Ancient name | Dioskouridou (Greek), ḏ-S³krd (South-Arabian) |
Country | Yemen |
Governorate | Ḥaḍramawt |
Kingdom | Mahrah sultan (1511) |
Coordinates | Latitude: 12° 30' 00" Longitude: 53° 45' 00" |
Coordinates accuracy | certain |
Type of site | Other |
Tribe | al-Mahrah |
Structures | Rock inscriptions |
Language | Brāhmī, South-Arabian, Ethiopic, Greek, Palmyrene, Syriac |
Location and toponomy | Archaeological objects, inscriptions and drawings were found by speleologists in the Ḥoq cave, north-east of the island. |
General description | Part of Yemen, Soqoṭra is a small island of an archipelago (4 islands) in the Indian Ocean. It lies some 240 km east of the Horn of Africa. A third of its vegetation is composed of endemic species: the most striking is the Dracaena cinnabari tree ("dragon's blood"). The island measures 132 km in lenght and 50 km in width. |
Chronology | Lower Palaeolithic: Oldowan culture (Hadibo area). The local tradition holds that the inhabitants were converted to Christianity by Thomas the Apostle. Archaeological finds from 1st-6th centuries AD. A Christian Syriac Nestorian church is attested in the 10th century. |
Classical sources | Periplus of the Erythraen Sea. |
Identification | Strauch, Robin, Gorea, Bukharin (see Robin and Gorea 2002; Dridi 2002, Strauch 2012). |
Travellers | 1506-1507: Tristão da Cunha and Alfonso de Albuquerque 1737: Captain de la Garde-Jazier. |
Archaeological missions | 2001: Belgian Socotra Karst Project |
south-west of Hoq Cave (Unknown) |
Strauch and Bukharin 2004 | Strauch, Ingo and Bukharin, Michael D. 2004. Indian inscriptions from the Cave Ḥoq on Suquṭrā (Yemen). Annali dell'Istituto Universitario Orientale di Napoli, 64: 121-138. |
Dridi 2002 | Dridi, Hédi. Indiens et Orientaux dans une grotte de Suquṭrā. Journal Asiatique, 290/2002: 565-610. |
Strauch 2012 | Strauch, Ingo (ed.) 2012. Foreign Sailors on Socotra. The Inscriptions and Drawings from Cave Hoq. (Vergleichende Studien zu Antike und Orient). Bremen: Ute Hempen Verlag. |