Pre-Islamic Arabia

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The history of Pre-Islamic Arabia before the rise of Islam in the 630s is not known in great detail. Archaeological exploration in the Arabian peninsula has been sparse; indigenous written sources are limited to the many inscriptions and coins from southern Arabia. Existing material consists primarily of written sources from other traditions (such as Egyptians, Greeks, Persians, Romans, etc.) and oral traditions later recorded by Islamic scholars.

The study of Pre-Islamic Arabia is important to Islamic studies as it provides the context for the development of Islam.

There are epigraphic Old South Arabian sources from about the 9th century BC, and Old North Arabian one from about the 6th century BC. From the 3rd century AD, Arabian history becomes more tangible with the rise of the Himyarite Kingdom, and with the appearance of the Qahtanis in the Levant and the gradual assimilation of the Nabateans by the Qahtanis in the early centuries AD, a tendency of expansion that finally culminated in the explosive Muslim conquests of the 7th century.

Contents

[edit] Bronze Age Arabia

[edit] Early Semitic migrations

Further information: Proto-Semitic

The earliest known events in Arabian history are migrations from the peninsula into neighbouring areas.[1] In the 3rd millennium BC, Semitic-speaking peoples migrated from the Arabian peninsula into Mesopotamia, settled in Sumer, and eventually established the Akkadian Empire under Sargon of Akkad (c. 2300).[2] The Babylonians and Assyrians were later descended from the Semitic Akkadians.

The East Semitic group established itself at Ebla. The Amorites were West Semitic speakers who left Arabia in the late 3rd millennium and settled along the Levant. Some of these migrants evolved into the Amorites and Canaanites of later times.[3][4]

[edit] Magan and A'ad

Further information: A'ad and Magan
  • Magan is attested as the name of a trading partner of the Sumer. It is often assumed to be located in Oman.
  • The A'adids established themselves in South Arabia settleing to the East of the Qahtan tribe. They established the Kingdom of A'ad around the 10th century BC to the 3rd century AD.

The A'ad nation were known to the Greeks and Egyptians. Claudius Ptolemy's Geographos (2nd century AD) refers to the place by a Hellenized version of the inhabitants of the capital Ubar.

[edit] Thamud

Picture of thamudi house carved from mountain
Picture of thamudi house carved from mountain

The Thamud (Arabic: ثمود) were a people of ancient Arabia, either a tribe or a group of tribes, that created a large kingdom and flourished from 3000 BC to 200 BC. Recent archaeological work has revealed numerous Thamudic rock writings and pictures not only in Yemen but also throughout central Arabia.

They are mentioned in sources such as the Quran, Old Arabian poetry, Assyrian annals (Tamudi), in a Greek temple inscription from the northwest Hijaz of 169 AD, in a 5th-century Byzantine source and in Old North Arabian graffiti around Tayma.

They are mentioned in the victory annals of the Babylonian King, Sargon II (8th Century BC), who defeated these people in a campaign in northern Arabia. The Greeks also refer to these people as "Tamudaei", i.e. "Thamud", in the writings of Aristo, Ptolemy, and Pliny. Before the rise of Islam, approximately between 400-600 AD, the Thamud totally disappeared.

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[edit] Iron Age South Arabia

The Bar'an temple in Marib. Built in the 8th century BC and performed its function for nearly 1000 years.
The Bar'an temple in Marib. Built in the 8th century BC and performed its function for nearly 1000 years.
Sabaean inscription adressed to the moon-god Almaqah, mentioning five South Arabian gods, two reigning sovereigns and two governors, 7th century BCE.
Sabaean inscription adressed to the moon-god Almaqah, mentioning five South Arabian gods, two reigning sovereigns and two governors, 7th century BCE.
A Griffon from the royal palace at Shabwa, the capital city of Hadhramaut.
A Griffon from the royal palace at Shabwa, the capital city of Hadhramaut.

[edit] Kingdom of Ma'in (9th century BC – 1st century BC)

Main article: Minaean

During Minaean rule the capital was at Karna (now known as Sadah). Their other important city was Yathill (now known as Baraqish). The Minaean Kingdom was centered in northwestern Yemen, with most of its cities laying along the Wadi Madhab. Minaic inscriptions have been found far afield of the Kingdom of Ma'in, as far away as al-`Ula in northwestern Saudi Arabia and even on the island of Delos and in Egypt. It was the first of the South Arabian kingdoms to end, and the Minaic language died around 100 CE.[5]

[edit] Kingdom of Saba (9th century BC – 275AD)

Main article: Sabaeans

During Sabaean rule, trade and agriculture flourished generating much wealth and prosperity. The Sabaean kingdom is located in what is now the Aseer region in southwestern Yemen, and its capital, Ma'rib, is located near what is now Yemen's modern capital, Sana'a.[6] According to South Arabian tradition, the eldest son of Noah, Shem, founded the city of Ma'rib.

