Seminar for Arabian Studies

2002 Seminar Programme


The 2002 Seminar for Arabian Studies was held from July 18-20, 2002, at the British Museum, London, U.K. This coincided with the Queen of Sheba - Treasures from Ancient Yemen exhibition (9 June - 13 October 2002)

Lectures were held in the BP Lecture theatre, Clore Education Centre, the British Museum

Thursday, July 18
Friday, July 19
Saturday, July 20



Thursday, July 18, 2002

ARCHAEOLOGY IN OMAN AND THE GULF

8.15 - Registration

9.00 - Opening Remarks by Venetia Porter

9.10 - Peter Magee (Department of Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology, Bryn Mawr College, USA): Intensification and resource diversity in late prehistoric southeastern Arabia

9.35 - Vincent Charpentier and Philippe Marquis (CNRS UMR 7041, Paris, France and Commission du vieux, Paris, France): Two campaigns on the Neolithic site of Gorbat al-Mahar, Suwayh, Sultanate of Oman

10.00 -
Jutta Haeser (DAI): Results of the survey campaigns in the Wadi Bani Awf and in the Al-Hamra Region, Oman

10.25 - COFFEE

11.00 -
Serge Cleuziou, Rémy Crassard and Cecile Monchablon (CNRS, UMR, Nanterre, & INRAP (Pantin), France): Excavations at Ra's al-Jinz RJ-1 (Sultanate of Oman): Early Bronze Age chronology without tells

11.25 - Tom Vosmer (Western Australia Maritime Museum, Australia): La nave di Magan: the construction of the ship.

11.50 - Lynne Newton (University of Minnesota, USA): A Landscape of Trade, Colonization and Resistance: Iron Age Dhofar

12.15 -
Anne Benoist and Jérémie Schiettecatte (CNRS, Lyon, & University of Paris I, France): Stratigraphy and distribution of artefacts in the fort CW at Mleiha (Emirate of Sharjah)

12.35 - LUNCH

Chair: Tony Wilkinson

14.00 -
Ali Tigani ElMahi and Moawiyah Ibrahim (Department of Archaeology, Sultan Qaboos University, Sultanate of Oman): Two seasons of investigations at Manal site in Wadi Samayil, Sultanate of Oman.

14.25 - Derek Kennet (Department of Archaeology, University of Durham, UK): The archaeology of the mountain villages of the Musandam

14.50 - Caesar Farah (Department of History, University of Minnesota, USA): Anglo-Ottoman confrontation in the Persian Gulf

15.15 - TEA

COMPARATIVE WATER SYSTEMS

15.45 - Miquel Barcelo (Departament de Ciences de L'Antiguitat i de l'Edat Mitjana, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain): Peasants of Zafar. The architecture of hydraulic systems. A report of the 1999 and 2000 campaigns.

16.10 - Helena Kirchner Granell (Departament de Ciències de l'Antiguitat i de l'Edat Mitjana, Facultat de Lletres, edifici B. Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain): Ma'gil: A type of hydraulic system in Yemen and in Al-Andalus?

16.35 - Walid Yasin al-Tikriti (Al Ain Museum, United Arab Emirates): An Early Islamic falaj from Al-Ain (UAE)


Friday, July 19, 2002

LIFE AND AFTERLIFE IN THE YEMENI LANDSCAPE

Chair: St. John Simpson

9.30 - Tony J. Wilkinson (The Oriental Institute, Chicago, USA) : The organization of the landscape of highland Yemen in the Bronze and Iron Ages

9.55 - Frank Braemer, Jean-Francois Breton, Serge Cleuziou and Tara Steimer (CNRS, Paris, France): Dolmen-like structures, some unusual funerary monuments in Yemen.

10.20 - Carl Phillips (CNRS UMR 7041, Paris, France): Arabian Stonehenge

10.45 - COFFEE

11.20 - William Glanzman (Department of Archaeology, University of Calgary, Canada): A re-examination of the building campaign of Yada''il Dar_h bin Sumhu'alay, mukarrib of Saba,' in light of recent archaeology

11.45 - Abdu O. Ghaleb (University of Sana'a, Republic of Yemen): The results of the April-May 2001 field season of excavations by The American Foundation for the Study of Man at Mahram Bilqis in Marib

12.10 - Iris Gerlach (DAI, Sanaa, Republic of Yemen): The Sabaean Cult centre Sirwah: The latest archaeological and architecturally historic research by the German Archaeological Institute on the temple hill and in the oasis

12.35 - Jean-Francois Breton (University of Paris, France): The development of the city of Shabwa (Hadramawt)

13.00 - LUNCH

Chair: William Glanzman

14.30 - Joseph Daniels: Landscape graffiti in the Dhamar Plains and its relation to mountaintop religious practice

14.55 - Krista Lewis (Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago, Chicago, USA): Landscapes of Himyar in Ancient Highland Yemen

15.20 - Holger Hitgen (DAI, Sanaa, Republic of Yemen): Living and dying on the Jabal al'Awd - Types of buildings and burial rites of an early Himyarite mountain settlement in the Yemen

15.45 - Jan Retso (Goteborg, Sweden): When did Yemen become Arabia Felix?

