Rasulid dynasty, Muslim dynasty that ruled Yemen and Ḥaḍramawt (1229–1454) after the Ayyubids of Egypt abandoned the southern provinces of the Arabian Peninsula.
The family took its name from Muḥammad ibn Hārūn, who, as a messenger (Arabic rasūl) for an Abbasid caliph, was known by the epithet Rasūl. He was likely of Turkic origin, although the family claimed descent from Qaḥṭān, the legendary patriarch of the southern Arabs. His son ʿAlī was governor of Mecca under the last Ayyubid ruler of Yemen and succeeded him in the government of the whole country. ʿUmar I ibn ʿAlī (reigned 1229–50), Rasūl’s grandson, first established himself at Zabīd (Yemen) and then moved into the mountainous interior, making Sanaa the Rasulid capital. Though the Hejaz (west coast of Arabia) was a tributary of the Egyptian Mamluks from 1252, ʿUmar also ruled the holy city Mecca.
For the next two centuries Yemen was an important and prosperous Muslim state; the Rasulid ruler assumed the title of caliph in 1258. Political and trade relations were maintained with China, India, and Sri Lanka, and the opening of the port of Aden encouraged a lively international trade. Disturbances in Mecca about the middle of the 14th century, however, offered the Mamluks an opportunity to intervene in Rasulid affairs. Aḥmad ibn Ismāʿīl (reigned 1400–24) regained temporary control and offered Mamluk trade in the Red Sea keen competition, but, soon after his death, internal unrest, revolts of enslaved people, and the plague hastened the fall of the dynasty. Yemen then passed into the hands of the Tahirid dynasty until the Ottoman conquest of the 16th century.