During Sabaean rule, Yemen was called "Arabia Felix" by the Romans who were impressed by its wealth and prosperity. The Roman emperor Augustus sent a military expedition to conquer the "Arabia Felix", under the orders of Aelius Gallus. After an unsuccessful siege of Ma'rib, the Roman general retreated to Egypt, while his fleet destroyed the port of Aden in order to guarantee the Roman merchant route to India.

The success of the Kingdom was based on the cultivation and trade of spices and aromatics including frankincense and myrrh. These were exported to the Mediterranean, India, and Abyssinia where they were greatly prized by many cultures, using camels on routes through Arabia, and to India by sea.

During the 8th and 7th century BCE, there was a close contact of cultures between the Kingdom of Dʿmt in northern Ethiopia and Eritrea and Saba'. Though the civilization was indigenous and the royal inscriptions were written in a sort of proto-Ethiosemitic, there were also some Sabaean immigrants in the kingdom as evidenced by a few of the Dʿmt inscriptions.[7][8]

Agriculture in Yemen thrived during this time due to an advanced irrigation system which consisted of large water tunnels in mountains, and dams. The most impressive of these earthworks, known as the Ma'rib Dam was built ca. 700 BCE, provided irrigation for about 25,000 acres (101 km²) of land[9] and stood for over a millennium, finally collapsing in 570 CE after centuries of neglect.

[edit] Kingdom of Hadhramaut (8th century BC – 3rd century AD)

Main article: Hadhramaut

The first known inscriptions of Hadramaut are known from the 8th century BCE. It was first referenced by an outside civilization in an Old Sabaic inscription of Karab'il Watar from the early 7th century BCE, in which the King of Hadramaut, Yada`'il, is mentioned as being one of his allies. When the Minaeans took control of the caravan routes in the 4th century BCE, however, Hadramaut became one of its confederates, probably because of commercial interests. It later became independent and was invaded by the growing kingdom of Himyar toward the end of the first century BCE, but it was able to repel the attack. Hadramaut annexed Qataban in the second half of the 2nd century AD, reaching its greatest size. The kingdom of Hadramaut was eventually conquered by the Himyarite king Shammar Yuhar`ish around 300 CE, unifying all of the South Arabian kingdoms.[10]

[edit] Kingdom of Awsan (8th century BC – 6th century BC)

Main article: Awsan

The ancient Kingdom of Awsan in South Arabia (modern Yemen), with a capital at Hagar Yahirr in the wadi Markha, to the south of the wadi Bayhan, is now marked by a tell or artificial mound, which is locally named Hagar Asfal.

[edit] The Achaemenids in Northern Arabia

Main article: Arabia (satrapy)

Achaemenid Arabia corresponded to the lands between Egypt and Mesopotamia, later known as Arabia Petraea. According to Herodotus, Cambyses did not subdue the Arabs when he attacked Egypt in 525 BCE. His successor Darius the Great does not mention the Arabs in the Behistun inscription from the first years of his reign, but mentions them in later texts. This suggests that Darius conquered this part of Arabia.[11][12]

[edit] Nabateans

Main article: Nabateans

The Nabateans are not to be found among the tribes that are listed in Arab genealogies because the Nabatean kingdom ended a long time before the coming of Islam. They settled east of the Syro-African rift between the Dead Sea and the Red Sea, that is, in the land that had once been Edom. And although the first sure reference to them dates from 312 BC, it is possible that they were present much earlier.

Petra (from the Latin petrae, meaning 'of rock') lies in a great rift valley east of Wadi `Araba in Jordan about 80 kilometers south of the Dead Sea. It came into prominence in the late first century BCE (BC) through the success of the spice trade. The city was the principal city of ancient Nabataea and was famous above all for two things: its trade and its hydraulic engineering systems. It was locally autonomous until the reign of Trajan, but it flourished under Roman rule. The town grew up around its Colonnaded Street in the first century and by the mid-first century had witnessed rapid urbanization. The quarries were probably opened in this period, and there followed virtually continuous building through the first and second centuries CE.

[edit] Palmyra

For more details on this topic, see Palmyra.

Palmyra was made part of the Roman province of Syria during the reign of Tiberius (1437). It steadily grew in importance as a trade route linking Persia, India, China, and the Roman empire. In 129, Hadrian visited the city and was so enthralled by it that he proclaimed it a free city and renamed it Palmyra Hadriana. In the mid-first century, Palmyra, a wealthy and elegant city located along the caravan routes linking Persia with the Mediterranean ports of Roman Syria and Phoenicia, came under Roman control. During the following period of great prosperity, the Arab citizens of Palmyra adopted customs and modes of dress from both the Iranian Parthian world to the east and the Graeco-Roman west.

