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Is Saudi Arabia the next big heritage tourism destination?

Saudi Arabia, Oman sites added to UNESCO World Heritage List
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Photo showing members of delegations attend the opening session of United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization’s (UNESCO) 42nd session of the world heritage meetings in the Bahraini capital Manama, June 25, 2018. (AFP)
AFP
June 29, 201817:16
  • UNESCO added Saudi Arabia’s Al-Ahsa Oasis and Oman’s ancient city of Qalhat to its World Heritage List on Friday.
  • Saudi Arabia’s lush Al-Ahsa oasis is dotted with yet-to-be-excavated archaeological sites, and carries traces of human occupation dating back to Neolithic times.
MANAMA: UNESCO added Saudi Arabia’s Al-Ahsa Oasis and Oman’s ancient city of Qalhat to its World Heritage List on Friday, the world cultural body said.
Authorities in Riyadh, as well as Muscat, have put tourism high on their economic agendas as Gulf states look to diversify their oil-dependent economies.
Saudi Arabia’s lush Al-Ahsa oasis is dotted with yet-to-be-excavated archaeological sites, and carries traces of human occupation dating back to Neolithic times.
Al-Ahsa “was a commercial center for the Hajjar territory of Bahrain,” reads the Saudi submission to UNESCO.
“Archaeological evidence shows that it exchanged products from southern Arabia and Persia as well as throughout the Arabian Peninsula.”
Riyadh’s tourism drive, backed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has not shied from highlighting pre-Islamic heritage in the kingdom.
Oman’s Qalhat also dates back to pre-Islamic times.
The port city on Oman’s Indian Ocean coast was once a key hub for trade in goods including Arabian horses to Chinese porcelain, according to the Omani submission.
The case of Qalhat also demonstrates the power women could hold in Arabian society at the time.
“In the 13th century ... the governor Ayaz split his presence between Hormuz and Qalhat, which in his absence was ruled by his wife Maryam,” the submission reads.
“She, Bibi Maryam, is said to have built the Great Friday Mosque and a mausoleum for her late husband. She continued ruling after her husband’s death until at least 1319.”
The World Heritage designation is a prestigious one for the Gulf states, looking to make their mark as culturally rich, safe tourist destinations.
The UNESCO gathering in neighboring Bahrain however comes at a sensitive time for the world body as it scrambles for funding following Washington’s withdrawal last year.
US President Donald Trump’s administration pulled out of UNESCO citing its continuing “anti-Israel bias,” six years after the organization allowed the Palestinians to join.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1330406/saudi-arabia

Saudi ‘al-Ahsa’ officially in UNESCO’s World Heritage List
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Saudi al-Ahsa Oasis, an Evolving Cultural Landscape has been officially included in UNESCO’s World Heritage List. (Supplied)

Staff writer, Al Arabiya English
Friday, 29 June 2018

Prince Sultan bin Salman, President and Chairman of the board of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and Heritage (SCTH), announced on Friday that the Saudi al-Ahsa Oasis, an Evolving Cultural Landscape has been officially included in UNESCO’s World Heritage List.

The prince added that al-Ahsa had a fierce competition with other cities and world’s landmarks also in the fray.

He extended his thanks and gratitude to King Salman bin Abdulaziz for his constant support and keenness to enter the Kingdom’s historic sites in the UNESCO World Heritage List.


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Prince Sultan also praised the constant efforts of prince Saud bin Nayef, prince of the eastern region, for supporting the application of al-Ahsa in the UNESCO competition as well as the efforts of prince Badr bin Mohamed bin Jalawi, governor of al-Ahsa province, and its secretary Engineer Adel bin Mohamed al-Melhem who worked hard on preparing the file of al-Ahsa, according to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

Prince Sultan also thanked the people of al-Ahsa for their efforts and great cooperation with al-Ahsa Secretariat in preparing the file, and their keenness to restore the historical, cultural and natural status of al-Ahsa as one of the most important settlements for inhabitants in the Kingdom dating back to the 5th millennium BC, when it was known for its booming agricultural and advanced irrigation system.

