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History of Religions, Ancient Near East, Digital Humanities, Pre-Islamic Arabia, Semitic Philology, Epigraphic South Arabian, and 25 morePenitential texts, Minaic inscriptions, Epidoc, Semitic languages, Ancient Religion, Funerary Practices, History of Pre-Islamic Arabia, Royal Inscriptions, Semitic Epigraphy, Sabaic inscriptions, North-West Arabia, Legal inscriptions, Ancient Near Eastern Religions, Ancient Near Eastern History, Ancient Near Eastern Languages, Digital epigraphy, Comparative Semitics, Northwest Semitics, Northwest Semitic Epigraphy, Arabic Language and Linguistics, South Arabian Culture, Comparative Semitic Linguistics, Arabian Peninsula in Antiquity, Ancient South Arabia, and Semitic Linguistics edit
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Researcher at the CNR-ISPC, 2019-. Researcher at the CNR - ISMA, 2016-2019. Post-doc researcher at Labex RESMED (CNRS... moreResearcher at the CNR-ISPC, 2019-.
Researcher at the CNR - ISMA, 2016-2019.
Post-doc researcher at Labex RESMED (CNRS UMR 8167 - Paris-Sorbonne Université), 2016.
Research fellow at LARTTE (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa) within the ERC project "DASI - Digital Archive for the Study of Pre-Islamic Arabian Inscriptions", 2012-2016.
PhD in Oriental Studies: Egypt, Near and Middle East (University of Pisa). Thesis in Semitic Philology: Ancient South Arabian epigraphy. L-OR/07, 2009-2012.
MA in Languages and Cultures of the Near and Middle East (University of Pisa), 2005-2008.
BA in Literatures (University of Pisa), 2002-2005. edit
Open Science best practices and policies have been increasingly promoted and adopted in Europe and worldwide to extend public availability of research data and publications, according to FAIR principles. In this context, the so-called... more
Open Science best practices and policies have been increasingly promoted and adopted in Europe and worldwide to extend public availability of research data and publications, according to FAIR principles. In this context, the so-called ‘Diamond Open Access’ model is particularly relevant since it entails provision of scientific content entirely free of charge, both for authors and readers. The journal Archeologia e Calcolatori adopted this model at a very early stage, when - in 2005 - it started publishing online full-text PDFs and metadata of its articles according to recognised standards, as an Open Archives Initiative data provider. This paper addresses the evolution of ‘Archeologia e Calcolatori’ in the context of scientific publishing in the disciplinary domain of IT applications to archaeology. It focuses on the updates of its OAI-PMH repository, which led to the journal’s inclusion in OpenAIRE as a data provider, and on mapping its current position in the OA Diamond landscape. The paper also illustrates recent implementations of Archeologia e Calcolatori’s website to provide full access to visual and interactive resources, such as images and 3D models, related to its publications, and to relevant metadata, structured according to OpenAIRE’s most recent guidelines. The combined, contextual provision of full texts, visual and interactive resources, and structured metadata – including full annotations and relations turns out to be a pioneering publishingservice in the domain of IT applications to archaeology.
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An epigraph is a complex historical document, whose significance is fully acknowledged only if its textual features (script, language, content, etc.) are studied in combination with the contextual information (on the textual support and... more
An epigraph is a complex historical document, whose significance is fully acknowledged only if its textual features (script, language, content, etc.) are studied in combination with the contextual information (on the textual support and its provenance). This is the reason why digital epigraphy lies at the crossroads of different disciplines applying ITs to textual and material sources, such as digital philology, computational linguistics, and computational archaeology. The specific interests and methods of those disciplines have exerted an influence on digital epigraphy, which is apparent in the documentary vs statistical approaches applied over time to the electronic treatment of the (re)source ‘inscription’. The aim of the paper is to trace those trends in the application of qualitative vs quantitative methods in the history of studies of digital epigraphy, highlighting the main moments of change, until the most recent developments.
