In the first millennium BC, the South Arabian kingdom of Ma'īn was involved in trading activity along the trans-Arabian routes. Nearly seventy monumental inscriptions written in the Minaic language come from the oases of al-'Ulā, Madā'in Sālih, and Qaryat al-Fāw (in modern Saudi Arabia), and from Egypt and Delos. This epigraphic corpus, labelled ‘Marginal Minaic’, is not merely the testimony of the economic relationships binding the South Arabian states with the rest of the Near East and the Mediterranean. The paper presents a comparative analysis of the cultural and textual features of these inscriptions. Similarities and divergences with respect to the documentation from the motherland, especially in textual models, lexicon, and formulae, are highlighted. The study enables the evaluation of the extent of language contact and cultural integration in different environments; at the same time, the role of the writing schools is appreciated in relation to the strategies enacted by the state or local communities in order to preserve their cultural identity and political cohesion in a foreign milieu.

The Minaeans beyond Ma‘īn

ROSSI, IRENE
2014

Abstract

In the first millennium BC, the South Arabian kingdom of Ma'īn was involved in trading activity along the trans-Arabian routes. Nearly seventy monumental inscriptions written in the Minaic language come from the oases of al-'Ulā, Madā'in Sālih, and Qaryat al-Fāw (in modern Saudi Arabia), and from Egypt and Delos. This epigraphic corpus, labelled ‘Marginal Minaic’, is not merely the testimony of the economic relationships binding the South Arabian states with the rest of the Near East and the Mediterranean. The paper presents a comparative analysis of the cultural and textual features of these inscriptions. Similarities and divergences with respect to the documentation from the motherland, especially in textual models, lexicon, and formulae, are highlighted. The study enables the evaluation of the extent of language contact and cultural integration in different environments; at the same time, the role of the writing schools is appreciated in relation to the strategies enacted by the state or local communities in order to preserve their cultural identity and political cohesion in a foreign milieu.
2014
Seminar for Arabian Studies
The British Museum
27th July 2013
Languages of Southern Arabia. Papers from the Special Session of the Seminar for Arabian Studies held on 27th July 2013
Archaeopress
9781905739554
9781905739813
Ma'īn; trade; writing school; language contact; identity
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11384/49898
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