Ha'il

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ha'il City
Ha'il, Saudi Arabia
Ha'il, Saudi Arabia
Country Saudi Arabia
Province ha'il Province
Government
 - Governor Prince Saud Bin Abed Al-Mohsen
 - Deputy Governor Prince Sa`ad Bin Abdul Aziz
Population
 - Total 267,005
Time zone EAT (UTC+3)
Area code(s) +966-6
Website: Ha'il city official website


Ha'il (also spelled Hail, Ha'yel ,or Hayil Arabic: حائل) is an oasis city in Nejd in northwestern Saudi Arabia. It is the capital of the Ha'il Province. The city has a population of 267,005, according to a 2004 census.

Ha'il is largely agricultural, with significant grain, date, and fruit production. A large percentage of the kingdom's wheat production comes from Ha'il Province, where the area to the northeast, 60 km to 100 km away, consists of irrigated gardens. Traditionally Ha'il derived its wealth from being on the camel caravan route of the Hajj. Ha'il is well known by the genorousity of its people in Saudi Arabia & the Arab world as it is the place where Hatim al-Tai lived in.


Contents

[edit] History

Ha'il was the center of the emirate of Al Rashid, a clan of the Shammar tribe, from 1836 until 1921. The first emir, Abdullah bin Rashid, took power with his brother emir Obaid and their distant cousin and close friend emir Zamil(1st) Al Sabhan in 1836 from the former ruler of Hail, Mohammad Ibn Ali, who was a fellow member of the Jafaar linage of the Abde section of the Shammar tribe. Abdulla bin Rashid continued constructing the Barzan Palace in Hail which had been started by Mohammad Ibn Ali. After the death of Abdullah bin Rashid (in 1847 or 1848) his son and successor, Talal (or Telal), completed the palace.


During the ibn Rashid period many foreign travellers visited Ha'il and the ibn Rashid emirs, and described their impressions in different journals and books, including those of Georg August Wallin (1854), William Gifford Palgrave (1865), Lady Anne Blunt (1881), Charles Montagu Doughty (1888), and Gertrude Bell (1907).

Al-Rashid emirs were considered relatively tolerant towards foreigners, including traders in Ha'il:

Many of these traders belonged to the Shiyaa sect, hated by all good Sonnites, doubly hated by the Wahabees. But Telal affected not to perceive their religious discrepancies, and silenced all murmurs by marks of special favour towards these very dissenters, and also by the advantages which their presence was not long in procuring for the town.[1]


The extent of Al Rashid's rule
The extent of Al Rashid's rule


The opening of the Hejaz railway between Damascus and Medina, together with new inexpensive steamship routes to Jeddah, undermined the traditional camel caravan economy of Ha'il.

The last Al-Rashid emir was ousted from power by Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia in 1921. Ibn Saud then gave orders to destroy the Barzan Palace and also ordered Al-Rashid and Al Sabhan leaders to move from Ha'il to Riyadh City, and he assigned one person from the mentioned families, as temp. emir " Prince Ibraheem bin Salem Al Sabhan " in order to assure the loyality from Ha'il people and shammar, to keep in their minds, there is no major changes has been done.

After this Ha'il fell into steep decline, as witnessed by E. Rutter in 1931:

Hail seem like a city marooned among the sand...the population of Hail was plainly in decline. Numbers of houses in the norccthern quarter of the town were in ruins...many people of Hail had fled to the comfortable realms of King Faisal of Iraq...

Today Ha'il is the center of Saudi Arabia's agricultural program,[citation needed] and most of the wheat crops of the kingdom come from the area surrounding the city.

[edit] Famous People

  • Hatim al-Tai:
Main article: Hatim al-Tai

Was a famous pre-Islamic (Jahiliyyah) Arabian poet, and the father of the Sahaba Adi ibn Hatim and Safana bint Hatem. He was a Christian[2], and belonged to the Ta'i Arabian tribe. Stories about his extreme generosity have made him an icon to Arabs up till the present day, as in the proverbial phrase "more generous than Hatem"

  • Abdulaziz bin Mitab:
Main article: Abdulaziz bin Mitab

The son of the third amir of Al Rashid, he was adopted by his uncle Mohammed, the fifth amir, and brought up to be his heir. After Mohammed died of natural causes, Abdulaziz succeeded him unopposed. However, the Rashidi rule was insecure, as their Ottoman allies were unpopular and weakening. In 1904 the young Ibn Saud, the founder of Saudi Arabia, returned from exile with a small force and retook Riyadh. Abdulaziz died in the battle of Rawdat Muhanna with Ibn Saud in 1906.

  • Madawi Al-Rasheed:
Main article: Madawi Al-Rasheed

A Saudi-Arabian-born professor of Social Anthropology at the department of Theology and Religious Studies in King's College London since 1994. She gives occasional lectures in the United States, Europe and the Middle East. She is working on religio-political debate in Saudi Arabia after 11 September. She has written several books and articles in academic journals on the Arabian Peninsula, Arab migration, globalisation and religious transnationalism.

  • Mohamed Al-Deayea:
Main article: Mohamed Al-Deayea

A Saudi Arabian football (soccer) goalkeeper. He played in four World Cups for the Saudi Arabia national team, and as of early 2007, he is the world record holder for most international appearances by a male footballer, with 181 caps for Saudi Arabia. He is the current captain of local club Al-Hilal.

[edit] Sightseeing and Events

an old photo of the Barzan souk.
an old photo of the Barzan souk.

[edit] Barzan Souk

Ha'il has a market or souk near the location of the Barzan Palace. Now it's not like a bazar or souk, it is a well developed shopping place.

