Language | Ancient South Arabian » Minaic » Central Minaic | ||
Alphabet | Ancient South Arabian | ||
Script typology | Monumental writing | ||
Script cursus | Left to right | ||
Writing technique | Incision | ||
Chronology |
| ||
Textual typology | Construction text | ||
Royal inscription | Yes |
Halévy notes that this text is written in ornate characters. In fact, the form of the letters as recorded by Halévy is comparable to that of the texts SW-BA/I/1-4 on the gate of the extra muros temple of as-Sawdāʾ, which are the most archaic inscriptions of the Jawf. We hypothesize that the author of the inscription was a king because in Haram 3 and 4 on the pillars of the gate he commemorates the foundation of the temple. |
1 | Yhrʾl was probably a king. |
English | |
1 Yhrʾl founded Hdnn. |
Support type | Inscription on architectural structure » Gate |
Material | Stone |
Link to object record |
Modern site | Kharibat Hamdān |
Ancient site | Hrm |
Geographical area | Jawf - Wādī Madhab |
Country | Yemen |
Found | In situ |
Archaeological context | Religious context: Temple of Mtbnṭyn |
Notes | When the inscriptions of the temple were recorded by Halévy, they were in situ. They disappeared after his visit. The temple was originally called Hdnn, then ʾrṯt. |
Link to site record |
Robin 1992 a: 67-68 | Robin, Christian J. 1992. Inabbaʾ, Haram, al-Kāfir, Kamna et al-Ḥarāshif. Fasc. A: Les documents. Fasc. B: Les planches. Inventaire des inscriptions sudarabiques. 1. Paris: de Boccard / Rome: Herder. [Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-lettres; Istituto italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente] |
Rossi 2022: 253 | 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. |