Editor: Jérémie Schiettecatte
Ancient name | Ṣrwḥ |
Country | Yemen |
Geographical area | Ṣirwāḥ |
Governorate | Maʾrib |
Kingdom | Saba |
Coordinates | Latitude: 15° 27' 6" Longitude: 45° 1' 4" |
Coordinates accuracy | certain |
Type of site | Settlement |
Tribe | Tribe: Ḍmrn Tribe: Ḏrʾn Tribe: Fys²n Tribe: Ḫll Tribe: Mydʿyn (nisba) Tribe: Nhmynhn (nisba) Tribe: Nzḥt Tribe: S¹bʾ Tribe: Ṣrwḥ; ʾṣrḥn (nisba); ṣrwḥyn (nisba) Tribe: Ṣrwḥ w-Ḫwln Ḫḍlm Tribe: Ṣrwḥ w-Ḫwln Ḫḍlm w-Hynn Tribe: Ṣrw w-Ḫwln w-Ḫblm w-Ḫynn Tribe: Yhblḥ Lineage: ʾlḏrʾ Lineage: ʿdʾl Lineage: ʿnmtn Lineage: ʿnnn Lineage: Bʿln Lineage: Brʾn Lineage: Brtn Lineage: Ḏrʾn Lineage: Fḍḥm Lineage: Gdnm Lineage: Ḫlfn Lineage: Ḫll Lineage: Ḥbb Lineage: Ḥḏmt Lineage: Ḥzfrm Lineage: Kbr Ḫll Lineage: Mbḥrt Lineage: Mḥfdm Lineage: Mlḥn Lineage: Mwnyn Lineage: Mwqṣm Lineage: Nzḥtn Lineage: Qlẓn Lineage: Rfdn Lineage: Rglm Lineage: S²hrʿly Lineage: Ṯbrm Lineage: Ṯwrnhn Lineage: Yfʿn Lineage: Yḥmn Lineage: Ykrb Lineage: Yṣr Lineage: Zʿmm |
Deities | ʾlmqh(w) ʾlmqh bʿl ʾwʿln ʾlmqh(w) bʿl ʾwʿl Ṣrwḥ ʾlmqw ʾnby ʿmm ʿṯtr ʿṯtr S²ymm ʿṯtr S²rqn ḏt-Ḥmym ḏt-Bʿdnm Hwbs¹ Ḥwl Krwm ʾmʿṯtr bʿlt Bnn rbʿ-hmw Yhnʿm Ṯr Bʿlm S¹mht S¹yn S²ms¹-hmw ḏt-Ḫṭbm |
Structures | Dwelling (indeterminate) Dwelling (concentrated) Workshop Quarry Light hydraulic structure (ex. canal, well) Wells, cisterns Plot of cultivated land Building with political function Rampart Small temple Pilgrimage temple Graveyard Paved road Rock inscriptions |
Language | Sabaic |
General description | Extension: 3 / 4 ha. The site is located on a rocky outcrop 34 km W from Mārib. The intra muros site shows a considerable density of monumental buildings, while an urban settlement was laying in the extra muros area. The surroundings have been investigated in order to clarify the various economic sources to which the settlement was relying on. Many structural interventions were made in order to manage the hydraulic resources of the area. It is moreover clear that the calcite-alabaster extractions, from the near Jabal al-Makhdara quarry, had an important role in the commercial activities. Walled systems encircle some of the hills and mountains around the site (the longest of these is 1 km long) and, even if their function is still under debate, they have been provisionally connected with cattle farming. |
Chronology | The most ancient structures of the site date back to the end of 8th century BC (part of the city walls and oval temple). Other interventions can be dated to a later period, like the Administrative Building, whose first phase should be dated to the 2nd century BC and the last one to the first centuries AD. |
Identification | 1843: T. Arnaud |
Travellers | 1970: J. Halévy 1947: A. Fakhry 1955: F. Geukens |
Archaeological missions | 1965: C. Robin (France) 1979/80; 1991/94 and since 2001: DAI (Germany) |
[By A. Agostini] The ancient defensive structure has been heavily damaged by intense pillage, but some preserved portions are in the NE area, and they should have been characterized by projections and recesses. Its original length should have been around 780 m. They draw a nearly quadrilateral plan measuring about 210 m for each side. Many portions of this enclosure have been erected directly on the bedrock. The oval temple apse was breaking its regularity (see below), but the structure have been moreover characterized by different techniques and materials, and even quality levels were inhomogeneous. Inscriptions record royal interventions in the city walls from the beginning of 7th century BC until the 1st century BC. Eight are the most imposing buildings detected inside the walls and, amongst these, five should be recognized as sacral structures. This identification was helped by the fact that later Islamic interventions on the site have not been much invasive (like the Islamic tower built over the temple's outer wall at S). |
