Nabataeans

(Redirected from Nabatäer)

The Nabataeans or Nabateans (/ˌnæbəˈtənz/; Nabataean Aramaic: 𐢕𐢃𐢋𐢈‎, NBṬW, vocalized as Nabāṭū)[a] were an ancient Arab people[1] who inhabited northern Arabia and the southern Levant.[2] Their settlements—most prominently the assumed capital city of Raqmu (present-day Petra, Jordan)[3]—gave the name Nabatene (Ancient Greek: Ναβατηνή, romanizedNabatēnḗ) to the Arabian borderland that stretched from the Euphrates to the Red Sea. The Nabateans emerged as a distinct civilization and political entity between the 4th and 2nd centuries BC,[4] with their kingdom centered around a loosely controlled trading network that brought considerable wealth and influence across the ancient world.

Nabataeans
A map of the Roman empire under Hadrian (ruled AD 117–138), showing the location of the Arabes Nabataei in the desert regions around the Roman province of Arabia Petraea (lower right)
Languages
Religion
Related ethnic groups
Arabs

Described as fiercely independent by contemporary Greco-Roman accounts, the Nabataeans were annexed into the Roman Empire by Emperor Trajan in 106 AD. Nabataeans' individual culture, easily identified by their characteristic finely potted painted ceramics, was adopted into the larger Greco-Roman culture. They converted to Christianity during the Later Roman Era. They have been described as one of the most gifted peoples of the ancient world[5][6][7] and one of the "most unjustly forgotten".[8][4]

History

edit

Hellenistic period

edit

The Nabataeans were an Arab tribe who had come under significant Babylonian-Aramaean influence.[9] The first mention of the Nabataeans dates from 312/311 BC, when they were attacked at Sela or perhaps at Petra without success by Antigonus I's officer Athenaeus in the course of the Third War of the Diadochi; at that time Hieronymus of Cardia, a Seleucid officer, mentions the Nabataeans in a battle report. About 50 BC Greek historian Diodorus Siculus cites Hieronymus in his report[clarification needed] and adds the following: "Just as the Seleucids had tried to subdue them, so the Romans made several attempts to get their hands on that lucrative trade."[citation needed]

They wrote a letter to Antigonus in Syriac letters, and Aramaic continued as the language of their coins and inscriptions when the tribe grew into a kingdom and profited by the decay of the Seleucids to extend its borders northward over the more fertile country east of the Jordan River. They occupied Hauran, and in about 85 BC their king Aretas III became lord of Damascus and Coele-Syria.

Nabataean Kingdom

edit
 
The Roman province of Arabia Petraea, created from the Nabataean kingdom
 
Silver drachm of Malichos II with Shaqilat II
 
Silver drachm of Obodas II with Hagaru

Petra was rapidly built in the 1st century BC and developed a population estimated at 20,000.[10] The Nabataeans were allies of the first Hasmoneans in their struggles against the Seleucid monarchs. They then became rivals of the Judaean dynasty and a chief element in the disorders that invited Pompey's intervention in Judea. According to popular historian Paul Johnson, many Nabataeans were forcefully converted to Judaism by Hasmonean king Alexander Jannaeus.[11][better source needed] It was this king who, after putting down a local rebellion, invaded and occupied the Nabataean towns of Moab and Gilead and imposed a tribute. Obodas I knew that Alexander would attack, so was able to ambush Alexander's forces near Gaulane destroying the Judean army in 90 BC.[12]

The Roman military was not very successful in their campaigns against the Nabataeans. In 62 BC, Marcus Aemilius Scaurus accepted a bribe of 300 talents to lift the siege of Petra, partly because of the difficult terrain and the fact that he had run out of supplies. Hyrcanus II, who was a friend of King Aretas, was despatched by Scaurus to the king to buy peace. In so obtaining peace, Aretas retained all his possessions, including Damascus, and became a Roman vassal.[13]

In 32 BC, during King Malichus I's reign, Herod the Great, with the support of Cleopatra, started a war against Nabataea. The war began with Herod plundering Nabataea with a large cavalry force and occupying Dium. After this defeat, the Nabataean forces regrouped near Canatha in Syria but were attacked and routed. Cleopatra's general Athenion sent Canathans to the aid of the Nabataeans, and this force crushed Herod's army, which then fled to Ormiza. One year later, Herod's army overran Nabataea.[14]

