Wadi Zahr is the site of several historic forts, including Fiddah, Ṭaybah, and Munif:
Fiddah Jabal Fiddah is a steep-sided mountain on the south side of the wadi. Al-Hamdani described it as "a high rocky peak which is very precipitous and (therefore) beyond the reach of climbers." The main fort, built by the
Hatimi sultan of Sanaa in 1184 (584 AH), was located below the summit, on the southern side of the mountain. At the top of the mountain was another fortification called al-ʽAnqā'. The fort of Fiddah remained in use until the downfall of the
Sharaf al-Din dynasty in the 16th century.
Ṭaybah West of Fiddah, and also on the southern side of Wadi Zahr, is the fort of Ṭaybah, which is now in ruins. It was originally called
Dawram (or
Dūram, the vocalization preferred by
Muhammad al-Akwa), and under this name it appears in the
Iklil of al-Hamdani and the ''
Tarikh Sanʽa' of al-Razi. The first reference to the modern name Ṭaybah
is in the year 1324 (724 AH), in the Ghayat al-amani'' of
Yahya ibn al-Husayn. It is then mentioned several more times in that text as a frequently contested stronghold.
Munif The fortress of Munif (
Ḥiṣn Munīf), now in ruins, is located on the north side of Wadi Zahr. Its first mention is in the year 1386 (788 AH), also in the
Ghayat al-amani. == See also ==