Difference between revisions of "Category:Nabateans (subject)"
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
In the Greek and Roman Period the Nabateans created a powerful kingdom at the borders of the land of Israel. | In the Greek and Roman Period the Nabateans created a powerful kingdom at the borders of the land of Israel. They had control of the [[Incense Route]], the commercial route connecting the Arabian peninsula to Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean. The Nabatean capital [[Petra]] served as a strategic place of reloading, with one route crossing the desert of [[Negev]] to the port of [[Gaza]], and another leading through [[Bosra]] and [[Damascus]] to [[Mesopotamia]] in the east and [[Phoenicia]] in the west. | ||
The Nabateans supported the | The Nabateans supported the [[Maccabees]] in their fight against the [[Seleucids]] but then resisted to the expansion of the [[Hasmoneans Kings]] and [[Herod the Great]]. | ||
In 106 CE the Nabaten kingdom was absorbed into the Roman Empire. As part of the new province of [[Arabia Petrae]], the Nabatean towns continued to flourished in the centuries to come. | In 106 CE the Nabaten kingdom was absorbed into the Roman Empire. As part of the new province of [[Arabia Petrae]], the Nabatean towns continued to flourished in the centuries to come. |
Revision as of 06:35, 6 October 2010
The Nabateans were a Semitic population living in Southern Jordan and the northern part of Arabia.
See Nabatean Kings
Overview
In the Greek and Roman Period the Nabateans created a powerful kingdom at the borders of the land of Israel. They had control of the Incense Route, the commercial route connecting the Arabian peninsula to Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean. The Nabatean capital Petra served as a strategic place of reloading, with one route crossing the desert of Negev to the port of Gaza, and another leading through Bosra and Damascus to Mesopotamia in the east and Phoenicia in the west.
The Nabateans supported the Maccabees in their fight against the Seleucids but then resisted to the expansion of the Hasmoneans Kings and Herod the Great.
In 106 CE the Nabaten kingdom was absorbed into the Roman Empire. As part of the new province of Arabia Petrae, the Nabatean towns continued to flourished in the centuries to come.
The Nabateans in ancient sources
Diodorus Siculus (1st cent. BCE)
The land (of Arabia) is situated between Syria and Egypt, and is divided among many peoples of diverse characteristics. Now the eastern parts are inhabited by Arabs, who bear the name of Nabateans and range over a country which is partly desert and partly waterless, though a small section of it is fruitful” (Bibliotheca II,48,1-2).
“Consequently the Arabs who inhabit this country, being difficult to overcome in war, remain always unenslaved; furthermore, they never at any time accept a man of another country as their overlord and continue to maintain their liberty unimpaired” (II,48,4).
“They are exceptionally fond of freedom...” (XIX,94,1).
“Some of them raise camels, others sheep, pasturing them in the desert. While there are many Arabian tribes who use the desert as pasture, the Nabateans far surpass the others in wealth although they are not much more than ten thousand in number; for not a few of them are accustomed to bringing down to the sea frankincense and myrrh and the most valuable kind of spices, which they procure from those who convey them from what is called Arabia Eudaemon”, i.e. Arabia, the Blessed (XIX, 94, 4-5).
The Nabateans in Scholarship
The Nabateans in Fiction
External links
Major articles
- History of the Nabatean Kings / Schurer/Vermes / 1 (1973) 574-586
Pages in category "Nabateans (subject)"
The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
1
- The Other Side of the Jordan (1940 Glueck), book
- Deities and Dolphins: The Story of the Nabataeans (1965 Glueck), book
- The Nabatean Potter's Workshop at Oboda (1974 Negev), book
- Roman Arabia (1983 Bowersock), book
- Adone ha-midbar: toldot ha-Nabatim u-mamlakhtam (1983 Negev), book
- The Late Hellenistic and Early Roman Pottery of Nabatean Oboda (1986 Negev), book
- Personal Names in the Nabatean Realm (1991 Negev), book
- The Architecture of Oboda (1997 Negev), book