Aden Protectorate ( *) (ca. 285,000 km²) was a British protectorate in southern Arabia in the early and middle 20th century. Together with Aden Colony, it subsequently became known as South Arabia and later South Yemen. Today the territory forms part of the Republic of Yemen.
In 1917, control of Aden Protectorate was transferred from the Government of India, which had inherited the British East India Company's interests on strategically important naval route from Europe to India, to the British Foreign Office. For administrative purposes, the protectorate was informally divided into the Eastern Protectorate and the Western Protectorate, each with its own political advisor (in Al Mukalla and Lahij respectively) and some separation of administration.
The Eastern Protectorate (ca. 230,000 km²) ) came to include the following entities (mostly in Hadhramaut):
The Western Protectorate (ca. 55,000 km²) included:
The boundaries between these polities and even their number fluctuated over time. Some such as the Mahra Sultanate barely had any functioning administration at all. Not included in the protectorate were Aden Colony or the insular areas of Perim, Kamaran, and Khuriya Muriya that accrued to it.
Eastern Protectorate States
These agreements allowed for the stationing of a Resident Advisor in the signatory states which gave the British a greater degree of control over their domestic affairs. This rationalized and stabilized the rulers’ status and laws of succession but had the effect of ossifying the leadership and encouraging official corruption. Aerial bombardment and collective punishment were sometimes used against wayward tribes to enforce the rule of Britain’s clients. British protection came to be seen as an impediment to progress, a view reinforced by the arrival of news of Arab nationalism from the outside world on newly available transistor radios.
In 1950, Kennedy Trevaskis, the Advisor for the Western Protectorate drew up a plan for the protectorate states to form two federations, corresponding to the two halves of the protectorate. Although little progress was made in bringing the plan to fruition, it was considered a provocation by Ahmad bin Yahya. In addition to his role as king, he also served as the imam of the ruling Zaidi branch of Shi'a Islam. He feared that a successful federation in the Shafi'i Sunnite protectorates would serve as a beacon for discontented Shafi'ites who inhabited the coastal regions of Yemen. To counter the threat, Ahmad stepped up Yemeni efforts to undermine British control and, in the mid-1950s, Yemen supported a number of revolts by disgruntled tribes against protectorate states. The appeal of Yemen was limited initially in the protectorate but a growing intimacy between Yemen and the popular Arab nationalist president of Egypt Gamal Abdel Nasser and the formation of United Arab States increased its attraction.
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"Aden Protectorate".
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