 
Colossal Nabataean columns stand in Bosra, Syria

After an earthquake in Judaea, the Nabateans rebelled and invaded Judea, but Herod at once crossed the Jordan River to Philadelphia (modern Amman), and both sides set up camp. The Nabataeans under Elthemus refused to give battle, so Herod forced the issue when he attacked their camp. A confused mass of Nabataeans gave battle but were defeated. Once they had retreated to their defences, Herod laid siege to the camp, and over time some of the defenders surrendered. The remaining Nabataean forces offered 500 talents for peace, but this was rejected. Lacking water, the Nabataeans were forced out of their camp and battled but were defeated.[15] King Aretas IV defeated Herod Antipas, son of Herod the Great, in a battle after he intended to divorce his daughter Phasaelis[16]

Roman period

edit

An ally of the Roman Empire, the Nabataean kingdom flourished throughout the 1st century. Its power extended far into Arabia along the Red Sea to Yemen, and Petra was a cosmopolitan marketplace, though its commerce was diminished by the rise of the Eastern trade route from Myos Hormos to Coptos on the Nile. Under the Pax Romana, the Nabataeans lost their warlike and nomadic habits and became a sober, acquisitive, orderly people, wholly intent on trade and agriculture. The kingdom was a bulwark between Rome and the wild hordes of the desert except in the time of Trajan, who reduced Petra and converted the Nabataean client state into the Roman province of Arabia Petraea.[17] There was a Nabataean community in Puteoli, in southern Italy, that reached its end around the establishment of the province.[18]

Five Greek-Nabataean bilingual inscriptions, known as the Ruwafa inscriptions, date to AD 165–169, . They are ascribed to an auxiliary military unit drawn from the Roman-allied Thamud tribe and were built to describe the temple they were inscribed in and to recognize the authority of the emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus.[19][20]

By the 3rd century the Nabataeans had stopped writing in Aramaic and begun writing in Greek. By the 5th century they had converted to Christianity.[21] Their lands were divided between the new Qahtanite Arab tribal kingdoms of the Byzantine vassals, the Ghassanid Arabs, and the Himyarite vassals, the Kingdom of Kinda in North Arabia.

Culture

edit
 
Nabataean trade routes

Many examples of graffiti and inscriptions—largely of names and greetings—document the area of Nabataean culture, which extended as far north as the north end of the Dead Sea, and testify to widespread literacy; but except for a few letters[22] no Nabataean literature has survived, nor was any noted in antiquity.[23][24][25] Onomastic analysis has suggested[26] that Nabataean culture may have had multiple influences. Classical references to the Nabataeans begin with Diodorus Siculus. They suggest that the Nabataeans' trade routes and the origins of their goods were regarded as trade secrets, and disguised in tales that should have strained outsiders' credulity.[27]

Diodorus Siculus (book II) describes them as a strong tribe of some 10,000 warriors, preeminent among the nomads of Arabia, eschewing agriculture, fixed houses, and the use of wine, but adding to pastoral pursuits a profitable trade with the seaports in frankincense, myrrh and spices from Arabia Felix, as well as a trade with Egypt in bitumen from the Dead Sea. Their arid country was their best safeguard, for the bottle-shaped cisterns for rain-water which they excavated in the rocky or clay-rich soil were carefully concealed from invaders.[27]

Ibn Sayyar al-Warraq's Kitab al-Tabikh, the earliest known Arabic cookbook, contains a recipe for fermented Nabatean water bread (khubz al-ma al-nabati). The yeast-leavened bread is made with a high quality wheat flour called samidh that is finely milled and free of bran and is baked in a tandoor.[28]

Women

edit
 
Queen Huldu of Nabatea depicted on a drachma

Based on coins, inscriptions and non-Nabatean contemporary sources, Nabataean women seem to have had many legal rights. Inscriptions on tombs demonstrate the equality of property rights between man and woman and women's rights in matters of inheritance and also their ability to make decisions about their own property.[29] That set the Nabateans apart from the attitudes on a woman's role in society by their neighbours in the region. Women also participated in religious activities, and had a right to visit the temples and make sacrifices.

