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Ancient Civilizations, Empires & Kingdoms of the Arab World

Al-Magar civilization


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Map showing location of Al Magar site in Saudi Arabia
Location In the southwestern central part of the Arabian Peninsula
Region Najd
Coordinates
17px-WMA_button2b.png
19.744213°N 44.620447°E
Type Ancient
Part of Central Arabia
History
Founded
c. 8000 BC
Abandoned c. 7000 BC
Periods Neolithic

horse-map-sm.jpg

horse-hills.jpg

Al-Magar lies amid the low hills and sandy valleys of southwestern Saudi Arabia, which until 4000 or 5000 years ago were as verdant as the African savannah today.


Al-Magar was a prehistoric civilization whose epicenter lied in modern-day southwestern Najd in Saudi Arabia. Al-Magar is characterized as being one of the first civilizations in the world where widespread domestication of animals occurred, particularly the horse, during the Neolithic period.[1]

The inhabitants of Al-Magar were also one of the first communities in the world to practice the art of agriculture and animal husbandry before climate changes in the region resulted in desertification and lived in stone houses built with dry masonry.[2]

Aside from horses animals such as sheep, goats, dogs, in particular of the Saluki race, ostriches, falcons and fish were discovered in the form of stone statues and rock engravings. Radiocarbon dating of these and other objects discovered indicate an age of about 9,000 years. The features of the al-Magar horse statues are similar to those of the original Arabian horse, characterized by its long neck and unique head shape. The size of a specific unearthed horse statute only comprising of its neck and chest was found to be about 100 cm, which could be the largest horse sculpture known in the world from such an early time period. The list of Neolithic stone tools found at al-Magar is long with over 80 objects and includes: arrows and spear heads, various scrapers, gravitation stones used in weaving looms, stone reels for spinning and weaving, tools for leather processing, soapstone pots decorated with geometrical motifs and plenty of grain grinders and pestles for pounding grains.


A few of the archeological findings discovered at the Al-Magar site.

The inhabitants of Al-Magar were thus likewise among some of the first communities in the world to practice the art of agriculture and animal husbandry before climate changes in the region resulted in desertification. The people of Al-Magar lived in stone houses built with dry masonry.[3] In addition to the above mentioned artifacts, a stone dagger was found bearing the same features and shape of the genuine Arabian Janbiya dagger used presently throughout the Arabian Peninsula. Moreover various rock art drawings in the area adjacent to al-Magar have been found. The petroglyphs were created by deep pecking and engraving the darkly patinated rock surface called desert varnish. Ibex, ostriches and other animals as well as human figures including a horse rider are carefully depicted. Another drawing shows a hunting scene with dogs following various ibex and five dogs surrounding a single ibex. The Neolithic Al-Magar Civilization combined four significant Arabian cultural characteristics. These include horsemanship and horse breeding, falconry as well as dog hunting and wearing the typical dagger as part of the Arabian traditional dress. The various impressive discoveries reflect the significance of the site as an important ancient civilization and gives it significant pre-historic importance with enough proof and detailed data for re-writing the Neolithic history of the Arabian Peninsula and Saudi Arabia in particular. Al-Magar also reveals additional information about the relationship between human economic activities and inherent climate change, how hunter-gatherer societies became sedentary, how they made use of natural resources available to them, and how they set into motion the domestication of plants and animals.[4][5][6]

In November 2017 hunting scenes showing images of most likely domesticated dogs, resembling the Canaan dog, wearing leashes were discovered in Shuwaymis, a hilly region of northwestern Saudi Arabia. These rock engravings date back more than 8000 years, making them the earliest depictions of dogs in the world.[7]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Magar

Desert finds challenge horse taming ideas

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-21538969

Carved in stone: were the Arabs the first to tame the horse?

https://www.thenational.ae/arts-cul...he-arabs-the-first-to-tame-the-horse-1.655413

Al-Magar Civilization

https://www.scta.gov.sa/en/antiquities-museums/archeologicaldiscovery/pages/Al-Magar.aspx

Discovery at Al-Magar

http://archive.aramcoworld.com/issue/201203/discovery.at.al-magar.htm

Al-Magar Civilization
Domestication of Horses in Saudi Arabia?


http://paleolithic-neolithic.com/overview/al-magar/

THE ROCK ART OF SAUDI ARABIA
Al-Magar

http://www.bradshawfoundation.com/middle_east/saudi_arabia_rock_art/al_magar.php

These may be the world’s first images of dogs—and they’re wearing leashes


http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017...first-images-dogs-and-they-re-wearing-leashes

Al-Magar civilization


8px-Archaeological_site_icon_%28red%29.svg.png

Map showing location of Al Magar site in Saudi Arabia
Location In the southwestern central part of the Arabian Peninsula
Region Najd
Coordinates
17px-WMA_button2b.png
19.744213°N 44.620447°E
Type Ancient
Part of Central Arabia
History
Founded
c. 8000 BC
Abandoned c. 7000 BC
Periods Neolithic

horse-map-sm.jpg

horse-hills.jpg

Al-Magar lies amid the low hills and sandy valleys of southwestern Saudi Arabia, which until 4000 or 5000 years ago were as verdant as the African savannah today.


Al-Magar was a prehistoric civilization whose epicenter lied in modern-day southwestern Najd in Saudi Arabia. Al-Magar is characterized as being one of the first civilizations in the world where widespread domestication of animals occurred, particularly the horse, during the Neolithic period.[1]

The inhabitants of Al-Magar were also one of the first communities in the world to practice the art of agriculture and animal husbandry before climate changes in the region resulted in desertification and lived in stone houses built with dry masonry.[2]

Aside from horses animals such as sheep, goats, dogs, in particular of the Saluki race, ostriches, falcons and fish were discovered in the form of stone statues and rock engravings. Radiocarbon dating of these and other objects discovered indicate an age of about 9,000 years. The features of the al-Magar horse statues are similar to those of the original Arabian horse, characterized by its long neck and unique head shape. The size of a specific unearthed horse statute only comprising of its neck and chest was found to be about 100 cm, which could be the largest horse sculpture known in the world from such an early time period. The list of Neolithic stone tools found at al-Magar is long with over 80 objects and includes: arrows and spear heads, various scrapers, gravitation stones used in weaving looms, stone reels for spinning and weaving, tools for leather processing, soapstone pots decorated with geometrical motifs and plenty of grain grinders and pestles for pounding grains.


A few of the archeological findings discovered at the Al-Magar site.

The inhabitants of Al-Magar were thus likewise among some of the first communities in the world to practice the art of agriculture and animal husbandry before climate changes in the region resulted in desertification. The people of Al-Magar lived in stone houses built with dry masonry.[3] In addition to the above mentioned artifacts, a stone dagger was found bearing the same features and shape of the genuine Arabian Janbiya dagger used presently throughout the Arabian Peninsula. Moreover various rock art drawings in the area adjacent to al-Magar have been found. The petroglyphs were created by deep pecking and engraving the darkly patinated rock surface called desert varnish. Ibex, ostriches and other animals as well as human figures including a horse rider are carefully depicted. Another drawing shows a hunting scene with dogs following various ibex and five dogs surrounding a single ibex. The Neolithic Al-Magar Civilization combined four significant Arabian cultural characteristics. These include horsemanship and horse breeding, falconry as well as dog hunting and wearing the typical dagger as part of the Arabian traditional dress. The various impressive discoveries reflect the significance of the site as an important ancient civilization and gives it significant pre-historic importance with enough proof and detailed data for re-writing the Neolithic history of the Arabian Peninsula and Saudi Arabia in particular. Al-Magar also reveals additional information about the relationship between human economic activities and inherent climate change, how hunter-gatherer societies became sedentary, how they made use of natural resources available to them, and how they set into motion the domestication of plants and animals.[4][5][6]

In November 2017 hunting scenes showing images of most likely domesticated dogs, resembling the Canaan dog, wearing leashes were discovered in Shuwaymis, a hilly region of northwestern Saudi Arabia. These rock engravings date back more than 8000 years, making them the earliest depictions of dogs in the world.[7]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Magar

Desert finds challenge horse taming ideas

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-21538969

Carved in stone: were the Arabs the first to tame the horse?

https://www.thenational.ae/arts-cul...he-arabs-the-first-to-tame-the-horse-1.655413

Al-Magar Civilization

https://www.scta.gov.sa/en/antiquities-museums/archeologicaldiscovery/pages/Al-Magar.aspx

