The Nabataean Arabs, one of the most gifted peoples of the ancient world, are today known only for their hauntingly beautiful rock-carved capital--Petra. Here, in the wild and majestic landscapes of southern Jordan, they created some of the most prodigious works of man in the vast monuments that they chiseled from the sandstone mountains. The very scale of their achievement is breathtaking, but beyond mere magnitude is their creative vision, for they transformed the living rock of Petra into an enduring architectural masterpiece. For nearly two thousand years, their civilization has been lost and all but forgotten. Yet the Nabataeans were famous in their day--Herod the Great and his sons, and a kaleidoscope of Roman emperors, were keenly aware of their power and wealth. Often victims of Greek, Roman, or Herodian duplicity, murder, and power politics, the Nabataeans were major players in the drama of the Middle East in biblical times. This richly illustrated volume recounts the story of a remarkable but lost civilization and the capacity of its people to diversify their skills as necessity demanded. It describes their nomadic origins, the development of their multifaceted culture, their relations with their now famous neighbors, and the demise of their kingdom. It looks at their continued, if unrecognized, survival as Christians and farmers under the Byzantine Empire and into the early years of Islam.
Beyond the remarkable tenacity and durability of the Nabataens, typified by their rock-carved art and building facades in the midst of an ocean of near-barren land, little is conventionally known about this old kingdom which stood at the crossroads of the western world, metaphorically and literally.
Taylor takes us back in time to the early southern Arabian kingdoms, notably the Minaeans, Sabaeans, Hadhramut and Qataban, where the nomadic lifestyle had been superseded by cities built on the wealth of the land. Southern Arabia yielded the precious frankincense and myrrh which found aromatic, funerary and religious use in communities stretching from India to the western periphery of the Roman Empire. The Nabataens in northern Arabia, having spread out over an area across the Saudi, Syrian and Jordanian borders, utilised their intimate knowledge of the land, areas which were difficult for irregular travellers and possessing water sources invisible to the naked eye, to transport the caravans at a faster rate and profit off tariffs and excuse taxes in the ports and hubs they controlled. Even the emperor Augustus ordered an expedition into the Arabian interior with a Nabataen guide at the helm, a necessity without which many Romans would have perished from exhaustion and dehydration. Leader such as Obayd (Obodas) and Harith (Aretas) would spend the next century navigating Roman politics to ensure the prosperity of their kingdom.
Nabataen architecture developed a unique style from the fact that it was a blend of all the cultures that they traded with directly. While Nabataen sites are spread out over the land they controlled, it is the capital, Petra and Hegera, in Saudi Arabia, which possess the finest examples of Nabataen art and religious culture. The rock-face tombs and temples would employ either Assyrian cornices, like in Mada'in Saleh, or Greco-Roman pediments, like the so-called Khazneh in Petra (despite the evidence pointing to it being a temple dedicated to the cult of the dead), columns crowned with plain, Corinthian or even elephant head capitals, Greco-Roman metopes to add further decorations above the door posts and lastly, indigenous hydraulic engineering to prevent flooding in water and divert that precious water to cisterns. Their religion was less prone to assimilation, prefer to maintain the unique featureless iconography of their local deities as slender stone blocks alongside the inherited anthropomorphic deities of the Greco-Roman world. Similarly, their native old Arabic dialect was supplemented with Aramaic in order to facilitate trade with speakers of different Arabic dialects and foreigners from across the ocean.
That such a nation left behind so much grand, ornamental attestation of their existence is testament to their values, preferring to engage in business and building rather than war and enmity. The Greeks learned this the hard way, and rightly so given their treacher, and their Herodian rivals dying out before them. Eventually, the state was absorbed peacefully into the Roman Empire under Trajan. This is not a hint at their weakness but the direction in which the empire was headed, troublesome client states were conquered and friendly client states were left to Rome in the wills of their kings as in the case of Pergamum. Perhaps this is what happened with Rabbel since the commemoration on Roman coinage states that Nabataea was not "captured" as with Armenia, Egypt and Mesopotamia, but "acquired".
This book and all of the color photos are great history. Ms Taylor can write well and she is keeping me riveted on the ancient history of the Nabateans and their wondrous city, Petra. Coupling Roman history, the Judeans and the tribe of Nabateans, this book is terrific. It's suspenseful and concise. It's a real find.
Interesting book for holiday prep. Helped to have read it before visiting the sites. My copy from Amazon was a self published edition - the photos reproduction was very poor - should have bought a good second hand copy
I read this book in preparation for our trip to Petra in March. It was very informative about the Nabataeans, who built Petra, and their history. The photos in the book were gorgeous, although some parts were very slow reading.
I am always interested by the rise and fall of empires. The Nabataeans were powerful, creative and the masters of all they surveyed. And, poof the were gone.
Awesome detailed account of the area and it's history. The book to read if you want to know it ALL. Gorgeous photos. Read this before you go so you will know what hidden treasures to look for.