However, the power basis of an-Nasir al-Hasan was quite limited. He was actually attacked by other Zaidi groups, such as the Hamzah sharifs, the sons of the last imam
al-Mutahhar, and even by his cousins of the Mu'ayyad clan. In 1580, a new and redoubtable Ottoman governor, Hasan Pasha, was appointed by the
Porte. By making use of the inner divisions of the highland groups, Hasan Pasha was able to reinforce the sultan's authority in the regions north of
San'a.
Sa'dah and
Najran were occupied by the Turks in 1583. An-Nasir al-Hasan kept his stronghold in the inaccessible
Shaharah but was eventually betrayed and captured on 11 September 1585. His captor was the
ketkhuda (deputy) of Hasan Pasha, Emir Sinan. After having spent one year in prison in San'a, he was brought to
Turkey where he eventually died in 1615. The torch of resistance was taken over in 1597 by the imam
al-Mansur al-Qasim, of another
Sayyid lineage, who founded a new Yemeni state. ==See also==