Discovery at Al-Magar

http://archive.aramcoworld.com/issue/201203/discovery.at.al-magar.htm

Al-Magar Civilization
Domestication of Horses in Saudi Arabia?


http://paleolithic-neolithic.com/overview/al-magar/

THE ROCK ART OF SAUDI ARABIA
Al-Magar

http://www.bradshawfoundation.com/middle_east/saudi_arabia_rock_art/al_magar.php

These may be the world’s first images of dogs—and they’re wearing leashes


http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017...first-images-dogs-and-they-re-wearing-leashes

@The SC @SALMAN F @Gomig-21 (is this magnificent brother still around?) @Mhmoud @Full Moon (saw you around the other day after my long break, hopefully everything is well brother) @Hamilcar @Falcon29 and the rest of the remaining gang. Hope you are all doing well and enjoying the break after a hopefully blessed and spiritual month. Surviving/bothering on/with this troll-infested forum might be a bigger challenge though.:lol:
 
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@Hamilcar @Falcon29 and the rest of the remaining gang. Hope you are all doing well and enjoying the break after a hopefully blessed and spiritual month. Surviving/bothering on/with this troll-infested forum might be a bigger challenge though.:lol:

Thanks for asking pal!
no break for me though hhhhhhhh
studying and working in a western nation can be a pain in the ***....
the forum is indeed being invaded not only by trolls but also by serious psycho and sociopaths man xD
btw, interesting piece you've got there, any idea about the kind of population who lived there and what happened to them ? did they migrated or just setteled somewhere else around
 
Thanks for asking pal!
no break for me though hhhhhhhh
studying and working in a western nation can be a pain in the ***....
the forum is indeed being invaded not only by trolls but also by serious psycho and sociopaths man xD
btw, interesting piece you've got there, any idea about the kind of population who lived there and what happened to them ? did they migrated or just setteled somewhere else around

We were and are in the same boat, bro.

A break as in a spiritual break and a break of the usual modus operandi doing the day and night.:cheesy:

Yes, our stateless megalomaniac from tiny Kabyle and his usual nonsense (to put it mildly) seems to be as it has been always (for years) and similar with the usual Arab-obessed and inferiority ridden Iranian trolls. Other than this this section at least, is rather peaceful.

It's very hard to tell since this was a period 10.000 years ago (basically the start of the Neolithic period in the Middle East and thus the world since the Neolithic period began in more precisely the Arab part of the Middle East) but my guess is that a portion remained in what is modern-day KSA and the other migrated to areas in the vicinity (remaining Arabia, Sham (Levant) and Mesopotamia and even further away. A portion probably perished too.

I don't recall if I have covered Carthage here in this thread (as I wrote, I have covered around 0,1% of the glorious history of the Arab world) but you are of course more than welcome to contribute as are gems of the forum like @Gomig-21
 
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We were and are in the same boat, bro.

A break as in a spiritual break and a break of the usual modus operandi doing the day and night.:cheesy:

Yes, our stateless megalomaniac from tiny Kabyle and his usual nonsense (to put it mildly) seems to be as it has been always (for years) and similar with the usual Arab-obessed and inferiority ridden Iranian trolls. Other than this this section at least, is rather peaceful.

It's very hard to tell since this was a period 10.000 years ago (basically the start of the Neolithic period in the Middle East and thus the world since the Neolithic period began in more precisely the Arab part of the Middle East) but my guess is that a portion remained in what is modern-day KSA and the other migrated to areas in the vicinity (remaining Arabia, Sham (Levant) and Mesopotamia and even further away. A portion probably perished too.

I don't recall if I have covered Carthage here in this thread (as I wrote, I have covered around 0,1% of the glorious history of the Arab world) but you are of course more than welcome to contribute as are gems of the forum like @Gomig-21

my good friend, that dude seriously has issues, I'm questioning either his age, he might be after all just a kid who doesn't know better or his mental abilities, our friend is not only detached from reality and delusional but he has a serious racial complex towards Arabs in general (he kinda believes that master race carp it seems) and at the same time he lives under the impression that his country is the Roman empire at its peak
lol
I won't even mention his foul language and expressions.
talking about Carthage, a recent facial reconstruction to Hannibal shows that he looks typically Tunisian :lol:


hn.jpg



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I don't recall if I have covered Carthage here in this thread (as I wrote, I have covered around 0,1% of the glorious history of the Arab world) but you are of course more than welcome to contribute as are gems of the forum like @Gomig-21

You're too kind, ma bro. Good to see you again. Hamdela 3al salaama.
 
@Hamilcar

10 Fascinating Facts About Hannibal Barca That You Should Know
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POSTED BY: DATTATREYA MANDAL JANUARY 15, 2016

Hannibal ad portas – a phrase that not only exemplified what an entire generation of Romans went through, but also reverberated into popular consciousness during the later years of crisis faced by the Roman Empire. Simply meaning ‘Hannibal is at the gates’, it was an adage used by parents who wanted to scare their children at night. And in more crucial scenarios, it was even used as a desperate rallying cry that reminded Romans of their hardships in the late 3rd century BC. The character in this phrase obviously pertains to Carthaginian general Hannibal Barca, arguably Rome’s greatest adversary and the realm’s eternal ‘bogeyman’ – who surely was the greatest military general of his entire generation. So without further ado, let us check out ten fascinating facts you probably didn’t know about Hannibal.




1) Barca – the ‘lightning flash’
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Like father, like son. Hamilcar Barca – Hannibal’s father, was the leading Carthaginian general during the First Punic War. He commanded the Carthaginian land forces in Sicily from 247 BC to 241 BC, during the latter stages of the conflict; and as such, was pretty successful in mounting localized guerrilla-inspired raids until the Carthaginians were forced to retire from the island. More importantly, Hamilcar was instrumental in carving out the ‘newer’ overseas territories of Carthage in Iberia (Spain) by expanding upon her initial dominions. Suffice it to say, Hamilcar was known for his dynamic initiatives on military campaigns – with one incident even involving a lightning-fast raid inside the southern part of mainland Italy.



In fact, this intrinsic swiftness of attitude and planning is what inspired fellowmen to bestow the moniker of baraq (or Barca) upon Hamilcar. Baraq in Semitic roughly translates to ‘lightning flash’. And Hannibal not only carried forth his father’s legacy through this adopted surname of Barca, but also by his deeds. As Annaeus Florus, a 2nd century AD Roman historian compared the greatHannibal Barca and his army to a lightning bolt (in Epitome of the Histories) –

[which] burst its way through the midst of the Alps and swooped down upon Italy from those snows of fabulous heights like a missile hurled from the sky.

2) A calculated show of audacity –
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Hannibal’s crossing of the Alps in 218 BC is often viewed as a military action that is tantamount to daredevilry on a large scale. But while risks were surely involved in the endeavor, the ‘audacity’ of the scope was fairly well planned by Hannibal. Simply put, the crossing was not just tried and accomplished purely for the ‘shock and awe’ factor that would psychologically afflict the Romans. There was a deep strategic side to the entire affair, and the Carthaginian general precisely weighed his option and then decided to go for the calculated risk. Obviously this entailed years of planning, with the original scheme of crossing the Alps sometimes even attributed to Hannibal’s brother-in-law Hasdrubal the Fair (or possibly his father Hamilcar) – who commanded the Carthaginian forces in Spain from 229 BC. And if the latter case is true, then the Romans themselves might have known about this grandiose plan, and perhaps were even relieved when Hasdrubal was assassinated by a Celtic mercenary in 221 BC.


In any case, when Hannibal Barca took over the command, his underlying objective was always tied to the feat of crossing the Alps and taking advantage of a land-based conflict – simply because the Carthaginians had become weak when it came to naval power. So by 220 BC, he had already started maintaining cordial contacts with the Padane Gauls of the Po Valley (in present-day northern Italy). These gradually morphed into agreements concerning the distribution of food, money and even hospitality. And while such concessions came into fruition, the general also sent spies and scouts to comprehend and coordinate the best possible route through the Alps. In other words, Hannibal didn’t want to cross the Alps with his tired army and then get routed by the waiting Romans; instead he wanted to bring a ‘tour de force’ to Italy that would not only surprise his disciplined foes but also snatch the strategic advantage away from the Romans. As Polybius said this about Hannibal Barca –


Conducted his enterprise with consummate judgement; for he had accurately ascertained the excellent nature of the country in which he was to arrive, and the hostile disposition of its inhabitants towards the Romans; and he had for guides and conductors through the difficult passes which lay in the way of natives of the country, men who were to partake of the same hopes with himself.

