Author: * Muse Alexandros -
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Date: Dec 31, 2005 - 17:39
Hey peeps. This article is rather lengthy. Its part of an assignment we had to do in class years ago. I kept my writings but i will post the name of the books that i used for resources when i dig through my boxes. The article explains the beginnings of the Sabaeans people and how the legendary Queen of Sheba came about. There were three historical tribes which are named here. The three tribes today are as we know them as the people of Yemen. The Question in one of the threads was asked what had the yemenites had to do with Africa. Part of that question is answered in this article....Thanks all *S*
I will attempt to post some historical background of the land and people surrounding this Queen with many names. Such as, Sheba, Makeda Bilqis and list goes on. It is rather facinating when one researches through the pro's and con's.
Sheba was one of the oldest centers of civilization in the Near East. Its relatively fertile land and adequate rainfall in a moister climate helped sustain a stable population, a feature recognized by the ancient Greek geographer Ptolemy, who described Sheba as Eudaimon Arabia ( better known in its Latin translation, Arabia Felix) meaning "fortunate Arabia," due to green land and moderate climate.
Between the 12th century BC and the 6th century AD, it was dominated by three successive civilisations which controlled the lucrative spice trade: Minaean, Sabaean and Himyarite.
But first we will look at the Sabean rule seeing that this thread is dedicated to its mysterious queen. During Sabaean rule in the 8th century, an impressive dam was erected that provided irrigation and stood for over a millennium. (It finally collapsed in AD 570 after centuries of neglect.) The Sabaeans were polytheistic, and should not be confused with the Sabians mentioned in the Qur'an, whose name is written with the Arabic letter sad rather than sin, and is widely believed to refer to the Mandaeans. Much wealth was generated from the spice trade, and Sheba was best known as the source of myrrh and frankincense.
These were exported to the Mediterranean, where they were greatly prized by many cultures, using camels on routes through Arabia, and to India by sea. From the coast of Oman it was transported in huge camel caravans across the desert along the edge of Arabia's Empty Quarter. The ancient camel tracks, like highways, can be seen in the desert today. Only now are we beginning to understand the full dimensions of this trade and the social and economic structures which supported and were a part of it. A book. The Road to Ubar (1999), sheds light on the trade which originated in one of the harshest regions on earth.
In an even deeper level of time, the Arabian peninsula had a much better climate and sustained great cities and vast stretches of irrigated agricultural land. This was the world of the fabled Queen of Sheba, whose people conducted the most far-reaching expeditions along the East Coast of Africa.
Until comparatively recent times knowledge of the Arabian Peninsula was limited to that provided by ancient Greek and Roman writers and by early Arab geographers; much of this material was unreliable. In the 20th century, however, archaeological exploration has added considerably to the knowledge of the area.
Land of the mountains and the small valleys among them, area of an unprecedented Wadi-phenomenon at Hadramawt, focal point of land routes and desert routes of trade, territory encompassing long and rich coastal strips, turned to various seas, to the Red Sea and to the Indian Ocean as we call these seas now, Sheba has long been the most African part of …. Asia, or… the Asiatic part of Africa! Undoubtedly, Sheba linked India with Egypt, East Africa with Assyria, Persia with Sudan, Rome with China, all ways - land, desert and sea - involved.
But whenever a certain expansion of the many, various and
diversified Sabean peoples, tribes and states took place in the
past, it was manifested in Africa. This is probably due to physical delimitations, the Oman coastal strip being too limited a place for expansion, the Hedjaz coastal strip being an uninviting place, the greatest part of the peninsula being desert (Rub' al Khali), and other lands being simply … too far! What is closest to Sheba is either the high seas or Africa…
Sheba goes back to the middle of the 8th century BCE. It is a
reference to tribute and gifts presented to the Assyrian emperor
Tiglat-Pileser (Tukulti - apil - Esharra) III (745 - 727) by Sheba, as well as by Arabs of the Hedjaz, and other countries. Despite the Assyrian and the Babylonian expansion in the East and the North of the peninsula (Yathribu was the summer residence of the Babylonian Nabonid Kings in the 6th century BCE), Sheba was too far for the Sargonid Assyrian empire and the Nabonid Babylonian royal pretensions.
Assurbanipal (669 - 625) ruled from Central Iran to Upper Egypt, and from the eastern coast of the Persian Gulf to the western coast of Turkey, but Sheba escaped his dominion by simply paying tribute. Cambyses, the Achaemenid Shah of Iran, in the second half of the 6th
century, was ruling from Napata of Kush (today's Karima in Sudan) to Central Asia, but again Sheba was spared! Alexander the Great, at the end of the 4th century, invaded all the lands between Macedonia and India, but Pentapotamia (Pundjab), not Sheba, seemed closer to either Pella (his first capital) or Babylon (his ultimately chosen capital)!
