South Arabian of Sheba kingdom
A Sabaean priestess, who intercedes with the sun goddess on behalf of the donor, probably first century
Sheba south Arabian ,
Hebre was South Arabian speaking kingdom whose location is unknown. It is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) and the Quran.
Sheba features in
Jewish
Muslim
and Christian,
particularly
Ethiopian Christian, traditions. It was the home of the biblical "Queen of Sheba", who is left unnamed in the Bible, but receives the names Makeda in Ethiopian and Bilqīs in Arabic tradition.
The predominant scholarly view is that the biblical narrative about the kingdom of Sheba was based on the ancient civilization of Saba in South Arabia
* in contradiction to several local traditions from different countries. Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silbermanwrite that "the Sabaean kingdom began to flourish only from the eighth century BCE onward" and that the story of Solomon and Sheba is "an anachronistic seventh-century set piece meant to legitimize the participation of Judah in the lucrative Arabian trade.
*The British Museum states that there is no archaeological evidence for such a queen but that the kingdom described as hers was Saba, "the oldest and most important of the South Arabian kingdoms.
* Kenneth Kitchen dates the kingdom to between 1200 BCE until 275 CE with its capital, Ma'rib.
*The kingdom fell after a long but sporadic civil war between several Yemenite dynasties claiming kingship.
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