Abstract

Over the past three decades, the site of Khirbet eḏ-Ḏarīḥ, south Jordan, had provided us with scarce epigraphical evidence in the form of Byzantine Greek or Islamic Arabic inscriptions. This work is the first publication of three North Arabian short inscriptions, datable between the 1st century BC and the 2nd century AD. Two are of the Ḥismā'ic type (one of them is engraved on a reused Nabataean stela, the second on the drum of one of the heart-shaped angle piers of the temple's adyton); the third is a Dedanite inscription engraved on a plaster seal.

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