
H 290 x W 205 mm
318 pages
Published Jul 2026
ISBN
Hardback: 9781805833260
Digital: 9781805833277
Keywords
Archaeology; History; Epigraphy; Rock art; Digital humanities; Cult; Religion; Afterlife; Funerary; Southern Levant; Arabia
Related titles




Edited by Juan Manuel Tebes, Michael C.A. Macdonald
Hardback
£65.00
Exploring the sacred landscapes of northern Arabia and the southern Levant from prehistory to the Early Islamic period, the book examines cults, ritual traditions, funerary practices and beliefs across deserts and borderlands. Combining archaeology, epigraphy, rock art and digital humanities, it traces long-term continuities and transformations.
Preface
Introduction. Across different times and landscapes: Cults and afterlife beliefs in Northern Arabia and the arid Southern Levant in the longue-durée – Juan Manuel Tebes and Michael C.A. Macdonald
Chapter 1. Borders in the desert: The archaeology and epigraphy of the arid Southern Levant and North-West Arabia and their context, from the nineteenth century to the present – Juan Manuel Tebes and Michael C.A. Macdonald
The Archaeology and Iconography of Cult and Death
Chapter 2. The immediacy of scarcity: Towards an understanding of the indigenous geonuminosity of Arabia’s landscapes – Hans Georg K. Gebel
Chapter 3. No rest for the dead: An active afterlife in the Neolithic – Bill Finlayson
Chapter 4. Continuities, convergences, truncations, and other trends in Negev cult over the long term: An archaeological perspective – Steven A. Rosen
Chapter 5. A remote sensing perspective on funerary and cultic monuments in the arid regions of Northern Arabia – Michael Fradley
Chapter 6. A reassessment of the ‘local shrine’ and the Hathor sanctuary, Timna (Site 200), Southern Negev – Gaël Carriou
Chapter 7. The rock art of the Negev, Israel: Discussing private and public space – Davida Eisenberg-Degen and George H. Nash
Chapter 8. Speech of tree: The tradition of sacred trees in the Southern Levant and Northern Arabia as archetypal symbolism – Elizabeth S. Bloem Viljoen
The Epigraphic and Textual Evidence for Cults and Beliefs
Chapter 9. Scented smoke over Dadan: Revisiting Julius Euting’s Stone No. 36 – Regine Hunziker-Rodewald, Thierry Grégor and Andrei Aioanei
Chapter 10. Up on the mountain, down in the valley: New clues to the spatial and social organization of religion at ancient Dadan, and to the political-economic context of the late Lihyanite period – Fokelien Kootstra-Ford, Josselin Pinot and Jérôme Rohmer
Chapter 11. Le dieu Kahl à Qaryat al-Faʾw et à Ḥimà: nordarabique ou sudarabique? – Christian Julien Robin and Mashʿal ʿAbd Allāh Āl Qurād with a contribution of Jérôme Norris
Chapter 12. Nabataean royal portraits in the area of the Qaṣr al-Bint temple at Petra – Laïla Nehmé and François Renel
Chapter 13. Ethical waṣiyyas on the Eve of Islam – Ilkka Lindstedt
Chapter 14. Sacred locales in the Qur’an – Nicolai Sinai
Juan Manuel Tebes is Professor at the Catholic University of Argentina, current Director of its Center of Studies of Ancient Near Eastern History, and Researcher at the National Research Council of Argentina. He is co-editor of the Ancient Near East Monographs (SBL Press) and former editor-in-chief of the scholarly journal Antiguo Oriente. Tebes has participated in archaeological expeditions in Jordan, Israel, and Turkey, and has also been research fellow at many institutions.
Michael C.A. Macdonald is a Fellow of the British Academy, holds a D.Litt from the University of Chicago, and is an Honorary Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford. For the last 50 years he has studied the languages, scripts, rock-art and cultures of ancient Arabia and its neighbours, ancient nomads, and ancient literacy. He has led numerous expeditions to record inscriptions in the deserts of Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, and led the creation of the Online Corpus of the Inscriptions of Ancient North Arabia (OCIANA).