16.15 - TEA

ETHNOGRAPHY IN YEMEN

16.45 - Vitaly Naumkin and Victor Porkhomovsky: Oral poetry in Socotran socio-cultural context

17.10 - Miranda Morris - Concepts of good and poor health in the Soqotra Archipelago: the promotion of the former and treatment of the latter

17.35 - Hanne Schönig (Martin-Luther-Universitat, Halle, Wittenburg, Germany): Reflections on the u
se of animal drugs in Yemen

18.00 - Ester Muchawsky-Schnapper (Department of Ethnography, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel): Children's attire in early twentieth century Sana'a as a socio-cultural paradigm

18.45 - RECEPTION IN THE JOHN ADDIS ISLAMIC GALLERY (BRITISH MUSEUM)


Saturday, July 20, 2002

ANCIENT NORTH ARABIAN AND ARABIC

Chair: Michael Macdonald

9.00 - Sultan Maani (Queen Rania's Institute of Tourism and Heritage, Hashemite University, Zarqa, Jordan): New Safaitic Inscriptions from Jordan

9.25 - Francois de Blois (Universitaet Hamburg, Asien-Afrika-Institut, Hamburg, Germany: Qur’an IX: 37 and CIH 547

9.50 - Janet C.E. Watson (University of Durham, UK): A 'little' look at language change in San'ani Arabic: What came before shwayyih?

10.15 - COFFEE

SOUTH ARABIAN EPIGRAPHY

10.45 - Serguei A. Frantsouzoff (Institute of Oriental Studies, St. Petersburg, Russia): The Hadramitic funerary inscription from the grotto of ar-Rukba (wadi al-Ghabr, Inland Hadramawt) and burial ceremonies in ancient Hadramawt

11.10 - Mohammed Maraqten (University of Marburg, Germany): Some notes on Sabaic epistolography

11.35 - Peter Stein (Jena, Germany): The inscribed wooden sticks of the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek in Munich

12.00 - Walter Müller (
Institut für Orientalistik und Sprachwissenschaft der Philipps-Universität, Marburg, Germany): A statuette in bronze with a Sabaic penitential inscription

12.25 - Alexander V. Sedov (Institute of Oriental Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia): The beginning of coin circulation in south Arabia

12.50 - LUNCH

YEMEN IN THE ISLAMIC PERIOD

Chair: Valeria Piacentini

14.20 - Selma al-Radi and Lamia Khalidi (Yemen): Documentation of a section of carved stucco from the Amiriya Madrasa in Rada, Yemen

14.45 - Soumyen Bandyophadyay and Magda Sibley (School of Architecture and Building Engineering, University of Liverpool, UK): Spatial organisation of mosques in central Oman: Its ancient Hadramawtic and Yemeni origin and the notions of purity

15.10 - Paolo Costa (University of Bologna, Italy): Wayside cisterns for the supply of free drinking water: A traditional charity common in the Yemen and throughout Arabia

15.35 - Axelle Rougeulle (CNRS, France): Sharma, an 11th century emporium of the Oriental Trade on the South Arabian coast

16.00 - TEA

16.30 - Noha Sadek (France): A tale of two capitals: Taizz and Zabid during the Rasulid Period

16.55 - Samer F. Traboulsi (Princeton University, USA): Setting sail for India: The relocation of the Ismaili da'wa from Yemen

17.20 -
Aviva Klein-Franke (Martin-Buber Institute for Jewish Studies, University of Cologne, Germany): Ancient gravestones and Jewish cemeteries in Aden

18.30 - CONCERT OF YEMENI MUSIC



We are grateful to the following for their support of the Seminar this year: MBI Foundation and the Seven Pillars of Wisdom Trust. With special thanks to those who have supported the concert: The British Museum Friends, the British Yemeni Society and Yemenia.

The Seminar is part of the public programme of events centred around the exhibition '
Queen of Sheba - Treasures from Ancient Yemen' (9th June - 13 October 2002) which has been sponsored by Barclays.

The next Seminar for Arabian Studies will be at The British Museum from Thursday July 17th - Saturday July 19th, 2003.




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