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Al-Ahsa Oasis is considered the largest in the world with more than three million palm trees, and was included recently among the UNESCO’s World Heritage List during the committee meeting in Manama, Bahrain, under the chair of Sheikha Haya Rashed Al Khalifa of Bahrain and which started on June 24 and finishes on July 4.

The UNESCO Cultural Sites’ list included 47 cities in 33 countries around the world.

Al-Ahsa is the first city from the gulf included in the list.

Al-Ahsa represents 20 percent of the Kingdom’s area and is of great importance as it is home to largest oil fields with an area of 379,000 square km, with a population of about 1,800,000 people, located in the heart of the Arabian Gulf.

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/li...ficially-in-UNESCO-s-World-Heritage-List.html

KSA just started in the past 10 years. I expect us to reach top 15 not far from now and continue to climb along with numerous other Arab countries.

@The SC
 
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I think they are going to find dozens if not hundreds of sites in the Area (under-explored till now)that will be worthy of being world heritage sites..but this one is huge!
 
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I think they are going to find dozens if not hundreds of sites in the Area (under-explored till now)that will be worthy of being world heritage sites..but this one is huge!

New $2bn project to boost Saudi heritage and culture
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The new city will have heritage centers, museums, recreational areas and a convention center.

Updated 16 sec ago
MOHAMMED AL-SULAMI
June 30, 2018

  • The new city will generate more than 15,000 jobs, with 80 percent of them on offer to young Saudis.
  • Prince Khaled Al-Faisal, governor of Makkah and adviser to King Salman, laid the foundation of the new project during celebrations for the opening of the 12th annual Souq Okaz.
JEDDAH: Work has begun on a massive Saudi heritage tourism project at Souq Okaz City in Taif that will eventually cost more than $2 billion — nearly 90 percent of it invested by the private sector.

The new city will have heritage centers, museums, recreational areas and a convention center. It will create more than 15,000 jobs, with 80 percent of them on offer to young Saudis.

Souq Okaz City will also have a suburb with housing for about 750,000 people; a new international airport able to handle 5 million passengers a year in its first phase; a technology hub implemented by King Abdul Aziz City for Science and Technology; Taif University; and an industrial city.

The plans include five main public-sector projects: Interactive museums focusing on learning through recreation; an Okaz Museum; an exhibition and convention center offering multi-purpose halls in which to host activities, festivals, heritage events, poetry and theater fairs throughout the year; a museum for the Souq Okaz monuments next to an artisanal creative center; and Okaz park.

The 18 main projects earmarked for the private sector include recreational parks, heritage villages, open markets, hotels, environmental camps, shopping malls, hospitals and medical centers, business centers, a social club, international schools, health clubs, sports facilities and tourist accommodation.

Prince Khaled Al-Faisal, governor of Makkah and adviser to King Salman, laid the foundation of the new project during celebrations for the opening of the 12th annual Souq Okaz.

The city is part of the National Transformation Program and is one of the main projects of the High Committee for Taif Development, and of the Two Holy Mosques program.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1331126/saudi-arabia
 
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As long as it's not Islamic heritage, in which case they'll go all shirk-bidah-bulldoze-5starHotel on it.

KSA has more Islamic heritage (and the oldest in the world) than any other country in the world. That a few shrines were removed 100 years ago (not the tombs themselves), a few houses that can be counted on 1 hand and a 200 year old mud fort that prevented the necessary expansion projects in Makkah, won't change that. Most of all this can easily be rebuilt again sometime in the future if necessary.

An incredibly ignorant comment.

Discovering Saudi Arabia's hidden archaeological treasures

Mada'in Saleh remains a blank page on the archaeological record, closed off by geography, politics, and religion – but this stunning region is about to throw open its doors to the world

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Mada'in Saleh, the archaeological site with the Nabatean tomb from the first century ( All photographs by Nicholas Shakespeare )
Out of the windy darkness a fine sand was blowing across the road from Medina to Al-Ula. Flat desert on either side, a few lights. The Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta passed this way on camel back in 1326, and wrote of its emphatic wilderness: “He who enters it is lost and he who leaves it is born.”