3) Sharing (hardships) is caring –
Fascinating_Hannibal_Barca_Facts_3.jpg


Alexander was known for his self-assurance, Hannibal for his personality. Livy attests to the latter’s leadership skills by mentioning how Hannibal managed to not only control his mercenary army (which had been described as ‘a hotch-potch of the riff-raff of all nationalities’), but went on to win victories over the Roman forces for fifteen straight years – and that too within the confines of Italy. The irony in this case related to how the same folks who fought for money and plunder, grouped together to forego such things in favor of innumerable hardships for their chosen leader. This certainly speaks highly of the potent charisma demonstrated by Hannibal Barca all throughout these rigorous years spent in a foreign land.

However beyond just charisma, there must have been a more intrinsic sensitive side to his ‘management skills’. Literary evidence point out how Hannibal slept alongside the ordinary soldiers out in the cold open; he even went hungry along with his soldiers when the supplies ran low. But more importantly, the soldiers (despite their different origins) placed their utmost trust on their Carthaginian commander when it came to actual battles. Simply put, they acknowledged and followed the directives of their general – mostly without question, due to their collective belief in the prodigious generalship of Hannibal Barca.

4) Slingers given preference over archers –
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Circa the later period of 3rd century BC, the Romans were known for their organized ranks of maniples (read more here) comprising what can be technically termed as heavy infantrymen. As a result, their battlefield tactic was spectacularly simple – as it often entailed countering the enemy forces (who were mostly disordered) with sheer discipline and rotation of manpower on the field itself. Hannibal Barca formulated a plan against these seemingly invulnerable formation-based armies by inducting highly trained light troops into the ‘rag-tag’ Carthaginian army, especially from Spain and Africa. One example would pertain to the incorporation of Balearic slingers who were known for their expertise in accuracy over various ranges (which encompassed the use of three different types of slings!). In fact, their effectiveness was so aptly demonstrated against the Romans that even conventional archers were eschewed in favor of these lightly armed mercenaries.

And since we brought up the scope of effectiveness, very few units showcased their on-field efficacy against the tightly packed Romans as the Numidian riders armed with only javelins. Espousing daredevilry on horseback, they probably rode without reins – instead using just a rope around the horse’s neck and a small stick to give it commands. In many cases (like at the Battle of Trebbia), Hannibal utilized their nigh-perfected mobility and zig-zag maneuvering ability to draw the attention (and ire) of the Romans. Such skirmishing tactics, often mixed with vocal insults, in turn forced the roused Roman to give battle even when they were under-prepared.

5) Cannae selected for food and ‘provocation’ –
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Much has been said about the Battle of Cannae – an encounter which had resulted in the highest loss of human life in a single day in any battle recorded in history. In terms of sheer numbers, the bloody day probably accounted for over 40,000 Roman deaths (the figure is put at 55,000 by Livy; and 70,000 by Polybius), which equated to about 80 percent of the Roman army fielded in the battle! To put things into perspective, the worst day in the history of the British Army usually pertains to the first day of the Battle of the Somme in 1916, where they lost around 20,000 men. But the male population of Rome in 216 BC is estimated to be around 400,000 (thus the Battle of Cannae possibly took away around 1/10th – 1/20th of Roman male population, considering there were also allied Italic casualties), while Britain had a population of around 41,608,791 (41 million) at the beginning of 1901, with half of them expected to be males. However objectively beyond just baleful numbers, the encounter in itself was a set-piece triumph for Hannibal, with the general’s strategy even dictating the very choice of the battlefield itself.

Cannae and its ruined citadel had long been used as a food magazine by the Romans with provisions for grain oil and other crucial items. Hannibal Barca knew about this supply scope, and willfully made his army march towards Cannae (in June, 216 BC) for over 120 km from their original winter quarters at Gerunium. Interestingly, the camp of the Carthaginian army was just set above verdant agricultural fields with ripening crops – which could provide easy foraging to the snugly quartered troops. In other words, the chosen location and its advantages surely drummed up the morale of these soldiers, while strengthening their resolve and dedication for their commander. However at the same time, there was a more cunning side to Hannibal’s choice of Cannae – (possibly) unbeknownst to his army. That is because Rome was still dependent on the grain grown in native Italy (while seeking alternative corn supplies from Sicily), especially from the region of Apulia where Cannae was located. Simply put, the choice of Cannae was an intentional ploy to provoke the Romans to give direct battle – as opposed to the Fabian strategy of delaying. This once again alludes to Hannibal’s confidence and craftiness when it came to military affairs and logistics.

6) Charisma and charm of Hannibal Barca –
Fascinating_Hannibal_Barca_Facts_6.jpg


In the previous entry, we talked about the massive number of casualties suffered by the Romans at the Battle of Cannae. This automatically suggests the huge number of troops actually fielded by both the armies – with Polybius estimating around 80,000 Romans and 50,000 Hannibal-commanded soldiers taking part in the encounter (though modern estimates tend to lower these figures). Given such an enormous scale of the impending battle and the size of the approaching Roman army, many of the Carthaginian officers were clearly anxious about their numerical inferiority. One such officer named Gisgo even went ahead and voiced his uneasiness to Hannibal at the sight of the Romans (who were moving forward in tighter formations with greater manipular depths than usual).

And this is where Hannibal’s greatest strength was revealed, and it pertained to his character. Instead of punishing or even rebuking Gisgo for such a demoralizing comment – especially before a battle, the general turned to the officer and perkily commented – ‘There is one more thing you have not noticed.’ When Gisgo asked, ‘What is that sir?’; Hannibal replied, ‘In all that great number of men opposite there is not a single one whose name is Gisgo.’ The nearby batch of officers wholeheartedly laughed with Hannibal’s retort – and the ‘infectious smiles’ were carried forth by even the rank-and-file soldiers, thus calming their nerves.

7) The paradox –
Fascinating_Hannibal_Barca_Facts_7.jpg


Interestingly enough, it was the Battle of Cannae that was ultimately responsible for Hannibal’s unceremonious call back to Carthage (in 203 BC) after 15 years of remaining undefeated on Italian soil. In the post years of the Cannae incident, the Roman leadership came to a realization that they couldn’t counter Hannibal’s genius in conventional warfare. As a result, they reverted to the defensive Fabian strategy (named after Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus) which basically entailed a guerrilla-warfare type scenario with internal lines of communications. In other words, the Romans rigorously avoided open-field battles, while resorting to hit-and-run and harassing tactics that afflicted the stretched Carthaginian lines and patrols who were regularly dispatched for foraging.

This predicament was further exacerbated when Hannibal Barca had to provide garrisons for the newly defected cities in south of Italy. This took away much of his precious manpower that had already deteriorated due to previous battles, skirmishes and attrition. Moreover, much of Hannibal’s army was composed of mercenaries of different nationalities – and they were neither suited to siege warfare or garrison duty, and thus many of them started to desert en masse. So slowly but surely, the once grand expeditionary force that made its way to Italy via the Alps, was now only a shadow of itself. By 203 BC, even chances of arriving reinforcements from Carthage or Iberia went slim, with both of his brothers being soundly defeated. And ultimately, Hannibal himself had to answer the desperate call from his own Barcid war party, which was one of the two major political factions of Carthage. So the general and some of his trusted mercenaries finally decided to set sail for Africa. And thus ended the epoch of Hannibal Barca in Italy – paradoxically brought on by his incredible victory at the Battle of Cannae.

8) Hannibal the Carthaginian Commander To Hannibal the Statesman –
Fascinating_Hannibal_Barca_Facts_8.jpg


The true genius of Hannibal Barca was not confined to his generalship and strategies during the war, but also defined his very character even during times of peace. In other words, the high level of education received by the leader in his younger days was revealed in full spades in the later years after the Second Punic War, when Hannibal the commander became Hannibal the statesman. Already claiming massive support on his return from Italy (and even after his defeat at the Battle of Zama), the leader was chosen as one of the two suffetes (shophet in Semitic), which gave him the rank of the chief magistrate of the Carthaginian state. By this time however Carthage was already stripped of its formerly mighty empire, and was in outstanding debt with the huge war indemnities to be paid to Rome. But the tireless Hannibal set to work by first successfully obtaining a revision in the constitution and then initiating an agreement condition that limited the power of the council (also known as Hundred and Four) with annual elections. The latter clause clearly curtailed the previously unchecked power of some council members who now couldn’t hold their offices for two consecutive years.

