Barāqish/Yathill (Yemen) 1986-2007
Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration / Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies edited by Sabina Antonini and Francesco G. Fedele. DOI: 10.32028/9781789694703.
Paperback; 205x290mm; 2 volumes: 398pp & 546pp; 700 figures, tables
and plates. Contributions in English, Italian, and French. Chapter
abstracts in English and Arabic. 732 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789694703. Epublication ISBN 9781789694710.
The
walled town of Barāqish in interior Yemen – ancient Yathill of the
Sabaeans and Minaeans – was for Alessandro de Maigret (1943-2011) ‘one
of the archaeological marvels not just of Yemen, but of the entire Near
East’. Established as an oasis settlement in the semi-desert depression
of the Jawf, it became in the 1st millennium BCE a thriving caravan
station on the ‘incense’ route and a famed place of worship, controlled
by rich rulers and merchants. Topography and trade made it a crucible of
South Arabian and foreign traditions, and on several occasions, it was a
border town disputed between rival powers. A sustained archaeological
effort to investigate the site and area began in 1986 by the Italian
Archaeological Mission, led by de Maigret, and developed in two phases.
In 1989-1992 the temple of the patron god was excavated, while between
2003-2007 a range of new excavations were undertaken, including a second
temple, a sounding, a dissection of the tell's edge outside the Minaean
wall, and a cemetery.
Presented across two volumes, Volume 1: Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration is
particularly devoted to the temple of god ʿAthtar dhu-Qabḍ (Temple B),
dated to the second half of the 1st millennium BCE. Six chapters fully
illustrate its excavation, architecture, restoration, findings,
inscriptions, and dating. The contribution of this work and monument to
regional history transcends its local significance. The report is framed
by ten chapters detailing the historiography of research on Barāqish,
the initial surveys carried out in 1986-1987, the architecture and
restoration of Temple A together with the extramural excavation at the
adjacent curtain wall, the cultic equipment, and radiocarbon datings.
The nine contributors are leading scholars in the above fields and
include recognized experts in South Arabian archaeology.
The core of Volume 2: Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies
is a final report on Area C, an exploratory dissection through the
western edge of the Barāqish mound outside the curtain wall, and a
unique operation for Yemen until now. Eight chapters detail the
excavation, stratigraphy, and geoarchaeology (from about 800 BCE to the
present), in addition to radiocarbon chronology, cultural finds, animal
and plant remains, economy, major historical events, and unique evidence
for trade. Four further chapters offer a glimpse of settlement
archaeology for Sabaean Yathill and the survey of a religious centre to
the west, together with a first typology of Minaean pottery and an
epigraphic and political-historical overview for Barāqish and the Jawf.
The contributors are recognized experts in South Arabian archaeology.
About the Editors
Sabina Antonini heads the Italian Archaeological Mission to Yemen
c/o Monumenta Orientalia (Rome). Since 1984 she has taken part in
archaeological surveys and excavations of prehistoric sites in Khawlān
al-Ṭiyāl and Ramlat al-Sabʿatayn and of South Arabian sites, including
Yalā, Tamnaʿ, Ḥayd ibn ʿAqīl, and Barāqish. She is a specialist in South
Arabian archaeology and history of art. Her contribution, ‘The Italian
Archaeological Mission at Šibām al-Ġirās, Yemen’, has appeared in Festschrift in honour of Professor Mikhail Piotrovsky (2019). ;
Francesco G. Fedele has been Professor of Anthropology and
Prehistoric ecology at the Università di Napoli ‘Federico II’, Naples,
until retirement in 2011. As a member of the Italian Archaeological
Mission to Yemen since 1984 he has conducted excavations in Khawlān al-
Ṭiyāl and at Barāqish, with a particular focus on site geoarchaeology
and archaeofaunas. His recent publications include ‘New data on domestic
and wild camels in Sabaean and Minaean Yemen’ in Archaeozoology of the Near East 9 (2017).
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