[By A. Agostini] As the Awwām temple in Mārib, this temple is characterized by its oval wall and both were in fact destination of important pilgrimages devoted to the same principal Sabaean god. Access to the sanctuary was via two different propila, both originally with 6 pillars. Those entrances, although being in axis to each other, are both positioned northward in respect of the longitudinal axis of the oval area. These two entrances are separated by a broad rectangular courtyard, which is paved by stone slabs. The second pillared entrance leads to the oval court, again paved, which can be considered as a protruding extension from the original city walls line. Inside this area, which was the real hearth of the sanctuary, some cultic installations are preserved, like banquets, benches and altars. Several banqueting areas have been detected, one of these was realized in the southern edge of the oval court, just on the right from the second propylon. At the centre of the courtyard, on two facing walls, are located important annalistic inscriptions: the well-known RES 3945-3946 (Karibʾīl Watār son of Dhamarʿalī) and the recently discovered DAI- Ṣirwaḥ 50 (Yathaʿʾmar Watār son of Yakrubmalik). The area encircled by the oval wall measures internally about 34 x 33 m and this is realized with the casemate techniques, the stone blocks are of the highest ashlar quality, and one row of the external surface is engraved with a continuous line of ibex heads. According to excavations and textual documentation, we can observe a very long usage of this structure: from the end of the 8th century BC until the first centuries AD. |
[By A. Agostini] Of this massive structure only the stone basement remains (10 m high), though allowing a reliable reconstruction of its original layout. The plan is rectangular and shows multiple squared rooms, distributed in U-shape around an internal court surrounded by walls or a gallery, from which a podium is accessible. The building was originally erected in the 2nd or 1st century BC, but traces of a later intervention with wood pillars and mud brick have also been documented (4th – 5th century AD). |
[By A. Agostini] The funerary area is concentrated southward from the city walls. The stone structures so far investigated are very similar to the mausoleums which the same German Mission excavated just outside the Awwām Temple in Mārib. They are in fact rectangular multi-storey buildings with two rooms close to each other and some subterranean chambers. All of them have been found empty from human bones and grave goods. |
Further excavations will be concentrating in an ʿAthtar temple and in another structure known as 'Five Pillars Building' (A. Agostini). |
west of Jabal Kawfal (Unknown) |
west of al-Mashjaḥ (Unknown) |
Epigraphs
in CSAI Objects in CSAI |
Arnaud 1845 | Arnaud, Thomas-Joseph 1845. Relation d'un voyage à Mareb (Saba) dans l'Arabie méridionale, entrepris en 1843 par M. Arnaud. Journal Asiatique, 5: 211-245, 309-345. |
Bleibtreu 1997 | Bleibtreu, Erika 1997. Zur grossen Tempelanlage von Ṣirwāḥ (Haulān). Pages 19-31 in Roswitha G. Stiegner (ed.). Aktualisierte Beiträge zum 1. Internationalen Symposion Südarabien, interdisziplinär an der Universität Graz mit kurzen Einführungen zu Sprach- und Kulturgeschichte. In memoriam Maria Höfner. Graz: Leykam. |
Bowen and Albright, Frank P. 1958: 289 | Bowen, Richard LeBaron and Albright, Frank P. (eds) 1958. Archaeological Discoveries in South Arabia. With foreword by Wendell Phillips. (Publications of the American Foundation for the Study of Man, 2). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press. |
Breton 1994 c: 92-95 | Breton, Jean-François 1994. Les fortifications d'Arabie méridionale du 7e au 1er siècle avant notre ère. (Archäologische Berichte aus dem Yemen, 8). Mainz: Verlag Philipp von Zabern. |
Bron 1981 a | Bron, François 1981. Inscriptions de Ṣirwāḥ. Raydān, 4: 29-34. |
Doe 1983: 124-125, 164-166 | Doe, D. Brian 1983. Monuments of South Arabia. (Arabia past and present, 12). Naples: The Falcon Press / Cambridge: The Oleander press. |
Fakhry 1948 | Fakhry, Ahmed 1948. Les antiquités du Yémen. Un voyage à Ṣirwâḥ, Mârib et el-Ǧôf. Le Muséon, 61: 215-226. |
Fakhry 1952: vol.1, 29-56 | Fakhry, Ahmed 1952. An archaeological Journey to Yemen (March-May 1947). (3 vols), Cairo: Government Press. |
al-Garoo 1986: 313-315 | al-Garoo, Asmahan 1986. Les antiquités du Yémen dans l'œuvre de al-Hamdânī. (PhD, Université Paris I). |
Gerlach 2003 b | Gerlach, Iris 2003. Die archäologisch-bauhistorischen Untersuchungen in der sabäischen Stadtanlage und Oase von Sirwah. Pages 96-105 in Iris Gerlach (ed.). 25 Jahre Ausgrabungen und Forschungen im Jemen, 1978-2003. (Hefte zur Kulturgeschichte des Jemen, 1). Berlin: Deutsches Archäologisches Institute. |