Archeological evidence strongly suggest that the Nabataean women had a role in the social and political life by the 1st century AD, which is shown by the fact that Nabatean queens were depicted on coins, both independently and together with their spouse the king. The assumption to be made from this were that they ruled together and that the Nabatean queens and other female members were given or already had political importance and status.[30] It is likely other Nabatean women benefited from this by extension.[31]

Though Nabatean culture seems to have favored male succession rather than female or equal succession, it seems plausible that like their neighbouring Ptolemaic dynasty and the Seleucids, marrying a female member of the Nabatean royal family reinforced a ruler's position or one whose claim to the throne was not as strong as his wife's.[32] The Nabatean royal house, like the Ptolemaic and Seleucids, later adopted sibling marriage.[33][34]

Fashion

edit
 

Not much is known for certain about the fashions of ancient Nabateans and before the Hellenization and Romanization of the region, but based on extant clothes and textiles found in graves and tombs on Nabatean territory, the clothing worn by the Nabateans during the 1st and 2nd century were not unlike their neighbour Judaeans.[35] It is unknown what the Nabateans wore in more ancient times since their art before this period was non-figurative. Among the most common colors were yellow made from saffron and a bright red produced from madder.[31] Blue textiles were also found.[31] Nabatean men wore a tunic and a mantle both made of wool. The tunic was a Roman style (sleeveless) and with the mantle cut in a Greek style. This reflects a popular style rather than an ethnic style exclusive to the Nabateans.[36] Nabataean women wore long tunics along with scarves and mantles. These scarves were loosely woven and sported fringes at the bottom.

 
Aretas IV and Shaqilath II

The upper class of Nabataean society, what can be seen on coins, show an even stronger Greek and Roman influence. The kings are depicted clean-shaven with long curled hair while queens are depicted wearing headcoverings with curled hair and long tunics and high-necked garments. Purple cloth seems to have been associated with the king based on Strabo's account of Nabatean men going outside "without tunics girdles about their loins, and with slippers on their feet—even the kings, though in their case the colour is purple."[37]

Language

edit

Historians such as Irfan Shahîd,[38] Warwick Ball,[39] Robert G. Hoyland,[40] Michael C. A. Macdonald,[41] and others[42] believe Nabataeans spoke Arabic as their native language. John F. Healy states "Nabataeans normally spoke a form of Arabic, while, like the Persians etc., they used Aramaic for formal purposes and especially for inscriptions."[43] Proper names on their inscriptions suggest that they were ethnically Arabs who had come under Aramaic influence, and the Nabataeans had already some trace of Aramaic culture when they first appear in history. Some of the authors of Safaitic inscriptions identify themselves as Nabataeans.[44]

Religion

edit
 
An eagle on the tomb facade that represents the guardianship of Dushara against intruders at Mada'in Saleh, Hejaz, Saudi Arabia

The extent of Nabataean trade resulted in cross-cultural influences that reached as far as the Red Sea coast of southern Arabia. The major gods worshiped at Petra were notably Dushara and Al-‘Uzzá. Dushara was the supreme deity of the Nabataean Arabs and was the official god of the Nabataean Kingdom who enjoyed special royal patronage.[45] His official position is reflected in multiple inscriptions that render him as "The god of our lord" (the king).[46]

The name Dushara is from the Arabic "Dhu ash-Shara": which simply means "the one of Shara", a mountain range southeast of Petra also known as Mount Seir.[45] Therefore, from a Nabataean perspective, Dhushara was probably associated with the heavens. However, one theory which connects Dushara with the forest gives a different idea of the god.[47] The eagle was one of the symbols of Dushara.[48] It was widely used in Hegra as a source of protection for the tombs against thievery.[49]

Nabataean inscriptions from Hegra suggest that Dushara was linked either with the sun or with Mercury with which Ruda, another Arabian god, was identified.[46] "His throne" was frequently mentioned in inscriptions; certain interpretations of the text consider it as a reference for Dushara's wife, goddess Harisha. She was probably a solar deity.[47]

 
Nabatean baetyl (possibly a replica of the actual artifact) at the Jordan Archaeological Museum

Dushara's consort at Petra is considered to have been al-Uzza, and the goddess has been associated with Temple of Winged Lions on the basis that if the divine couple of Petra was Dushara and al-Uzza and the Qasr al Binti temple was dedicated to Dushara then the other major temple must have been al-Uzzas.[50] This is just a theory however, based on conjecture, and it can only be said that the temple is likely dedicated to the supreme goddess figure of the Nabateans, but the identity of this goddess is uncertain. Excavated from The Temple of the Winged Lions was the "Eye Baetyl" or "Eye-Idol".