Beyond politics, Hannibal Barca also played his major role in administration by clearly revamping the state system, thus countering several acts of corruption, embezzlement and even unpaid taxes. All of these factors proved that a war indemnity could be paid without heavily taxing the general public. And was the case with Barcid ingenuity, he even trained many of his soldiers in agriculture. So the combined efforts in the fields of both commerce and agriculture – supplemented by Hannibal sweeping reforms, once again made Carthage prosperous. In fact, the levels of prosperity were reached at such an efficient rate that by 191 BC, the state was wealthy enough to pay its entire war indemnity of 8,000 talents (that was to be paid over a course of 40 years) in a lump sum. But given Rome’s preeminent position in the Mediterranean, they arrogantly declined the offer.

In any case, seven years after the Battle of Zama, Hannibal’s term as a suffete expired – and his position inside Carthage also became precarious. Firstly, this was due to the fact that he had made many enemies in the council, courtesy of the far-reaching political reforms. Secondly, and more importantly, by then Rome had become wary of Hannibal’s rising influence. Subsequently, the senate sent a Roman commission to Carthage on investigating a (possibly) made-up charge that implicated Hannibal on maintaining connections with Antiochus III of Syria – who was Rome’s foremost enemy in the Anatolian theater. Hannibal already knew of such a plan being hatched against him, and thus not trusting his fellow countrymen, he retired and inconspicuously made his very way to Antiochus’ court in Ephesus – as a challenge to Rome.

9) ‘Snaky’ Catapults –
Fascinating_Hannibal_Barca_Facts_9.jpg


Warfare and its degree of unconventionality – both these limits were put to test in battlefields by Hannibal Barca (and the opposing Romans) during his Italian campaign that lasted for fifteen years. But Hannibal had proverbial tricks up his sleeve even when he was pursued by his foes in his later years. One such incident pertains to how as a last gamble, he sought refuge in the court of Prusias I of Bithynia, after the defeat of his longtime ally Antiochus III of Syria. The Bithynian king who was engaged in war with his rival (and Roman ally) Eumenes II of Pergamon, proceeded on to give Hannibal the charge of his entire fleet, after numerous reversals in land-based battles. And though outnumbered in ships, Hannibal devised a seemingly odd tactic which entailed filling up pots with venomous snakes. The unsuspecting sailors from Pergamon even jeered at the Bithynian marines for fighting with pots instead of swords. But once the pots were launched into the enemy ships, their boards were soon crawling with poisonous snakes of different varieties. Now we don’t quite know if it was the psychological effect of such a demonstration or if it was actually the snakes themselves, but the tactic seemingly did yield victory for the naval forces of Bithynia.

10) A general and an author –
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History is replete with examples and anecdotes of Hannibal’s generalship. But before he became the commander of the Carthaginian forces in Spain (and that too quite by chance, when their original commander Hasdrubal the Fair was assassinated), Hannibal was by all means an incredibly educated man. Some of this had to do with his closely supervised upbringing, especially since his father – the eminent Carthaginian leader Hamilcar Barca, was posted overseas in Sicily fighting the First Punic War against the Romans. The lack of such a father-figure at least in Hannibal’s initial boyhood days was made up for by the employing of famed Greek tutors. In fact, Greek military traditions (especially the exploits of Alexander and Pyrrhus) inspired the young general to such a degree that he even took his Greek tutors out on the military campaigns – like in the case of the Spartan historian Sosylos who accompanied Hannibal on his renowned expedition across the Alps.

And furthermore, Hannibal’s Greek training was not just for show. The Carthaginian leader even in his exile after the Second Punic War, authored books in Greek, with one example pertaining to the campaigns conducted by his Roman foe Gnaeus Manlius Vulso in Asia Minor. It was written as a military manual for the defenders of Rhodes. Hannibal’s penchant for the Greek language may have also been evident from an engraving (in both Punic and Greek) inside a temple, according to Livy, in the town of Crotone, southern Italy. Under his supervision, the artisans supposedly etched and documented his illustrious albeit ultimately unsuccessful Italy campaign on bronze tablets; but the original temple was later destroyed probably due to the effects of wars and an earthquake.



Sources: Livius / Britannica / Ancient.eu / Biography

Book References: Hannibal (by Nic Fields) / The Punic Wars (by Brian Caven) / Cannae 216 BC: Hannibal Smashes Rome’s Army (by Mark Healy)

https://www.realmofhistory.com/2016/01/15/10-fascinating-things-you-should-know-about-hannibal/

@The SC

Brother check this thread out. I know that you are a history buff as well and are more than capable of contributing. I have just covered 0,01%. More contributions are always welcome after all.:cheers:
 
I was fascinated by Hannibal generalship for a long time.. and it is still fascinating to read about it.. Thanks brother for this wonderful piece of history.. I will for sure try to contribute..
 
@Hamilcar

10 Fascinating Facts About Hannibal Barca That You Should Know
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POSTED BY: DATTATREYA MANDAL JANUARY 15, 2016

Hannibal ad portas – a phrase that not only exemplified what an entire generation of Romans went through, but also reverberated into popular consciousness during the later years of crisis faced by the Roman Empire. Simply meaning ‘Hannibal is at the gates’, it was an adage used by parents who wanted to scare their children at night. And in more crucial scenarios, it was even used as a desperate rallying cry that reminded Romans of their hardships in the late 3rd century BC. The character in this phrase obviously pertains to Carthaginian general Hannibal Barca, arguably Rome’s greatest adversary and the realm’s eternal ‘bogeyman’ – who surely was the greatest military general of his entire generation. So without further ado, let us check out ten fascinating facts you probably didn’t know about Hannibal.




1) Barca – the ‘lightning flash’
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Like father, like son. Hamilcar Barca – Hannibal’s father, was the leading Carthaginian general during the First Punic War. He commanded the Carthaginian land forces in Sicily from 247 BC to 241 BC, during the latter stages of the conflict; and as such, was pretty successful in mounting localized guerrilla-inspired raids until the Carthaginians were forced to retire from the island. More importantly, Hamilcar was instrumental in carving out the ‘newer’ overseas territories of Carthage in Iberia (Spain) by expanding upon her initial dominions. Suffice it to say, Hamilcar was known for his dynamic initiatives on military campaigns – with one incident even involving a lightning-fast raid inside the southern part of mainland Italy.



In fact, this intrinsic swiftness of attitude and planning is what inspired fellowmen to bestow the moniker of baraq (or Barca) upon Hamilcar. Baraq in Semitic roughly translates to ‘lightning flash’. And Hannibal not only carried forth his father’s legacy through this adopted surname of Barca, but also by his deeds. As Annaeus Florus, a 2nd century AD Roman historian compared the greatHannibal Barca and his army to a lightning bolt (in Epitome of the Histories) –

[which] burst its way through the midst of the Alps and swooped down upon Italy from those snows of fabulous heights like a missile hurled from the sky.

2) A calculated show of audacity –
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Hannibal’s crossing of the Alps in 218 BC is often viewed as a military action that is tantamount to daredevilry on a large scale. But while risks were surely involved in the endeavor, the ‘audacity’ of the scope was fairly well planned by Hannibal. Simply put, the crossing was not just tried and accomplished purely for the ‘shock and awe’ factor that would psychologically afflict the Romans. There was a deep strategic side to the entire affair, and the Carthaginian general precisely weighed his option and then decided to go for the calculated risk. Obviously this entailed years of planning, with the original scheme of crossing the Alps sometimes even attributed to Hannibal’s brother-in-law Hasdrubal the Fair (or possibly his father Hamilcar) – who commanded the Carthaginian forces in Spain from 229 BC. And if the latter case is true, then the Romans themselves might have known about this grandiose plan, and perhaps were even relieved when Hasdrubal was assassinated by a Celtic mercenary in 221 BC.


