Kamaran is generally flat, with a few hills in the south. Highest point is Jabal Yaman, 24 meters high, about three kilometers form Ra's al Yaman, the southeastern cape of the island
History
Kamaran had been inhabited for centuries when the Portuguese established an outpost there in the 16th century. The island was occupied by the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century and used as a quarantine station for pilgrims conducting the hajj to the Ottoman-controlled Muslim holy city of Mecca .
In June 1915, during World War I, the British seized the island with troops from Aden and started appointing Commissioners to administer it, but did not declare formal possession. In 1923, the Treaty of Lausanne, which divided up the defeated Ottoman Empire, declared an end to its sovereignty over the island and that its future was to be "settled by the parties concerned" without specifying those parties. Britain continued to occupy the island despite the objections of Yemen and administered it from the Colony of Aden. In 1949, Britain formally declared the governor of Aden to be the governor of Kamaran but the island did not become a part of the colony .
On 30 November 1967, Kamaran became a part of the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen) upon its independence from Britain , but was seized by the adjacent Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen ) in 1972 and became a part of a unified Yemen in 1990.
British Commissioners
- June 1915 - 191. D.G.L. Shaw -Commander
- 191. - 1930's Capt.Wickham.
- 1930's - c.1945 David Thompson
- c.1945 - 1952 Major Thomson British Army 1948
- 1952 - 1954? R.G.W.E. Alban (b. 1899 - d. ....)
- 1954? - 30 November 1967 ....
Postal history
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