DASI

digital archive for the study of pre-islamic arabian inscriptions

Editor: Jérémie Schiettecatte


Aerial view from South
Benoist et al. 2007: fig. 12

SITE INFORMATION

Ancient nameṮwbt (?)
CountryYemen
Geographical areaCentral Ḥaḍramawt
GovernorateḤaḍramawt
KingdomHadramawt
CoordinatesLatitude: 16° 8' 54.5"    Longitude: 49° 16' 30.4"    
Coordinates accuracycertain
Type of siteSettlement
Deitiesḏt-Ḥmym
Ḥwl
S¹yn
S¹yn ḏ-Mwtr
StructuresDwelling (indeterminate)
Dwelling (concentrated)
Light hydraulic structure (ex. canal, well)
Large hydraulic structure (ex. dam)
Plot of cultivated land
Rampart
Small temple
Large temple
Graveyard
Rock inscriptions
LanguageSabaic, Ḥaḍramitic
General descriptionExtension: 8 ha. The settlement covers a surface area of 600 m x 400 m (220 x 150 m intra muros). The centre of the site is encircled by a city wall including several large public buildings around an empty space. Two temples have been erected in the southern part of this area. The residential quarter was located outside the central fortified zone.
ChronologySeveral soundings have shown that the site was inhabited from the end of the 2nd millennium BC, though with a different organization of the structures. Archaeological materials and potsherds demonstrated several phases consistent with those already detected in other sites of the region (e.g. Raybūn): a first phase goes back to the 10th – 7th centuries BC, and a second phase to 7th – 5th centuries BC when a first wall circuit was achieved. The following stages (3rd – 1st centuries BC) are those more connected with the building of monumental structures, such as the defensive walls and the shrines, while the site experiences its greatest development. Traces of destruction by fire are visible in levels of the 2nd – 1st centuries BC and probably to be connected with a Qatabanian assault. It is not already clear if this event marks the site's abandonment. Some areas have been reutilised in a late Islamic period.
Identification1930s: D. van Meulen and H. von Wissmann
Archaeological missions1959: G.Lankester Harding
1979: Mission Archéologique Française (dir. J-F. Breton)
since 2002: Jawf-Hadramawt Expedition (France)

MONUMENTS

[By A. Agostini] Defensive structures have been firstly realized adjoining the most external houses of the site, sometimes linked by ramparts. The walls, thick up to 2 m, show regular buttresses. Three main phases have been distinguished. From the 7th to the 4th centuries BC rough-hewn slabs and mud bricks were used for internal filling. From the 4th – 3rd centuries BC the whole structure was monumentalised using more regular blocks and courses. A third phase shows clear trace of rough material reuse but it could also be dated to an early Islamic period. Two main entrances, protected by two lateral bastions, have been detected at the southern and northern edges, both are L-shaped and paved by limestone blocks. Two double doors probably protected the entrance to the internal site.

  • photoPart of the walls
[By A. Agostini] This monumental stone building stands the northern area of the site. It is centred on a large pillared room just after the main entrance on the western side of the building. The eastern aisle is characterized by a long corridor onto which several small rooms open. A podium was later adjoined on the western side of the main room. A light plaster covered all the internal walls. The original function of the building is not yet clear, even if some of the objects there found should suggest religious connections (e.g. incense burners, offertory tables). A violent fire marks the abandonment of the building at the end of the 1st millennium BC.

MAP

Your browser doesn't support Google Maps or Javascript is turned off.

NOTES

[By A. Agostini]
A residential area has been investigated S of the central settlement, the houses used bricks over a stone platform showing a tripartite layout (two rows of rooms separated by a central corridor). According to the artefacts they can be dated between 7th to 4th centuries BC. Two shrines mounted on podiums are located onto a terrace in the SE area of the enclosure. Only foundations have been preserved and they are of rectangular shape (Shrine B : 12 x 8 m and Shrine D : 8 x 6 m). These two sacral structures were connected with Building A which is a massive structure covering an area of 30 x 25 m, including about 40 rooms around a central area, it is probable that it was also associated to the religious sphere (residence for priests ?). One temple was erected outside the fortified area and seven more have been detected on the surroundings, thus delimiting the cultivated area.

RELATED MATERIAL

Epigraphs in CSAI
Objects in CSAI