In any case, when Hannibal Barca took over the command, his underlying objective was always tied to the feat of crossing the Alps and taking advantage of a land-based conflict – simply because the Carthaginians had become weak when it came to naval power. So by 220 BC, he had already started maintaining cordial contacts with the Padane Gauls of the Po Valley (in present-day northern Italy). These gradually morphed into agreements concerning the distribution of food, money and even hospitality. And while such concessions came into fruition, the general also sent spies and scouts to comprehend and coordinate the best possible route through the Alps. In other words, Hannibal didn’t want to cross the Alps with his tired army and then get routed by the waiting Romans; instead he wanted to bring a ‘tour de force’ to Italy that would not only surprise his disciplined foes but also snatch the strategic advantage away from the Romans. As Polybius said this about Hannibal Barca –


Conducted his enterprise with consummate judgement; for he had accurately ascertained the excellent nature of the country in which he was to arrive, and the hostile disposition of its inhabitants towards the Romans; and he had for guides and conductors through the difficult passes which lay in the way of natives of the country, men who were to partake of the same hopes with himself.

3) Sharing (hardships) is caring –
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Alexander was known for his self-assurance, Hannibal for his personality. Livy attests to the latter’s leadership skills by mentioning how Hannibal managed to not only control his mercenary army (which had been described as ‘a hotch-potch of the riff-raff of all nationalities’), but went on to win victories over the Roman forces for fifteen straight years – and that too within the confines of Italy. The irony in this case related to how the same folks who fought for money and plunder, grouped together to forego such things in favor of innumerable hardships for their chosen leader. This certainly speaks highly of the potent charisma demonstrated by Hannibal Barca all throughout these rigorous years spent in a foreign land.

However beyond just charisma, there must have been a more intrinsic sensitive side to his ‘management skills’. Literary evidence point out how Hannibal slept alongside the ordinary soldiers out in the cold open; he even went hungry along with his soldiers when the supplies ran low. But more importantly, the soldiers (despite their different origins) placed their utmost trust on their Carthaginian commander when it came to actual battles. Simply put, they acknowledged and followed the directives of their general – mostly without question, due to their collective belief in the prodigious generalship of Hannibal Barca.

4) Slingers given preference over archers –
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Circa the later period of 3rd century BC, the Romans were known for their organized ranks of maniples (read more here) comprising what can be technically termed as heavy infantrymen. As a result, their battlefield tactic was spectacularly simple – as it often entailed countering the enemy forces (who were mostly disordered) with sheer discipline and rotation of manpower on the field itself. Hannibal Barca formulated a plan against these seemingly invulnerable formation-based armies by inducting highly trained light troops into the ‘rag-tag’ Carthaginian army, especially from Spain and Africa. One example would pertain to the incorporation of Balearic slingers who were known for their expertise in accuracy over various ranges (which encompassed the use of three different types of slings!). In fact, their effectiveness was so aptly demonstrated against the Romans that even conventional archers were eschewed in favor of these lightly armed mercenaries.

And since we brought up the scope of effectiveness, very few units showcased their on-field efficacy against the tightly packed Romans as the Numidian riders armed with only javelins. Espousing daredevilry on horseback, they probably rode without reins – instead using just a rope around the horse’s neck and a small stick to give it commands. In many cases (like at the Battle of Trebbia), Hannibal utilized their nigh-perfected mobility and zig-zag maneuvering ability to draw the attention (and ire) of the Romans. Such skirmishing tactics, often mixed with vocal insults, in turn forced the roused Roman to give battle even when they were under-prepared.

5) Cannae selected for food and ‘provocation’ –
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Much has been said about the Battle of Cannae – an encounter which had resulted in the highest loss of human life in a single day in any battle recorded in history. In terms of sheer numbers, the bloody day probably accounted for over 40,000 Roman deaths (the figure is put at 55,000 by Livy; and 70,000 by Polybius), which equated to about 80 percent of the Roman army fielded in the battle! To put things into perspective, the worst day in the history of the British Army usually pertains to the first day of the Battle of the Somme in 1916, where they lost around 20,000 men. But the male population of Rome in 216 BC is estimated to be around 400,000 (thus the Battle of Cannae possibly took away around 1/10th – 1/20th of Roman male population, considering there were also allied Italic casualties), while Britain had a population of around 41,608,791 (41 million) at the beginning of 1901, with half of them expected to be males. However objectively beyond just baleful numbers, the encounter in itself was a set-piece triumph for Hannibal, with the general’s strategy even dictating the very choice of the battlefield itself.

Cannae and its ruined citadel had long been used as a food magazine by the Romans with provisions for grain oil and other crucial items. Hannibal Barca knew about this supply scope, and willfully made his army march towards Cannae (in June, 216 BC) for over 120 km from their original winter quarters at Gerunium. Interestingly, the camp of the Carthaginian army was just set above verdant agricultural fields with ripening crops – which could provide easy foraging to the snugly quartered troops. In other words, the chosen location and its advantages surely drummed up the morale of these soldiers, while strengthening their resolve and dedication for their commander. However at the same time, there was a more cunning side to Hannibal’s choice of Cannae – (possibly) unbeknownst to his army. That is because Rome was still dependent on the grain grown in native Italy (while seeking alternative corn supplies from Sicily), especially from the region of Apulia where Cannae was located. Simply put, the choice of Cannae was an intentional ploy to provoke the Romans to give direct battle – as opposed to the Fabian strategy of delaying. This once again alludes to Hannibal’s confidence and craftiness when it came to military affairs and logistics.

6) Charisma and charm of Hannibal Barca –
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In the previous entry, we talked about the massive number of casualties suffered by the Romans at the Battle of Cannae. This automatically suggests the huge number of troops actually fielded by both the armies – with Polybius estimating around 80,000 Romans and 50,000 Hannibal-commanded soldiers taking part in the encounter (though modern estimates tend to lower these figures). Given such an enormous scale of the impending battle and the size of the approaching Roman army, many of the Carthaginian officers were clearly anxious about their numerical inferiority. One such officer named Gisgo even went ahead and voiced his uneasiness to Hannibal at the sight of the Romans (who were moving forward in tighter formations with greater manipular depths than usual).

And this is where Hannibal’s greatest strength was revealed, and it pertained to his character. Instead of punishing or even rebuking Gisgo for such a demoralizing comment – especially before a battle, the general turned to the officer and perkily commented – ‘There is one more thing you have not noticed.’ When Gisgo asked, ‘What is that sir?’; Hannibal replied, ‘In all that great number of men opposite there is not a single one whose name is Gisgo.’ The nearby batch of officers wholeheartedly laughed with Hannibal’s retort – and the ‘infectious smiles’ were carried forth by even the rank-and-file soldiers, thus calming their nerves.

7) The paradox –
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Interestingly enough, it was the Battle of Cannae that was ultimately responsible for Hannibal’s unceremonious call back to Carthage (in 203 BC) after 15 years of remaining undefeated on Italian soil. In the post years of the Cannae incident, the Roman leadership came to a realization that they couldn’t counter Hannibal’s genius in conventional warfare. As a result, they reverted to the defensive Fabian strategy (named after Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus) which basically entailed a guerrilla-warfare type scenario with internal lines of communications. In other words, the Romans rigorously avoided open-field battles, while resorting to hit-and-run and harassing tactics that afflicted the stretched Carthaginian lines and patrols who were regularly dispatched for foraging.

This predicament was further exacerbated when Hannibal Barca had to provide garrisons for the newly defected cities in south of Italy. This took away much of his precious manpower that had already deteriorated due to previous battles, skirmishes and attrition. Moreover, much of Hannibal’s army was composed of mercenaries of different nationalities – and they were neither suited to siege warfare or garrison duty, and thus many of them started to desert en masse. So slowly but surely, the once grand expeditionary force that made its way to Italy via the Alps, was now only a shadow of itself. By 203 BC, even chances of arriving reinforcements from Carthage or Iberia went slim, with both of his brothers being soundly defeated. And ultimately, Hannibal himself had to answer the desperate call from his own Barcid war party, which was one of the two major political factions of Carthage. So the general and some of his trusted mercenaries finally decided to set sail for Africa. And thus ended the epoch of Hannibal Barca in Italy – paradoxically brought on by his incredible victory at the Battle of Cannae.

8) Hannibal the Carthaginian Commander To Hannibal the Statesman –
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The true genius of Hannibal Barca was not confined to his generalship and strategies during the war, but also defined his very character even during times of peace. In other words, the high level of education received by the leader in his younger days was revealed in full spades in the later years after the Second Punic War, when Hannibal the commander became Hannibal the statesman. Already claiming massive support on his return from Italy (and even after his defeat at the Battle of Zama), the leader was chosen as one of the two suffetes (shophet in Semitic), which gave him the rank of the chief magistrate of the Carthaginian state. By this time however Carthage was already stripped of its formerly mighty empire, and was in outstanding debt with the huge war indemnities to be paid to Rome. But the tireless Hannibal set to work by first successfully obtaining a revision in the constitution and then initiating an agreement condition that limited the power of the council (also known as Hundred and Four) with annual elections. The latter clause clearly curtailed the previously unchecked power of some council members who now couldn’t hold their offices for two consecutive years.