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The paper aims to contribute to the discussion of the challenges, impact and prospects of digital initiatives engaged with "young" and "niche" sectors of research, through the experience of DASI - Digital Archive for the Study of... more
The paper aims to contribute to the discussion of the challenges, impact and prospects of digital initiatives engaged with "young" and "niche" sectors of research, through the experience of DASI - Digital Archive for the Study of pre-Islamic Arabian Inscriptions. Formerly an ERC-funded project at the University of Pisa in partnership with Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, DASI is now maintained thanks to the cooperation between the University of Pisa and the CNR. The objective of DASI is to foster the study of the enormous epigraphic heritage of pre-Islamic Arabia, which spans from the beginning of the I mill. BCE to VI cent. CE. Attesting different Semitic languages and scripts, epigraphs are the only textual sources for the study of Ancient Arabia. Relevant Digital Humanities theoretical and methodological challenges encountered during the course of the project (e.g. issues of choices in data modelling in relation to the complex nature of the epigraphic source, of harmonization of definitions for "marginal epigraphies", of applying language technologies to under-resourced languages' corpora, of using the electronic resources for didactic aims) are discussed, in relation to the description of DASI's digital tools for archiving, curated edition, online fruition, and cultural and linguistic research. Finally, the research prospects of the project, in terms of widening contents, updating technologies and disseminating results, are considered against issues such as the sustainability of short-term funded projects, and of the evaluation of digital, "non-traditional" outputs and publications in academic careers.
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Elencati nel libro della Genesi come figli del fratellastro di Isacco, gli Arabi sono coinvolti in numerose vicende narrate nella Bibbia: dall'episodio di Giuseppe, figlio di Giacobbe, venduto dai fratelli invidiosi ai mercanti... more
Elencati nel libro della Genesi come figli del fratellastro di Isacco, gli Arabi sono coinvolti in numerose vicende narrate nella Bibbia: dall'episodio di Giuseppe, figlio di Giacobbe, venduto dai fratelli invidiosi ai mercanti provenienti dalla terra di Madian, all'incontro, straordinario e simbolico, tra Salomone e la regina di Saba. Sono racconti ispirati a una terra che, sin dagli inizi del I millennio a.C., fece da scenario a commerci e mercati tra i piú dinamici del mondo antico.
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During the 2017 excavation season in ancient Hegra (Madâ’in Sâlih, Saudi Arabia), a short fragmentary text in Ancient South Arabian (ASA) musnad characters was brought to light, inscribed on a stone block reused in a wall of the Roman... more
During the 2017 excavation season in ancient Hegra (Madâ’in Sâlih, Saudi Arabia), a short fragmentary text in Ancient South Arabian (ASA) musnad characters was brought to light, inscribed on a stone block reused in a wall of the Roman fort. The text mentions the theonym ʿzyn (al-ʿUzzā, according to the ASA spelling). Its script and phraseology have close comparisons with the monumental inscriptions from Qaryat al-Fāw and may therefore provide direct proof of the presence in ancient Hegra of at least one individual from one of the communities composing Qaryat al-Fāw’s society, like the ʾl ʾḥnkt.
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In the first millennium BC, the South Arabian kingdom of Maʿīn was involved in trading activity along the trans-Arabian routes. Nearly seventy monumental inscriptions written in the Minaic language come from the oases of al-ʿUlā, Madāʾin... more
In the first millennium BC, the South Arabian kingdom of Maʿīn was involved in trading activity along the trans-Arabian routes. Nearly seventy monumental inscriptions written in the Minaic language come from the oases of al-ʿUlā, Madāʾin Sālih, and Qaryat al-Fāw (in modern Saudi Arabia), and from Egypt and Delos. This epigraphic corpus, labelled ‘Marginal Minaic’, is not merely the testimony of the economic relationships binding the South Arabian states with the rest of the Near East and the Mediterranean. The paper presents a comparative analysis of the cultural and textual features of these inscriptions. Similarities and divergences with respect to the documentation from the motherland, especially in textual models, lexicon, and formulae, are highlighted. The study enables the evaluation of the extent of language contact and cultural integration in different environments; at the same time, the role of the writing schools is appreciated in relation to the strategies enacted by the state or local communities in order to preserve their cultural identity and political cohesion in a foreign milieu.
