Formative period The formative phase of the Sabaeans, or the period prior to the emergence of urban cultures in South Arabia, can be placed the latter part of the 2nd millennium BCE, and was completed by the 10th century BCE, where a fully developed script appears in combination with the technological prowess to construct complex architectural complexes and cities. There is some debate as to the degree to which the movement out of the formative phase was channeled by endogenous processes, or the transfer or technologies from other centers, perhaps via trade and immigration. Originally, the Sabaeans were part of "communities" (called
shaʿbs) on the edge of the
Sayhad desert. Very early, at the beginning of the 1st millennium BC, the political leaders of this tribal community managed to create a huge commonwealth of shaʿbs occupying most of South Arabian territory and took on the title "
Mukarrib of the Sabaeans".
Emergence (ancient Nashqum, Kingdom of Saba'), 6th–5th century BCE, the
Louvre Museum The origin of the Sabaean Kingdom is uncertain and is a point of disagreement among scholars, with estimates placing it around 1200 BCE, by the 10th century BCE at the latest, or a period of flourishing that only begins from the 8th century BCE onwards. Once the polity had been established, Sabaean kings referred to themselves by the title
Mukarrib.
First Sabaean kingdom (8th – 1st centuries BCE) Era of the mukarribs The first major phase of the Sabaean civilization lasted between the 8th and 1st centuries BCE. For centuries, Saba dominated the political landscape in South Arabia. The 8th century is when the first stone inscriptions appear, and when leaders are already being called by the title
Mukarrib ("federator"). Due to this convention, this era can also be called the "Mukarrib period". The title
mukarrib was more prestigious than that of
mlk ("king") and was used to refer to someone that extended hegemony over other tribes and kingdoms. Saba reached the height of its powers between the 8th and 6th centuries BCE. In particular, through
protracted warfare,
Karib'il Watar carried out a series of conquests that extended Sabaean territory to
Najran in the north, the
Gulf of Aden in the southwest, and eastward from that point along the coast until the western foothills of the Hadhramaut plateau. Saba reigned supreme over South Arabia, and Karib'il established diplomatic contacts with the
Assyrian emperor
Sennacherib. This territorial range by a South Arabian kingdom would not be seen again until
Himyar achieved it over 1,100 years later. Karib'il's success is reflected by the dynastic succession of four rulers from his lineage, including sons, grandson, and great-grandons, a rare occurrence in the face of the rarity of dynastic succession in ancient South Arabian culture. The next time this would be seen was six centuries later in Qataban.
Era of the kings After the 6th century BCE, Saba was unable to maintain its supremacy over South Arabia in the face of the expanding adjacent powers of
Qataban and
Hadhramaut militarily, and
Ma'in economically, leading it contract back to its core territory around
Marib and
Sirwah. Sabaean leaders reverted to use of the title
malik ("king") instead of
mukarrib. This decline began soon after the end of the reign of Karib'il Watar. While Karib'il established hegemony over the Jawf, his immediate successors only consolidated their power over some of its former city-states (including
Nashq and Manhayat) whereas others (like
Yathill and the towns of Wadhi Raghwan) were absorbed into Ma'in. Qataban expanded into the Southern Highlands, formerly under Sabaean rule. Economically, the first Sabaean period was dominated by a caravan economy that had market ties with the rest of the Near East. Its first major trading partners were at
Khindanu and the
Middle Euphrates. Later, this moved to Gaza during the Persian period, and finally, to
Petra in Hellenistic times. The South Arabian deserts gave rise to important aromatics which were exported in trade, especially
frankincense and
myrrh. It also acted as an intermediary for overland trade with neighbours in
Africa and further off from
India. By the end of the 1st millennium BCE, several factors came together and brought about the decline of the Sabaean state and civilization. The biggest challenge came from the expansion of the
Roman Republic. The Republic conquered Syria in 63 BCE and Egypt in 30 BCE, diverting Saba's overland trade network. The Romans then attempted to conquer Saba around 26/25 BCE with an army sent out under the command of the governor
Aelius Gallus, setting Marib to siege. Due to heat exhaustion, the siege had to be quickly given up. However, after conquering Egypt, the overland trade network was redirected to maritime routes, with an intermediary port chosen with
Bir Ali (then called Qani). This port was part of the
Kingdom of Hadhramaut, far from Sabaean territory. Greatly economically weakened, the Kingdom of Saba was soon annexed by the
Himyarite Kingdom, bringing this period to a close.
Second Sabaean kingdom (1st – 3rd centuries CE) After the disintegration of the first Himyarite Kingdom, the Sabaean Kingdom reappeared and began to vigorously campaign against the Himyarites, and it flourished for another century and a half. This resurgent kingdom was different from the earlier one in many important respects. The most significant change with the earlier Sabaean period is that local power dynamics had shifted from the oasis cities on the desert margin, like Marib, to the highland tribes. The Almaqah temple at Marib returned to being a religious center. Saba inaugurated a new coinage and the remarkable
Ghumdan Palace was built at
Sanaa which, in this period, had its status elevated to that of a secondary capital next to Marib. Despite liberating itself from Himyar by around 100 CE, leaders of Himyar continued calling themselves the "king of Saba", as they had been doing during the period in which they ruled the region, to assert their legitimacy over the territory. The Kingdom fell after a long but sporadic civil war between several Yemenite dynasties claiming kingship, and the late
Himyarite Kingdom rose as victorious. Sabaean kingdom was finally permanently conquered by the Ḥimyarites around 275 CE. Saba lost its royal status and reverted to a normal tribe, limited to the citizens of Marib, who are named in the last time in South Arabian sources in
CIH 541 in requesting assistance from the king in repairing a rupture in the
Marib Dam. == Conquests ==