Dhahban

Dhahaban

Dhahaban

Village in Amanat al-Asimah, Yemen


Dhahaban (Arabic: ذهبان Dhahabān), also Dhahban, is a town in Yemen, located on the outskirts of the capital Sanaa in Bani al-Harith District of Amanat al-Asimah Governorate.[1] It is on the Sanaa plain, a bit south of the point where the Wadi Zahr opens out onto the plain.[2] Before 2015, Dhahaban's power station was the main source of power in the Sanaa metro area, although the city's main supplier of electricity was the power plant in Ma'rib.[3]

Quick Facts ذهبان, Country ...

Name and history

According to the 10th-century writer al-Hamdani, Dhahaban was named after Dhahabān b. Nawf Dhī Thaʽlabān b. Sharaḥbīl, of the tribe of Himyar.[2] In 1989, Robert T.O. Wilson described Dhahaban as a small village and wrote that, while the name was vocalized as Dhahbān by al-Hamdani, as well as by the modern writers Muhammad al-Akwa and Hermann von Wissmann, "the pronunciation of this name is now closer to Dhahabān."[2]

Energy

Dhahaban's power station, located 10 km northwest of Sanaa, was supplied by power lines from the Ma'rib power plant.[3] It is also capable of generating its own electricity, with an original capacity of 20 megawatts, with an additional 30 megawatts added in the 2000s.[3]


References

  1. "Geonames.org. Dhahabān". Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  2. Wilson, Robert T.O. (1989). Gazetteer of Historical North-West Yemen. Germany: Georg Olms AG. p. 169. ISBN 9783487091952. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  3. United Nations Human Settlements Programme in Yemen (2020). Sana'a City Profile (PDF). Retrieved 1 March 2021.

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