Acquired at Petra, 50 miles south of the Dead Sea, in December 1974. Dated 2nd c. BC to 2nd c. A.D. Petra, formerly called Sela, capital of Edom, lies 50 miles south of the Dead Sea. Straddling the great trade routes, several wealthy cultures centered about this marvelous city carved in the sandstone wall of the box canyon. The narrow entrance made it easy to defend. The Nabataean Empire (ca. 170 BC – AD 106) with its series of Kings bearing the name of Aretas controlled the desert routes east and south of Syria-Palestine until Trajan’s conquest (AD 106). During this century Petra remained a prosperous center until the trade shifted to Palmyra. The Nabataean potters developed a distinctive ware unsurpassed in Palestine, compared by some t...
Religion in Nabataea was a confluence of native and foreign deities and practices which spread acros...
The Nabataeans, best known today for the spectacular remains of their capital at Petra in southern J...
Morphological and macroscopic analysis of 2nd\u20133rd/4th century CE pottery from Taym\u101\u2be (S...
The Roman Aqaba Project seeks to reconstruct diachronically the economic history of the ancient port...
We do not know the exact origins of the Nabataeans; they are a nomadic people from Arabia who settle...
In the desert regions of the Southern Levant, the dating of Nabataean sherds and vessels is a critic...
International audienceThe small settlement of aṭ-Ṭuwayr, located 34 km east of the ancient oasis of ...
The Nabataeans, who founded the city of Petra (southern Jordan) in the late first millennium BCE, ar...
Abstract: It is well known that the Nabataeans adopted and modified foreign cultic and funerary pra...
The remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period apsidal building in the ...
International audienceThe remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period ap...
The caravan activity that contributed to the wealth and renown of the Nabataean kingdom during the H...
The Negev region of southern Israel enjoyed a florescence of urbanization in the Roman and Byzantine...
Głównym celem pracy było przedstawienie dotychczasowych ustaleń dotyczących ceramiki określanej jako...
The Roman Emperor Trajan annexed the Nabataean Kingdom in 106 A.D. apparently in a peaceful way. He ...
Religion in Nabataea was a confluence of native and foreign deities and practices which spread acros...
The Nabataeans, best known today for the spectacular remains of their capital at Petra in southern J...
Morphological and macroscopic analysis of 2nd\u20133rd/4th century CE pottery from Taym\u101\u2be (S...
The Roman Aqaba Project seeks to reconstruct diachronically the economic history of the ancient port...
We do not know the exact origins of the Nabataeans; they are a nomadic people from Arabia who settle...
In the desert regions of the Southern Levant, the dating of Nabataean sherds and vessels is a critic...
International audienceThe small settlement of aṭ-Ṭuwayr, located 34 km east of the ancient oasis of ...
The Nabataeans, who founded the city of Petra (southern Jordan) in the late first millennium BCE, ar...
Abstract: It is well known that the Nabataeans adopted and modified foreign cultic and funerary pra...
The remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period apsidal building in the ...
International audienceThe remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period ap...
The caravan activity that contributed to the wealth and renown of the Nabataean kingdom during the H...
The Negev region of southern Israel enjoyed a florescence of urbanization in the Roman and Byzantine...
Głównym celem pracy było przedstawienie dotychczasowych ustaleń dotyczących ceramiki określanej jako...
The Roman Emperor Trajan annexed the Nabataean Kingdom in 106 A.D. apparently in a peaceful way. He ...
Religion in Nabataea was a confluence of native and foreign deities and practices which spread acros...
The Nabataeans, best known today for the spectacular remains of their capital at Petra in southern J...
Morphological and macroscopic analysis of 2nd\u20133rd/4th century CE pottery from Taym\u101\u2be (S...