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11 From South to North in Ancient Arabia

    Alessandra Avanzini

The Archaeology of North Arabia, Oases and Landscapes, pp. 337-344, 2016/11/30

Proceedings of the International Congress held at the
University of Vienna, 5-8 December, 2013

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Abstract

Exhaustive knowledge of the long history of some areas of northern Arabia, as that of the history of the oasis of Taymāᵓ, is important for reflecting on the relationship between the north and south of the Arabian Peninsula in pre-Islamic times. In particular, the relations between the two regions during the most ancient phase of the Ancient South Arabian (ASA) history (i.e. the end of the 2nd and the early 1st millennium BCE) will be presented in the paper. The relationship between South Arabia and the Near East beyond Arabia is more complex than I myself once thought. During the formative phase of ASA culture, movements of peoples from south to north and vice versa, involving temporary settlements, close interactions between these peoples, and the presence of Ancient South Arabian-speaking enclaves for a period in the north of Arabia can be presumed.

Keywords: Ancient South Arabian documentation, cultural and commercial relationships, endogenous formation of Ancient South Arabian culture