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Authors: Arbach M., Rossi I. The date of appearance and the origins of the South Arabian kingdom of Ma‘īn are still debated among scholars. In this paper we propose an outline of Ma‘īn’s ancient history, between the VIII and the VI... more
Authors: Arbach M., Rossi I.
The date of appearance and the origins of the South Arabian kingdom of Ma‘īn are still debated among scholars. In this paper we propose an outline of Ma‘īn’s ancient history, between the VIII and the VI centuries BC, providing arguments in favour of the hypothesis of its endogenous formation, contemporaneous with the other political entities of the Jawf. We will analyse historical dynamics and events from Ma‘īn’s first attestations as a city-state in the documentary sources, through a period of expansion of its control over the Jawf, until the confederation with the tribe of Yathill, which started Ma‘īn’s hegemony in the valley. This led to the take-over of international trade from South Arabia, marked by clashes with Saba’. An essay of chronological reconstruction of the royal sequence is provided, with references to all significant texts. Among these, two new inscriptions attesting ancient kings’ names are published: Ma‘īn 112 and 113. The first is probably the most archaic Minaic text known to date.
The date of appearance and the origins of the South Arabian kingdom of Ma‘īn are still debated among scholars. In this paper we propose an outline of Ma‘īn’s ancient history, between the VIII and the VI centuries BC, providing arguments in favour of the hypothesis of its endogenous formation, contemporaneous with the other political entities of the Jawf. We will analyse historical dynamics and events from Ma‘īn’s first attestations as a city-state in the documentary sources, through a period of expansion of its control over the Jawf, until the confederation with the tribe of Yathill, which started Ma‘īn’s hegemony in the valley. This led to the take-over of international trade from South Arabia, marked by clashes with Saba’. An essay of chronological reconstruction of the royal sequence is provided, with references to all significant texts. Among these, two new inscriptions attesting ancient kings’ names are published: Ma‘īn 112 and 113. The first is probably the most archaic Minaic text known to date.
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
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Il volume raccoglie i contributi presentati al secondo - e ultimo - convegno internazionale del progetto EAGLE "Europeana network of Ancient Greek and Latin Epigraphy", tenutosi dal 27 al 29 gennaio del 2016 alla Sapienza Università di... more
Il volume raccoglie i contributi presentati al secondo - e ultimo - convegno internazionale del progetto EAGLE "Europeana network of Ancient Greek and Latin Epigraphy", tenutosi dal 27 al 29 gennaio del 2016 alla Sapienza Università di Roma.
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The Arabian Peninsula is still poorly represented in maps and digital reference tools on the geography of the ancient world. To respond to this need, a Gazetteer of Ancient Arabia has been conceived in the frame of the recently funded... more
The Arabian Peninsula is still poorly represented in maps and digital reference tools on the geography of the ancient world. To respond to this need, a Gazetteer of Ancient Arabia has been conceived in the frame of the recently funded ANR-project MAPARABIA.
The Gazetteer is synchronised with DASI, the “Digital Archive for the Study of pre-Islamic Arabian Inscriptions” [http://dasi.cnr.it/], from which it currently draws thousands of names of entities related to the territory, which are encoded in the Southern Arabian inscriptions, and hundreds of records of archaeological sites and monuments.
As a thesaurus of ancient “places”, the gazetteer identifies, disambiguates, and describes them, and represents their environmental and semantic relations, as well as their changes over time.
It will be released in linked data format and under open license (LOD), in order to enhance interoperability with other repositories.