Before mass tourism ruined them for a second time, I’d travelled to the so-called “lost” cities of Petra, Machu Picchu and Angkor Wat. My destination tonight was the isolated sandstone valley eulogised by Charles Doughty, the first European to enter it in 1876, as “the fabulous Mada’in Saleh which I was come from far countries to seek in Arabia”.

The prospect of following in Doughty’s flapping shadow gave me a jolt of anticipation that I hadn’t experienced since my twenties. Doughty’s classic book Arabia Deserta was championed by his friend TE Lawrence, who later used it as a military textbook, as the greatest record of adventure and travel in our language.

It begins with Doughty trying to smuggle himself into Mada’in Saleh in the guise of a poor Syrian pilgrim. Even up until recently few Europeans have visited this cradle of forgotten civilisations, which, though designated a World Heritage Site in 2008, remains a blank page on the archaeological record, closed off by geography, politics, religion.


“Visitors last year from abroad? I can say zero,” my guide Ahmed tells me.

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The temples of Mada'in Saleh near Al-Ula have survived for almost 3,000 years

This is set to change. Last July, under the impetus of Saudi Arabia’s progressive new Crown Prince, Mohammed Bin Salman, or “MBS” as he is popularly known, a Royal Commission took charge of Mada’in Saleh and its surrounds – “the crown jewel of a site that the country possesses,” says one of the archaeologists recruited to excavate it.

In December, public access was halted; first in order to survey what actually is there, next to develop a strategy for protecting it, and then to open up Mada’in Saleh to the outside world. My advance visit is aimed at providing an amuse-bouche, as it were.

In the bright morning sunlight, Ahmed escorts me through locked gates, past the German-built railway-line linking Damascus with Medina, which Lawrence bombed (“there are still local tribes which call their sons Al-Orans”), to the celebrated Nabatean rock tombs.

Doughty first heard about these in Petra, 300 miles north. Fifty years earlier, an awe-struck British naval commander had gazed in disbelief at Petra’s imperishable Treasury, murmuring, as many continue to do: “There is nothing in the world that resembles it.” He was wrong.

If a little less rosier than her sister city, Mada’in Saleh shares her capacity to stagger. Out of the flat desert, one after another, the ornate facades rise into sight, 111 of them, carved into perpendicular cliffs up to four storeys high, their low doorways decorated by Alexandrian masons in the first century AD, with Greek triangles, Roman pilasters, Arabian flowers, Egyptian sphinxes, birds.

“This is a twin to Petra,” Ahmed says. Except that in Petra we would be bobbing among crowds.

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Tour guide Ahmed is descended from a long line of imams

Standing in reverent silence, with the valley to ourselves, I recall how the Victorian artist who supplied the first images of Petra to the world, David Roberts, responded to that other city. “I turned from it at length with an impression which will be effaced only by death.”

These tombs were carved for the Nabatean tribes who ruled this region for 300 years until the Romans annexed them in 106AD. Semi-nomadic pastoralists who had settled and grown wealthy, the Nabateans controlled the lucrative spice route from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea.

Then, like the civilisations they’d replaced, the Dedanites, the Lihyanites, the Thamuds, they galloped off into obscurity. Their tombs were looted: the acacia doors plundered for firewood, the marble statues melted to make lime for plaster, the porphyry urns smashed.

All that survives of their caravan city, Hegra, is a flat expanse behind a wire fence: “her clay-built streets are again the blown dust in the wilderness,” Doughty wrote.

The same desolation holds true for the still more ancient Biblical city of Dedan, situated on the lip of an oasis a few minutes drive way. To visit both sites is to gain the sense of a narrative even now being worked out. Until the 20th century the story of these civilisations was scrawled on the rocks in Nabatean or Thamudic script. Ahmed leads me between two steep cliffs to the oldest inscription, written 6,000 years ago.

