The Safaitic scripts: palaeography of an ancient nomadic writing culture
Doctoral Thesis This
dissertation is the first systematic investigation of the materiality
of Safaitic inscriptions, which were carved by ancient nomads in the
Ḥarrah, a basaltic desert stretching from southern Syria, through
north-eastern Jordan, into northern Saudi Arabia. The thesis focuses on
graphic variation and palaeographic development in the Safaitic
inscriptions, seeking to analyse different levels and patterns of
variation in the Safaitic script(s). By using the long genealogies of
several texts by members of the lineage of Ḍf as chronological
framework, it describes and measures the palaeographic development from
the ‘common’ to the ‘fine’ script across generations. In addition, the
information from the Ḍf lineage-tree and the attested generations is
combined with the dated texts by members of the same lineage in order to
provide a working chronological framework for Safaitic writing among
the Ḍf. The thesis also deals with other aspects of the materiality of
Safaitic texts which have never been treated systematically, such as
carving techniques, text layout, writing styles, and disruptive
practices towards the texts, that is, their effacement and modification.- Supervisor
- Akkermans, P.M.M.G.
- Co-supervisor
- Kossman, M.G.
- Committee
- Kaper, O.E.; Kolen, J.C.A.; Macdonald, M.C.A.; Putten, M. van; Vroom, J.A.C.
- Qualification
- Doctor (dr.)
- Awarding Institution
-
Faculty of
Archaoleogy ,
Leiden University
- Date
- 2022-04-21
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