Beyond politics, Hannibal Barca also played his major role in administration by clearly revamping the state system, thus countering several acts of corruption, embezzlement and even unpaid taxes. All of these factors proved that a war indemnity could be paid without heavily taxing the general public. And was the case with Barcid ingenuity, he even trained many of his soldiers in agriculture. So the combined efforts in the fields of both commerce and agriculture – supplemented by Hannibal sweeping reforms, once again made Carthage prosperous. In fact, the levels of prosperity were reached at such an efficient rate that by 191 BC, the state was wealthy enough to pay its entire war indemnity of 8,000 talents (that was to be paid over a course of 40 years) in a lump sum. But given Rome’s preeminent position in the Mediterranean, they arrogantly declined the offer.

In any case, seven years after the Battle of Zama, Hannibal’s term as a suffete expired – and his position inside Carthage also became precarious. Firstly, this was due to the fact that he had made many enemies in the council, courtesy of the far-reaching political reforms. Secondly, and more importantly, by then Rome had become wary of Hannibal’s rising influence. Subsequently, the senate sent a Roman commission to Carthage on investigating a (possibly) made-up charge that implicated Hannibal on maintaining connections with Antiochus III of Syria – who was Rome’s foremost enemy in the Anatolian theater. Hannibal already knew of such a plan being hatched against him, and thus not trusting his fellow countrymen, he retired and inconspicuously made his very way to Antiochus’ court in Ephesus – as a challenge to Rome.

9) ‘Snaky’ Catapults –
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Warfare and its degree of unconventionality – both these limits were put to test in battlefields by Hannibal Barca (and the opposing Romans) during his Italian campaign that lasted for fifteen years. But Hannibal had proverbial tricks up his sleeve even when he was pursued by his foes in his later years. One such incident pertains to how as a last gamble, he sought refuge in the court of Prusias I of Bithynia, after the defeat of his longtime ally Antiochus III of Syria. The Bithynian king who was engaged in war with his rival (and Roman ally) Eumenes II of Pergamon, proceeded on to give Hannibal the charge of his entire fleet, after numerous reversals in land-based battles. And though outnumbered in ships, Hannibal devised a seemingly odd tactic which entailed filling up pots with venomous snakes. The unsuspecting sailors from Pergamon even jeered at the Bithynian marines for fighting with pots instead of swords. But once the pots were launched into the enemy ships, their boards were soon crawling with poisonous snakes of different varieties. Now we don’t quite know if it was the psychological effect of such a demonstration or if it was actually the snakes themselves, but the tactic seemingly did yield victory for the naval forces of Bithynia.

10) A general and an author –
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History is replete with examples and anecdotes of Hannibal’s generalship. But before he became the commander of the Carthaginian forces in Spain (and that too quite by chance, when their original commander Hasdrubal the Fair was assassinated), Hannibal was by all means an incredibly educated man. Some of this had to do with his closely supervised upbringing, especially since his father – the eminent Carthaginian leader Hamilcar Barca, was posted overseas in Sicily fighting the First Punic War against the Romans. The lack of such a father-figure at least in Hannibal’s initial boyhood days was made up for by the employing of famed Greek tutors. In fact, Greek military traditions (especially the exploits of Alexander and Pyrrhus) inspired the young general to such a degree that he even took his Greek tutors out on the military campaigns – like in the case of the Spartan historian Sosylos who accompanied Hannibal on his renowned expedition across the Alps.

And furthermore, Hannibal’s Greek training was not just for show. The Carthaginian leader even in his exile after the Second Punic War, authored books in Greek, with one example pertaining to the campaigns conducted by his Roman foe Gnaeus Manlius Vulso in Asia Minor. It was written as a military manual for the defenders of Rhodes. Hannibal’s penchant for the Greek language may have also been evident from an engraving (in both Punic and Greek) inside a temple, according to Livy, in the town of Crotone, southern Italy. Under his supervision, the artisans supposedly etched and documented his illustrious albeit ultimately unsuccessful Italy campaign on bronze tablets; but the original temple was later destroyed probably due to the effects of wars and an earthquake.



Sources: Livius / Britannica / Ancient.eu / Biography

Book References: Hannibal (by Nic Fields) / The Punic Wars (by Brian Caven) / Cannae 216 BC: Hannibal Smashes Rome’s Army (by Mark Healy)

https://www.realmofhistory.com/2016/01/15/10-fascinating-things-you-should-know-about-hannibal/

@The SC

Brother check this thread out. I know that you are a history buff as well and are more than capable of contributing. I have just covered 0,01%. More contributions are always welcome after all.:cheers:


Apologies for the late reply good friend (study issues).
we'll go back to discuss this into details inshallah.
really great piece you wrote there!
 
Arabia and in particular Yemen has more ancient mummies anywhere in the world expect for neighboring Egypt

Two hundred Paleolithic tombs have been discovered in the western al-Mahwit region of Yemen, reports say.

The tombs contain embalmed mummies and other funerary relics, according to the state-run Saba news agency.

They were carved into the rock and have one or more chambers depending on how many bodies they held, Mohammad Ahmad Qassim, head of antiquities for Al-Mahwit province, told Saba.

Among the objects found in the tombs were earthenware utensils and weapons.

The artefacts were very effectively preserved and were put in niches carved in the walls of the tombs.

Over 1,000 other Paleolithic artefacts were also found in the Bani Saad area, Mr Qassim added.

The findings point to the existence of a developed culture in the region at the time, Saba reports.

The Paleolithic period, the larger part of the prehistoric Stone Age, is thought to have begun over 2m years ago and ended around 8,000 BC.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-16477111

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Stephen Buckley
Research Fellow

Biography
I obtained my first degree in Chemistry (BSc, University of Sheffield), before taking a MSc in Analytical Chemistry and Instrumentation at Loughborough University of Technology (the research project for my masters being entitled ‘Identification of the Mummification ‘Resins’ Employed in Ancient Egypt in an Early 18th Dynasty Tomb in the Valley of the Kings’), followed by a PhD in archaeological chemistry, on the embalming materials used in ancient Egyptian mummification, from the University of Bristol. As part of York University’s Mummy Research Team (set up in 1999), I worked on archaeological projects in the Valley of the Kings, Egypt, the Yemeni Highlands, north-west of Sana’a, Rome, and a number of museums, before becoming a Wellcome Research Fellow in Bioarchaeology in 2004 (joint Archaeology and Chemistry) based at Archaeology’s BioArch Centre.
https://www.york.ac.uk/archaeology/staff/research-staff/stephen-buckley/#profile

Unlocking the secrets of the Mummies of Yemen

Hamed Thabet For Yemen Times

In ancient Yemen, people believed in life after death. Their belief in resurrection was essential to ensure a safe passage to the afterlife for their dead. Mummification was an important step to ensuring one's afterlife in ancient Yemen. However contradictory to their belief, not only the dead lost their way to the afterworld; sadly, the mummies have never crossed the boundaries of their tombs. So where did all the mummies go?

According to the researchers, In the ancient days, Yemen was one of the most famous countries in the world with its civilization and secrets. Unfortunately, the sad truth is that there are huge numbers of mummies in Yemen that have not been revealed and introduced to the international community


It is difficult to know exactly why this society practiced mummification, but it must surely reflect a desire to keep their dead with them since the mummies do not seem to have been buried immediately. Ancient Yemenis used to embalm their dead due to their belief that they would return to this world on the Day of Resurrection. Researchers confirmed that many mummies have been found in Yemen in several different places by accident in the last 20 years and many of them are still hidden in their tombs and unknown.

For the first time, ,Windol Fliees, the head of an American expedition group found samples in Ma’reb in 1951-1952 in the graveyard or cemetery of Awam Temple called Haied Bin Aqeed. But the important discovery was in 1983 in Shebam Al Garas by the archeology expedition department, which found 26 Mummies at a depth of 60 centimeters, and among all those, only one has survived. Moreover, in 1991 Mummies have been found in the Al Noman mountain in Al Mahweet governorate, and until today their work is not finished as there are many more. In 1994 in Saih Bani Matar, Mummies have been found in natural caves, but unfortunately, no one has examined them until this date; because there are no specialists and experts to study the tombs and the bodies. In 1999, another body was found in Shaoob and finally a local found a Mummy of a small child in Damar.

