Language | Ancient South Arabian » Minaic » Central Minaic | ||
Alphabet | Ancient South Arabian | ||
Script typology | Monumental writing | ||
Writing technique | Incision | ||
Measure of letters | 7.5 | ||
Chronology |
| ||
Textual typology | Dedicatory text |
2 | it is not sure whether Nṭʿhtn is a name of place (Arbach and Schiettecatte 2006 and Arbach 2005) or of some other kind of property (Bron 2013). |
English | |
1 ʾbwṯn daughter of Ys³qʾl ḏ-Ṣnʿ dedicated 2 to Nkrḥ, when she came into possession of Nṭʿhtn (or, of the plantations). |
2 | The translation "plantations" for nṭʿhtn is suggested by Bron on the basis of the comparison with the Heb. NṬʿ "to plant" (with the Minaic feminine plural ending -ht). |
Bron 2013 a: 175-176 | Bron, François 2013. Notes d'épigraphie minéenne. Semitica, 53: 173-178. [Pages 173-174: Une stèle funéraire d'un roi de Maʿīn; pages 175-176: Al-Jawf 04.32; pages 176-178: Une mention méconnue de la ville de Gaza.] |
Deposit | Ṣanʿāʾ, The National Museum |
Support type | Stone inscription |
Material | Stone |
Measures | h. 18, w. 72, th. 11.5 |
Link to object record |
Modern site | Unknown |
Ancient site | Unknown |
Geographical area | wādī al-Jawf |
Country | Yemen |
Link to site record |
Arbach 2005 d | Arbach, Mounir 2005. Une reine en Arabie du Sud? Abîwathan fille de Yasaqʾîl, dáprès une inscription provenant de la région du Jawf. Chroniques Yéménites, 12: 19-26. |
Arbach and Schiettecatte 2006: 44, pl. 11/33 | Arbach, Mounir and Schiettecatte, Jérémie 2006. Catalogue des pièces archéologiques et épigraphiques du Jawf au Musée National de Ṣanʿâʾ. Ṣanʿâʾ National Museum. Ṣanʿāʾ: Centre français d'archéologie et de sciences sociales de Ṣanʿâʾ. [Text in French and Arabic] |
Bron 2013 a: 175-176 | Bron, François 2013. Notes d'épigraphie minéenne. Semitica, 53: 173-178. [Pages 173-174: Une stèle funéraire d'un roi de Maʿīn; pages 175-176: Al-Jawf 04.32; pages 176-178: Une mention méconnue de la ville de Gaza.] |
Rossi 2022: 318, 486, fig. 59 | Rossi, Irene 2022. The city-states of the Jawf at the dawn of Ancient South Arabian history (8th-6th centuries BCE). II. Corpus of the inscriptions. (Arabia Antica, 17/2). Roma: «L'Erma» di Bretschneider. |