Bareq
Bareq, is one of the governorates of Asir in the north-west of the region, north of Abha. It occupies a distinct location midway between Tihama and Asir, above sea level. With an estimated population of 75,351, it is well off economically; the city has grown rapidly and has many government services and public utilities available. It is one of Asir's winter resorts because of its natural environment and mild winter weather. Bareq has valleys.
History
Bareq was founded in 220 AD. Bareq is part of the territory which is historically known as the "Yemen", which dates back to the second millennium BC and was inhabited by an immigrant tribe of southern Yemen called Bariq belonging to the ancient tribe of Al-Azd that has many clans linked to it.Known before the advent of Islam as Diyār Bāriq, it was traversed by the ancient trade route from Yemen to Mecca and the Levant, known as the winter and summer journeys. It also used to hold the Suq Hubasha in the first eight days of the month of Rajab. The market and convoys were protected by the Bareq country and this souq was the market for Azd. It was one of the greatest Arab souqs of all, and also the last of the pre-Islamic markets to be destroyed. In the mid-seventh century AD, the Bareq tribe entered Islam and played a pivotal and a major role in the Muslim conquests, and many Bariqis settled in various countries after the Muslim conquest.
Modern
At the rise of the First Saudi State in the 18th century, the villages of Bareq were governed by local clans in a fashion similar to that of Nejd, while the large tribal confederations maintained a high degree of autonomy. Bareq gave allegiance to First Saudi State in 1809 under the leadership of the Bareq chief Ahmed Ibn Zahir of the Humaydah clan. When the First Saudi State was destroyed by the Egyptians in 1818, the Bariqis continued to fight the Egyptian forces in their region tenaciously. With the withdrawal of the Egyptians in 1840.In 1872 the Turks took direct control of the region, making Bareq a sanjak of Turkish Yemen, remained in the Ottoman Empire for 42 years. In the 1880s, the Idrissi dynasty of Sabya became the predominant political force, ruling the region under the supervision of Turkish advisors. In the early twentieth century, in 1910, Muhammad ibn Ali al-Idrisi, a descendant of Ahmad Ibn Idris, began to establish political control of Bareq. After negotiations with Italy, which had interests nearby in Somalia, the Idrisi forces of Muhammad came into conflict with Ottoman forces in Ajama. The Idrisis were defeated in 1911 by Hashemite forces under Hussein ibn Ali, Sharif of Mecca, then still loyal to the Ottomans, but the tide turned when Muhammad ibn Ali concluded a secret military alliance with Great Britain in 1915, and Sharif Hussein later switched sides and joined the British against the Ottomans.
Turkish troops were withdrawn following the outbreak of war in 1914, and Turkish rule in Bareq became even more tenuous. In April 1915, British agents, hoping to garner Bariqis support for the Allies, signed a treaty with the Idrisi emir guaranteeing the independence and security of Bareq upon the defeat of the Turks. Bariqi troops fought the Turks as allies of the British forces in January 1917;, in a subsequent agreement, the British government of India promised independence at the end of the war.
After the end of First World War, Muhammad ibn Ali became ruler of an internationally recognized sovereign state, until his death in 1920. The territories of the emirate reached from Bareq in the north to Hudaydah in the south. Muhammad's successors were however unable to resist the growing power of Abd Al-Aziz Ibn Saud, who began annexing south of Arabian Peninsula and its neighboring regions after Muhammad's death. The Saudis took Bareq in 1924, and from then on Bareq was controlled by the House of Sa'ud - a situation formalized in 1934 with the signing of the Treaty of Taif between Saudi Arabia and Yemen..
Geography
Bariq is at an elevation of above sea level, and approximately inland from the Red Sea. It's lies km north-west of Abha. The district of Bariq begins about north of "Muha'il", and covers an area of about from north to south and from east to west, and are bounded by Tanomah to the east, Majaridah to the north, Muhail to the south, and Qunfudhah to the west. It is a fertile country and well watered and extensively cultivated, maize, millet, barley, and sesame being the principal crops.Neighborhoods and villages
- Sahil
- Bilad al-Musa
- Rass
- Husnayn.
- Saban
- Qafeel
- Atif
- Al Farah
- Qurayha
- Ajama
- Munaydhir
- Mifa
- Shahar
- Gdraymah
- Hubayah
- Jabal Atherb
- Qarn Mikhled
- Fuhah
- Faqah
- Ma`riyah
- Al-Ishy
- Murayba
- Khawsh
- Al Qahab, and more than 500 villages.
Ethnography
Agriculture
The region's crops, most of which are cultivated on small plains irrigated by the floods or on the silt of the stream beds. include wheat, coffee, indigo, ginger, vegetables, and sesame. It is one of the best agricultural districts in Saudi Arabia. The region also supports cattle, sheep, and goats.Education
The first school in Bareq was established in 1952. Today Bareq is home to more than 100 public educational institutes.Climate
Bareq has an arid tropical climate with an average annual temperature of. January typically sees daytime highs of and lows of, while July has average daytime highs of and lows of. With an average annual temperature of.Cuisine
Bareq is known for its cuisine and traditional meals such as jalamah, khmer, haneeth, lahoh, murtabak, aerykh, asida, muqalqal, and mandi.Hospitals and medical care
- Bareq Hospital
- Alahli Hospital
- Alsaqr dental
- Alamer Hospita
Notable people
- Hudhayfah al-Bariqi
- Suraqah al-Bariqi
- Urwah al-Bariqi
- Arfaja al-Bariqi
- Humaydah al-Bariqi
- Jamilah bint Adwan
- Asma bint Adiy al-Bariqiyyah
- Mu'aqqir
- Amr ibn Khalid
- Hamed al-Bariqi
- Umm al-Khair
- Al-Nu'man ibn Humaydah
Gallery