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Taymāʾ I: Archaeological Exploration, Palaeoenvironment, Cultural Contacts
Taymāʾ I: Archaeological Exploration, Palaeoenvironment, Cultural Contacts
edited by Arnulf Hausleiter, Ricardo Eichmann, Muhammad al-Najem.
Hardback; 210x297mm; xii+268 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and
black & white (66 plates in colour). 499 2018 Taymāʾ: Multidisciplinary Series on the Results of the Saudi-German Archaeological Project 1. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789690439. Epublication ISBN 9781789690446.
Archaeological
investigations in the north-western part of the Arabian Peninsula has
increased during the last 15 years. One of the major sites in the region
is the ancient oasis of Taymāʾ, known as a commercial hub on the
so-called Incense Road connecting South Arabia with the Eastern
Mediterranean. In the context of this new research a multidisciplinary
project by the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage (SCTH)
and the Orient Department of the German Archaeological Institute (DAI)
has been investigating the archaeology and ancient environment of Taymāʾ
since 2004. A major aim of this project was the development of new
perspectives of the site and the region, characterised by elaborating
the local socio-cultural and economic contexts. So far, Taymāʾ has been
known mainly through exogenous sources.
The present volume is the first of the publication series of the
Saudi-German archaeological project and focuses on three fundamental
aspects of research at Taymāʾ: the current archaeological exploration of
the oasis is contextualised with previous and ongoing research within
the region, while at the same time offering a first overview of the
settlement history of the site, which may have started as early as more
than 6000 years ago. New information on the palaeoenvironment has been
provided by multiproxy- analysis of sediments from a palaeolake
immediately north of the settlement. The results indicate an Early
Holocene humid period in the region that is shorter than the so-called
African Humid Period. The abrupt aridification at around 8 ka BP, known
from other regions in the Near East, is also attested in north-western
Arabia. The reconstruction of the past vegetation of the site and its
surroundings demonstrates that oasis cultivation at Taymāʾ started
during the 5th millennium BCE with grapes and figs, rather than with the
date palm. According to hydrological investigations on water resources,
groundwater aquifers provided the main source of local water supply.
These were exploited through wells, some of which have been identified
in the area of the ancient oasis. Finally, since the time of early
travellers to Northwest Arabia evidence of cultural contacts has been
observed in the records from the site, which had been occupied by the
last Babylonian king, Nabonidus (556–539 BCE) for ten years. A
historical-archaeological essay on Egypt and Arabia as well as a study
on the ambiguous relationship between Assyria and Arabia – characterised
by conflict and commerce – shed new light on the foreign relations of
ancient Taymāʾ.
About the Editors
ARNULF HAUSLEITER is researcher at the DAI’s Orient Department for the
Taymāʾ project, funded by the German Research foundation (DFG). He has
been field director of the excavations at Taymāʾ since 2004 and has
co-directed the project with Ricardo Eichmann.
RICARDO EICHMANN is director of the Orient Department at the German
Archaeological Institute in Berlin. He is the head of the German
component of the Taymāʾ project and has co-directed it with Arnulf
Hausleiter.
MUHAMMAD AL-NAJEM is head of the Antiquities Office of the Saudi
Commission for Tourism and National Heritage (SCTH) and director of the
Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography at Taymāʾ, Province of Tabuk,
Saudi Arabia.
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