Difference between revisions of "Category:Nabateans (subject)"

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The Nabateans supported the Maccabeans in their fight against the [[Seleucids]] but then resisted to the expansion of the Hasmoneans kings and [[Herod the Great]].   
The Nabateans supported the Maccabeans in their fight against the [[Seleucids]] but then resisted to the expansion of the Hasmoneans kings and [[Herod the Great]].   


In 106 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 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.
 
====List of major Nabatean Kings====
*[[Aretas I]]
*[[Aretas II]], 120/110 to 96 BCE
*[[Obodas I]]
*[[Aretas III Philhellenos]], 82/87 to 68 BCE
*[[Aretas IV Philopatris]], 9 BCE to 40 CE
*[[Malichus II]], 40 to 70/71 CE
*[[Rabbel II Soter]], 70/71 to 106 CE


==The Nabateans in ancient sources==
==The Nabateans in ancient sources==

Revision as of 12:06, 5 October 2010

The Nabateans were a Semitic population living in Southern Jordan and the northern part of Arabia.

Overview

In the Greek and Roman Period the Nabateans created a powerful kingdom at the borders of the land of Israel. Their cities (Petra and Bosra) controlled the commercial routes from the Arabian peninsula to the Mediterranean.

The Nabateans supported the Maccabeans in their fight against the Seleucids but then resisted to the expansion of the Hasmoneans kings and Herod the Great.

In 106 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.

List of major Nabatean Kings

The Nabateans in ancient sources

The Nabateans in Scholarship

The Nabateans in Fiction

External links

Major articles

  • History of the Nabatean Kings / Schurer/Vermes / 1 (1973) 574-586