this issue
previous article in this issuenext article in this issue

Document Details :

Title: Once Again, Petra on the Frankincense Road?
Author(s): MILDENBERG, Leo
Journal: ARAM Periodical
Volume: 8    Issue: 1   Date: 1996   
Pages: 55-65
DOI: 10.2143/ARAM.8.1.2002185

Abstract :
In 1994 I wrote a short note, which was published together with a map in 1995. I had argued that the northern branch of the main frankincense-road did not pass through Petra in Persian times for the following reasons: Petra proper did not exist in the fifth, or even in the fourth centuries BC; the ascent to and from the site would have been an arduous and unnecessary detour; and the ascent through the Siq would have been difficult. At the time, I was not aware of Zayadine’s pioneering article of 1992, which stressed that not all caravan routes passed through the Petra basin. Zayadine writes: “Par ces nombreux sanctuaires, son immense métropole, Pétra devait jouer d’abord le rôle d’un centre religieux et d’une ville sacrée des morts”. In the meantime, however, I was told that no-one had ever supposed that caravans were actually led through the Siq at Petra and that they came out on the other side of the city. I duly checked, and discovered that the maps at my disposal draw the route through just the Wadi Musa, the basin and the Siq.

Download article