Emir of Zayla
𝕹𝖆𝖙𝖎𝖔𝖓 𝖔𝖋 𝕻𝖔𝖊𝖙𝖘
In Arabia and the wider Muslim world, 3 nisbas are specifically associated with the Horner Muslims.
2. Meaning a person from any of the Muslim Sultanates of the Horn (think of, Ifat, Shewa, Adal, Bale, Dawaro, Fatagar)
3. Meaning anyone from the Guban coast.
**The name Abyssinia is used as a general name for the Horn African region.
The frequency of migrations from the Horn to Yemen/Arabia was large enough that in the eighth/fourteenth century the laqab al-Zayla'is eventually expanded to be used to designate any Muslim from the Horn of Africa
For those who don’t know where the name “Jabarti” comes from, it originates in Arabic and means “the burning land.” It was what Arabs called Horner Muslims living on the northern coast.
This correspondences with this area of the Horn of Africa that is extremely hot (Image below). Which could also explain why Eritrean Muslims are also called "Jabarti” by generalization.
The rapid success of some of these migrants and their descendants are measured in a highly symbolic way in veneration, several tombs of saints, such as those of ʿAlī al-Zaylaʿī (circa 13th century), or from Isma'il al-Jabarti (m 875/1471) (Darood's Father), whose mausoleum gave its name to one of the cemeteries most famous of Tihama, north of the city of Zabid.
- Al-Habashî,
- Al-Zayla‘î,
- Al-Jabartî
2. Meaning a person from any of the Muslim Sultanates of the Horn (think of, Ifat, Shewa, Adal, Bale, Dawaro, Fatagar)
3. Meaning anyone from the Guban coast.
**The name Abyssinia is used as a general name for the Horn African region.
The frequency of migrations from the Horn to Yemen/Arabia was large enough that in the eighth/fourteenth century the laqab al-Zayla'is eventually expanded to be used to designate any Muslim from the Horn of Africa
For those who don’t know where the name “Jabarti” comes from, it originates in Arabic and means “the burning land.” It was what Arabs called Horner Muslims living on the northern coast.

This correspondences with this area of the Horn of Africa that is extremely hot (Image below). Which could also explain why Eritrean Muslims are also called "Jabarti” by generalization.

The rapid success of some of these migrants and their descendants are measured in a highly symbolic way in veneration, several tombs of saints, such as those of ʿAlī al-Zaylaʿī (circa 13th century), or from Isma'il al-Jabarti (m 875/1471) (Darood's Father), whose mausoleum gave its name to one of the cemeteries most famous of Tihama, north of the city of Zabid.