However, not all mummies that were found belong to Yemenis, “A Mummy has been found which belonged to the 6 century, however the body wasn’t preserved by humans, but by natural forces. We prsume this mummy belonged to one of the Ethiopian soliders who served in the Army of (Abraha) when they invaded Yemen. There are two theories about the solider’s death: the first theory was that he was killed in battle, the second theory was that he died because of suffocation by volcanic smoke,” said Dr, Abdul Hakim, who is a tutor at Sana’a University in the Archeology Department and also the storekeeper at the museum.

Abdul Hakim explained the ancient Yemeni steps of mummification , saying the theory and idea of Mummies in Yemen are the same as that of any other country but of course each have their own system of embalmment. On the basis of some researches on Mummies, a kind of plant called Al Ra’a, was found in all the bodies, and also chemical materials like oxides of iron and sulfur dioxide. Furthermore, camel oil was found to be the principle agent of embalming the dead.

During this process, they would tear the stomach, take out the bowels, and put the plant material and distribute the chemicals in a way that would fill the stomach in order to keep it preserved. The body was covered and painted with a color called Henna. Furthermore, the shrouding process in Yemeni Mummies took several steps. Firstly, rolls with silk and then leather were placed on the body and if the person was rich more money was spent for more rolls of silk and leather rolls. Nevertheless, some Mummies that were found in Shaoob in Sana’a were embalmed by shrouding, using cotton and straw. After putting the materials, the body was well dressed and adorned with new shoes, coats, and mineral rings in order to drive away evil spirits.

Dr. Mohamed Al- Aroosi, who was the Chief of General Assembly in ancient monuments and now teaches at Sana’a University, said: “since we found the bodies in 1983, no researches have been made to find out about these Mummies. Even the atmosphere for the bodies in the museum is as bad as hell, so much that when first the body arrived to the museum they were well and you could feel their spirit, but nowadays they are getting destroyed because of the carelessness and there being no support from the government and other countries or even Organizations to protect them. It is a shame to keep these valuable ancient monuments, while we cannot give them what they deserve, and it is better to contribute them to other museums or countries who will take care of them, instead of ignoring them as it is the case now.”

It is hard to differentiate between Yemeni Mummies and the Egyptian ones, as there is absolutely no information and studies, but the only difference that we can tell for now is that mummies in Egypt took everything they could with them , furthermore there tombs told the story of their lives. The Yemeni ones, on the other hand, are different because they just took with them a small weapon, food, and a ring on one of their toes. Specialists inferred the main goal was forgiveness from the gods (Al-Rahman Thi Samawi) and they would give themselves to their gods asking for peace and love.

In addition, the materials that were used in mummification indicate that ancient Yemenis had very advanced medical and scientific information and methods. It also indicated that Yemenis had lived luxurious life as most of the materials were very expensive at the time.


Mr. Mohamed Qasim, the head of the national team, said “because of the huge number of mummies that can be found in Yemen, the government offered to open a special museum in Al Tawilah in Al- Mahweet. The delay comes because there is no subsidy from the government to open this museum. Moreover, the lack of specialists and experts play a role in this, and our Yemeni team is not qualified.

“Yemen has a lot of Mummies; leaving them without proper care and maintenance is a crime. The problem is that no one can touch the bodies because they need experts in this field. Some graves are in the Mountains at a height of 40 – 60 meters, we need help to reach them, we need help to serve them and we need help to study them,” he concluded.

http://yementimes.com/article.shtml?i=1090&p=report&a=1

http://atlantisonline.smfforfree2.com/index.php?topic=4022.0;wap2

http://qudama-alarab.blogspot.com/2012/12/yemen.html



Most of those 1000's upon 1000's of ancient Arabian artifacts are located in Western Museum (Louvre, British Museum etc.)

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Biochemistry Research International
Volume 2014, Article ID 481508, 9 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/481508
Research Article
Evaluating the Biodeterioration Enzymatic Activities of Fungal Contamination Isolated from Some Ancient Yemeni Mummies Preserved in the National Museum

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/bri/2014/481508/

National Geographic documentary about ancient mummies in Yemen



More recent videos:



How many people across the world even inside Yemen, Arabia and the Arab world are aware of this tremendous rich history (sadly not too many for now) that no other region in the planet can compete with when the entire palette is included? Even the oldest recorded human remains have been found in the Arab world outside of Africa.

@SALMAN F @OutOfAmmo @Gomig-21 @Falcon29 @Hell NO @The SC @HannibalBarca @Hamilcar @Full Moon @Nile-Tiger @Frogman etc. kindly take a look at this thread and contribute if possible.

Tagging is most likely not working as usual.
 
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The tagging does not work as usual. When tagging other users or when I am supposedly tagged, more than half of the time I do not receive any notifications.

Ancient Mummies Finally Give Up Their Genetic Secrets
Armed with new DNA techniques, scientists have extracted genetic sequences from preserved Egyptians


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The sarcophagus of Tadja, one of the mummies from Abusir el Meleq that had its DNA analyzed in a new study. (Aegyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung)
By Ben Panko
SMITHSONIAN.COM
MAY 31, 2017

Historically, the idea of extracting DNA from an Egyptian mummy has been a bit like trying to suck dinosaur DNA out an insect trapped in amber: a tantalizing prospect, but still more myth than science. “This has been around for a long time as a hot topic,” says Johannes Krause, a geneticist at Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. But unlike the dino scenario, it turns out analyzing mummy DNA is actually scientifically possible.

Krause has spent his career teasing information out of very old DNA. His work has led to the discovery of a new subspecies of human, which he helped identify from a bone fragment in a European cave; he also definitively identified the disease behind the infamous Black Death by examining dug-up plague victims. Now he can add another ancient jewel to his list: mummies. His team has managed to extract the first intact DNA from thousands-year-old Egyptian mummies, allowing them to unravel the secrets of their genetic heritage.

The discovery comes out of a relatively new field known as archaeogenetics. It was founded by a Swedish biologist named Svante Pääbo who claimed to have extracted the DNA of 23 ancient Egyptian mummies as a young researcher in the 1980s. However, Pääbo’s work fell under heavy criticism from other scientists when it became clear that his DNA samples could be contaminated with modern DNA, Krause says. By the 2000s, some experts had begun to question whether it was even possible to extract usable DNA from mummies that had been weathered for so long by the hot, dry Egyptian climate.

Advances in DNA sequencing technology in the past eight years, particularly “high-throughput” sequencing technology that can sequence millions of DNA base pairs quickly, cheaply and accurately, have reopened the possibility that Egyptian mummies could give up their genetic secrets, Krause says. Last year, he and his colleagues aimed to learn more about the genetic makeup of ancient Egyptian people—and particularly, how their population had been influenced by a particularly turbulent, thousand-year chapter of history.

Starting in the 8th century BCE, waves of migration and conquest from Rome and farther south in Africa shook the region. If they were indeed able to extract mummy DNA, Krause expected to find the effects of this period of invasion—and, presumably, intermixing—written in the genetics.

Drawing on two mummy collections from German universities, the team analyzed more than 150 mummies recovered from an ancient area of middle Egypt called Abusir el-Meleq, a thriving city along the Nile River where many Egyptians were buried starting in 1500 BCE. The mummies ranged in age from 2,000 to 3,000 years old. These were not pharaohs or wealthy Egyptians buried in elaborate stone sarcophagi, Krause says, but rather ordinary, “middle-class” people buried in simple painted wood coffins. “At the time, they mummified almost everything,” Krause says, including pets and wild animals.

schuneman.jpg

Lead author Verena Schuenemann works with part of a skull from a mummy that had its DNA extracted. Bones and teeth were found to preserve the DNA much better than the mummified soft tissues. (Johannes Krause)
Using these new techniques, Krause was able to find complete mitochondrial genomes in the tissues of 90 of those mummies, according to a study published yesterday in the journal Nature Communications. While previous studies of ancient mummy DNA tended to focus on sampling from the remaining soft tissues of the bodies (i.e. muscle, skin and organs), Krause says his team found that actually the bones and teeth of the mummies best preserved the people’s DNA, because these structures were less exposed to the heat and humidity that can degrade genetic material.

