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A
brief history about Socotra
Socotra was called Dioskouridou ("of the Dioscurides") in the 1st century
AD, in the “Periplus of the Erythraean Sea,” an early shipping manual.
“Dioscoridou is very large but desert and marshy, having rivers in it and
crocodiles and many snakes and great lizards, of which the flesh is eaten
and the fat melted and used instead of olive oil" - thus commented the
author of the Periplus. The island that he was describing was Socotra, which
today forms part of the Republic of Yemen. The crocodiles and giant lizards
referred to by the author of the Periplus are no longer present there today.
No fossils have so far been discovered but this is not to say that they did
not exist. Indeed, the Indian Ocean crocodile survived right up to the 17th
century AD when it was described by sailors visiting the Seychelles, which
lie 1,600 km due south. Such lost inhabitants apart however, Socotra
remains, from a natural history viewpoint, one of the most fascinating
places in the world. Its unique character is the result of a long period of
isolation. As a result, many animals and plants that live today on Socotra
are found nowhere else on earth. The very high degree of endemism is what
makes Socotra such an important place in terms of global wildlife
conservation, and it is sometimes called the Galapagos of the East. It is
believed that some of the plants and animals found on Socotra are in fact
ancient relics from a much larger land mass (Africa) which have been
preserved here as a result of the fact that the Hagghir massif has not been
totally submerged.
In the notes to his translation of the Periplus, G.W.B. Huntingford remarks
that the name Suqotra is not Greek in origin, but from the Sanskrit dvipa
sukhadhara ("island of bliss"). Another probable origin of the name is the
Arabic “Suq” meaning “market” and “qotra” meaning “dripping frankincense”.
The ancient frankincense route that went through to Jerusalem and to Europe,
began on Socotra, and the present town of Suq on the north coast near
Hadiboh, was the port from which the frankincense (and myrrh and aloes)
began its journey. A tradition holds that the inhabitants were converted to
Christianity by Thomas the apostle in AD 52, and that Thomas was once
shipwrecked on Socotra during his frequent journeys to India, and the
shipwreck was used to build a church. In the 10th century the Arab
geographer Abu Zaid Hassan states that in his time most of the inhabitants
were Christians.
The famous Venetian traveler Marco Polo (1254-1324) visited Socotra and
accused the Socotrans of having the supernatural ability to control the
weather and to cause shipwrecks. He wrote of Socotra saying, “I give you my
word that the people of this island are the most expert enchanters in the
world. It is true that the archbishop does not approve of these enchantments
and rebukes them for the practice. But this has no effect, because they say
that their forefathers did these things of old.
The explorer Tristão da Cunha put ashore in the early 16th century and
considered Socotra conquered for Portugal. He landed at the previously
mentioned port town of Suq which was the old capital of the Socotran
sultans. A military force soon came and occupied Suq (but not Socotra) for
about seven years from 1504 to 1511. Suq was the site of a fierce battle
with the Suqotrans, which was partly the cause of the eventual Portuguese
departure, although the deprivation in living there was also a big factor.
Today, the remains of the old Portuguese fort can be seen by climbing the
rocky outcrop beside Suq, and the rump pillars of a church built by the
Portuguese can be seen on the edge of the town. At this time Christianity
had disappeared from the island except for stone crosses at which the
Portuguese Alvares said people worshipped. However, during a visit to the
island in 1542, Francis Xavier found a group of people claiming to be
descended from the converts made by St. Thomas.
The islands passed under the control of the Mahra sultans in 1511, but
eventually became a British protectorate in 1886, and it became an important
strategic stop-over for British shipping in the area. It was an important
air base for the British in World War two, and the remains of the main
airfield can be seen inland from Suq. Some 10 British airmen are buried on
cemetery hill near the Mori airfield, and all these were all killed in
crashes during World War 2. A German U boat scuttled a dhow off Qalansiya,
and was apparently sunk by later action of the air force. With the
independence of South Yemen from the British in 1969, the islands came under
the southern government of the Democratic Republic of Yemen, and then after
unification with the north in 1990, the island came under the governance of
the new Republic of Yemen.
Apart from some 19th century travel accounts (such as Bent) and a few more
recent expeditions, including that of the Oxford University team led by
Douglas Botting (July-August 1955), and a British joint-services and
civilian expedition (in 1967), the Socotra archipelago has received
relatively little attention from the scientific community, being virtually
isolated from the rest of the world. Until the end of the twentieth century
it was effectively closed to foreign visitors by a combination of military
considerations and extreme natural conditions. Books have been published by
the leaders of the above expeditions which can be found in the large English
libraries of the world. (see Island of the Dragons Blood, by Douglas Botting,
from the 1955 expedition, and Socotra: Island of Tranquillity, by Brian Doe,
published by Immel Publishing, 1992). Other more recent books of excellent
quality and scholarship have been published about Socotran fauna and flora
by Wolfgang Wranik, and by Tony Miller and Miranda Morris, who have devoted
many years of research to Socotra since the early 1980’s. Publications are
now available also at the center for the Socotra Conservation and
Development Fund in Hadiboh, which began in the late 1990’s as a United
Nations research and development venture, and has done considerable
scientific research on the Socotra Archipelago.
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