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Sheba

 

(West Asian mythology)

The Queen of Sheba came to Jerusalem and tested the wisdom of King Solomon ‘with hard questions’. Around the visit of this nameless Queen legend has woven a rich tapestry. Her gifts were magnificent because the wealth of her land, present-day Yemen, derived from a near-monopoly over the supply of frankincense and myrrh. In Hebrew mythology Solomon ‘lay with the Queen of Sheba and from her went forth Nebuchadnezzar’. In Ethiopia the legend took on a political significance, for the 1955 Revised Constitution stated that the pedigree of Emperor Haile Selassie ‘descends without interruption from the dynasty of Menelik I, son of the Queen of Ethiopia, Queen of Sheba, and King Solomon of Jerusalem’. Most surprising of all, however, are the embellishments found in Islamic tradition, where the visitor has become not the Queen, but Solomon. He travelled from Mecca to Sheba and expected to find its queen with ‘legs like a donkey's because her mother was a djinn’, a demon. To his relief the legs of the Queen of Sheba proved attractively human, though they were rather hairy. So they married–after she had used depilatories.

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Dictionary: She·ba   (shē') pronunciation
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An ancient country of southern Arabia comprising present-day Yemen. Its people colonized Ethiopia in the tenth century B.C. and were known for their wealth and commercial prosperity. In the Bible, the queen of Sheba made a celebrated visit to King Solomon.

 

 
Sheba, biblical name of a region, called in Arabic Saba, of S Arabia, including present-day Yemen and the Hadhramaut. Its inhabitants were called Sabaeans or Sabeans. According to some passages in Genesis and First Chronicles, Sheba, a grandson of Noah's grandson Joktan, was the ancestor of the Sabaeans. According to other passages in those books, however, Sheba was a descendant of Abraham. The Semitic colonization of Ethiopia was established (10th cent. B.C.) from Sheba. In that century the biblical queen of Sheba (called in Muslim tradition Bilqis; see Sheba, in the Bible) is said to have made her famous visit to Solomon.

Situated along the trade route from India to Africa, Sheba was known as a region of great wealth. Trade between Israel and Sheba is mentioned in First Kings. Elements of Sheba's culture, which was at its height between the 9th and 5th cent. B.C. (after the traditional dates for the reign of Solomon), is evidenced by the dam (since collapsed) near Marib, the capital of Sheba, and by the many inscriptions found there. Written in Himyaritic, a Semitic language, the inscribed characters derive from Phoenician writing. Ethiopia conquered (c.A.D. 525) Sheba. In 572, Sheba became a Persian province and, with the rise of Muhammad, fell under Islamic control and lost its separate identity.

Bibliography

See W. Phillips, Qataban and Sheba (1955); R. Le Baron Bowen et al., Archaeological Discoveries in South Arabia (1958).


Wikipedia: Sheba
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The Middle East through the eyes of the ancient Israelites, reconstructed according to the documentary hypothesis.

Sheba (Arabic: سبأ, Sabaʼ, Hebrew: שבא, Sh'va, Ge'ez, Amharic, Tigrinya: ሳባ, Saba) was a kingdom mentioned in the Jewish scriptures (Old Testament) and the Qur'an. The actual location of the historical kingdom is disputed, with modern evidence tending toward Yemen in southern Arabia,[1][2][3] but other scholars argue for a location in either present-day Eritrea or Ethiopia.

Contents

Biblical tradition

Sheba is mentioned several times in the Bible. For instance, in the Table of Nations (Genesis 10:7), Sheba, along with Dedan, is listed as a descendant of Noah's son Ham (as sons of Raamah son of Cush). In Genesis 25:3, Sheba and Dedan are listed as names of sons of Jokshan, son of Abraham. Another Sheba is listed in the Table of Nations (Genesis 10:28) as a son of Joktan, another descendant of Noah's son Shem. Yet another Sheba is mentioned in 2 Samuel 20:1-22 who rebelled against King David, was beheaded and his head thrown over the wall by the people in the city of Abel in order to save their lives.

In Ethiopian Orthodox tradition, the last of these three Shebas (Joktan's son) is considered the primary ancestor of the original Semitic component in their ethnogenesis, while Sabtah and Sabtecah, sons of Cush, are considered the ancestors of the Cushitic element.

Jewish-Roman historian Josephus describes a place called Saba as a walled, royal city of Ethiopia, which Cambyses afterwards named Meroe. He says "it was both encompassed by the Nile quite round, and the other rivers, Astapus and Astaboras" offering protection from both foreign armies and river floods. According to Josephus it was the conquering of Saba that brought great fame to a young Egyptian Prince, simultaneously exposing his personal background as a slave child named Moses.[4]

The Kitab al-Magall ("Book of the Rolls", considered part of Clementine literature) and the Cave of Treasures mention a tradition that after being founded by the children of Saba (son of Joktan), there was a succession of sixty female rulers up until the time of Solomon. The Biblical tradition of the "Queen of Sheba" (named Makeda in Ethiopian tradition and Bilqis in Islamic tradition) makes its first appearance in world literature in 1 Kings 10, describing her as travelling to Jerusalem to behold the fame of King Solomon.

