Abstract
With the devastating air and ground war in Yemen now in its seventh year, archaeological
excavation, not to mention topographical surveys, have had to be abandoned throughout the
country. So it is heartening to learn that new painstaking scrutiny of satellite aerial imagery by
EAMENA researchers at Oxford University have revealed two previously unknown town sites on
the eastern side of the Tihamah coastal strip. Satellite imagery of central Tihamah, where
widespread farming disturbs the ground, has not revealed architectural remains. However on
the east, two small towns previously unknown have now been discerned. One site is situated on
the north bank of Wadi Mawr where it flows out from the foothills and enters the plain, and the
other is a similar site against a spur of hillside on the southern flank of Wadi Shu'aynah east of
Hays. Both these 'newly discovered' sites occur on major access routes leading into the
foothills of the highlands of central Yemen. These two sites share certain architectural features
including earthen rampart walls which could mean they are from the same period, if only we can
learn more about them from afar.
The panel speaker will discuss what era these sites might date from and thus who lived there.
Textual sources rich in historical place names and/or tribal names have been collected in an
unpublished Tihamah Gazetteer that might help. Notable are the chronicles of al-Khazraji, and
local histories and biographies by Ibn al-Mujawir, al-Sharji, Watyut, Umarah, Ibn al-Dayba et al,
and by early western travellers such as Carsten Neibuhr in the 18th century.
Without the ability to collect ceramic remains on the ground at present, establishing habitation
periods is speculative at best. As soon as hostilities cease and Yemenis return to peaceful
coexistence, a program of topographical surveys could be coordinated with GOAM, the official
historical research institute in Sanaa. Analysis of ceramic remains would tell us enough to date
these sites using well established sherd sequences from the Royal Ontario Museum
excavations at Zabid. The point is to encourage as broad a conversation as possible to help
understand these finds in the aerial satellite record.
Discipline
Geographic Area
Sub Area
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