Editor: Jérémie Schiettecatte
Ancient name | ʾnbʾ |
Country | Yemen |
Geographical area | Jawf - Wādī Madhab |
Governorate | al-Jawf |
Coordinates | Latitude: 16° 07' 35" Longitude: 44° 54' 30" |
Coordinates accuracy | certain |
Type of site | Settlement |
Tribe | Tribe: ʾnbʾ Tribe: ḏ-S²rwn |
Deities | ʿṯtr Wdm S¹mʿ S¹mʿ ḏ-Frʿ |
Structures | Dwelling (indeterminate) Dwelling (concentrated) Light hydraulic structure (ex. canal, well) Building with political function Rampart Small temple Rock inscriptions |
Language | Minaic |
Location and toponomy | The site of Inabbaʾ is located downstream into the valley of the Jawf, 110 km north-east of Ṣanʿāʾ, 90 km north-west of Maʾrib, and 15 km from al-Ḥazm. The site is located in the centre of the plain, on the left bank of wādī Madhāb, just before its course plunges into the desert area of Ramlat as-Sabʿatayn. Toponymy The inscription Inabbaʾ 1 mentions a king of Inabbaʾ (mlk ʾnbʾ), where Inabbaʾ appears as the name of the kingdom, probably of the tribe which dominated the kingdom, and could also be the name of its capital, whose site is still called Inabbaʾ today. |
History of research | Discovery 1870: J. Halévy: Inabbaʾ is described as a site lacking inscriptions. Visits & surveys 1981-1988: MAFRAY visits the site in three separate moments. 2006: the inscriptions found during the looting of the site are acquired by the National Museum of Ṣanʿāʾ and published by M. Arbach and R. Audouin (Arbach, Audouin 2007, p. 48-51). |
General description | With its square shape, the site of Inabbaʾ measures 245 x 265 m, with a perimeter of 870 m and a surface area of 5.8 ha. Although no remains of dwellings are visible on the surface, the site extension and its ten metres of stratigraphic accumulation mentioned suggest a long occupation sequence. J.-F. Breton mentions the presence of a rampart composed of a wall in dressed stone lined with a mudbrick massif (Breton 1994, p. 109). The inscription Inabbaʾ 1, dated to the end of the 8th century BC-beginning of the 7th, describes the construction of a structure called Yaghūl (Yġl) by Wqhʾl Yfs² bn S¹mhyṯʿ, king of Inabbaʾ. Nothing indicates that this is the residence of the sovereign; anyway, the inscription leaves open the possibility that this city was the place of residence of the king in the 8th century BC. Hwr, mentioned in the inscription Inabbaʾ 3, was probably the main divinity of the kingdom of Inabbaʾ. The divinity actually appears in the intra muros temple of ʾrnydʿ in as-Sawdāʾ, together with the other main deities of the great tribes of the Jawf (Arbach, Audouin, Robin 2004, p. 30-31). Another god was worshipped in Inabbaʾ, S¹mʿ ḏ-Frʿ, to which a banquet room was consecrated in the 8th century BC (Inabbaʾ 4), and an altar around the 5th century BC (YM 29828). |
Chronology | According to the inscriptions, the city of Inabbaʾ was occupied in the 8th cent. BC at the latest. There is no inscription dated after the 5th cent. BC. The site may have been abandoned at that time, possibly for political and environmental reasons (Schiettecatte 2011: 46). |
Classical sources | Claudius Ptolemy, Geogr. 6.7.34 (2nd cent. AD) : Ίνάφα (?) |
Halévy (1872, p. 44) identified Inabbaʾ as Inapha (Ίνάφα), a toponym mentioned by Claudius Ptolemy. According to Halévy, Inapha was located halfway between the Jawf and Gerrha on the side of the Arabian Gulf. This last indication suggests that J. Halévy’s indication is uncertain. |
Epigraphs
in CSAI Objects in CSAI |