This article is an edition of an inscription in a variety of Thamudic that contains several glyph shapes that have not been found together in the same inscription, and are typical of inscriptions from central and southern Arabia. Interesting glyph shapes include the glyph shapes for ', w, and g. A personal name formed on a morphological H-Causative verb, familiar from the South Arabian, as well as Dadanitic inscriptions, is attested in this inscription. The formula found in the inscription is paralleled most closely by those typical of Thamudic C inscriptions. Finally, the article discusses the implications of the combination of these features, typically associated with different scripts and geographic distribution, for the field of ANA epi...
Literacy was widespread in large areas of ancient Arabia, as shown by the huge numbers of graffiti b...
International audienceThis article is the edition and commentary of an inscription discovered some t...
The primary aim of this article is to present newly found ancient North Arabian inscriptions discove...
This article is an edition of an inscription in a variety of Thamudic that contains several glyph sh...
This essay is an analytical study of sixteen new Ancient North Arabian inscriptions collected by the...
This paper publishes three new Safaitic-Greek bilingual inscriptions. One of them is the first to co...
The aim of this study is to shed light on a new Ancient North Arabian inscription containing a refer...
This paper aims to study a new Safaitic inscription documented from the eastern Jordanian Badiyah. T...
This article presents four new Nabataean inscriptions from Umm el-Jimāl in north-eastern Jordan. The...
This paper will produce a new edition of the Rīʿ al-Zallālah inscription, discussing in detail its p...
This work comprises a linguistic survey of the Ancient North Arabian (ANA) epigraphic material from ...
This article publishes eighteen inscriptions: seventeen in the Nabataean script and one in the pre-I...
This paper discusses four new Safaitic inscriptions from Jordan. Two of the funerary inscriptions sh...
International audienceThis article examines the divine figures attested in the Nabataean, Nabataeo-A...
This contribution is devoted to four Dadanitic graffiti from the Region of Taymā ʾ – North-West Arab...
Literacy was widespread in large areas of ancient Arabia, as shown by the huge numbers of graffiti b...
International audienceThis article is the edition and commentary of an inscription discovered some t...
The primary aim of this article is to present newly found ancient North Arabian inscriptions discove...
This article is an edition of an inscription in a variety of Thamudic that contains several glyph sh...
This essay is an analytical study of sixteen new Ancient North Arabian inscriptions collected by the...
This paper publishes three new Safaitic-Greek bilingual inscriptions. One of them is the first to co...
The aim of this study is to shed light on a new Ancient North Arabian inscription containing a refer...
This paper aims to study a new Safaitic inscription documented from the eastern Jordanian Badiyah. T...
This article presents four new Nabataean inscriptions from Umm el-Jimāl in north-eastern Jordan. The...
This paper will produce a new edition of the Rīʿ al-Zallālah inscription, discussing in detail its p...
This work comprises a linguistic survey of the Ancient North Arabian (ANA) epigraphic material from ...
This article publishes eighteen inscriptions: seventeen in the Nabataean script and one in the pre-I...
This paper discusses four new Safaitic inscriptions from Jordan. Two of the funerary inscriptions sh...
International audienceThis article examines the divine figures attested in the Nabataean, Nabataeo-A...
This contribution is devoted to four Dadanitic graffiti from the Region of Taymā ʾ – North-West Arab...
Literacy was widespread in large areas of ancient Arabia, as shown by the huge numbers of graffiti b...
International audienceThis article is the edition and commentary of an inscription discovered some t...
The primary aim of this article is to present newly found ancient North Arabian inscriptions discove...