Thaʾrān Yuhanʿim | |
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King of the Himyarite Kingdom | |
Reign | 324–375 CE |
Predecessor | Dhamar Ali Yuhabirr |
Successor | Malkikarib Yuhamin |
Died | c. 375 Yemen |
Father | Dhamar Ali Yuhabirr |
Religion |
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Thaʾrān Yuhanʿim (c. 324–375) was a king (Tubba', Arabic: تُبَّع) of the Himyarite Kingdom (in modern-day Yemen), and was the second king of the new dynasty founded by his father Dhamar Ali Yuhabirr. He had an unusually long reign, on the order of fifty to fifty-five years and his son, Malkikarib Yuhamin, appears to have entered the throne at an advanced age.[1]
Iwona Gajda has proposed that the oldest known monotheistic Himyarite inscription (YM 1950), dating either to 363 or 373, comes from his reign.[2] More recently, Christian Julien Robin has identified an earlier monotheistic inscription from his reign that dates earlier than 355.[3]
Byzantine historians more prominently know of a conversion to Judaism during the reign of his son and successor, Malkikarib.[4]
He is known to the Islamic-era Yemeni traditionalist al-Hasan al-Hamdani as Yunʿim Tārān, and was conceived by this author to be the founder of a dynasty. He is also known to Muhammad ibn Habib al-Baghdadi as Bārān Yuhanʿim in his al-Muḥabbar.[1]