Early history In the early 1st millennium BC, Najran was controlled by a commune called Muhamirum, which in alliance with other communes, especially Amirum, formed a federation. The great Sabaean
mukarrib Karib'il Watar conquered this federation in the early 7th century BC as part of a series of conquests that he described in a lengthy Sabaic inscription that commemorated the achievements of his reign. The federation survived under the tutelage Sabaean domination, and an inscription from the late 7th century BC describes its failed attempt to break away from the kingdom. The major role already played by Najran in trade in this time is reflected by a passage mentioning it in the biblical
Book of Ezekiel (27:20–23):Dedan [today al-Ula in the Hijaz] traded in saddlecloths with you. Arabia and all the princes of Qedar [today al-Jawf in the north of Arabia] were your favoured dealers in lambs, rams and goats. In these they did business with you. The merchants of Sheba [Saba’ in Yemen] and Ra‘mah [Najran] traded with you; for your wares they exchanged the finest of all kinds of spices and precious stones, and gold. Haran, Kanne and Eden traded with you, and merchants of Assur and Media traded with you.In this time, the inhabitants of Najran likely spoke some variant of North Arabic, while the inscriptions are in the
Sabaic script (and more rarely, in
Minaic). Three centuries later, another inscription shows continuing Sabaean rule over Najran. As the dominance of Sheba in the region waned, Najran entered into an alliance of small, trade-focused kingdoms under the leadership of the
Kingdom of Ma'in. By the 2nd century BC, Amirum eclipsed Ma'in in the Jawf area and took control of Najran. During this period of time, the considerable role played by Najran in the caravan trade led to the great god,
Dhu Samawi, being adopted across Yemen, including by the earlier Ma'in kingdom. The only other gods affiliated with Najran in this time are
Athtar and the "Master of
Mkntn". In later periods, some longer deity lists enumerate all the gods of Najran. In 24 BC, the
Roman Empire briefly conquered Najran during the siege of South Arabia led by the Roman prefect
Aelius Gallus. According to the geographer
Strabo, Aelius "came to the town of Negranes [Najran], a peaceful, fertile region. The king fled and the town was taken by assault" (
Geography 16.4.24). Najran was then used as a launching point to put
Marib, the Sabaean capital, under siege. However, the Romans had to retreat from the area shortly afterwards. In the second century,
Ptolemy described Najran as a "metropolis" (
Geography 6.7.37). In the second and third centuries AD, rule over Najran switched multiple times. A briefly revitalized Sabaean kingdom retook it, before it passed into the hands of the
Himyarite Kingdom during its conquest of Saba. In the first decades of the third century, the Ethiopian
Kingdom of Aksum was able to conquer and hold on to it, as described both by Sabaean and Ethiopian sources. By the mid-third century, Himyar regained control over the area. Later in the fourth century, the
Namara inscription records that the
Lakhmid king
Imru al-Qays I waged a campaign against Najran, which it describes as the "city of Shammar" (or
Shammar Yahri'sh, the
Himyarite king). The campaign by Imru al-Qays may have been waged on behalf of the Roman emperor,
Constantine, and it has been suggested that a triggering factor for the conflict involved Shammar's expansion into the territory called
Arabia Deserta. Najran had a local prince/king who held the title
ʿāqib as far back as the 2nd century AD. The person holding this office had a civilian purpose, being the administrator of the city and the one maintaining public order, but apparently did not play a military role. This title was also used for the local ruler of other settlements in South Arabia. One named chief,
Arethas of Najran (also known as Ḥārith ibn Kaʿb), was one of the victims of the famous massacre of the Christians of Najran. The prestige of the role he played in the city, tied with his martyrdom, led to his clan renaming itself by his name, and their ascendancy in Najranite politics. However, this family lost its power soon after the Islamic conquests.
Christian period Christianity may have been introduced into Najran in the fifth century, and from there, it became Christianity's central city in South Arabia and through it Christianity was introduced into the rest of South Arabia. The entrance of Christianity into the city plausibly happened via trade routes. Several late sources suggest different beginnings for the Christianity of Najran. According to the
Chronicle of Seert, Christianity was introduced into the area around 450 when a Christian merchant from the city named Hannan travelled to Constantinople, and then Al-Hira, where he converted and was baptised. Upon returning to Najran, he began sharing his faith with others and other members of the community also began to convert.