The Gazetteer is synchronised with DASI, the “Digital Archive for the Study of pre-Islamic Arabian Inscriptions” [http://dasi.cnr.it/], from which it currently draws thousands of names of entities related to the territory, which are encoded in the Southern Arabian inscriptions, and hundreds of records of archaeological sites and monuments.
As a thesaurus of ancient “places”, the gazetteer identifies, disambiguates, and describes them, and represents their environmental and semantic relations, as well as their changes over time.
It will be released in linked data format and under open license (LOD), in order to enhance interoperability with other repositories.
Research Interests:
DASI is a project directed by Alessandra Avanzini of the University of Pisa, which has been funded by the European Community within the Seventh Framework Programme “Ideas”, Specific Programme “ERC – Advanced Grant”. DASI seeks to gather... more
DASI is a project directed by Alessandra Avanzini of the University of Pisa, which has been funded by the European Community within the Seventh Framework Programme “Ideas”, Specific Programme “ERC – Advanced Grant”.
DASI seeks to gather all known pre-Islamic Arabian epigraphic material into a comprehensive online database, with the aim to make available to specialists and to the broader public a wide array of documents often underestimated because of their difficulty of access.
DASI seeks to gather all known pre-Islamic Arabian epigraphic material into a comprehensive online database, with the aim to make available to specialists and to the broader public a wide array of documents often underestimated because of their difficulty of access.
Research Interests:
MEDINA is a Mediterranean network funded by the European Union within the ENPI - CBCMed (European Neighborhood and Partnership Instrument - Cross-Border Cooperation in the Mediterranean Sea Basin) programme. The main objective of MEDINA... more
MEDINA is a Mediterranean network funded by the European Union within the ENPI - CBCMed (European Neighborhood and Partnership Instrument - Cross-Border Cooperation in the Mediterranean Sea Basin) programme.
The main objective of MEDINA is to enhance awareness, both in the local and in the international community, of the often unjustly neglected Ancient Near East cultural heritage, as a necessary step for its future preservation.
In this view, three relevant archaeological and epigraphic collections related to the Phoenician, the Nabataean and the South-Arabian civilizations have been catalogued. They are presently preserved into the National Museum of Beirut, the Museum of Jordanian Heritage of the Yarmouk University and the Museo Nazionale d’Arte Orientale “Giuseppe Tucci” in Rome.
The main objective of MEDINA is to enhance awareness, both in the local and in the international community, of the often unjustly neglected Ancient Near East cultural heritage, as a necessary step for its future preservation.
In this view, three relevant archaeological and epigraphic collections related to the Phoenician, the Nabataean and the South-Arabian civilizations have been catalogued. They are presently preserved into the National Museum of Beirut, the Museum of Jordanian Heritage of the Yarmouk University and the Museo Nazionale d’Arte Orientale “Giuseppe Tucci” in Rome.
Research Interests:
The aim of this research is to define the history and the culture of the most ancient phase (the so-called “Madhābaean” period) of the Ancient South Arabian civilization in the Jawf valley (northern Yemen) through the analysis of its... more
The aim of this research is to define the history and the culture of the most ancient phase (the so-called “Madhābaean” period) of the Ancient South Arabian civilization in the Jawf valley (northern Yemen) through the analysis of its monumental epigraphic documentation.
In the first half of the I millennium BC, this region is characterized by the flourishing of five small city-states (Nashshān, Ma‘īn, Haram, Kamna and Inabba’), a peculiar political organization in respect to the major kingdoms that were assessing their sphere influence on Southern Arabia at that time.
Through the study of the 264 inscription which have been identified as the documentation of the five city-states, it has been possible to reconstruct their history, defining the chronological limits of this “ancient period” from at least the end of the 9th to the beginning of the 6th century BC, when the kingdom of Ma‘īn succeeded in establishing a new geo-political asset of the region.