 
A Nabatean sculpture of Atargatis

Numerous Nabatean bas-relief busts of the northern Syrian goddess Atargatis were identified by Nelson Glueck at Khirbet et-Tannû. Atargatis was amalgamated into the worship of Al-‘Uzzá. However, when the Romans annexed the Nabataean Kingdom, Dushara still had an important role despite losing his former royal privilege. The greatest testimony to the status of the god after the fall of the Nabataean Kingdom was during the 1,000th anniversary of the founding of Rome where Dushara was celebrated in Bostra by striking coins in his name, Actia Dusaria (linking the god with Augustus victory at Actium). He was venerated in his Arabian name with a Greek fashion in the reign of an Arabian emperor, Philip.[46]

Other gods worshipped in Nabatea during this period were Isis, Balshamin and Obodat[50] Sacrifices of animals were common, and Porphyry's De Abstenentia, written in the 3rd century, states that in Dūmah a boy was sacrificed annually and was buried underneath an altar. Some scholars have extrapolated this practice to the rest of the Nabataeans, but this view is contested due to the lack of evidence.[51]

The Nabataeans used to represent their gods as featureless pillars or blocks. Their most common monuments to the gods, commonly known as "god blocks", involved cutting away the whole top of a hill or cliff face so as to leave only a block behind. However, over time the Nabataeans were influenced by Greece and Rome, and their gods became anthropomorphic and were represented with human features.[52]

Language

edit
 
Qasr al-Farid, the largest tomb at Mada'in Saleh

The Nabataeans spoke an Arabic dialect but for their inscriptions used a form of Aramaic that was heavily influenced by Arabic forms and words.[53] When communicating with other Middle Eastern peoples, they, like their neighbors, used Aramaic, the region's lingua franca.[46] Therefore, Aramaic was used for commercial and official purposes across the Nabataean political sphere.[54]

The Nabataean alphabet developed out of the Aramaic alphabet, but it used a distinctive cursive script from which the Arabic alphabet emerged. There are different opinions concerning the development of the Arabic script. J. Starcky considers the Lakhmids' Syriac form script as a probable candidate.[55] However, John F. Healey states "The Nabataean origin of the Arabic script is now almost universally accepted".[55] In surviving Nabataean documents, Aramaic legal terms are followed by their equivalents in Arabic. That could suggest that the Nabataeans used Arabic in their legal proceedings but recorded them in Aramaic.[56][57] The name may be derived from the same root as Akkadian nabatu, to shine brightly.[58]

Agriculture

edit
Nabataean farming, capturing 50 acres of run-off water for one acre of crops
Remains of a Nabataean cistern north of Makhtesh Ramon, southern Israel

Although not as dry as at present, the area occupied by the Nabataeans was still a desert and required special techniques for agriculture. One was to contour an area of land into a shallow funnel and to plant a single fruit tree in the middle. Before the wet season, which could easily consist of only one or two rain events, the area around the tree was broken up. When the rain came, all the water that collected in the funnel would flow down toward the tree and sink into the ground. The ground, which was largely loess, would seal up when it got wet and retain the water.

In the mid-1950s, a research team headed by Michael Evenari set up a research station near Avdat (Evenari, Shenan and Tadmor 1971). He focused on the relevance of runoff rainwater management in explaining the mechanism of the ancient agricultural features, such as terraced wadis, channels for collecting runoff rainwater, and the enigmatic phenomenon of "Tuleilat el-Anab". Evenari showed that the runoff rainwater collection systems concentrate water from an area that is five times larger than the area in which the water actually drains.[59]