Saudi Arabia's hidden archaeological treasures
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Tombs in Mada'in Saleh were decorated by Alexandrian masons in the first century with Greek, Roman and Arabian symbols

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The ancient Biblical city of Dedan is situated on the lip of an oasis

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Cliffs formed out of red and black sandstone have eroded into crazy, hallucinatory shapes such as elephants, mushrooms, and seals
Nicholas Shakespeare
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Ancient Dedan inscriptions. Holes in the rock floor denote a sacrificial spot from the time of the Dedanites
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A street in the old town of Al-Ula

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Mada'in Saleh, the archaeological site with the Nabatean tomb from the first century
Nicholas Shakespeare
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Ahmed comes from a long line of imams descended from a grand tribal judge who arrived c1400 in Al Ula’s 'old town'
Nicholas Shakespeare

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The cliffs in the distance: out of the flat desert, one after another, the ornate facades rise into sight, 111 of them, carved into perpendicular cliffs up to four storeys high
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The temples of Mada'in Saleh near Al-Ula have survived for 3,000 years
Nicholas Shakespeare
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'Charles' is scratched on the oat-coloured mud wall not by Charles Doughty but by Prince Charles (in 2015, with his key)
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Al Gharamil

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Mada'in Saleh tombs

Below, a square hole in the rock floor denotes a sacrificial spot from the time of the Dedanites. Ahmed could be speaking of the cavity in the historical record when he says, “They were making sacrifices to one god, Dhu-Ghaibat, which means ‘the one who is absent’.”

Out in the desert, the wind has chiselled its own mysterious deities and hieroglyphs. The scene is stunning. In Petra, which forms part of the same massif, David Roberts threw away his pencil in despair at being able to convey it, believing that the ruins “sink into insignificance when compared with these stupendous rocks”.

It’s hard to disagree. Cliffs formed out of red and black sandstone have eroded into crazy, hallucinatory shapes: elephants, mushrooms, braying seals. If they were transcribed into music, it would be Wagnerian.


They make you believe in mountain gods, I tell Ahmed, who smiles. “I never try smoking weed, but when I hear someone react, I feel like that. It makes you high, naturally.”

For sheer high spirits, no one yields to the British archaeologist I meet that night. Jamie Quartermain is part of an international team employed since March to survey these sites.

A surveyor who pioneered the use of drones, Quartermain says: “We’ve been wanting to get involved here, but Saudi has been a closed shop, a completely untapped reserve."


"The perception is that it’s big, open desert. When I tried to find out anything about it, there was essentially one book. The discovery that there are so many archaeological sites is a big shock for most people. It was a big shock for me.”

Advised by the Royal Commission to expect 450 unexcavated sites, Quartermain estimates the truer number between 6,000-10,000. “The survival of the archaeology is remarkable, some of the best condition remains I’ve ever seen. We’re not finding it close to the surface, it’s above surface, well and truly visible.”


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Ancient Dedan inscriptions. Holes in the rock floor denote a sacrificial spot from the time of the Dedanites

Deploying a drone, he has begun creating a three-dimensional textural surface of the area. Already, what he has found is ground-breaking. “You can see all the archaeology jumping out and biting you on the bottom.”


When, aged 20, I visited Petra, sleeping in one of the caves, I talked to the head of the Bdoul tribe, allegedly descendants of the Nabateans, who told me: “We have a saying that the more wealth you have, the more brain cells you need to be able to cope with it.

What impresses about MBS’s plan for Mada’in Saleh is his determination to use his nation’s resources to avoid the pitfalls of Petra.

“Wadi Rum is pretty disastrous,” says Chris Tuttle, an American archaeologist seconded to the project. Tuttle spent many years excavating in Petra. He saw at first hand the ruinous impact of tourism, both on the ruins and the local community.


By contrast, in Al-Ula, the local town for Mada’in Saleh, there has been a concerted drive to educate the locals, giving scholarships to 150 children, but also to attract experts armed with the latest methodol

One reason for the blankness on Saudi Arabia’s archaeological map, says Tuttle, has been the resistance of conservative religious leaders to question their history. “You don’t need to study the past when you’ve been given a manual from God.”