Owing to the connection with the Queen of Sheba, the location has thus become closely linked with national prestige, as various royal houses have claimed descent from the Queen of Sheba and Solomon. The most vigorous claimant has been Ethiopia and Eritrea, where Sheba was traditionally linked with the ancient Axumite Kingdom.

Islamic origins

The Qur'anic Queen of Sheba, Balqis, was a ruler who visited Solomon after receiving a letter from him inviting her to submit to God. The letter read, "In the Name of Allah, the Most Beneficent, and Most Merciful: be you not exalted against me, but come to me as Muslims (true believers who submit with full submission)" (27:30-31 Quran). After visiting with King Solomon the Queen of Sheba said, "My Lord! Verily, I have wronged myself, and I submit (in Islam), together with Sulayman, to Allah, the Lord of the Alamin (mankind, jinns, and all that exists)" (27:20-44 Quran).

Archaeological considerations

see also Queen of Sheba and Rulers of Sheba.

Modern archaeological evidence increasingly supports Sheba being located in modern Yemen, at or near the site of the famous Marib Dam, which was first built more than 2500 years ago.[5][6][7]

Some scholars suggest a link to the Sabaeans of southern Arabia.[8] A number of sources claim that the people of Sheba controlled trade in the Red Sea, and expanded at some point from Arabia into Africa to found trading posts in the lands currently called Eritrea and Somalia.[9][10]

In the medieval Ethiopian cultural work called the Kebra Nagast, Sheba was located in Ethiopia.[11] Some scholars therefore point to a region in northern Tigray and Eritrea which was once called Saba (later called Meroe), as a possible link with the Biblical Sheba.[12] Other scholars link Sheba with Shewa (also written as Shoa, modern Addis Ababa) in Ethiopia.[13]

Ruins in many other countries, including Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan, Egypt, Eritrea and Iran have been credited as being Sheba, but with only minimal evidence. There has even been a suggestion of a link between the name "Sheba" and that of Zanzibar (“San-Sheba”).

Bibliography

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2000/09/12/sheba000912.html
  2. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=aM5hw9kZJ8sC&pg=PA160&lpg=PA160&dq=%2Bsheba,+%2Bmarib&source=bl&ots=lSNwgtEjnK&sig=4kiCYFlhHZwz3QJW9Of8apfzkVY&hl=en&ei=xNpZSrzOCeGrjAe18twa&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6
  3. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=2Vo-11umIZQC&pg=PA257&lpg=PA257&dq=%2Bsheba,+%2Bmarib&source=bl&ots=5QdSdWXuQS&sig=bCECpLzCkRBqWmDrdB8rgf5R9BI&hl=en&ei=pdpZSp6KJ4isjAfqgekb&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3
  4. ^ Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews II.10
  5. ^ http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2000/09/12/sheba000912.html
  6. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=aM5hw9kZJ8sC&pg=PA160&lpg=PA160&dq=%2Bsheba,+%2Bmarib&source=bl&ots=lSNwgtEjnK&sig=4kiCYFlhHZwz3QJW9Of8apfzkVY&hl=en&ei=xNpZSrzOCeGrjAe18twa&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6
  7. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=2Vo-11umIZQC&pg=PA257&lpg=PA257&dq=%2Bsheba,+%2Bmarib&source=bl&ots=5QdSdWXuQS&sig=bCECpLzCkRBqWmDrdB8rgf5R9BI&hl=en&ei=pdpZSp6KJ4isjAfqgekb&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3
  8. ^ Stuart Munro-Hay, Aksum: An African Civilization of Late Antiquity, 1991
  9. ^ Ethiopia in Pictures, bJeffrey Zuehlke
  10. ^ The history of Ethiopia, by Saheed A. Adejumobi
  11. ^ Edward Ullendorff, Ethiopia and the Bible (Oxford: University Press for the British Academy, 1968), p. 75
  12. ^ The Quest for the Ark of the Covenant: The True History of the Tablets of Moses, by Stuart Munro-Hay
  13. ^ Donald N. Levine, Wax and Gold: Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopia Culture (Chicago: University Press, 1972)

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Saba
Bichri (in the Old Testament)
Sabaean (extinct Semitic language)

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World Mythology Dictionary. A Dictionary of World Mythology. Copyright © Arthur Cotterell 1979, 1986, 2003. All rights reserved.  Read more
Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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