Architects and stonemasons

edit
  • Apollodorus of Damascus - Greek-Nabataean architect and engineer from Damascus, Roman Syria, who flourished during the 2nd century AD. his massive architectural output gained him immense popularity during his time. He is one of the few architects whose name survives from antiquity, and is credited with introducing several Eastern innovations to the Roman Imperial style, such as making the dome a standard.[60]
  • Wahb'allahi - a first century stonemason who worked in the city of Hegra.[61] Wahb'allahi was the brother of the stonemason 'Abdharetat and the father of 'Abd'obodat. He is named in an inscription as the responsible stonemason on the oldest datable grave in Hegra in the ninth year of the Nabataean king Aretas IV (1 BC-AD).[62]
  • 'Abd'obodat son of Wahballahi - a 1st-century Nabatean Stonemason who worked in the city of Hegra.[63] He is named by inscriptions on five of the grave facades typical of Hegra as the executing craftsman. On the basis of the inscriptions, four of the facades can be dated to the reigns of kings Aretas IV and Malichus II. 'Abd'obodat was evidently a successful craftsman. He succeeded his father Wahb'allahi and his uncle 'Abdharetat in at least one workshop in the second generation of Nabatean architects. 'Abd'obodat is considered to be the main representative of one of the two main schools of the Nabataean stonemasons, to which his father, his uncle belonged. Two more grave facades are assigned to the school on the basis of stylistic investigations; 'Abd'obodat is probably to be regarded as the stonemason who carried out the work.[64]
  • 'Aftah - a Nabatean stonemason who became prominent in the beginning of the third decade of the first century.[65] 'Aftah is attested in inscriptions on eight of the grave facades in Hegra and one grave as the executing stonemason. The facades are dated to the late reign of King Aretas IV. On one of the facades he worked with Halaf'allahi, on another with Wahbu and Huru. A tenth facade without an inscription was attributed to the 'Aftah sculpture school due to technical and stylistic similarities. He is the main representative of one of the two stonemason schools in the city of Hegra.
  • Halaf'allahi - Nabatean stonemason who worked in the city of Hegra in the first century. Halaf'allahi is named in inscriptions on two graves in Hegra as the responsible stonemason in the reign of the Nabataean king Aretas IV. The first grave, which can be dated to the year 26-27 AD, was created together with the stonemason 'Aftah. He is therefore assigned to the workshop of the 'Aftah. Nabataean architects and sculptors were in reality contractors, who negotiated the costs of specific tomb types and their decorations. Tombs were therefore executed based on the desires and financial abilities of their future owners. The activities of Halaf'allahi offer an excellent example of this, as he had been commissioned with the execution of a simple tomb for a person who apparently belonged to the lower middle class. However, he was also in charge of completing a more sophisticated tomb for one of the local military officials.[66]

Archeological sites

edit
Jordan
Syria
Northwest Saudi Arabia
Negev Desert, Israel
South Sinai, Egypt
  • Dahab: excavated Nabataean trading port

Outside the Middle East

edit
  • A now submerged Nabataean temple in Puteoli (modern Pozzuoli), Italy

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Arabic: ٱلْأَنْبَاط, al-ʾAnbāṭ, singular النبطي, an-Nabaṭī; compare Ancient Greek: Ναβαταῖος, romanizedNabataîos; Latin: Nabataeus

