is the capital of Yemen and the centre of San‘a’ Governorate. It is Yemen's largest city. Sana'a has a population of 1,747,627 (2004 census).[citation needed]
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Sana'a is one of the ancient Yemeni cities dating back to the Sabaean dynasty of the 6th century BC. The oldest written reference to its existence is found in inscriptions which date back to the 1st century AD. It is suggested that Sana'a was the capital of the Himyarite kingdom at the onset of the 6th century AD.
When King Yousef Athar (or Dhu Nuwas), the last of the Himyarite kings, was in power, Sana'a was also the capital of the Ethiopian viceroys.
As of the dawn of Islam until the detachment of independent sub-states in many parts of Yemen Islamic Caliphate, Sana'a persisted as the governing seat, who himself is Caliph's deputy in running the affairs of one of Yemen's Three Makhalifs: Mikhlaf Sana'a, Mikhlaf al-Janad and Mikhlaf Hadhramawt. The city of Sana'a recurrently assumed an important status and all Yemenite States competed to control it.
The Mamelukes arrived in Yemen in AD 1517. Following the collapse of the Mamelukes in Egypt at the hands of the Ottoman Turks, Yemen fell under the Ottoman rule and during the first Ottoman rule of Yemen between 1538–1635, Sana'a became the capital of the Ottoman wilayah and also during the Ottoman second rule 1872-1918. In 1918, Sana'a was the capital of Imam Yahya, who ruled North Yemen. At the onset of the 1962 revolution which deposed the imamate rule, it became the capital of the Yemen Arab Republic. It was then the capital of unified Yemen in 1990 where it is dubbed as the historical capital of Yemen. In 2008, the Saleh Mosque was completed. It holds over 40,000 worshippers.
| Old City of Sana'a* | |
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| UNESCO World Heritage Site | |
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| State Party | |
| Type | Historic, Cultural |
| Criteria | IV, V, VI |
| Reference | 385 |
| Region** | Arab States |
| Inscription history | |
| Inscription | 1986 (10th Session) |
| * Name as inscribed on World Heritage List. ** Region as classified by UNESCO. |
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The old fortified city has been inhabited for more than 2,500 years, and contains a wealth of intact architectural gems. It was declared a World Heritage City by the United Nations in 1986. Efforts are underway to preserve some of the oldest buildings, some of which are over 400 years old. Surrounded by ancient clay walls which stand 6–9 metres (20–30 ft) high, the old city boasts over 100 mosques, 12 hammams (baths) and 6,500 houses. Many of the houses resemble ancient skyscrapers, reaching several stories high and topped with flat roofs. They are decorated with elaborate friezes and intricately carved frames and stained glass windows.
One of the most popular attractions is Suq al-Milh (Salt Market), where it is possible to buy not only salt but also bread, spices, raisins, cotton, copper, pottery, silverware, antiques (both fake and real) and formerly, slaves. The majestic 7th century Jami' al-Kabir (Great Mosque) is one of the oldest in the Muslim world. The Bāb al-Yaman (Yemen Gate) is an iconized entry point through the city walls and is over 700 years old.
A commercial area of the old city is Al Madina, where development is proceeding rapidly. In addition to three large hotels, there are numerous stores and restaurants. The area also contains three parks and the President's palace.
Sana'a was designated as the Arab Cultural Capital for the year of 2004.
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Yemenia, the national airline of Yemen, has its head office in Sana'a.[1]
Sana'a International Airport is Yemen's main domestic and international airport. The airport will be expanded by 2010. There is no rail network currently but one will also be built. The best way around the city is dababs which are like minibuses holding about 10 people. Taxis are also a very common form of public transport at Yemen and in the recent years, Yemen has started using higher quality cars and companies are starting to take over the taxi business which could add more comfort to passengers with great services by both Marhaba and Al-Raha. There are many coaches to other major cities like Aden, Taiz and many more.
"La budda min Ṣanʻāʼ" (Sana'a must be seen) are famous words first attributed to Imam Muḥammad ibn Idris al-Shafiʼi (768-820) who visited the ancient capital several times.