Ibn Ishaq offers a different story: a Christian Syrian named Fimiyyun ended up as a slave in Najran. His manner of praying shocked the Najran community, leading to a mass conversion. Other versions of the story also permeated the Arab-Islamic tradition, some focusing on the miracles of a man named Abdallah ibn Tahmir that Fimiyyun was ministering to, and another centered on a secret conversion of a Himyarite king. Though the details about Christianity's introduction into the area cannot be recovered, an involvement of the trade routes of
Al-Hira are possible. Several explicitly Christian inscriptions are known from the
Hima Paleo-Arabic inscriptions, located at a site near Najran, with the texts dates covering the late fourth to early fifth centuries. Many of these contain Christian iconography, including large and ornate crosses, establishing a notable Christian community in the region which had produced them. For example, Ḥimà-al-Musammāt PalAr 5 contains a cross and describes a figure named "῾Abd al-Masīḥ" ("the servant of Christ"). The Christian community of Najran experienced waves of persecution before the massacre of the Jewish king Dhu Nuwas, likely beginning around 470. The
Martyrdom of Azqir reports that Najran's first priest, Azqir, was transferred to the Himyarite capital
Zafar where he was beheaded on the advice of a group of rabbis to create an example against introducing a new religion into the region. The first bishop of Najran, named Paul, was stoned to death sometime afterwards but before 500. Ethiopian sources describe a persecution of Najran's Christians during the reign of the Himyarite king
Sharhabil Yakkuf (468–480 AD). Later, the Syriac poet
Jacob of Serugh wrote a letter of consolation to the Christian community of Najran (his
Letter to the Himyarites), sometime before his death in 521, indicating another wave of persecution prior to the massacre of 523. Finally, the
Book of the Himyarites says that an (unidentified) bishop named Thomas appealed to the aid of the Kingdom of Aksum in the face of the Himyarite persecution of the Najran Christians. Beginning in 522, the Jewish king of Hummer,
Dhū Nuwās, initiated a series of campaigns against Christians in South Arabia, including Himyarite locals and Aksumites in the region. 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 his inscriptions, Dhu Nuwas himself captured and burned down the churches of the cities of
Zafar and Al-Mukāʾ. Then, three inscriptions (
Ja 1028, Ry 507, and Ry 508) describe the campaigns of Sharahil Yaqbul dhu-Yazan against Najran (despatched by Dhu Nuwas) and the ensuing massacre. According to these inscriptions, Sharahil "positioned himself against Najran" (laying it to siege). He blocked the Najran's caravan route to the northeast that would have led to both Qaryat al-Faw and eastern Arabia to put economic pressure on the city. After a thirteen month long siege, Sharahil captured Najran, which resulted in a large plunder of the area and a stated execution of 12,500 people from the city. Part of the success of the capture involved, according to Simeon's letters, an offer made by Dhu Nuwas that relinquishing control of the area would result in guarantees for the safety of the Christians, which Dhu Nuwas was said to have sworn an oath over, on a Torah scroll, and in the presence of several rabbis. However, Dhu Nuwas broke his promise, and the massacre ensued. The massacre became a moment of international outrage among Christians, with Syriac authors writing many works about the massacre of the Christian community of Najran, including the
Book of Himyarites and Simeon's
Letter on the Himyarite Martyrs. There is also the Greek
Martyrdom of Arethas. A particular moment of outrage, according to Simeon's letters, was how Dhu Nuwas ordered the bones of Najran's bishops to be exhumed, collected in a church, and then burned up there alongside other Christian laity and clerics. near the ruins of
Al-Okhdood At Najran, Christians built churches, monasteries, and martyria. In the aftermath of the massacre, the clan of
Arethas of Najran of the Christian community built a
martyrium dedicated to the martyred Christians known as the
Kaaba of Najran, one of several pre-Islamic Arabian
Kaabas. This Kaaba became a point of pilgrimage, and its custodians were from Banū ʿAbd al-Madān, the chief clan of the tribe of Balḥārith. As such, Najran became one of the holy cities of
Eastern Christianity. The Kaaba may be identical to another building named the Martyry of Arethas in sources, constructed around 520 in the memory of the martyrdom of Arethas. In addition to the Kaaba Najran, three churches from Najran are known: the Church of the Ascension of Christ, the Church of the Holy Martyrs and the Glorious Arethas, and the Church of the Holy Mother of God.
Monasticism (involving
monks and
monasteries) is also documented. Najran was the only
episcopal see in the Arabian Peninsula apart from those in Eastern Arabia. The first bishops of Najran are mentioned by the letter written in 524 of
Simeon, the bishop of Beth Arsham. According to Simeon,
Philoxenus of Mabbug consecrated two bishops, both called Mar Pawlos (Paul). Both died during the massacre, the first during the siege of Zafar, and the second in Najran before its final surrender to Dhu Nuwas. The consecration being done by Philoxenus, a leading member of the Syrian Orthodox Church, indicates a Miaphysite, non-Chalcedonian Christianity at Najran. Other bishops are mentioned in Islamic sources, including the legendary
Quss Ibn Sa'ida al-Iyadi, a contemporary of
Muhammad. Bishops are attested for Najran into the Islamic era, up until the 9th and 10th centuries. The Christian community of Najran was also linked with Syriac Christianity and some of the clerics located at Najran were trained in Syriac monasteries. This link is also indicated by a letter sent to the Christians of the city by the Syriac poet and bishop, Jacob of Serugh. Two strands of the Islamic tradition commented on Christian community of Najran: those sources commenting on the
Quranic story of the
People of the Ditch, believed by many to be about the massacre of Najran's Christians, and South Arabian Muslims with an antiquarian interest in the regions pre-Islamic history.