[edit] Barzan palace

Main article: Barzan palace

Barzan historical palace is made in 1808 by prince Muhammad bin Abdul-Muhsin AL Ali over an erea more than 300,000 meter square. The Palace was completed during the rule of the 2.nd Rashidi amir, Talal ibn Abdullah (1848–68). The Palace consisted of 3 floors, the first had the reception halls, gardens, and kitchens. The second had the diplomatic guests rooms. The third had the royal family rooms. It was near Barzan souq.

Qishlah palace in Ha'il
Qishlah palace in Ha'il

[edit] Qishlah

Main article: Qishlah

Made in the 1940s during the principality of prince Abdul-Aziz bin Musa'ad Al Saud of Ha'il province. It is a two-floor mud palace, 142.8x141.2 meters, its walls are 8.5m high, and it has eight watching-towers along with the wall with two main gates, eastern and western gates.

[edit] Ha'il Rally

Is an important event in Ha'il and even in Saudi Arabia as it is the first Rally in Saudi Arabia which started in 2006 and approved by FIA in 2008.[3]

[edit] Ha'il Desert Life Festival

Is an annual festival held in the province of Ha'il to exchange experiences in desert life around the world[4].

[edit] Ha'il University

[edit] History

The university of Ha'il (UOH) started as a community college, called Hail Community College (HCC), under the auspices of King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM) in September 1998. HCC was the first Community College to open in a planned expansion of educational opportunities for Saudi Arabian high school graduates. HCC started by offering three-years Associate degree programs in Business Administration, Computer Systems, and Electronic Engineering and Instrumentation. Later on, HCC offered three Bachelor degree programs in Applied Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, Management Information Systems. It was officially established on 14 June 2006 .[5] The university consists of five colleges: College of Medicine & Medical Sciences, College of Science, College of Engineering, College of Computer Science & Computer Engineering, and Community College. The first students were admitted on 11 February 2006. In 2007, two existing colleges joined the university, which are Teachers College and Girls Education College. These two colleges were originally under the auspices of the Ministry of Education. The university enrolment has grown to more than 16,000 students.

[edit] Location

It is located in Ha’il City in north-central Saudi Arabia, about 600 km (approx. 360 miles) north-west of the Riyadh city. The Ha'il city is served by major highways and a modern domestic airport. The University has several campuses inside the city, as well as a new campus under construction, which is located to the north of the city and covers an area of more than 9,000,000 m².

[edit] Transportaion

[edit] Hiways

Ha'il is connected to 3 main Hiways, Madinah ,Buraydah Hiways, and Jouf Hiway, which connect Ha'il with the northern borders of Saudi Arabia

[edit] Rail System

In 2008, Ha'il is the site of a Concrete sleeper plant for the railways construction in Saudi Arabia. This rail road connects Riyadh to the northern border to Jordan where Ha'il plays the main rail logestic role in Saudi Arabia.

[edit] Airport

Ha'il Regional Airport (IATA:HAS , ICAO:OEHL) is a domestic airport located to the southern-east of Ha'il city and is served by three airlines; Sama Airlines, NAS Airlines, and a few flights by Saudi Arabian Airlines. It should be noticed that a new International airport will be constructed near Ha'il city, in The Prince Abdul Aziz ibn Musaed Economic City (PABMEC), as Ha'il has a strategic location in the Middle East because it takes only one houre by plane to 11 Arab capitals.[6].

PABMEC is a leap forward in the economy of the Middle East as a whole and not just that of Saudi Arabia [7]

.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ William Gifford Palgrave, 1865.
  2. ^ Biography of Sheikh Bahi Dadiza (Arabic)
  3. ^ Hail Rally Flags Off Today. Arab News (9 February 2007).
  4. ^ Hail to Host Global Desert Life Festival. Arab News (11 April 2008).
  5. ^ Hail University Foundation Today. Arab News (Wednesday 14 June 2006).
  6. ^ New Economic City to Boost North. Arab News (6 December 2006).
  7. ^ said Al-Rakhis

[edit] External Links

[edit] References

  • G. A. Wallin (1854): Narrative of a journey from Cairo to Medina and Mecca, by Suez, Araba, Tawila, al-Jauf, Jublae, Hail and Negd in 1845, Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, vol 24: 115-201. (Reprinted 1979).
  • Lady Anne Blunt (1881): A Pilgrimage to Nejd, The Cradle of the Arab Race: a Visit to the Court of the Arab Emir and `our Persian Campaign` (Reprinted 1968)
  • William Gifford Palgrave, 1865.Personal Narrative of a Year's Journey through Central and Eastern Arabia (1862-1863), 2 vols (London: Macmillan & Co). (Reprinted many times, last in 1985).
  • Charles Montagu Doughty (1888): Travels in Arabia Deserta. (Reprinted many times)
  • Gertrude Bell (1907): The Desert and the Sown (Republished 1987)
  • E. Rutter (1931): Damascus to Hail. Journal of Royal Central Asian Studies, vol 18: 61-73.
  • D. G. Hogarth (1905): The Penetration of Arabia: a Record of Western Knowledge Concerning the Arabian Peninsula.
  • Madawi Al Rasheed: Politics in an Arabian oasis. The ibn rashid Tribal Dynasty. I.B. Tauris & Co Ltd, London -New York 1991 (based on a Ph.D. thesis presented to Cambridge University, 1988). ISBN 1-85043-320-8
  • Lonely Planet: The Middle East, 3rd edition 2000. ISBN 0-86442-701-8

Coordinates: 27°31′N, 41°41′E