الحكم
كلمة (الحَكَم) في اللغة صفة مشبهة على وزن (فَعَل) كـ (بَطَل) وهي من...
One of the largest mountains of Tihāmah, presently known as "As-Sa‘diyyah", situated 100 kilometers southwest of Makkah. It is the place of assuming ihrām for the pilgrims from Yemen or any pilgrim who is traveling parallel to it or passes by it.
Yalamlam is one of the largest mountains of the Tihāmah coastal plain (in the Arabian Peninsula), which is situated 100 kilometers southwest of Makkah. Its valleys slope down to the Red Sea. It is the "meeqāt" (fixed place) where "ihrām" is assumed for the pilgrims of Yemen as well as the pilgrims who come to Makkah from that direction, such as the pilgrims from India and China (if they pass by it). This area is known today as "As-Sa‘diyyah", after the "As-Sa‘diyyah" well, which was dug there by Ash-Shareef Sa‘d, a former governor of Makkah. The residents of the valley today are the remaining descendants of the Kinānah tribe, and towards the top of the valley are the Banu Fahm tribe. The scholars agreed that Yalamlam is one of the place "meeqāts" which the pilgrim may not pass beyond except after assuming "ihrām", and that it is the "meeqāt" for its residents as well as anyone who passes through it or parallel to it.
"Yalamlam": one of the largest mountains of Tihāmah that is presently known as "As-Sa‘diyyah", situated 100 kilometers southwest of Makkah. It is where pilgrims from Yemen assume their "ihrām" (ritual state of consecration).
The mīqāt of the people of Yemen. Yalamlam is a mount in Tihāmah at a distance of fifty-four kilometres from Makkah.