Many travellers in ancient days were impressed by the beauty of Sana'a. The well-known Yemeni geographer and historian al Hamdani marveled at the cleanliness of the city:
| “ | The least dwelling there has a well or two, a garden and long cesspits separate from each other, empty of ordure, without smell or evil odors, because of the hard concrete (adobe and Cob probably) and fine pastureland and clean places to walk. | ” |
The Persian traveller Ibn Rustah, a contemporary of al-Hamdani, noted its food:
| “ | It is the city of Yemen - there not being found ... a city greater, more populous or more prosperous, of nobler origin or more delicious food than it... | ” |
The British writer Jonathan Raban devotes a chapter of his 1979 book, 'Arabia Through the Looking Glass' to Sana'a. He initially found the city disorienting:
| “ | Suddenly in Sana'a I was in the middle of a real maze. Its walls were oppressively high, its corridors narrow, its noise frightening. ... Sana'a was functioning exactly as a labyrinth should: it was a close protective hive for insiders; but for an outsider it was a trap with no apparent means of escape. | ” |
Later, as he became more familiar with the place, and had made more acquaintances with its residents, he becomes admiring. In one striking sequence where he is invited onto the roof of somebody's home, the cityscape is revealed to him in a different way:
| “ | It was like stepping out into the middle of a vast pop-up picturebook. Away from the street, the whole city turned into a maze of another kind, a dense, jumbled alphabet of signs and symbols. The stucco friezes on the towers formed a continuous scrawl of handwriting around. You could look at the walls of Sana'a for a year, finding more and more hidden meanings in them. | ” |
Sana'a features the very rare mild version of a desert climate. Sana'a sees on average approximately 200 mm of precipitation per year. However, due to its high elevation, temperatures are much more moderate than many other cities on the Arabian Peninsula. In fact, average temperatures remain relatively constant throughout the year in Sana'a, with its coldest month being January and its warmest month in July. The city seldom experiences extreme heat or cold. Sana'a receives half of its annual rainfall during the months of July and August.
| Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | |
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| Average high °C (°F) | 19.8 (68) |
20.2 (68) |
22.8 (73) |
25.5 (78) |
26.0 (79) |
27.1 (81) |
27.7 (82) |
25.9 (79) |
23.7 (75) |
22.0 (72) |
20.7 (69) |
19.7 (67) |
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| Average low °C (°F) | 6.9 (44) |
8.0 (46) |
9.7 (49) |
11.5 (53) |
13.6 (56) |
15.8 (60) |
16.7 (62) |
16.3 (61) |
12.4 (54) |
9.1 (48) |
6.8 (44) |
6.2 (43) |
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| Precipitation mm (inches) | 0.0 (0) |
2.0 (0.08) |
9.9 (0.39) |
14.7 (0.58) |
4.7 (0.19) |
17.8 (0.7) |
49.9 (1.96) |
63.6 (2.5) |
24.0 (0.94) |
7.5 (0.3) |
4.4 (0.17) |
0.0 (0) |
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| Source: National Weather Service 1975-2004 | |||||||||||||
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SANA may refer to:
Template:Dab
SANA (Send a), a town in S. Arabia, the capital of the Turkish vilayet of Yemen. It is situated in 15° 22' N. and 44° 10' E. in a broad valley running nearly N. and S., 7250 ft. above sea-level, on the E. slope of the great meridional range, over which the road runs to Hodeda, on the Red Sea coast 130 m. distant, crossing the Karn al Wal pass, over 9000 ft., about 25 m. W. of the city. The mean temperature of the year is 60° F., with a summer maximum of 77°, and a regular rainfall which falls chiefly during the S.W. monsoon from June to September. The usual cereals, fruits and vegetables of the temperate zone, wheat, barley, apples, apricots, vines, potatoes, cabbages, beans, &c., are abundant and excellent.