During all these long centuries, the peoples and the tribes of
ancient Sheba could not be kept united under the scepter of a
descendant of the famous Queen Balqis. Yet, writing was introduced as early as the 6th century BCE, or to put it better, it was invented! It would be essential at this point to stress the originality of the event! At a moment the Assyrian - Babylonian cuneiform ('al kitabeh al mesmariyeh' in Arabic), syllabogrammatic Writing (the term means that the cuneiform characters were of syllabic phonetic value) was
diffused in Iran (introduction of the old Persian Ach
Shibam's skyscrapers, in Hadrmout Gov.
aemenid cuneiform writing system that was in use for about 300 to 400
years), and the Phoenician and the Aramaic alphabetic writings were
diffused throughout the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East
(more precisely among Greeks, Israelites, Romans, and Persians), the
different peoples of Ancient Sheba, instead of adopting a foreign
writing system, developed their own syllabogrammatic writing, no less
than 1200 years before the arrival of Islam!
Through a historical overview of almost 1400 years of Sabaean
pre-Islamic history (based on Assyrian - Babylonian, Sabaean,
Persian, Ancient Greek, Latin and Aramaic sources), we can get a
clear diagram of several basic cultural characteristics.
The geographical divisions of the land of Sheba, many mountains and
plains, various coastal strips, all oriented differently to the outer
world, were probably the reason of the political disunion that mostly
characterized Sheba. Of course, this was repeated throughout Islamic
times, but it would be wrong for us to perceive disunion in terms of
enmity, fratricide or civil wars. We should rather see the various
ancient Sabaean states in terms of specific task assignments.
The war of Sheba and Himyar against Qataban (around 115 BCE) is rather
due to Sabaean and Himyarite reactions to the Qatabanic performance
in respect of preserving the Sabaean thalassocracy and the complete
navigation control throughout the Red Sea at a moment of rise of
Ptolemaic Egyptian seafaring and sea trade in which Aramaeans seem
definitely involved. The different Sabaean states, Saba, Awsan,
Hadramawt, Main, Timna, Qataban, Raydhan and Himyar, were often in
agreement with regard to the role each one had to play in its own
domain with regard to a generally conceived Sabaean interest.
However, reunification considerations we attest only as late as the
end of the 2nd century CE, and it is the Himyarites, who seem to be
more conscious in this regard.
Sabaean expansion in Africa, in terms of population, language and
scripture.
Despite the lack of unity, or perhaps due to this phenomenon, many
waves of Sabaeans have reportedly crossed the Bab el Mandeb straits,
and settled either in the African Red Sea shore opposite the Sabaean
coast, or further in the African inland.
What the famous Abyssinian legend and the great epic text Kebra
Negast (the Glory of the Kings) narrate is rather an extension to the
Biblical and the Quranic texts' references to the legendary Queen of
Sheba - Balqis - Makeda, and to her contacts with Solomon, the King
of Israel. But it reflects perfectly well the reality of the
millennium-long, repeated Sabaean waves of Asiatic immigrants to the
Horn of Africa area.
Menelik, as son to Solomon and Balqis - Makeda,
is an abstraction made for poetic reasons within the text, and it
concerns all the numerous Sabaeans, who repeatedly and in successive
waves expressed their predilection for Africa.
It is not only literary sources and archaeological evidence that
testify to this event; full epigraphic and linguistic support is
offered for this assertion, since the ancient Abyssinian language and
scripture (dating back to the early Christian era) have derived from
the earlier attested ancient Sabaean semitic dialect and
syllabogrammatic writing. Gueze, as is called the ancient Abyssinian
language, is very important to Christianity, as one of the languages
and the scriptures of the Evangiles and the New Testament - along
with Aramaic - Syriac, Greek, Coptic, Latin, Armenian and Georgian.
Gueze is the ancestral linguistic form of modern Abyssinian languages
like Tigrinia, Tigre and Amharic (Amarinia) that are widely spoken in
Eritrea and Abyssinia.
The name itself of Abyssinia ('-b-sh-t, Abashat) is mentioned in
Ancient Sabaean texts and epigraphic documentation as the name of a
… Sabaean tribe! This tribe, or at least a sizeable part of it,
migrated to Africa and transferred there its name that lasts until
now, as ultimate proof of the Sabaean origin of a large part of the
populations of Abyssinia and Eritrea.
'Returning' the compliment, Gueze - that was never lost, since it
still is the religious language and scripture of the Christians of
Ethiopia and Eritrea - helped a lot in the deciphering of the ancient
Sabaean epigraphic monuments. It was as useful as Coptic to
Champollion deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphics. Without Coptic,
Champollion would have failed; without Gueze the likes of Conti
Rossini and Rhodokanakes would have failed too.
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