Dar Al Hajar – A Summer Home
photo by Baron Moe
This palatial summer home was built by Amir al-Mumenin al-Mutawakkil ‘Ala Allah Rab ul-Alamin Imam Yahya bin al-Mansur Bi’llah Muhammad Hamidaddin, Imam and Commander of the Faithful. Why don’t we call him Imam for short?
Imam was the King of Yemen from 1926 to 1948, when he was assassinated. We don’t go too far into politics or anything here on YLW, but apparently he was a pretty fair and nice guy, and he had 14 sons, so they were probably pretty sad.
Back to Dar Al-Hajar, though, because is that a beautiful place or what? Imam had the place constructed as a summer home, and it was constructed on an already-existing prehistoric structure. This particular valley that Dar Al-Hajar overlooks is a fertile ancient land that is talked about in rock drawings, for Pete’s sake. Scholars speculate that the old construction on top of the mountain where Dar Al-Hajar was built was older than recorded history. That’s, needless to say, pretty darn cool.
The structure itself is 7 stories tall, with open courtyards and little pools everywhere. It has 35 rooms and the stairs look like they were built into the rocks. They probably were. The entrance has a 700-year old tree in it. Even though Imam had the place built in the 1930′s, it looks like a place completely out of time. A place of beauty and wonder that I’m sure his 14 sons enjoyed – from ducking in and out of the courtyards to exploring the caves beneath (unless the caves were really used for corpses, as rumors say).
Dar Al-Hajar is open to the public now as a sort of museum, though the Yemen travel website says that its “only jewel is the building itself.”
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There is no doubt in mind that the caves were really used for corpses. I would personally use them for corpses if I was around in that marigold era.