The town consists of three parts - (I) the Medina, the old city, now the Arab quarter, on the E. containing the principal mosques, baths, &c., with the citadel, el Kasr, at its S.E. corner at the foot of Jebel Nukum on the crest of which 2000 ft. above the valley are the ruins of the old fort of el Birash, traditionally attributed to Shem the son of Noah, and the Mutawakkil, 1 This is on the usual assumption that there was only one ark in the history of Judah and Israel.
formerly containing the palace and gardens of the imams, covering its W. face; (2) the Bir Azab W. of the city, consisting of detached houses and gardens, chiefly occupied by the higher Turkish officials, and (3) on the extreme W. the Ka`el Yahud or Jewish quarter. The city with the Kasr and Mutawakkil is surrounded by ramparts built of clay and sun-dried brick, 25 to 30 ft. high and of great thickness. The Bir Azab and Ka`el Yahud are enclosed in a similar enceinte but of more recent construction, connected with that of the city by the Mutawakkil; the whole forms a rough figure of eight, some 22 m. long from E. to W., and 4 m. in breadth. The walls are pierced by several gates; the principal are the Bab esh Shu`b and the Bab el Yemen in the N. and S. faces of the city respectively, and the Bab es Sabah in its W. face leading into the Mutawakkil, and thence by a broad street through the Bir Azab and Ka`el Yahud to the Bab el Ka', the main entrance to the town from the Hodeda road. The city itself has narrow, paved streets, with massive, flat-roofed houses of several storeys, and many extensive groups of buildings, mosques, serais and baths. The Jami `Masjid, or principal mosque, stands on the site of the Christian church built by Abraha ruler of Yemen during the period of Ethiopian domination, about A.D. J30. It consists of a great rectangular courtyard paved with granite, surrounded by a triple arcade, the domed roofs of which are supported by numerous columns of stone or brick; in the centre there is a model of the Ka`ba at Mecca covered with stone flags of various colours arranged chequer-wise. Among the other mosques, of which there are forty-eight in all, that of Salah ed din with its beautiful minaret is one of the finest. Of the Kasr Ghumdan and other ancient buildings, the splendours of which were sung by the poets of the early days of Islam, nothing but mutilated ruins remain; the old palace of the imams, the Mutawakkil, was destroyed during the years of anarchy preceding the Turkish occupation, and the site is now occupied by a military hospital standing in well-kept gardens. The houses consist generally of a ground floor built of dressed stone, surmounted by two or three storeys of burnt brick; as a rule the lower storey has no openings but an arched doorway; the façade of the upper storeys is pierced by long narrow window recesses, divided into three parts, the lowest of which forms a square window closed by carved wooden shutters, while the upper ones contain round or pointed windows fitted with coloured glass, or thin slabs of alabaster which admit a subdued light.
The valley in which Sana lies is generally - sterile, but in places where water is brought from the hill streams on the W. fields. of barley, lucerne and market gardens are to be seen, particularly at Randa, the garden suburb, 6 m. N. of the town, and in the deep gorges of the Wadi Dhahr and W. Hadda, the terraced orchards of which are celebrated for their fine fruit-trees. The water supply of the town is derived from numerous wells, and from the Ghail Aswad, a small canal which supplies the military cantonment outside and S. of the walls, and runs through the gardens in the Mutawakkil.
The population was estimated by R. Manzoni in 1887 at 20,000 Arabs, 3000 Turks and 1700 Jews, or less than 25,000 altogether; H. Burchardt in 1891 put it at 50,000; the city has, however, suffered severely from the state of unrest which has been chronic in Yemen since 1893, and more particularly in 1905, when it was taken by the insurgents, and held by them for three months, and the actual numbers at present do not probably exceed Manzoni's estimate.
Arabic writers give many discordant and fabulous traditions about the oldest history of Sana and its connexion with the ancient kingdom of Himyar. But most agree that its oldest name was Azal,. which seems to be the same word with Uzal in Gen. x. 27. A Himyarite nation of Auzalites occurs in a Syriac writer of the 6th century. The better-informed. Arab writers knew also that the later name is due to the Abyssinian conquerors of Yemen, and that it meant in their language "fortified" (Bakri, p. 606; Noldeke, Gesch. d. Pers. u. Arab. p. 187). Sana became the capital of the Abyssinian Abraha (c. 530 A. D.) who built here the famous church (Kalis), which was destroyed two centuries later by order of the caliph Mansur (Azraki, p. 91).
Niebuhr, Travels in Arabia (Amsterdam, 1 774); R. Manzoni, Il Yemen (Rome, 1884); D. Charnay and A. Defiers, Excursions au Yemen. Tour du monde (Paris, No. 24, 1898).
