al-Ula
al-'Ula, Saudi Arabia

The ruins of the ancient city of Dedan are located approximately 4 km away from the oasis city now known as al-‘Ulâ, in the Wadi al-Qara. First settled ca. 800 BCE, this oasis town on the incense trading route that traversed the Arabian Penninsula became the capital of the Deadanite Kingdom, and one of the most important trade centers in the region. The Lihyanite Kingdom controlled the city from the 6th century BCE, but Dedan remained the primary commercial center. Inscriptions also indicate agricultural and shepherding activity. Inscriptions found on a mountainside area to the north of the city also indicate the area was a pilgrimage site.


The city collapsed and was eventually abandoned in the 1st century when the Nabateans rose to power in the area and diverted the incense trade routes through Hegra (Mada’in Salih) 30 km to the north.


A vast water storage basin, 3.75 m in diameter, 2.15 meters deep, and capable of holding and estimated 27,000 liters (6,000 gallons) of water, is situated in the center of the ruins. It is believed to be the ablution facility of a temple. According to Abdallah Al-Nasif, there was also a network of ancient qanat, (underground water channels), regulated by sun clocks, that irrigated surrounding lands.1


The foundations and walls of housing are discernible among the ruins, as are 3 religious structures, including a temple with a 16 x 13.2 m rectangular floor plan. There are also Lihyanite tombs at al-Khuraibiah, an area in the northeast of the city. The tombs vary in size and decoration, but most are approximately 2 m deep.


The Old Town of al-‘Ula arose in the 13th century/ 7th century AH, and was built incorporating many stones and other parts of the ruins of Dedan. The archaeological sites and historical sites are now preserved by the Ministry of Antiquities. 


Notes:    

1.   Abdallah Al-Nasif, 30-31


--Michael A. Toler, October 2015


SOURCES:

Works Cited

al-Nasif, Abdallah. 1981. "Al-'Ula (Saudi Arabia): A Report on a Historical and Archaeological Survey." Bulletin (British Society for Middle Eastern Studies), 1981. 30. JSTOR Journals, EBSCOhost (accessed October 13, 2015).


Ansary, A. R., and Hussein Abu Al Hassan. "Al-'Ula." The Civilization of Two Cities: Al-ʻUlā & Madāʼin Sāliḥ


. Riyadh: Dar Al-Qawafil, 2001. 10-57. Print.


Clark, Arthur P., Muhammad A. Tahlawi, William Facey, and Thomas A. Pledge. "Chapter 2-Arabia Before Islam."

A

Land Transformed: The Arabian Peninsula, Saudi Arabia, and Saudi Aramco


. Dhahran, Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabian Oil (Saudi Aramco), 2006. 29-59. Print.


"Dedan." The Incense Road. Accessed October 13, 2015.

http://nabataea.net/dedan.html

.


Hariri-Rifai, Wahbi, and Mokhless Hariri-Rifai. "Ancient Routes." The Heritage of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Washington, D.C.: GDG Publications, 1990. 32-83. Print.


Klee, Hugo De, and J. N. D. Anderson. "Chapter 4-History." The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. London: Stacey International, 1983. 65-73. Print.


Neil G., Smith, Passone Luca, al-Said Said, al-Farhan Mohamed, and Levy Thomas E. 2014. "Drones in Archaeology: Integrated Data Capture, Processing, and Dissemination in the al-Ula Valley, Saudi Arabia." Near Eastern Archaeology (NEA), 2014. 176. JSTOR Journals, EBSCOhost (accessed October 13, 2015).


"Tourist Sites in Al-Ula City." Www.madainsaleh.net. Accessed October 13, 2015. http://www.madainsaleh.net/al-ula-tourist-sites.html.

Location
al-'Ula, Saudi Arabia
Images & Videos
Site Contains
Events
800 BCE to 103 CE
Variant Names
al-'Ulâ
Alternate transliteration
Dedan
Formerly known as
Building Usages
public monuments
Keywords