Archaeological excavations by a Saudi‐Arabian‐German cooperation in the oasis of Tayma revealed stratified from the 2nd and 1st millennia BC until the Islamic period at a site marked by its specific environmentel setting. Political and cultural contacts of regional and supra‐regional scale are attested by archaeological and epigraphic sources from the centre of the city and its surrounding walls: pottery and sculpture as well as Aramaic and Taymanitic inscriptions. A newly discovered stele with a Mesopotamian royal representation and a Babylonian cuneiform text is attributed to the last Babylonian king Nabonidus who took residence in Tayma for ten years of his region.
a b s t r a c tVery little is known about early metallurgical activity in the north-western part of the Arabian Peninsula, despite the region's cultural importance. To begin to address this research lacuna, metallurgical remains including crucible fragments, metal dross and a copper artefact were sampled from two oases in northwest Arabia, Qurayyah and Tayma. The metallurgical activity in Qurayyah is dated to the Late Bronze Age, and in Tayma to the Roman/Late Roman period. At both sites we identified evidence for copper alloying and refining. Small scale copper smelting might also have been practiced in Qurayyah. Arsenical copper was processed at both sites, but in Tayma tin bronze and leaded tin bronze dominated. The chemical analysis of metal prills in crucible linings showed that fresh copper and tin instead of scrap metal were employed in these processes. Lead isotope analysis indicates that at least some of the Tayma metal was imported. Access to raw materials from remote areas is consistent with the importance of Tayma in the trading network of northwest Arabia.
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