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Bowersock, Glen Warren (1994). Roman Arabia. Harvard University Press. p. 12. ISBN 9780674777569. In the reign of Caesar Augustus, towards the end of the first century B.C., the extensive territory of what was to become Roman Arabia comprised the Arab kingdom of the Nabataeans. At that pivotal time in the fortunes of Rome, these Arabs had achieved both a high culture and a powerful monopoly of the traffic in perfume and spices. Healey, John (2023-05-31). Law and Religion between Petra and Edessa: Studies in Aramaic Epigraphy on the Roman Frontier. Taylor & Francis. p. 216. ISBN 978-1-000-94209-5. The Nabatean people are in fact of rather obscure origin. The earliest settlements were in southern Jordan and Palestine, though it is likely that they came ultimately from the east, possibly from the marginal regions to the north of modern Saudi Arabia. Others would see their origins in the Hijāz or Gulf areas. The Greek writers who mention these people (including well-informed authorities like Josephus, who wrote in the 1st century A.D. and knew the area well) frequently call them Arabs. In view of this fact and the clear evidence of Arabic influence in the Nabateans' language, personal names and religion, we can be virtually certain that they were originally a nomadic Arab group who had gradually settled to form a state. This background is reflected in the Greek sources which say that the Nabateans did not build houses originally or drink wine and that they reared sheep and camels. Schürer, Emil; Millar, Fergus; Vermes, Geza (2015-03-26). The History of the Jewish People in the Age of Jesus Christ. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-567-50161-5. On the other hand, they are repeatedly spoken of as Arabs by ancient writers, not only by those remote from them in time, but also by Josephus, to whom the distinction between Syrians and Arabs must have been quite familiar. In addition, the names on the inscriptions are Arabic throughout. It has therefore been concluded that they were Arabs who, because Arabic had not yet developed into a written language, made use of Aramaic. Stokes, Jamie (2009). Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East. Infobase Publishing. p. 483. ISBN 9781438126760. The Nabateans were a nomadic Arab people who migrated in the sixth century B.C.E. from the northern area of modern-day Jordan to the region south of the Dead Sea that was to become the heartland of their sedentary civilization.
  2. ^ Bowersock, Glen Warren (1994). Roman Arabia. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674777569.
  3. ^ "Nabataeans". livius.org. Retrieved August 31, 2015.
  4. ^ a b Taylor, Jane (2001). Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans. London: I.B.Tauris. pp. 14, 17, 30, 31. ISBN 9781860645082. Retrieved 8 July 2016.
  5. ^ Taylor, Jane (2001). Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans. London, United Kingdom: I.B.Tauris. pp. centerfold, 14. ISBN 978-1-86064-508-2. The Nabataean Arabs, one of the most gifted peoples of the ancient world, are today known only for their hauntingly beautiful rock-carved capital — Petra.
  6. ^ Taylor, Jane (2002). Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-00849-6.
  7. ^ Grant, Michael (2011-12-30). Jews In The Roman World. Orion. ISBN 978-1-78022-281-3.
  8. ^ Elborough, Travis (2019-09-17). Atlas of Vanishing Places: The lost worlds as they were and as they are today. White Lion Publishing. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-78131-895-9.
  9. ^ Lipiński 2000.
  10. ^ "A City Carved in Stone". Petra: Lost City of Stone. Canadian Museum of Civilization. 7 April 2006. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  11. ^ Johnson, Paul (1987). A History of the Jews. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-79091-4.
  12. ^ Josephus, Flavius (1981). The Jewish War. Vol. 1. Trans. G. A. Williamson 1959. Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England: Penguin. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-14-044420-9.
  13. ^ Josephus 1:61, p. 48.
  14. ^ Josephus 1:363–377, pp. 75–77.
  15. ^ Josephus 1:377–391, pp. 78–79.
  16. ^ Antiquities of the Jews. Josephus. pp. 18.109–118 or 18.5.1.
  17. ^ Smith, William Robertson (1911). "Nabataeans" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 146 to 147.
  18. ^ Stefanile, Michele; Silani, Michele; Tardugno, Maria Luisa (2024). "The submerged Nabataean temple in Puteoli at Pozzuoli, Italy: first campaign of underwater research". Antiquity. 98 (400): e20. doi:10.15184/aqy.2024.107. ISSN 0003-598X.
  19. ^ Macdonald, Michael C. A. (2009). Literacy and identity in pre-Islamic Arabia. Variorum collected studies series. Farnham, GB: Ashgate Variorum. pp. 1–26. ISBN 978-0-7546-5965-5.
  20. ^ Fisher, Greg (2020). Rome, Persia, and Arabia: shaping the Middle East from Pompey to Muhammad. London New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 51–56. ISBN 978-0-415-72880-5.
  21. ^ Rimon, Ofra. "The Nabateans in the Negev". Hecht Museum. Archived from the original on 20 November 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  22. ^ "The Dead Sea Scrolls - Browse Manuscripts". The Dead Sea Scrolls - Browse Manuscripts.
  23. ^ The carbonized Petra papyri, mostly economic documents in Greek, date to the 6th century: Glen L. Peterman, "Discovery of Papyri in Petra", The Biblical Archaeologist 57 1 (March 1994), pp. 55–57.
  24. ^ P. M. Bikai (1997) "The Petra Papyri", Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan.
  25. ^ Marjo Lehtinen (December 2002) "Petra Papyri", Near Eastern Archaeology Vol.65 No. 4 pp. 277–278.
  26. ^ Macdonald, M. C. A. (1999). "Personal names in the Nabataean realm: a review article". Journal of Semitic Studies. XLIV (2): 251–289. doi:10.1093/jss/xliv.2.251.