[edit] Qataban & Himyar in South Arabia

[edit] Kingdom of Qataban (4th century BC – 3rd century AD)

Main article: Qataban

Qataban was one of the ancient Yemeni kingdoms which thrived in the Baihan valley. Like the other Southern Arabian kingdoms it gained great wealth from the trade of frankincense and myrrh incense which were burned at altars. The capital of Qataban was named Timna and was located on the trade route which passed through the other kingdoms of Hadramaut, Saba and Ma'in. The chief deity of the Qatabanians was Amm, or "Uncle" and the people called themselves the "children of Amm".

[edit] Kingdom of Himyar (2nd Century BC – 525 AD)

Statue of Ammaalay,1st century BC, Yemen
Statue of Ammaalay,1st century BC, Yemen
Main article: Himyar

The Himyarites rebelled against Qataban and eventually united Southwestern Arabia, controlling the Red Sea as well as the coasts of the Gulf of Aden. From their capital city, the Himyarite Kings launched successful military campaigns, and had stretched its domain at times as far east to the Persian Gulf and as far north to the Arabian Desert.

During the 3rd century CE, the South Arabian kingdoms were in continuous conflict with one another. Gadarat of Aksum began to interfere in South Arabian affairs, signing an alliance with Saba', and a Himyarite text notes that Hadramaut and Qataban were also all allied against the kingdom. As a result of this, the Kingdom of Aksum was able to capture the Himyarite capital of Thifar in the first quarter of the 3rd century. However, the alliances did not last, and Sha`ir Awtar of Saba' unexpectedly turned on Hadramaut, allying again with Aksum and taking its capital in 225. Himyar then allied with Saba' and invaded the newly taken Aksumite territories, retaking Thifar, which had been under the control of Gadarat's son Beygat, and pushing Aksum back into the Tihama.[13][14]

[edit] Aksumite occupation of Yemen (525 AD – 570 AD)

They established their capital at Thifar (now just a small village in the Ibb region) and gradually absorbed the Sabaean kingdom. They traded from the port of Mawza'a on the Red Sea. Dhu Nuwas, a Himyarite king, changed the state religion to Judaism in the beginning of the 6th century and began to massacre the Christians. Outraged, Kaleb, the Christian King of Aksum with the encouragement of the Byzantine Emperor Justin I invaded and annexed Yemen. The Aksumites controlled Himyar and attempted to invade Mecca in the year 570CE, Eastern Yemen remained allied to the Sassanids via tribal alliances with the Lakhmids, which brought the Sassanid army into Yemen ending the Aksumite period.

[edit] Sassanid period (570 AD – 630 AD)

The Persian king Khosrau I, sent troops under the command of Vahriz (Persian اسپهبد وهرز), who helped the semi-legendary Saif bin Dhi Yazan to drive the Ethiopian Aksumites out of Yemen. Southern Arabia became a Persian dominion under a Yemenite vassal and thus came within the sphere of influence of the Sassanid Empire. After the dissolvment of the Lakhmids another army was sent to Yemen making it a province of the Sassanid Empire under a Persian satrap. Following the death of Khosrau II in 628, then the Persian governor in Southern Arabia, Badhan, converted to Islam and Yemen followed the new religion.

[edit] Qahtani expansion to the North

Further information: History of the LevantSyria (Roman province)Arabia Petraea, and Arab

In Sassanid times, Arabia Petraea was a border province between the Roman and Persian empires, and from the early centuries AD was increasingly affected by South Arabian influence, notably with the Ghassanids migrating north from the 3rd century.

[edit] Ghassanids, Lakhmids and Kindites

Further information: LakhmidsGhassanidsKindites, and Kahlan

The Ghassanids,Lakhmids and Kindites were the last major migration of non-muslims out of Yemen to the north and southwestern borders.

  • The Ghassanids revived the Semitic presence in the then Hellenized Syria. They mainly settled the Hauran region and spread to modern Lebanon, Palestine and Jordan. The Ghassanids held Syria until engulfed by the expansion of Islam.
Coin showing the Roman Emperor, Philip the Arab.
Coin showing the Roman Emperor, Philip the Arab.

