Page:The Northern Ḥeǧâz (1926).djvu/227

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TEBÛK TO WÂDI AL-ǦIZEL
211

were crushed, and my notebook with various inscriptions disappeared. Finally, at six o’clock in the evening, we were able to leave the camp of the Sḥama’, who gave us a young man as a guide. He was to accompany us to the nearest camp of the Beli on the road to al-Ḥeǧr.

The ancient tribe of the Beli[1] encamps to the south of the Ḥwêṭât at-Tihama. To the east its territory extends as far as the railway station of Dâr al-Ḥamra’. Its chief clans are:

al-Maʻâḳle
ar-Rmûṯ
al-Fawâẓle
az-Zabbâle
as-Sḥama’
al-Wâbṣe
al-Mwâhîb
al-Hrûf
al-Waḥše
al-ʻArâdât

The family of the great chief Eben Refâde is a scion of the clan of al-Maʻâḳle and dwells at the harbor of al-Weǧh. The oases of Bada’ and Šaṛab belong to the clan of the Wâbṣe.

WÂDI AL-ǦIZEL

At 6.30 P. M. we left the valley of al-Ǧizel.[2]

On the east of al-Ǧizel the hills of al-Maʻêḳel separate the šeʻîb of al-Ṛoṣon from the šeʻîb of Ṛubaṯa with the Ṛadîr al-Lâwi. Farther to the east the rocks of al-Ḥṯân and al-ʻAmâra are penetrated by the šeʻibân of Ḥalfa and Enḳêʻ, the latter of which contains the springs al-Aʻâl and al-Asfal, and also by the šeʻîb of aẓ-Ẓuma’. Below the latter the valley of al-Ǧizel is joined on the east by the šeʻibân of Enšejfe and al-Ǧîfe, which come down from the ope of aš-Šmejḥṭa near the volcano of an-Neǧme and
  1. See Musil, Arabia Petraea, Vol. 3, pp. 50f.
  2. Al-Hamdâni, Ṣifa (Müller), p. 170, says that the territory of the Beli contains the places Haǧašân, al-Ǧazl, as-Suḳja’, ar-Ruḥba. Maʻden Farân, as well as the settlements of Šaṛb and Bada’ between the oasis of Tejma and al-Medîna. On the coast the station of Nabk forms the frontier between the Beli and the Ǧuḏâm.—
    According to these particulars, an-Nabk, situated in the valley of aš-Šaʻaf, was the first halting place in the Beli territory on the Pilgrim Route from Egypt to al-Medîna. The settlement of Šaṛb belonged to the Beli tribe, as did also a part of the plain of ar-Raḥaba and the whole of the valley of al-Ǧizel, which I identify with the ancient al-Ǧazl. In the time of al-Hamdâni the valley of ad-Dâma would then have formed the actual frontier between the Ǧuḏâm, who guarded the halting places of al-ʻWejned, and the Beli, who protected Nabk. This frontier still exists between the Beli and the Ḥwêṭât at-Tihama, and, just as in the time of al-Hamdâni, the valley of al-Ǧizel as well as Šaṛb, Bada’, and Suḳja’, belong to the Beli. Ar-Ruḥba, or ar-Raḥaba, in the upper part of Wâdi ad-Dâma belongs to both.
    Ibn Ḥabîb (al-Bekri, Muʻǧam [Wüstenfeld], p. 789; Jâḳût, Muʻǧam [Wüstenfeld], Vol. 4, pp. 702 f.) locates the place Majâser, which is mentioned by the poet Kuṯejjer, between ar-Ruḥba and Suḳja’-l-Ǧazl, not far from the valley of al-Ḳura’.
    This Suḳja’-l-Ǧazl must be distinguished from the settlement of as-Suḳja’ situated near al-Ǧuḥfa, to the southwest of al-Medîna. It was in Suḳja’-l-Ǧazl, according to Jâḳût, that the singer Ṭwejs died, but according to Abu-l-Faraǧ (Aṛâni [Bûlâḳ, 1285 A. H.], Vol. 2, p. 172), he died under Caliph al-Walîd ibn ʻAbdalmalek at as-Swejda, two night halts from al-Medîna on the road to Syria.—As the valley of al-Ǧizel joins the valley of al-Ḳura’, the settlement of Suḳja’-l-Ǧazl can be included among the settlements in the latter. It seems, moreover, that Suḳja’-l-Ǧazl is identical with Suḳja Jazîd, referred to by al-Muḳaddassi, Aḥsan (De Goeje), p. 84.