also spelled Sanaa, or Sana, city and capital of Yemen. It is situated at the western foot of Mount Nuqum, at an elevation of more than 7,200 feet (2,200 metres) above sea level, in the western part of the country. San'a' has for many centuries been the chief economic, political, and religious centre of the Yemen Highlands. The city's name means fortified place. San'a' is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world, although an exact date for its establishment is unknown. According to Yemeni legend, it was founded by Shem, one of the three sons of Noah. It occupies the site of the ancient pre-Islamic stronghold of Ghumdan, which may date to the 1st and 2nd century BC. San'a' was an Arabian centre for Christians and Jews before it was converted to Islam by 'Ali, fourth caliph and son-in-law of Muhammad, in 632. The city's history as a Muslim centre is one of sporadic rivalry between the heterodox Zaydi (Zaydiyah) imams (leaders) and rival dynasties; the Zaydi imamate, whose original capital was at Sa'dah in the north, lasted, with frequent interruptions, from the 9th century to 1962. There was a sharp decline in the city's fortunes in the 12th15th century, as successive conquerors of Yemen set up their capitals in other cities. During the reign of 'Abd al-Wahhab ibn Tahir of the Tahirid dynasty in the early 16th century the city was embellished with many fine mosques and madaris (Islamic theological schools). Nominally under Ottoman sovereignty from the mid-16th century, San'a' was effectively controlled by the imams from the early 17th century to 1872; only then did the Ottomans succeed in capturing and holding the city. Civil strife between the Ottomans and the imams continued until 1911, when a treaty gave the latter almost total autonomy. San'a' became the national capital of independent Yemen after Ottoman defeat in World War I. Under the imam Ahmad (reigned 194862), the capital was moved south to Ta'izz, but San'a' again became the capital with the 1962 revolution and the proclamation of the Yemen Arab Republic (San'a'). The revolution ousted the Zaydi imamate and opened San'a' to political and cultural change, but it also sparked an eight-year civil war. In 1990 San'a' became the unified nation's capital when the Yemen Arab Republic (San'a'), or North Yemen, merged with the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (Aden), or South Yemen. The old city is surrounded by a massive wall 2030 feet (69 metres) high, pierced by numerous gates. Most notable architecturally is the Yemen Gate (Bab al-Yaman), renamed Liberty Gate after the revolution of 1962. Old San'a' includes 106 mosques, 12 hammams (baths), and 6,500 houses, all built before the 11th century AD. Multistoried tower houses, built of dark basalt stone and brick, are decorated with intricate frieze work and beautiful carved windows. San'a''s most notable mosque, al-Jami' al-Kabir (Great Mosque), contains a sacred shrine that was once a principal object of Zaydi veneration. The old suqs (marketplaces) begin at Bab al-Yaman and extend northward past the Great Mosque. The area is called Suq al-Milh (Salt Market) but consists of many smaller suqs selling a wide variety of goods. Northwest of the old city is the former summer palace of the imam, perched on a steep rock outcrop overlooking the Wadi Dharr. The garden suburb of Rawdah, due north of San'a', has a fine mosque in the Moorish style. Qa' al-Yahud (Jewish Quarter), a walled ghetto in the western part of the city, was long a centre for the practice of traditional crafts, such as fine gold and silver metalwork and embroidery. Virtually all the capital's Jews emigrated to Israel in 194950, dealing an almost fatal blow to the handicraft economy. San'a''s traditional isolation was mitigated by the opening (1961) of an all-weather road to the port of al-hudaydah to the southwest; the road was funded by the People's Republic of China. Another good highway leads to Ta'izz, which is linked to the old port of Mocha (Al-Mukha), now little-used. San'a''s international airport is at nearby ar-Raeabah. In addition to the city's function as a regional trade centre, modern industry has been stimulated by foreign assistance; a cotton textile mill built by the Chinese (opened 1966) is particularly important. Many of the city's residents are government workers. Several houses and public buildings in and around the capital were damaged in the civil war of 196270. The University of San'a' was established in 1970. In the late 20th century San'a''s population grew exponentially, from roughly 35,000 in the early 1960s to more than 400,000 by the mid-1980s; its greater metropolitan area (urban agglomeration) was nearly 1,000,000 in the mid-1990s. The city has expanded in all directions with the increase in population, but Old San'a', reduced to one-tenth of the city's population and area, was neglected until the 1980s, when UNESCO and the Yemeni government initiated efforts for the preservation and repair of the walled city. In 1986 it was designated a World Heritage site. Pop. (1986) 427,185; (1995 est.) urban agglomeration, 972,000.
SAN'A'
Meaning of SAN'A' in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012