Greeks and Romans referred to all the nomadic population of the desert in the Near East as Arabi. The Greeks called Yemen "Arabia Felix".[1], The Romans called the vassal nomadic states within the Roman Empire "Arabia Petraea" after the city of Petra, and called unconquered deserts bordering the empire to the south and east Arabia Magna.[2]

  • The Lakhmids settled the mid Tigris region around their capital Al-hira they ended up allying with the Sassanid against the Ghassanids and the Byzantine Empire. The Lakhmids contested control of the Central Arabian tribes with the Kindites with the Lakhmids eventually destroying Kinda in 540 after the fall of their main ally Himyar. The Sassanids dissolved the Lakhmid kingdom in 602.
  • The Kindites migrated from Yemen along with the Ghassanids and Lakhmids, but were turned back in Bahrain by the Abdul Qais Rabi'a tribe. They returned to Yemen and allied themselves with the Himyarites who installed them as a vassal kingdom that ruled Central Arbia from Qaryah dhat Kahl (the present-day Qaryat al-Faw) in Central Arabia. They ruled much of the Northern/Central Arabian peninsula until the fall of the Himyarites in 525AD.

[edit] Bedouin tribes

Approximate locations of some of the important tribes of the Arabian Peninsula at the dawn of Islam (cities are indicated in white).
Approximate locations of some of the important tribes of the Arabian Peninsula at the dawn of Islam (cities are indicated in white).
Main articles: Tribes of Arabia and Bedouin

Much of the Arab lineages provided before Ma'ad relies on biblical genealogy. The general consensus among 14th century Arabic genealogists was that Arabs are of three kinds:

  1. "Perishing Arabs": These are the ancients of whose history little is known. They include ‘Ad, Thamud, Tasm, Jadis, Imlaq and others. Jadis and Tasm perished because of genocide. Ad and Thamud perished because of their decadence. Some people in the past doubted their existence, but Imlaq is the singular form of 'Amaleeq and is probably synonymous to the biblical Amalek.
  2. "Pure Arabs": They allegedly originated from the progeny of Ya‘rub bin Yashjub bin Qahtan so were also called Qahtanian Arabs.
  3. "Arabized Arabs": They allegedly originated from the progeny of Ishmael Son of the biblical patriarch Abraham and were also called ‘Adnani Arabs.

[edit] Religion

For more details on Ancient Semitic religion, see Arabian mythology.

There is very little material on which to base a description of pre-Islamic religion, particularly in Mecca and the Hijaz. The Qur'an and the hadith, or recorded oral traditions, give some hints as to this religion. Islamic commentators have elaborated these hints into a coherent account that most academics doubt in part or in whole.
Christianity is known to have been active in the region prior to the rise of Islam, especially unorthodox, possibly gnostic forms of it.[15]

[edit] Rise of Islam

Further information: Historiography of early Islam and Rashidun
See also: Meccan Trade And The Rise Of Islam

[edit] References

  1. ^ Philip Khuri Hitti (2002), History of the Arabs, Revised: 10th Edition
  2. ^ Akkadians Study, Washington State University
  3. ^ http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9007224/Amorites The Amorites migration from Arabia
  4. ^ http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9007224/Amorite The Amorites origin – Britannica
  5. ^ Nebes, Norbert. "Epigraphic South Arabian", Encyclopaedia: D-Happ.334.
  6. ^ http://www.iraqandiraqis.com/Arab%20history.htm
  7. ^ Sima, Alexander. "Dʿmt" in Siegbert von Uhlig, ed., Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: D-Ha (Wiesbaden:Harrassowitz Verlag, 2005), pp.185.
  8. ^ Munro-Hay, Stuart. Aksum: A Civilization of Late Antiquity, (Edinburgh: University Press, 1991), pp.58.
  9. ^ Culture of Yemen - History and ethnic relations, Urbanism, architecture, and the use of space
  10. ^ Müller, Walter W. "Ḥaḍramawt", Encyclopaedia: D-Ha, pp.965–6.
  11. ^ Arabia
  12. ^ Encyclopaedia Iranica
  13. ^ Sima, Alexander. "GDR(T)", Encyclopaedia: D-Ha, p. 718–9.
  14. ^ Munro-Hay, Aksum, p. 72.
  15. ^ The Muslim Jesus, Tarif Khalidi, Harvard University Press, 2001, P.9, P.17

[edit] Literature

  • Berkey, Jonathan P. — The Formation of Islam, Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN 978-0-521-58813-3
  • Bulliet, Richard W. — The Camel and the Wheel, Harvard University Press, 1975, ISBN 0-674-09130-2
  • Crone, Patricia — Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam, Blackwell, 1987, as reprinted by Gorgias Press, 2004, ISBN 1-59333-102-9
  • Donner, Fred — The Early Islamic Conquests, Princeton University Press, 1981, ISBN 0-691-10182-5
  • Hawting, G.R. — The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam: From Polemic to History, Cambridge University Press, 1999
  • Hoyland, Robert G. — Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam, Routledge, 2001
Further information: Women in Arab societies#Arab women before Islam

Aisha is quoted as saying there was four kinds of marriage in the pre-Islamic era, one of them being a form of polyandry called Nikah Ijtimah.

[edit] See also

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