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Pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions

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Pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions refer to writings inscribed on stone (inscriptions) from pre-Islamic Arabia, or the Arabian Peninsula prior to the origins of Islam in the early seventh century AD. These inscriptions are a major source for learning about the history and culture of this region and period. Such inscriptions can be categorized into one of two types of inscriptions: namely, graffiti, which are "self-authored personal expressions written in a public space", and monumental inscriptions, which are inscriptions whose creation would have been commissioned to serve an official role.

Pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions were all written in one of three scripts: Ancient South Arabian (ASA), Ancient North Arabian (ANA), and Nabataean. Overall, tens of thousands of these inscriptions have been discovered. Despite the prevalence of their use in various time periods, only the tradition of the Nabataean script survived into the sixth century. Based on recent discoveries of Nabataean inscriptions documenting the evolution of this script, it is now widely accepted that the Arabic script ultimately descents from a Nabataean predecessor, through a Nabataean Arabic transitional phase.

See also

References

Citations

  1. Al-Jallad 2022, p. 7.
  2. Lindstedt 2023, p. 12.
  3. Donner 2022, p. 1–7.

Sources

External links

  • DASI (Digital Archive for the Study of pre-Islamic Arabian Inscriptions)
  • DiCoNab (The Digital Corpus of the Nabataean and Developing Arabic Inscriptions)
  • OCIANA (Online Corpus of the Inscriptions of Ancient North Arabia)
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