Hashid and Bakil Today still in the same ancient tribal form in Yemen
Hashid and
Bakil of Hamdan remained in the highlands North of Sana'a between Marib and Hajja'a.
Banu Yam Banu Yam settled to the North of
Bakil in Najran (today in Saudi Arabia) it also branched into the tribes: the
Al Murrah and the
'Ujman of eastern Saudi Arabia and the
Persian Gulf coast.
Banu Kathir Banu Kathir moved to
Hadramut in the East of Yemen where they established their own sultanate.
Banu Al-Mashruki Banu Al-Mashrouki settled in Lebanon producing well known Maronite influential families such as the
Awwad,
Massa'ad,
Al-Sema'ani,
Hasroun.
Banu Al Harith remained in
Jabal Amil and were mainly Shia. A smaller group joined the Yemeni
Druze and were eventually pushed by
Kaysi Druze to
Jabal Al Druze in Syria.
Banu Lakhm Under the leadership of Malik bin Uday bin Al-Harith bin Murr bin Add bin Zayed bin Yashjub bin Uraieb bin Zayed. They spread to the North mainly in Southern and Western Mesopotamia, Rafah, Golan, Hauran and they were the first Southern Arabs to settle Northern Egypt where they were later joined with the Sicasik,
Banu Judham and the
Ghassanids. The Lakhmids produced The
Abadi,
Ubadi and
Banu Bahr dynasties in Spain. Other notable Lakhmid is the late Arab leader
Gamal Abdul Nasser from the Bani Mur of Banu Lakhm.
Banu Tayy Led by
Usma bin Luai in their massive exodus out of
Yemen (115 BC), the
Tayy invaded the mountains of Ajaa and Salma from
Banu Assad and
Banu Tamim in northern Arabia. The Tayy became camel herders and horse breeders and lived a nomadic lifestyle in northern
Nejd for centuries. Because of their strength and blood relations with the
Yemenite dynasties that came to rule
Syria (
Ghassan) and Iraq (the
Lakhmids), they expanded north into Iraq all the way to the capital at the time
al-Hirah. Tayy later changed their name to
Shammar, renaming the mountains of Ajaa and Salma to
Jabal Shammar (Shammar's Mountain). ==Kinda branches==