The complete edition of this corpus of texts – with relevant information, transcription, translation and commentary provided – has also allowed to draw a picture of the “Madhābaean” culture, in its religious, social and textual-linguistic features.
In the first half of the I millennium BC, this region is characterized by the flourishing of five small city-states (Nashshān, Ma‘īn, Haram, Kamna and Inabba’), a peculiar political organization in respect to the major kingdoms that were assessing their sphere influence on Southern Arabia at that time.
Through the study of the 264 inscription which have been identified as the documentation of the five city-states, it has been possible to reconstruct their history, defining the chronological limits of this “ancient period” from at least the end of the 9th to the beginning of the 6th century BC, when the kingdom of Ma‘īn succeeded in establishing a new geo-political asset of the region.
The complete edition of this corpus of texts – with relevant information, transcription, translation and commentary provided – has also allowed to draw a picture of the “Madhābaean” culture, in its religious, social and textual-linguistic features.
Il presente lavoro si occupa della riedizione critica del corpus delle iscrizioni di espiazione provenienti dalla regione sudarabica del Jawf (in particolare dai siti di Shaqab al-Manassa, Kamna, Baraqish, Darb as-Sabi, Haram e dallo wadi... more
Il presente lavoro si occupa della riedizione critica del corpus delle iscrizioni di espiazione provenienti dalla regione sudarabica del Jawf (in particolare dai siti di Shaqab al-Manassa, Kamna, Baraqish, Darb as-Sabi, Haram e dallo wadi Shudayf). La ricerca, oltre a dedicarsi allo ...
Research Interests:
DASI – Digital Archive for the study of pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions is a 2011-2016 ERC project of the University of Pisa in collaboration with the Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa, aiming at getting the whole corpus of pre-Islamic... more
DASI – Digital Archive for the study of pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions is a 2011-2016 ERC project of the University of Pisa in collaboration with the Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa, aiming at getting the whole corpus of pre-Islamic inscriptions from the Arabian Peninsula inventoried and digitized, in order to strengthen knowledge of the civilizations of Ancient Arabia, enhance the study of their languages, and foster a methodological debate on the preservation of their epigraphic heritage.
The inscriptions are digitized by means of a hybrid system, which matches the advantages of xml (Epidoc) for the encoding of texts and of a database with its web-based data entry system to record metadata. DASI online archive, which counts 8,000 published inscriptions, is an aggregator of the three main epigraphic corpora attested for Ancient Arabia: those for Ancient South Arabian, Ancient North Arabian, and Aramaic. A tool for grammatical and lexical mark-up was also set up in order to facilitate the study of such under-resourced languages.
In this second year after the end of the ERC grant, the DASI project’s efforts are mainly aimed at ensuring the sustainability and constant improvement of its archive, at enhancing its aggregator functions and at pursuing established lines of research, both in the fields of pre-Islamic Arabian epigraphy and of digital epigraphy. A gazetteer is being implemented for a full exploitation of DASI epigraphic textual data and metadata.
In this paper, ongoing activities and future plans at DASI will be analysed in detail, together with the main challenges that the project has been facing since its beginning – both those shared with other digital epigraphy projects and those related to the specific documentation dealt with by DASI – which may further methodological debate and networking.
The inscriptions are digitized by means of a hybrid system, which matches the advantages of xml (Epidoc) for the encoding of texts and of a database with its web-based data entry system to record metadata. DASI online archive, which counts 8,000 published inscriptions, is an aggregator of the three main epigraphic corpora attested for Ancient Arabia: those for Ancient South Arabian, Ancient North Arabian, and Aramaic. A tool for grammatical and lexical mark-up was also set up in order to facilitate the study of such under-resourced languages.
