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"Unesco World Heritage The Manhattan/Chicago of the Desert The city of Shibam in Yemen--with its distinctive form of architecture described by early twentieth-century travelers as "The Manhattan of the Desert'- rises from the floor of the vast Wadi Hadramawt in central Yemen like a science fiction city from the Star Wars movie saga. The mud-brick tower hauses rising between five and nine stories high- are packed together so tightly that its inhabitants could visit their relations by skywalking from roof to roof. Shibam's sixteenth-century walls encircle more than 500 dwellings, sheltering a population of around 7,000 people. The walls of the houses taper from 3 feet (1 m) thick at the base to less than 1 foot (0,3 m thick at the top, and are plastered with mud and chopped straw. The tops and bases are painted with white lime plaster that serves as waterproofing land as an eyecatching decoration), and a good proportion of the beautifully carved wooden windows and doors remain. Traditionally, the ground and first ficors housed animals and food stores, the second floor was for entertaining, and the third floor upward was for the women and children The geometric plan of the streets and the height of its towerlike buildings the tallest of which reaches 97 feet (30 m) above street level- are thought to originate from the scarcity of land after a flood c. 1532 From that time dwellings began to be strategically situated and huddled together on the highest ground. Today, date groves surround the walls of the town on three sides and the sandy bed of the Wadi- where the ancient trade caravans used to halt-lies to the south"
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"Unesco Site The Manhattan/Chicago of the Desert"
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