(R. A. W.) Sana'I, the common name of Abulmajd Majdud B. Adam, the earliest among the great Stifle poets of Persia, was a native of Ghazni (in Afghanistan). He flourished in the reigns of the Ghaznevid sultans Ibrahim (10 5910 99, 45 1 -49 2 A.H.), his son Mas'ud (1099-1114), and his grandson Bahram (1118-1152). Persian authorities are greatly at variance as to the dates of the poet's birth and death. At any rate, he must have been born in the beginning of the second half of the 11th century and have died between 1131 and 1150 (525 and S45 A.H.). He composed chiefly gasidas in honour of his sovereign Ibrahim and the great men of the realm, but the ridicule of a half-mad jester is said to have caused him to abandon the career of a court panegyrist and to devote his poetical abilities to higher subjects. For forty years he led a life of retirement and poverty, and, although Bahram offered him a high position at court and his own sister in marriage, he remained faithful to his austere and solitary life. But, partly to show his gratitude to the king, partly to leave a lasting monument of his genius behind him, he began to write his great double-rhymed poem on ethics and religious life, which served as model to the masterpieces of Farid-uddin 'Attar and jelal ud-din Rumi, the Iladigat ul-liagigat, or "Garden of Truth" (also called Alkitab alfakhri), in ten cantos. This poem deals with such topics as: the unity of the Godhead, the divine word, the excellence of the prophet, reason, knowledge and faith, love, the soul, worldly occupation and inattention to higher duties, stars and spheres and their symbolic lore, friends and foes, separation from the world. One of Sana'i's earliest disciples, Mahommed b. 'Ali Raqqam, generally known. as 'Ali al-Raffa, who wrote a preface to this work, assigns to its composition the date 1131 (525 A.H.), and states besides that the poet died immediately after the completion of his task. Now, Sana'i cannot possibly have died in 1131, as another of his mathnawis, the Tariq-i-tahgiq, or "Path to the Verification of Truth," was composed, according to a chronogram in its last verses, in 1134 (528 A.H.), nor even in 1140, if he really wrote, as the Atashkada says, an elegy on the death of Amir Mu'izzi; for this court-poet of Sultan Sinjar lived till 1147 or 1148 (542 A.H.). It seems, therefore, that Taqi Kashi is right in fixing Sana'i's death in 1150 (545 A.H.), the more so as 'Ali al-Raffa himself distinctly says in his preface that the poet breathed his last on the 11th of Sha`ban, "which was a Sunday," and it is only in 1150 that this day happened to be the first of the week. Sana'i left, besides the Iladigah and the Tariq-i-tahgiq, several other Stifle mathnawis of similar purport: for instance, the Sair ul`ibad ila'lma`ad, o'r " Man's Journey towards the Other World" (also called Kunuz-urrumuz, " The Treasures of Mysteries"); the `Ishgnama, or "Book of Love"; the `Aglnama or "Book of Intellect"; the Karnama, or "Record of Stirring Deeds," &c.; and an extensive diwan or collection of lyrical poetry. His tomb, called the "Mecca" of Ghazni, is still visited by numerous pilgrims.
See Abdullatif al-'Abbasi's commentary (completed 1632 and preserved in a somewhat abridged form in several copies of the India Office Library); on the poet's life and works, Ouseley, Biogr. Notices, 184-187; Rieu's and Fhigel's Catalogues, &c.; E. G. Browne, Literary History of Persia (1906), ii. 317-322; H. Ethe in W. Geiger's Grundriss der iranischen Philologie, ii. 282-284.
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Categories: SAK-SAN
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Compare French sain, Ido sana, Italian sano, Latin sanus, Spanish sano.
sana (plural sanaj, accusative singular sanan, accusative plural sanajn)
(index sa)
sana
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Declension of sana (type kala)
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Word
apocopic form of sanatorium
sana m. (plural sanas)
Compare Esperanto sana, French sain, Italian sano, Latin sanus, Spanish sano.
sana (comparative plu sana, superlative maxim sana)
sana
sana f.
sana
sana f.
sana f.
sana
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