In this second year after the end of the ERC grant, the DASI project’s efforts are mainly aimed at ensuring the sustainability and constant improvement of its archive, at enhancing its aggregator functions and at pursuing established lines of research, both in the fields of pre-Islamic Arabian epigraphy and of digital epigraphy. A gazetteer is being implemented for a full exploitation of DASI epigraphic textual data and metadata.
In this paper, ongoing activities and future plans at DASI will be analysed in detail, together with the main challenges that the project has been facing since its beginning – both those shared with other digital epigraphy projects and those related to the specific documentation dealt with by DASI – which may further methodological debate and networking.
Research Interests:
Presented to the Rencontres Sabéennes 21, Toulouse, June 8-10 2017
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The paper presents a textual typology of the Ancient South Arabian epigraphic heritage: the expiatory inscriptions of the al-Jawf region. Through a revision of the history of studies on this texts, the paper analyses their peculiarities... more
The paper presents a textual typology of the Ancient South Arabian epigraphic heritage: the expiatory inscriptions of the al-Jawf region. Through a revision of the history of studies on this texts, the paper analyses their peculiarities with respect to the dedicatory inscriptions of penitential subject coming from the Sabaean and Hadramitic cultural area. In particular, the paper focuses on the interpretation of the most ancient expiatory inscriptions by the king and the community of Ma'in, which can be dated to the VII cent. BC (Université Catholique de Louvain - Institut orientaliste de Louvain, Chaire Ryckmans d’études arabiques anciennes, 23-3-2015).
Research Interests:
DASI is a University of Pisa five-year project funded by the European Community within the 7th Framework Programme “Ideas”, “ERC – Advanced Grant”. Started in May 2011, DASI seeks to gather all known pre-Islamic Arabian epigraphic... more
DASI is a University of Pisa five-year project funded by the European Community within the 7th Framework Programme “Ideas”, “ERC – Advanced Grant”. Started in May 2011, DASI seeks to gather all known pre-Islamic Arabian epigraphic material into a comprehensive online database which can be accessed by scholars from anywhere in the world, with the aim of promoting the study of the Arabian Peninsula through its immense epigraphic documentation.
DASI project is carrying out a wide range of activities in order to promote the study of pre-Islamic Arabia through innovative IT means, preserving its textual heritage, making it available to everyone, disseminating the results and promoting the interaction among scholars and institution of many countries (up to now Italy, UK, France, Spain, Austria, Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Yemen, USA).
DASI project is carrying out a wide range of activities in order to promote the study of pre-Islamic Arabia through innovative IT means, preserving its textual heritage, making it available to everyone, disseminating the results and promoting the interaction among scholars and institution of many countries (up to now Italy, UK, France, Spain, Austria, Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Yemen, USA).
Research Interests:
Towards the second half of the 1st millennium BC the South Arabian kingdom of Ma‘īn established itself as the leader in the trans-Arabian incense trade, a flourishing economic activity whose significant historical and cultural... more
Towards the second half of the 1st millennium BC the South Arabian kingdom of Ma‘īn established itself as the leader in the trans-Arabian incense trade, a flourishing economic activity whose significant historical and cultural implications still deserve to be fully appreciated.
A recent overall reconsideration of the Minaic corpus has allowed to make the point on the epigraphic documentation left by the Minaeans beyond their kingdoms’ borders in the Jawf valley, i.e. in Najran, Qaryat al-Fāw, al-‘Ulā and Madā’in Ṣāliḥ (modern Saudi Arabia), in Egypt, in the island of Delos and also in other South Arabian regions.
In this paper we analyse the textual features of this documentation from different perspectives (language, script and support of the texts) on the basis of the comparison, on one hand, with the foreign cultural environment where these inscriptions originated and, on the other hand, with the background of the documentation from the motherland.
The aim is to draw some cultural reflections on such a unique corpus of epigraphs starting from highlighting its linguistic peculiarities, with special attention to the reconstruction of its historical frame.