To rule out the contamination that sank previous studies, Krause relied on work of geneticists in the last decade who have learned how to track the damage that occurs to the structure of DNA as it degrades over hundreds or thousands of years. Newer, undamaged DNA that had contaminated a sample would now stand out in an analysis of older, pockmarked DNA. “With these DNA damage patterns, we’re really able to authenticate ancient DNA,” Krause says.

So how did the genetic makeup of the people living Abusir el-Meleq change in these turbulent centuries?

“Nothing really happened. It was very boring,” Krause says with a laugh. Apparently, all that conquering didn’t significantly change the genetics of this Egyptian population—which, in itself, was unexpected. “That was actually a bit of a surprise to us,” Krause says.

Next, Krause wanted to compare what he found in the ancient DNA to the genetics of modern Egyptians, drawing on a genetic survey in 2015 that looked at human migration out of Africa. Predominantly, the modern people sampled appeared to share the most genetic ties with people today living in the Arabic countries of the Middle East.
This contrasts with modern Egyptians, Krause says, who now appear to have more genetic origins from sub-Saharan Africa.

This suggests that the invading peoples from Nubia and Rome didn’t significantly intermix with the ancient Egyptians during the centuries before the year 0 AD—but that sometime since, a mass influx of African genes entered the Egyptian population.

American University in Cairo egyptologist Salima Ikram found Krause’s work overall to be “well-balanced, well-researched, and well thought-out.” However, Ikram, who was not involved in the study, is skeptical about how definitive Krause’s comparison to modern Egyptians really is. The genetic survey of modern Egyptians cited by Krause does not specify where the people sampled were from, Ikram says, a data gap that could have big implications on the conclusion.

“Despite mobility, [there] are [still] pockets of ethnic groupings,” Ikram says. Samples from southern Egypt or slave-trade centers could therefore show much more sub-Saharan African influence than samples from northern port cities that could have more European influence from the Crusades.

In future studies, Krause hopes to collect more mummy DNA from around Egypt to pinpoint when and why ancient Egyptians began to change genetically—and to find out exactly how their ancestors migrated to the fertile crescent in the first place. “What we’re most interested is extending the data back in time,” he says.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/scie...finally-give-their-genetic-secrets-180963518/

Not surprised and corresponding pretty much to what we know from the history books and human migrations.

The African (Horn of Africa and Sub-Saharan) ancestry in modern-day Egyptians (was it 20%?) is mostly a consequence of minorities such as Nubians and intermarriages during the slavery period. Mostly in Upper Egypt. Otherwise those DNA tests of ancient Egyptian mummies and modern-day Egyptians prove once again (without a single doubt) that the Arab Near East has been extremely closely connected on all fronts since at least the Neolithic period.

In Arabia the Horn of Africa/Sub-Saharan Africa ancestry tops in Yemen (10%) which correspondents to the Afro-Arab communities. Among ethnic Saudi Arabians (ethnic Arabs) I am yet to see a single Sub-Saharan African ancestry on all the available DNA tests online.


So outside of an influx of African slaves (mostly Arab males fathering children with African/Horn of Africa slave women out of wedlock, just like in the US and Latin America between British and Spanish/Portuguese slave owners, who grew up as Africans/Afro-Arabs, otherwise majority of the intermarriages were Afro-Arab-Afro-Arab intermarriages) and adopting local culture, the population of the Arab Middle East has been more or less the same since the Neolithic period which explains why Neolithic mummies from the Natufian culture (most advanced and the first Neolithic culture in the world) cluster with modern-day Saudi Arabians (in particular), Jordanians, Palestinians, Egyptians etc.

http://anthromadness.blogspot.com/2016/06/natufians-and-neolithic-levantines-lack.html

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5003663/
 
World's oldest bread found at prehistoric site in Jordan

Will Dunham
3 MIN READ

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Charred remains of a flatbread baked about 14,500 years ago in a stone fireplace at a site in northeastern Jordan have given researchers a delectable surprise: people began making bread, a vital staple food, millennia before they developed agriculture.


Amaia Arranz-Otaegui, a University of Copenhagen postdoctoral researcher in archaeobotany, and Ali Shakaiteer, a local assistant to researchers working at an archeological site in the Black Desert in northeastern Jordan, are seen collecting wheat in this image provided July 16, 2018. Joe Roe/Handout via REUTERS

No matter how you slice it, the discovery detailed on Monday shows that hunter-gatherers in the Eastern Mediterranean achieved the cultural milestone of bread-making far earlier than previously known, more than 4,000 years before plant cultivation took root.

The flatbread, likely unleavened and somewhat resembling pita bread, was fashioned from wild cereals such as barley, einkorn or oats, as well as tubers from an aquatic papyrus relative, that had been ground into flour.

It was made by a culture called the Natufians, who had begun to embrace a sedentary rather than nomadic lifestyle, and was found at a Black Desert archeological site.

“The presence of bread at a site of this age is exceptional,” said Amaia Arranz-Otaegui, a University of Copenhagen postdoctoral researcher in archaeobotany and lead author of the research published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


A stone structure at an archeological site containing a fireplace, seen in the middle, where charred remains of 14,500-year-old bread was found in the Black Desert, in northeastern Jordan in this photo provided July 16, 2018. Alexis Pantos/Handout via REUTERS

Arranz-Otaegui said until now the origins of bread had been associated with early farming societies that cultivated cereals and legumes. The previous oldest evidence of bread came from a 9,100-year-old site in Turkey.

“We now have to assess whether there was a relationship between bread production and the origins of agriculture,” Arranz-Otaegui said. “It is possible that bread may have provided an incentive for people to take up plant cultivation and farming, if it became a desirable or much-sought-after food.”

University of Copenhagen archeologist and study co-author Tobias Richter pointed to the nutritional implications of adding bread to the diet. “Bread provides us with an important source of carbohydrates and nutrients, including B vitamins, iron and magnesium, as well as fiber,” Richter said.


Abundant evidence from the site indicated the Natufians had a meat- and plant-based diet. The round floor fireplaces, made from flat basalt stones and measuring about a yard (meter) in diameter, were located in the middle of huts.

Arranz-Otaegui said the researchers have begun the process of trying to reproduce the bread, and succeeded in making flour from the type of tubers used in the prehistoric recipe. But it might have been an acquired taste.

“The taste of the tubers,” Arranz-Otaegui said, “is quite gritty and salty. But it is a bit sweet as well.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...efends-record-in-senate-hearing-idUSKBN1K91A7

Yet again the Arab world is a pioneer and more precisely the Arab/Semitic Near East.


As a side note the population of the Arab/Semitic Middle East has been more or less the same since the Neolithic period which explains why Neolithic mummies from the Natufian culture (most advanced and the first Neolithic culture in the world) cluster with modern-day Saudi Arabians (in particular), Jordanians, Palestinians, Egyptians etc.

DNA results from 2016:

https://plot.ly/~PortalAntropologiczny9cfa/1.embed?share_key=za9Lb3y1UX6nJRG9v4EXOL

Here is the entire report:

http://biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2016/06/16/059311.full.pdf

http://anthromadness.blogspot.com/2016/06/natufians-and-neolithic-levantines-lack.html

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5003663/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natufian_culture


Fascinating stuff.
 
Saudi Arabian Tourism and Heritage Authority registers 43 archaeological sites


ARAB NEWS
July 23, 2018

  • Saudi Arabia’s General Tourism and Heritage Authority has registered 43 archaeological sites across the Kingdom
  • Among the registered sites are 26 locations in the holy city of Makkah
RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s General Tourism and Heritage Authority has registered 43 archaeological sites across the Kingdom during the section quarter of this year.
Among the registered sites are 26 locations in the holy city of Makkah, including Al-Hafaira in the governorate of Al-Taif, and two archaeological sites in the governorate of Al-Jamoom,
It also includes nine in the region of Assir, including a site in the city of Bel Qarn, in south Saudi Arabia, and a location at the Shefa Saad site and several others in Wadi Ne’am in the governorate of Tathleeth.
The Kingdom has announced the registration of 32 archaeological sites during the first quarter of 2018.
The authority has also launched established the national electronic register for the documentation of archaeological and historical sites in the Kingdom.
It allows recording their details electronically so that they can be protected and developed. Through this important national project, the Authority has managed to register 8268 archaeological sites so far in the various regions of the Kingdom.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1343901/saudi-arabia






Magnificent video about the ancient history of Yemen.

 

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