HISTORY Sabaeans on the Somali coast

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Not sure if this has been posted before, it was a good read.

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Acknowledgments

We are very grateful to Mahad Jebiy, Senior President Advisor of the Region of Puntland, and Mohammed Yaasin, a Somali resident in the United Kingdom, for providing us with the photographs of these texts in order to publish them as soon as possible and prevent their illegal export. We also wish to thank Dr Jorge De Torres Rodriguez (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Spain) and Dr A González-Ruibal for providing many insights into the Shalʿaw inscription and its archaeological context.

Abstract

In 2019, the illegal excavation of an ancient sanctuary on the Somali coast yielded monumental Sabaic inscriptions from approximately the 8th-7th centuries BCE. The inscriptions, similar in content and script, have shed light on their authors’ origin (Sabaeans presumably from Maʾrib in Yemen), on the location’s cultic nature, and more broadly on Sabaean endeavours to establish an ambitious trade network in the first half of the 1st millennium BCE for the supply of aromatic resins from across the Horn of Africa, in order to convey them to the Near East and Mesopotamia. These inscriptions also highlight mastery of navigation techniques in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden as early as the period of the Sabaean mukarribs.

Introduction

As from the spring of 2019, photographs of illegally excavated remains and inscriptions on the Somali coast began circulating on the Web. Some were directly emailed to Khaldūn H. Nuʿmān and Christian J. Robin, with the request to intercede with local authorities. Until now, seven Sabaic inscriptions and an incense-burning altar have been brought to our attention. The location of this looted items was undisclosed. We were only told that the discovery was made in the autonomous state of Puntland, part of the Federal Republic of Somalia. One of our sources indicated Cape Guardafui, the second the town of Qandala on the northern coast of Puntland. By comparing the landscape in the background of the photographs with the digital elevation model provided by Google Earth, we were able, however, to pinpoint an approximate location on the eastern coast of Somalia, ca. 50 km SSW of Cape Guardafui, 20 km north of Bargal and 110 km north of Xaafuun6 (also named Ras Hafun). In the site’s background, the overhanging Ras Shannaqiif and the tabular relief of Mount Xambi are easily recognizable (Fig. 1). If these inferences are correct, the looted site would be located near the Abdexan well (Fig. 2). None of the archaeological surveys carried out along the eastern coast of Somalia7 have ever ventured in this area. Yet it is precisely in the Abdexan area that the French explorer Georges Révoil reported in 1880 the presence of an ancient temple, whose outlines he sketched (Fig. 3).8 Two facts suggest that this temple and the recently looted site are one and the same. Firstly, the photographs show the first course of a wall built in marginally drafted, pecked masonry, typical of South Arabian monumental constructions. 9 The nature and function of the monument is not recognizable from the photographic documentation at our disposal, but the content of the inscriptions indicates that it was most likely either a simple sacred enclosure, or a temple. Secondly, ancient built remains are exceptional on the Somali coast and inland. So far, evidence of pre-Islamic occupation is limited to rock art, megaliths, platforms and drystone cairns.10 Neither the coastal sites of Heïs (the alleged ancient port of Mundu),11 nor Olog and Damo (the ancient Aromata Emporion), 12 nor even the site of Hafun-Main (the ancient port of Opone), have yielded any significant structures apart from the burials. A built temple is therefore an exceptional structure, and the probability

A Sabaean trading venture As has been said, the suggested date for the drafting of the inscriptions and therefore the foundation of this site south of Cape Guardafui is uncertain. In any event, it happened after the Sabaeans began to settle in the Eritrean hinterland and on the Ethiopian Tigray plateau. 53 In the late 8th century BCE, the Sabaeans, moving from inner Yemen, came into contact with the people of the Tihāma coastal plain54 and seized political control of the Arabian coastline (Fig. 2). 55 Both political control and navigational experience on the Arabian and African coastal seas played the part of a catalyst for ambitious maritime exploration, which is illustrated by a fleet of Sabaʾ sailing along the northern coast of Somalia on behalf of the Sabaean ruler Yathaʿʾamar Watar. There is little doubt that the primary goal of the Sabaean presence on the Somali coast was the supply of aromatic resins. The putative location of the Somalian site, near Abdexan, has been described as receiving very little rainfall but endowed with numerous springs and incense trees.56 All ancient geographers praised the abundance and quality of its aromatics. 57 Like the routes described a few centuries later by the Periplus Maris Erythraei, navigation was likely along the coast, from the Bāb al-Mandab to the Gulf of Tadjura and then along the northern coast of present-day Somaliland to Cape Guardafui, before veering south to the Bargal area, where the shrine is located. An isolated item may testify to this coastal navigation by Sabaeans. A short South Arabian inscription of four characters is preserved not far from the coastal town of Shuula (or Shalʿaw),58 25 km southwest of Heïs, the ancient Mundu of the Periplus (Fig. 2). The


 
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This racist guy is everywhere.