Suddenly, a multi-thousand-year-old story has become an open book, not a closed one, and the revelation it contains could be a complex of sites more significant even than Petra. My guide Ahmed Alimam is a perfect representative of Al-Ula’s past and future. He comes from a long line of imams descended from a grand tribal judge who arrived c1400 in Al Ula’s “old town”


Abandoned in 1983, the year of Ahmed’s birth, this haunting labyrinth of mud houses and twisting streets replaced Dedan and Hegra. It was built using stones from those cities. They can be seen fortifying the occasional doorway.

Ahmed leads the way down an empty street to the house where his parents used to live – collapsed beams, upturned crates. He shows me the mosque, erected over the spot where the Prophet Mohammed stopped in 630AD, and with a goat bone drew in the sand the direction of Medina; Ahmed’s uncle was the last imam.

And a modern inscription: the name “Charles”, scratched on the oat-coloured mud wall not, as momentarily I’d hoped, by Charles Doughty, but by Prince Charles (in 2015, with his key), and below it the Islamic translation.


During the Islamic period, Al-Ula, or El-Ally as Doughty knew it, became an important station on the haj road south, and marked the last place where Christians were permitted to travel. Ibn Battuta described how pilgrim caravans paused here for four days to resupply and wash, and to leave any excess baggage with the townspeople “who are known for their trustworthiness”.

“I hope we are still doing our best to be like that,” Ahmed says. “You can try, if you want, to leave something.”

The only thing I left behind after my four days here was an urge to come back.


https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...y-alhijir-petra-charles-doughty-a8373686.html

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The ancient city of Ubar, Shisr, in the Dhofar region, Oman | © CL-Medien / Shutterstock
Oman / HISTORY
Ismael David

Updated: 20 July 2018

Spread across Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman and the UAE, the so-called Empty Quarter in the desert hides the secrets of civilisations lost millennia ago. A trip toward the Omani side of this terrain takes visitors on a journey tread by merchants before biblical times and remembered in the poetry of the Sultanate’s Bedouin tribes.

Stretching across the Arabian Peninsula, appearing almost as a giant patch of brown on most maps of the world, is a massive desert known as the Empty Quarter or the Rub Al Khali. This harsh wasteland’s name is descriptive, and seemingly nothing survives here except the hardy Bedouin tribes and camels that call it home – it is the largest area of continuous sand on Earth. For centuries, underneath this tremendous blanket of sand, slept ruined cities forgotten to all but the poems recited by these nomads.

Other lost cities were preserved only in religious scriptures, often praised for their size and riches, only to perish with time. Many of their names have troubled archeologists for years, such as Qaryat Al Faw, Kindah and Iram. Researchers and adventurers were left asking themselves the same questions time and again: how could a city survive – let alone thrive – in this ocean of sand?

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Remains in the ancient city of Ubar, Shisr, in Oman’s Dhofar region | © Damian Ryszawy / Shutterstock
The answer can be found in the Sultanate of Oman, where one such city was unearthed several years ago and remains open to visitors looking to see into a world dominated by merchant caravans and an ancient trade network that spanned the Arabian Peninsula and beyond.

Located 180 kilometres (112 miles) north of evergreen Salalah, the oasis of Shisr, whose inhabitants today live in a small village, is also the site of ancient ruins that were once home to a splendid ancient city built by the frankincense trade. As one of the most valuable commodities in antiquity, frankincense was highly prized among the Romans, Egyptians and other civilisations, who used it in numerous religious rituals. Luckily for many enterprising merchants, frankincense comes from trees of the genus Boswellia, and can only be found in a handful of modern countries: Ethiopia, Yemen, Somalia, Oman and Sudan.

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Shishr was discovered among a long stretch of desert | © CL-Medien / Shutterstock
As a result, more than 3,000 years before the birth of Christ, cities connected to the frankincense trade flourished, including Shisr. Yet despite that prosperity, Shisr, like many similar cities in ancient Arabia, would vanish centuries ago. It reemerged only in 1991, when a team of researchers used NASA’s Challenger radar system to discover hints of the ancient city beneath the sands of Dhofar’s northern desert. Later on, expeditions uncovered ruins dating back to 1,000 BC, with fortress walls found to have been built over a limestone cave. Archaeologists believe that the collapse of the limestone cave ultimately led to the city’s destruction.