  27. ^ a b J. W. Eadie, J. P. Oleson (1986) "The Water-Supply Systems of Nabatean and Roman Ḥumayma", Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research.
  28. ^ Nasrallah, Nawal (2007). Annals of the Caliphs' Kitchens. Brill.
  29. ^ Archaeometry (MAA), Mediterranean Archaeology and (2013-01-01). "WOMAN IN THE NABATAEAN SOCIETY". M. Alzoubi, E. Al Masri, F. Al Ajlouny.
  30. ^ Joseph, Suad; Zaatari, Zeina (2022-12-30). Routledge Handbook on Women in the Middle East. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-351-67643-4.
  31. ^ a b c Esler, Philip F. (2017-02-15). Babatha's Orchard: The Yadin Papyri and an Ancient Jewish Family Tale Retold. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-107990-0.
  32. ^ Fāsī, Hatūn Ajwād (2007). Women in Pre-Islamic Arabia: Nabataea. Archaeopress. ISBN 978-1-4073-0095-5.
  33. ^ Graf, David F. (2019-04-23). Rome and the Arabian Frontier: From the Nabataeans to the Saracens. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-78455-2.
  34. ^ Richard, Suzanne (2003). Near Eastern Archaeology: A Reader. Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1-57506-083-5.
  35. ^ Ḥak̲lîlî, Rāḥēl (2005). Jewish Funerary Customs, Practices And Rites In The Second Temple Period. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-12373-1.
  36. ^ Stuckenbruck, Loren T.; Gurtner, Daniel M. (2019-12-26). T&T Clark Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism Volume Two. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-567-66095-4.
  37. ^ Healey, J. F. (2015-08-27). The Religion of the Nabataeans: A Conspectus. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-30148-1.
  38. ^ Rome and the Arabs, Dumbarton Oaks, p. 9.
  39. ^ Rome in the East, Routledge, p. 65.
  40. ^ Language and Identity: Arabic and Aramaic, Scripta Classica Israelica vol. XXIII 2004, p. 185.
  41. ^ Arabs, Arabias and Arabic before Late Antiquity, Topoi. Orient-Occident Année 2009 16-1 p. 309.
  42. ^ The Nabateans in the Early Hellenistic Period : The Testimony of Posidippus of Pella, Topoi. Orient-Occident Année 2006 14-1 pp. 48.
  43. ^ John F. Healey, 'Were the Nabataeans Arabs?' Aram 1 (1989), 43.
  44. ^ Al-Jallad, Ahmed (2015). An Outline of the Grammar of the Safaitic Inscriptions. Leiden: Brill. p. 19. ISBN 978-90-04-28929-1.
  45. ^ a b Javier Teixidor (8 March 2015). The Pagan God: Popular Religion in the Greco-Roman Near East. Princeton University Press. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-4008-7139-1.
  46. ^ a b c d Jane Taylor (2001). Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans. I.B.Tauris. pp. 124–151. ISBN 978-1-86064-508-2.
  47. ^ a b Francisco del Río Sánchez (4 December 2015). Nabatu. The Nabataeans through their inscriptions. Edicions Universitat Barcelona. p. 118. ISBN 978-84-475-3748-8.
  48. ^ Rough Guides (1 November 2016). The Rough Guide to Jordan. Apa Publications. p. 395. ISBN 978-0-241-29849-7.
  49. ^ Mahdi al-Zoubi: Nabataean Practices for Tombs Protection - p. 3.
  50. ^ a b Alpass, Peter (2013-06-13). The Religious Life of Nabataea. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-21623-5.
  51. ^ Healey, John F. (2001). "Ritual Actions: Offerings". The Religion of the Nabataeans: A Conspectus. Religions in the Graeco-Roman World (136) (print ed.). BRILL. pp. 161–163 [ 162 ]. ISBN 978-90-04-10754-0. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  52. ^ "Biblical Archaeology Review, May/June 2016, page 20". Archived from the original on 2018-04-05. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
  53. ^ John F. Healey (1990). The Early Alphabet. University of California Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-520-07309-8.
  54. ^ Tony Maalouf. Arabs in the Shadow of Israel: The Unfolding of God's Prophetic Plan for Ishmael's Line. Kregel Academic. p. 172. ISBN 978-0-8254-9363-8.
  55. ^ a b Nabataean to Arabic: Calligraphy and script development among the pre-Islamic Arabs by John F. Healey p. 44.
  56. ^ Arabic in Context: Celebrating 400 years of Arabic at Leiden University. BRILL. 21 June 2017. p. 79. ISBN 978-90-04-34304-7.
  57. ^ Roger D. Woodard (10 April 2008). The Ancient Languages of Syria-Palestine and Arabia. Cambridge University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-1-139-46934-0.
  58. ^ Brinkman, Gelb, Civil, Oppenheim & Reiner (1980). The Assyrian Dictionary (PDF). Oriental Institute, Chicago. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-918986-17-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  59. ^ Johnson, Douglas L.; Lewis, Laurence A. (2007). Land Degradation: Creation and Destruction. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-1948-0.
  60. ^ Landart, Paula (2015). Finding Ancient Rome: Walks in the city.
  61. ^ Keller, Daniel (2007). Rainer Vollkommer (Hrsg.): Künstlerlexikon der Antike . Over 3800 artists from three millennia. Nikol, Hamburg 2007. Nikol. p. 947. ISBN 978-3-937872-53-7.
  62. ^ Healey, John (1994). "The Nabataean Tomb Inscriptions of Mada'in Salih". Journal of Semitic Studies Supplement. 1 (Oxford University Press): 154–162.
  63. ^ Zbigniew, Fiema (1987). "Remarks on the Sculptors from Ḥegra". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 46 (1): 52–53.
  64. ^ Keller, Daniel (2007). Abd'obodat. In: Rainer Vollkommer (Herausgeber): Künstlerlexikon der Antike. Über 3800 Künstler aus drei Jahrtausenden. Nikol. ISBN 978-3-937872-53-7.
  65. ^ Keller, Daniel (2007). Aftah. In: Rainer Vollkommer (editor): Künstlerlexikon der Antike. Over 3800 artists from three millennia. Nikol. p. 6. ISBN 978-3-937872-53-7.
  66. ^ Negev, Abraham. Nabatean Necropolis. p. 219.
  67. ^ "Nabataea: Medain Saleh". nabataea.net.

