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www.najran.gov.sa. Najran (Arabic: نجران Najrān), is a city in southwestern Saudi Arabia. It is the capital of Najran Province. Designated as a new town, Najran is one of the fastest-growing cities in the kingdom. Its population grew from 47,500 in 1974 to 90,983 in 1992, 246,880 in 2004, and 381,431 in 2021.
Najran's Zaidi community in 2008 numbers around 2,000. [4] The 2004 Saudi census put the number of inhabitants in Najran at around 408,000. Sulaymani Ismailis, widely believed to constitute a large majority of the Najrani population, share an identity based on historical, cultural, and religious roots.
Najran (Arabic: نجران, also spelled Nijran) is a village in southern Syria lying south of the Lejah plain, administratively part of the al-Suwayda Governorate, located northwest of al-Suwayda. Nearby localities include Harran to the northwest, Ariqah to the northeast, ad-Duweri and Qarrasa to the west, ad-Dour and Sami' to the southwest ...
1234. ISO 3166 code. SA-04. The Eastern Province (Arabic: المنطقة الشرقية al-Mintaqah ash-Sharqīyah), also known as the Eastern Region, is the easternmost of the 13 provinces of Saudi Arabia. It is the nation's largest province by area and the third most populous after the Riyadh and Mecca provinces. In 2017, the population was ...
Najran: 1 [5] (6) 59 592,300 149,511 Northern Borders Province: ... List of Arabian cities by population; List of cities and towns in Saudi Arabia; Rub' al Khali ...
It has an area of 76,693 square kilometres (29,611 sq mi), and an estimated population of 2,024,285 (in 2022). [1] ʿAsīr is surrounded by Mecca Province to the north and west, Al-Bahah Province to the northwest, Riyadh Province to the northeast, Najran Province to the southeast, and Jazan Province and the Yemeni Muhafazah ( Governorate ) of ...
In 2004, it was the tenth-largest city in Yemen and had an estimated population of 51,870. [1] ... the capital of Najran Province, Saudi Arabia. ...
Najran was an oasis, with a large population of Arab Christians and a significant community of Arab Jews. [3] Unlike most Ṣayhadic people of that zone, had only come under the authority of the Himyarite Kingdom in the early fifth century, more or less around the time that a local merchant, one Hayyān by name, had visited Constantinople and ...