Shibam

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Shibam (Arabic: ) (often referred to as Shibam Hadhramaut) is a town in Yemen with about 7,000 inhabitants. The first known inscription about the city dates from the 3rd century AD. It was the capital of the Hadramawt Kingdom. Shibam, which is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, owes its fame to its distinct architecture.The houses of Shibam are all made out of mud brick and about 500 of them are tower houses, which rise 5 to 11 stories high, with each floor having one or two rooms. This architectural style was used in order to protect residents from Bedouin attacks.
Shibam is often called “”the oldest skyscraper city in the world”” or “”the Manhattan of the desert””, and is one of the oldest and best examples of urban planning based on the principle of vertical construction. The city has some of the the tallest mud buildings in the world, with some of them over 30 meters (100 Feet ) high, thus being early high-rise apartment buildings. In order to protect the buildings from rain and erosion, the walls must be routinely maintained by applying fresh layers of mud. The nearby town of Tarim contains the tallest structure in the Wadi Hadhramaut valley, the mudbrick minaret of the Al-Mihdhar mosque. It stands at a height of approximately 53 meters (175 feet.) This is the tallest minaret in the southern Arabian peninsula. In 1999 the documentary film Architecture of Mud was made on the subject by the filmmaker Caterina Borelli.

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