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Sunday, January 30, 2011

Nabatean inscription from 2000 BCE? No.

NABATEAN (NABATAEAN) WRITING on a basalt column excavated in Syria?
Syria (Daraa) – A basaltic-stone column was discovered on Sunday during a project aimed at moving the archaeological and architecture items to the National Museum of Daraa.

The column's height is 1, 5 meters, standing on a square base.

Secretary of Daraa National Museum Ayham al-Zoubi told SANA that the column dates back to 2000 BC, and contains ornamentations and Nabataean writings.

[...]
Any writing from 2000 BCE would be in cuneiform, not Nabatean, and would be an unusual and highly noteworthy find. The photo is terrible, but I don't see anything on it that looks like cuneiform. My guess is that SANA misunderstood and the column is 2000 years old and bears a Nabatean (alphabetic Aramaic) inscription.

Via Explorator 13.41.

UPDATE (31 January): The Nabatean city of Bosra was in Syria in the vicinity of Daraa, which is further support for my understanding of the find.