A recent overall reconsideration of the Minaic corpus has allowed to make the point on the epigraphic documentation left by the Minaeans beyond their kingdoms’ borders in the Jawf valley, i.e. in Najran, Qaryat al-Fāw, al-‘Ulā and Madā’in Ṣāliḥ (modern Saudi Arabia), in Egypt, in the island of Delos and also in other South Arabian regions.
In this paper we analyse the textual features of this documentation from different perspectives (language, script and support of the texts) on the basis of the comparison, on one hand, with the foreign cultural environment where these inscriptions originated and, on the other hand, with the background of the documentation from the motherland.
The aim is to draw some cultural reflections on such a unique corpus of epigraphs starting from highlighting its linguistic peculiarities, with special attention to the reconstruction of its historical frame.
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
"In the second half of the 1st millennium BC, the South Arabian kingdom of Ma‘īn was engaged in international trade, with its caravans crossing Arabia. Alongside a considerable number of texts from the Minaean homeland hinting at this... more
"In the second half of the 1st millennium BC, the South Arabian kingdom of Ma‘īn was engaged in international trade, with its caravans crossing Arabia. Alongside a considerable number of texts from the Minaean homeland hinting at this commercial activity abroad, a number of Minaic inscriptions and graffiti was left outside South Arabia, being the direct proof of the presence of Minaean traders in different parts of the Near East.
The largest number of inscriptions has been found in the oasis of al-‘Ulā, modern Saudi Arabia, where the kingdom of Ma‘īn established a crucial outpost for its trading activities.The paper will present the results of the overall study of this corpus, which has allowed a better reading and interpretation of some texts and the possibility of an analysis of the relationship between the political, cultural and linguistic world of which these texts are expression and their North Arabian milieu.
In the light of the latest hypothesis regarding the Minaean chronology and the recent studies on the Dadanitic sources, special attention will be devoted to the historical frame of this documentation, to its textual features – script and language – and to the significance of monumental inscriptions as a means of assessment of one’s own identity in a “foreign” context."
The largest number of inscriptions has been found in the oasis of al-‘Ulā, modern Saudi Arabia, where the kingdom of Ma‘īn established a crucial outpost for its trading activities.The paper will present the results of the overall study of this corpus, which has allowed a better reading and interpretation of some texts and the possibility of an analysis of the relationship between the political, cultural and linguistic world of which these texts are expression and their North Arabian milieu.
In the light of the latest hypothesis regarding the Minaean chronology and the recent studies on the Dadanitic sources, special attention will be devoted to the historical frame of this documentation, to its textual features – script and language – and to the significance of monumental inscriptions as a means of assessment of one’s own identity in a “foreign” context."
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Il Seminar for Arabian Studies è la sola conferenza internazionale che si riunisce annualmente al fine di presentare le più aggiornate ricerche nel settore degli studi umanistici sulla penisola arabica, dall’antichità ai nostri giorni.... more
Il Seminar for Arabian Studies è la sola conferenza internazionale che si riunisce annualmente al fine di presentare le più aggiornate ricerche nel settore degli studi umanistici sulla penisola arabica, dall’antichità ai nostri giorni.
Dettagli sulla partecipazione alla conferenza sono disponibili all’indirizzo: www.theiasa.com/2020-seminar/
La scadenza per la sottomissione degli abstract è il 28 febbraio 2020.
Dettagli sulla partecipazione alla conferenza sono disponibili all’indirizzo: www.theiasa.com/2020-seminar/
La scadenza per la sottomissione degli abstract è il 28 febbraio 2020.
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The Seminar for Arabian Studies is the only international forum that meets annually for the presentation of the latest academic research in the humanities on the Arabian Peninsula. If you wish to offer a paper, see information available... more
The Seminar for Arabian Studies is the only international forum that meets annually for the presentation of the latest academic research in the humanities on the Arabian Peninsula. If you wish to offer a paper, see information available at: https://www.theiasa.com/2020-seminar/ (CfP closes on the 28th of February 2020).