Mada'in_Saleh_Al-Hijr_Hegra_(مدائن_صالح)_(8136618664).jpg
Summary
Description Mada'in Saleh Al-Hijr Hegra (مدائن صالح) (8136618664).jpg |
Mada'in Saleh, also called Al-Hijr or Hegra is an archaeological site located in the Al-Ula sector, within the Al Madinah Region of Saudi Arabia. A majority of the vestiges date from the Nabatean kingdom (1st century CE). The site constitutes the kingdom's southernmost and largest settlement after Petra, its capital. Traces of Lihyanite and Roman occupation before and after the Nabatean rule, respectively, can also be found in situ, while accounts from the Qur’an tell of an earlier settlement of the area by the tribe of Thamud in the 3rd millennium BC. According to the central Islamic text, the Thamudis, who would carve out homes in the mountains, were punished by Allah for their persistent practice of idol worship and for conspiring to kill she-camel (as mentioned in the Qur'an), the non-believers being struck by an earthquake and lightning blasts. Thus, the site has earned a reputation down to contemporary times as a cursed place— an image which the national government is attempting to overcome as it seeks to develop Mada'in Saleh, officially protected as an archaeological site since 1972, for its tourism potential. In 2008, for its well-preserved remains from late antiquity, especially the 131 rock-cut monumental tombs, with their elaborately ornamented façades, of the Nabatean kingdom,UNESCO proclaimed Mada'in Saleh as a site of patrimony, becoming Saudi Arabia's first World Heritage Site. |
Date | |
Source | Mada'in Saleh Al-Hijr Hegra (مدائن صالح) |
Author | Basheer Olakara |
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This image was originally posted to Flickr by Basheer Olakara at https://www.flickr.com/photos/34068250@N08/8136618664 . It was reviewed on 15 April 2014 by FlickreviewR and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0. |
15 April 2014