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Yemen: A funerary stele featuring a ploughman above three busts, Sabaean, limestone, 1st-3rd centuries CE. Inscription in Sabaean language: 'Stele of Yahmad, Shufnîqên, Hassat and Khallî'

Yemen: A funerary stele featuring a ploughman above three busts, Sabaean, limestone, 1st-3rd centuries CE. Inscription in Sabaean language: 'Stele of Yahmad, Shufnîqên, Hassat and Khallî'

The ancient Sabaean Kingdom established power in the early 1st millennium BC. In the 1st century BC it was conquered by the Himyarites, but after the disintegration of the first Himyarite empire of the Kings of Saba' and Dhu-Raydan, the Middle Sabaean Kingdom reappeared in the early 2nd century. It was finally conquered by the Himyarites in the late 3rd century. Its capital was Ma'rib. The kingdom was located along the strip of desert called Sayhad by medieval Arab geographers, which is now named Ramlat al-Sab`atayn.

The Sabaean people were South Arabian people. Each of these had regional kingdoms in ancient Yemen, with the Minaeans in the north along the Red sea, the Sabeans on the south western tip, stretching from the highlands to the sea, the Qatabanians to the east of them and the Hadramites east of them.

The Sabaeans, like the other Yemenite kingdoms of the same period, were involved in the extremely lucrative spice trade, especially frankincense and myrrh. They left behind many inscriptions in the monumental Musnad (Old South Arabian) alphabet, as well as numerous documents in the cursive Zabur script.

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