Muhammad and early caliphs During Muhammad's preaching, he was visited by a delegation of the Christians of Najran that involved a
ʿāqib, a
sayyid, and a bishop. After the
early Muslim conquests, the Christians of Najran fell under Islamic rule. According to the
Siyar of ash-Shaybani, the Christians of Najran 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 Abū Bakr and Umar ibn al-Khattab. In 641, however, the Christians of Najran were accused of usury and expelled from the city. Under the reign of the
Caliph ‘Umar, the Christian community of Najran was deported to Mesopotamia, where they settled near Kufa in a place they called Najānīya. In the following period, Najran 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.
Historical gap from the 7th to 17th centuries The city of Najran disappears entirely from the historical record for about a millennium, between the seventh and the seventeenth century. The sole exception to this is a 110-year period that stretches from the end of the ninth century to the beginning of the eleventh century, well-documented due to the
Description of the Arabian Peninsula by
Al-Hamdani and biographical accounts of the first
Zaydi Yemeni imams who tried to conquer Najran. Najran re-enters the historical record in the seventeenth century, when the
Principality of Najran is established by Ismaili Shia Muslims in the 1630s, whose rule continues until the 1930s. It is unknown when the region converted to Shi'ism, but the influence of the Shia sect in the region may stretch back to the tenth century.
Ismaili Shia rule In 1633, the
Principality of Najran was established, a state that was initially under the suzerainty of a Yemeni kingdom, although control over it later moved to the
Ottoman Empire as part of the formation of
Ottoman Arabia.
Incorporation into Saudi Arabia ) and his wife Rebecca Cohen (Najran Jew),
Paradesi Jews of Madras After the Ottoman Empire was defeated during
World War I, they retreated from the
Arabian Peninsula and left behind the region including Najran as part of the newly formed
Kingdom of Yemen. In 1932,
Ibn Saud merged the
Kingdom of Hejaz and the
Sultanate of Nejd to establish the kingdom of
Saudi Arabia. Between the formation of these two new states was a territory not properly demarcated, leading to a
land dispute over which kingdom Najran belonged to. After failed negotiations over the issue in February 1934, Saudi Arabia launched the Saudi–Yemen war on March 20. Saudi Arabia's forces quickly drove out the Yemeni forces. Concerned over their territorial possessions in the neighbouring colonial Africa,
Britain,
Italy, and
France sent warships into the port city of
Hodeidah, which had also been captured by Saudi Arabia, leading to Ibn Saud announcing a ceasefire and the initiation of negotiations. The war officially ended on May 20 with the signing of the
Treaty of Taif, which defined the border from the
Red Sea to the southern tip of Najran. While Saudi only claimed temporary rule over the Najran province at the time, in 1994, it asserted permanent ownership. After taking Najran in 1934, the local Jewish population was recorded by Saudi Arabia at around 200 at the time. In 1949, they were permitted to leave to the
Yemenite city of
Aden, where they rejoined the Yemenite Jewish community that were migrating to
Israel.
Persecution of the Ismaili community The
Ismailis, a religious and ethnic minority with historic roots in
Najran Province of southwestern Saudi Arabia, face increasing threats to their identity as a result of official discrimination. Official discrimination in Saudi Arabia against Ismāʻīlīs encompasses government employment, religious practices, and the justice system. Government officials exclude Ismāʻīlīs from decision making and publicly disparage their faith. With the arrival of
Mishʻal bin Suʻūd as the governor of Najran in 1996, tensions between local authorities and the Ismaʻili population increased, culminating in a watershed confrontation between armed Ismaʻili demonstrators and police and army units outside Najran's Holiday Inn hotel on April 23, 2000. Three months earlier, police had closed all
Tayyibi Ismaʻili
mosques on a religious holiday. On April 23, after security forces and religious morality police arrested an Ismāʻīlī cleric, a large demonstration took place outside the Holiday Inn, where Governor Mishʻal resided. After the governor refused for hours to meet the petitioners, an exchange of fire between security forces and armed demonstrators left two Ismāʻīlīs dead and, according to some government accounts, killed one policeman as well. Believing their religious identity to be under attack, Ismāʻili men erected defences around
Khushaywah, the seat of the Ismaʻili religious leader
Da'i al-Mutlaq. Khushaywah, which includes the Manṣūrah Mosque complex, was also the spiritual capital of
Sulaymani Ismaʻilis, a community with followers in
India and
Pakistan as well as Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The army surrounded the Ismaʻili positions and placed the city under its control. The standoff ended later the same day without further bloodshed. == Architecture ==