Bi'r `Ali

Bi'r `Ali
Country  Yemen
Governorate Shabwah
Time zone Yemen Standard Time (UTC+3)

Bi'r `Ali is a village in eastern Yemen. It is located in the Shabwah Governorate. The name means "Ali's Well" in Arabic. In pre-Islamic times, the port was called Qanīʻ.[1]

Archaeological finds

Wine jars (amphorae) dating back to the 1st century CE were discovered in Bi'r `Ali in 1988, in an underwater excavation along the shores of the Indian Ocean. On one of the jars is inscribed a word in the Palmyrene (Tadmori) alphabet and a word in Syriac script. The conclusion drawn by researchers, B. Davidde and R. Petriaggi, is that from the mid-1st century CE wine was imported from Italy and Syria upon camels that disembarked from Coptos (Qift) which lies along the banks of the Nile River in Egypt, thence unto ports Myos Hormos – a place that later became known as al-Quṣayr – and Berenike situated on the western shore of the Red Sea, and from there transported by ship to trade centers in Arabia, Ethiopia and India.[2]

The ruins of a Jewish synagogue were also discovered in Bi'r `Ali, dating back to at least the 3rd century CE. It is presumed that Jewish merchants from Hellenistic communities outside of Yemen may have eventually chosen to settle in that place, where they would have been occupied in the trade of aromatics.[3] This assumption is based on the five-lined Greek inscription that was preserved in the synagogue of ancient Qanīʻ (Bi'r `Ali), the content of which being a petition by a man named Kosmās unto the One God (eis theos) that he will protect his caravan (synodia) while traversing the vast wastelands.[4]

See also

External links

Bibliography

References

  1. Alternative spelling, Kanê; see: Rougeulle, Axelle (2001). "Notes on pre- and early Islamic harbours of Ḥaḍramawt (Yemen)". Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies. 31: 203–214. JSTOR 41223682. (registration required (help)).; Seland, Eivind (2005). "Ancient South Arabia: trade and strategies of state control as seen in the "Periplus MarisErythraei"". Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies. 35: 271–278. JSTOR 41219383. (registration required (help)).
  2. Davidde and Petriaggi 2005, p. 176; cf. Briquel-Chatonnet 2010.
  3. Sedov 1992; 1996; Breton 1999, pp. 171–173.
  4. Patrich 2011, p. 104.

Coordinates: 14°01′30″N 48°20′31″E / 14.02500°N 48.34194°E / 14.02500; 48.34194

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