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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Sabean Funerary Stone Plaque, 400 BCE - 200 BCE

Sabean Funerary Stone Plaque, 400 BCE - 200 BCE

Limestone
height 43.4 cm
height 17 1/8 in
AM.0140
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The ancient kingdom of Saba ruled over the lands of southern Arabia, centered in modern day Yemen. Saba is perhaps better known as Sheba, the Hebrew word for the kingdom,...
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The ancient kingdom of Saba ruled over the lands of southern Arabia, centered in modern day Yemen. Saba is perhaps better known as Sheba, the Hebrew word for the kingdom, whose famous Queen was recounted as having visited Solomon in the pages of the Old Testament. Biblical accounts speak of the wealth of this ancient civilization of traders and merchants, and modern archaeological excavations confirm these reports. Ruins of fortresses and walled towns are evident and remnants of their extensive irrigation system that turned the desert into a paradise still cover the land. Although gold and silver deposits were present, the chief source of their vast wealth was derived from their veritable monopoly of two of the most coveted materials in ancient times: frankincense and myrrh, resinous gums obtained from certain trees that only grow in Southern Arabia and were literally worth their weight in gold. There was not a temple or wealthy house in the ancient world, from Babylon to Rome, where one would not smell the fragrant scents of these incenses. In addition, a trade route that connected India to Egypt that passed through their capital of Marib was another major source of wealth. In the 1st Century A.D., the Ptolemaic Greeks discovered a sea route from India directly to the port of Alexandria, eliminating Saba from her lucrative trade and ushering in the decline of Sabean prosperity.

This magnificent stone funerary plaque is a stunning example of the sophistication of Sabean art. The following is a transcription of the analysis kindly provided by Professor Kitchen (University of Liverpool).

‘This ‘headpiece’ was originally inserted into a matching rectangular recess, cut into a tall stela (like a narrow quadrangular pillar), to form a tombstone plus ‘formal’ portrait. For intact examples, cf. St. John Simpson (ed.), ‘Queen of Sheba, Treasures from Ancient Yemen,’ (London, British Museum, 2002), p. 198, nos. 277-278.
Facial tombstone in moderately high relief, narrower than most specimens. Same basic features: thin hair-line across the top, semi-circular ears, curving/level eyebrows over hollowed-out eyes and slit mouth between well-formed lips. A narrow ‘fringe’ beard is also evident. Below the whole is a 4-letter name, M s k m, Mashkum, in Minean with related forms in both Sabean and Hadramautic (cf. R. L. Cleveland, ‘An Ancient South-Arabian Necropoli …Timna Cemetary,’ (Baltimore, 1965), p. 548 and S.F. Al-Said, ‘Die Personennamen in den Minäischen Inschriften,’ (Wiesbaden, 1995), p. 162, RES 2777, 2819). With only three letters to work on, it is hazardous to offer a palaeographic dating. What we have is consistent with somewhere about the 4th-3rd centuries BC, across Saba, Main and Qataban.’
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