Gerlach 2003-2004 | Gerlach, Iris 2003-2004. Die archäologisch-bauhistorischen Untersuchungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts in der sabäischen Stadtanlage und Oase von Ṣirwāḥ. Nürnberger Blätter zur Archäologie, 20: 37-56. |
Gerlach and Heckes 2003 | Gerlach, Iris and Heckes, Jürgen 2003. Die Stadtanlage von Sirwâh: Regierungssitz, Kultzentrum oder Handelsstation?. Pages 163-178 in Thomas Stöllner, Gabriele Körlin, Gero Steffens and Jan Cierny. Man and Mining (= Mensch und Bergbau). Studies in honour of Gerd Weisgerber on occasion of his 65th birthday. (Der Anschnitt, 16). Bochum: Deutschen Bergbau-Museum. |
Gerlach and Hitgen 2004 | Gerlach, Iris and Hitgen, Holger 2004. The Sabaean town of Sirwah: an introduction into the latest research project of the DAI, Orien-Department. Pages 210-220 in Alexander V. Sedov (ed.). Scripta Yemenica. Issledovanija po Južnoj Aravii. Sbornik naučnyh statej v čest' 60-letija M.B. Piotrovskogo. Moscow: Vostochna. |
Halévy 1872: 52-58 | Halévy, Joseph 1872. Rapport sur une mission archéologique dans le Yémen. Journal Asiatique 6e série, 19: 5-98; 129-266; 489-547. |
al-Ḫaṭīb 1948: 22, 24, 26 | al-Khaṭīb, Muḥibb ad-Dīn 1948. al-Iklīl min aḫbār al-Yaman w-ansāb Ḥimyar, taṣnīf lisān al-Yaman Abī Muḥammad al-Ḥasan ibn Aḥmad ibn Yaʿqūb al-Hamdānī, al-kitāb al-ʿāshir. Cairo. |
al-Ḥiwālī 1974: 221, 242, 365 | al-Ḥiwālī, Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī al-Akwaʿ 1974. Ṣifa ǧazirat al-ʿArab, taʾlīf Lisān al-Yaman al-Ḥasan ibn Aḥmad al-Hamdānī. Riyāḍ: Manšūrāt Dār al-Yamāma li-l-baḥṯ wa-l-taraǧama wa-l-našr. |
al-Ḥiwālī 1977: 140-148 | al-Ḥiwālī, Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī al-Akwaʿ 1977. Kitāb al-Iklīl li-lisān al-Yaman abī Muḥammad al-Ḥasan ibn Aḥmad ibn Yaʿqūb al-Hamdānī, al-ǧuzʾ al-awwal. Cairo. |
Höfner 1973 | Höfner, Maria 1973. Inschriften aus Ṣirwāḥ, Ḫaulān. (I Teil). Sammlung Eduard Glaser. 8. (Sitzungsberichte der Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-historische Klasse, 291/1). Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. |
Höfner 1976 | Höfner, Maria 1976. Inschriften aus Ṣirwāḥ, Ḫaulān. (II Teil). Sammlung Eduard Glaser. 12. (Sitzungsberichte der Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-historische Klasse, 304/5). Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. |
Jamme 1976: 61-100 | Jamme, Albert W.F. 1976. Carnegie Museum 1974-75 Yemen Expedition. (Special Publication, 2). Pittsburgh: Carnegie Museum of Natural History. |
Japp 2015: 98 | Japp, Sarah 2015. Pottery in sacred contexts. Everyday equipment - tableware for ritual meals - offerings?. Pages 95-106 in Mounir Arbach and Jérémie Schiettecatte (eds). Pre-Islamic South Arabia and its Neighbours: New Developments of Research. Proceedings of the 17th Rencontres Sabéennes held in Paris, 6–8 June 2013. (BAR International Series, 2740). Oxford: Archaeopress. [British Foundation for the Study of Arabia Monographs, 16] |
Jung 1988 | Jung, Michael 1988. The religious monuments of ancient Southern Arabia. A preliminary typological classification. Annali dell'Istituto Orientale di Napoli, 48: 177-218. |
de Maigret 2002: 71-81 | de Maigret, Alessandro 2002. Arabia Felix. An exploration of the Archaeological history of Yemen. London: Stacey International. |
Müller, David H. and Rhodokanakis 1913 | Müller, David H. and Rhodokanakis, Nikolaus (eds) 1913. Eduard Glasers Reise nach Marib. Sammlung Eduard Glaser. 1. Vienna: Alfred Holder. |
Nebes 1998 | Nebes, Norbert 1998. Der Tatenbericht des Karibʾil Watar in Sirwah. Pages 165-167 in Wilfried Seipel (ed.). Jemen. Kunst und Archäologie im Land der Königin von Sabaʾ. Eine Ausstellung des Kunsthistorischen Museums Wien in Zusammenarbeit mit der Generalinstitution fur Altertumer, Museen und Handschriften, Ministerium fur Kultur und Tourismus der Republik Jemen. Wien, Kunstlerhaus, 9. November 1998 bis 21. Februar 1999. Vienna: Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien. |
Nebes 1999 | Nebes, Norbert 1999. Der große Tatenbericht des Karibʾil Watar in Sirwah. Pages 66-69 in Werner Daum, Walter W. Müller, Norbert Nebes and Walter Raunig (eds). Im Land der Königin von Saba. Kunstschätze aus dem antiken Jemen. 7. Juli 1999-9. Januar 2000. Staatlichen Museum für Völkerkunde München. Germering: I.P. Verlagsgesellschaft / Munich: I.P. Verlagsgesellschaft. |
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