OCIANA
Online Corpus of the Inscriptions of Ancient North Arabia

LP 291

Text Information

Siglum
LP 291
Alternative Sigla
LP 1086; Is.Mu 18
Transliteration
l frʾ bn ḥnnʾl bn s¹ny
Translation
By Frʾ son of Ḥnnʾl son of S¹ny

Interpretation

Commentary
Al-ʿĪsāwī Area H. This text (LP 291) was copied both by Littmann himself and also by one of the "servants of the Princeton University Archaeological expedition" (Littmann 1943), LP 1086.

Provenance
Al-ʿĪsāwī is the name of a probably ancient well between two headlands on the eastern side of the Wādī Shām as it runs northwards from the modern Al-Namārah dam to the Ruḥbah. The well is large, stone lined and with stone water-channels running from it. The main concentration of published inscriptions is on the top of the northern headland, but there also many inscriptions on its south-west slopes, coming down to the well and on the southern headland, on the crest of which is a stone tower. Littmann visited the site twice when he and other members of the expeditions copied some 450 inscriptions. Between 1996 and 2003, the Safaitic Epigraphic Survey Programme [SESP] made a comprehensive survey of the site recording over 3500 inscriptions.
Original Reading Credit
Ed. pr.
Original Translation Credit
Ed. pr.

Technique
Chiselled

Associated Inscriptions
LP 290, 292–297

  • Littmann, E. Safaïtic Inscriptions. Syria. Publications of the Princeton University Archaeological Expeditions to Syria in 1904–1905 and 1909. Division IV. Section C. Leiden: Brill, 1943.
  • Inscriptions recorded at al-ʿĪsāwī by Muna Al-Muʾazzin, on the Safaitic Epigraphic Survey Programme, 1995–2002, and published here.
Site
Al-ʿĪsāwī, Rif Dimašq Governorate, Syria
Date Found
1904–1905; 1996
Current Location
In situ
Subject
Genealogy
Script
Safaitic
Old OCIANA ID
#0027020
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