References

edit
  • Ephʿal, Israel (1984). The Ancient Arabs: Nomads on the Borders of the Fertile Crescent, 9th-5th Centuries B.C. Jerusalem: Magnes Press, Hebrew University. ISBN 978-0-685-74243-3.
  • Graf, David F. (1997). Rome and the Arabian Frontier: From the Nabataeans to the Saracens. Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-86078-658-0.
  • Healey, John F., The Religion of the Nabataeans: A Conspectus (Leiden, Brill, 2001) (Religions in the Graeco-Roman World, 136).
  • Krasnov, Boris R.; Mazor, Emanuel (2001). The Makhteshim Country: A Laboratory of Nature: Geological and Ecological Studies in the Desert Region of Israel. Sofia: Pensoft. ISBN 978-954-642-135-7.
  • Lipiński, Edward (2000). The Aramaeans: Their Ancient History, Culture, Religion. Orientalia Lovaniensia analecta. Vol. 100. Leuven, Belgium: Peeters Publishers. pp. 448–450. ISBN 9789042908598.
  • "Nabat", Encyclopedia of Islam, Volume VII.
  • Negev, Avraham (1986). Nabatean Archaeology Today. Hagop Kevorkian Series on Near Eastern Art and Civilization. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-5760-4.
  • Schmid, Stephan G. (2001). "The Nabataeans: Travellers between Lifestyles". In MacDonald, Burton; Adams, Russell; Bienkowski, Piotr (eds.). The Archaeology of Jordan. Sheffield, England: Sheffield Academic Press. pp. 367–426. ISBN 978-1-84127-136-1.
edit