The dating is interesting.

Did they radio-carbon date it or perhaps do linguistic analyses on the archeological items? I have not read this.

We were not in the region for long in the 8th century BC. If true, those Sabaeans would have dealt with the earliest Somalis.

Who is he and how is he racist?
 
This racist guy is everywhere.

The dating is interesting.

Did they radio-carbon date it or perhaps do linguistic analyses on the archeological items? I have not read this.

We were not in the region for long in the 8th century BC. If true, those Sabaeans would have dealt with the earliest Somalis.
Really ? I would have thought we'd have been in the region for several centuries at least by then since this is right around when the migrations from southern arabia to Ethiopia/eritrea happned and we don't seem to have been affected at all by that.
 

NidarNidar

♚kṯr w ḫss♚
VIP
This racist guy is everywhere.

The dating is interesting.

Did they radio-carbon date it or perhaps do linguistic analyses on the archeological items? I have not read this.

We were not in the region for long in the 8th century BC. If true, those Sabaeans would have dealt with the earliest Somalis.
LOL I didn't notice this walal, I know who he is. We may not have been there long, but the trade routes and farming of frankincense was already known, the temple was built as a tribute to their tribal God and they seemed to go out of their way to purchase franchise and myrrh, this is the second oldest port alongside Damo, Heis has been operational 10th century BCE, completely disproving the age old myth of us being only agropastoralist, our city states are ancient.

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Who was illegally excavating these writings?
Locals, PL confiscated it or it was donated forcefully.
 
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This racist guy is everywhere.

The dating is interesting.

Did they radio-carbon date it or perhaps do linguistic analyses on the archeological items? I have not read this.

We were not in the region for long in the 8th century BC. If true, those Sabaeans would have dealt with the earliest Somalis.
Who said we were not there in the 8th century
 
Really ? I would have thought we'd have been in the region for several centuries at least by then since this is right around when the migrations from southern arabia to Ethiopia/eritrea happned and we don't seem to have been affected at all by that.
We came after 3000 years ago, but perhaps a bit before 2800 years ago. There is much evidence for it. I was actually going to respond to that in my thread when you asked.
 
Intriguing, before that were somalis or more specifically proto-somalis in Eritrea/Northern Sudan? I've seen threads about the incredible amount of fossils and what not found there.
Specifically, pre-proto-Somalis existed from Lower Nubia ~3000 years ago, trekked through Eritrea and Djibouti, and ended up in Somaliland some 2900-2800 years ago.
 

NidarNidar

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Nah, I think Xiis was dated centuries earlier, like the 2nd century CE, IIRC.

That is a beautiful picture. Amazing. The star things were a tradition that goes back at least 7500 years.
Hmmm, you are right, Opone is older, I mistakenly attributed the date for Opone to Xiis, this temple basically confirms Opone's age.

I'm still reading Astronomy Galaal, truly fascinating, I'm starting to think my maternal grandfather was trained in weather lore xD he was truly fascinating he had 30, and very knowledgeable, I recall before his passing, he had a collection of very old manuscripts, much of it was written in Arabic and unknown script, he was a Sheikh.

Specifically, pre-proto-Somalis existed from Lower Nubia ~3000 years ago, trekked through Eritrea and Djibouti, and ended up in Somaliland some 2900-2800 years ago.
Mofo trekked through the Danakil Desert :chrisfreshhah: or did they hog the coast?

I recall Asa Koma site showing the earliest sign of cattle herding in the region, they also found Long-horned humpless cattle bones dating to 3,500 ybp, aswell as ceramics like some of the pottery from Sihi on the Saudi coast and Subr on the Yemeni littoral .

The region had big cats, buffaloes, elephants, rhinones etc...but the climate change about 1500 BCE as the got more arid

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Oh it just occurred to me if the incense was already being harvested from that the edge of the gulf of Aden coast. Then its very likley that this was also where the incense 700 years before this in 1500 b.c was being harvest for sale to anicnet eygpt
 

NidarNidar

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Damn is that sanaag ? Wow. I wonder what the hell is on those 2 islands
I did a bit of digging, this is why it's important to fact check xD, can't find the original, I've looked at the coast and can't seem to find two Islands, the photo seems edited version of Lanikai Beach Hawaii.
 

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