Since it was rediscovered, archaeologists have identified Shisr as Ubar, the ancient desert city christened the ‘Atlantis of the Sands’ by T E Lawrence. For decades before the discovery of Shisr, expeditions were launched in search of Ubar to no avail. Today, these ruins remain a reminder of Ancient Arabia and the men and women who searched long and hard to bring its secrets to us.

https://theculturetrip.com/middle-e...and-rediscovery-of-the-ancient-city-of-shisr/

Mysterious ancient civilization left signs across vast desert
By Caroline McGuire, The Sun

June 22, 2018 | 4:09pm | Updated

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The tomb of Madain Saleh is a UNESCO World Heritage site in Saudi Arabia.Getty Images

People don’t tend to spend days traveling through the desert if they can help it.

Which could be why most people outside Saudi Arabia have never heard of the Al-Ula county – an area humans have occupied for over 6,000 years.

The rocky landscape, which covers around 9,000 square miles in the northwest of the country, contains mysterious drawings and writing that date back around 6,000 years.

According to CNN, an international team of experts currently surveying the area has found thousands of archaeological sites that feature everything from mysterious triangular constructions to ancient tombs.

There is also an old town that dates back more than 1,000 years, where people lived until as recently as the 1980s.

Cliffs dotted across the landscape feature ancient petroglyphs of people and animals that are thought to be thousands of years old.

One of the most important sites is the Mada’in Salih – which features 111 ancient tombs that are carved into rock that are so impressive they are registered as a UNESCO World Heritage site.

UNESCO describes the site as: “The largest conserved site of the civilization of the Nabataeans south of Petra in Jordan [with] well-preserved monumental tombs with decorated facades dating from the 1st century BC to the 1st century AD.”

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The Abu Lawha, the largest tomb, at the Madain Saleh archaeological siteAP
It also has around 50 inscriptions of the pre-Nabataean period and some cave drawings.

The area was particularly important during the 2nd and 3rd centuries BC because of its location between ancient civilizations on a trade route between the Arabian Peninsula, the Mediterranean and Asia.

Texts written on the rocks and cliffs are written in Aramaic, Arabic, Nabataean, Greek and Latin, while the rock art dates back to when animals like giraffes and elephants roamed the surrounding desert.

Jamie Quartermaine, who is currently surveying the area for the Saudi government, told CNN: “The giraffes and ostriches date from the period before 6,000 B.C. when those species lived here.”

“Climate change records show that after this time, the landscape transitioned from savannah to desert. As the environment dried up, these animals were driven south to their current range in Africa.”

There are also common graves that date back up to 6,000 years – to 4,000 BC, the style of which archaeologists say they have never seen before – triangular shapes built in the direction of piles of stones.

https://nypost.com/2018/06/22/mysterious-ancient-civilization-left-signs-across-vast-desert/

Treasures revealed: Saudi Arabia’s true nature will blow your mind away
April 7, 2018 12:00 pm


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This month on ‘Inside the Middle East’, CNN uncovers the rich and diverse archaeological treasures of Saudi Arabia and how the desert Kingdom is opening itself up to international archaeologists and tourists.

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CNN explores how Saudi Arabia is putting the preservation of culture and heritage at the top of the agenda as it is ready to invest billions of dollars to promote cultural tourism. By 2030, Saudi Arabia hopes to more than double the number of world heritage sites in the country and to do that it is embarking on one of the region’s most expansive archaeological surveys.





The programme visits Mada’in Saleh – the Nabateans southernmost city and one of the Middle East’s major archaeological treasures – which became Saudi Arabia’s first world heritage site in 2008. More than 100 tombs, some over 20 meters tall, dot the landscape. Over 15 years ago, the French archaeologist, Laila Nehme became the first foreign archaeologist allowed to work in Mada’in Saleh but over the years she has uncovered that this area has a lot more secrets to be shared.

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Laila Nehme, Co-Director, Mada’in Saleh Archaeological Project explains the possibilities for further excavation and discovery: “There are huge amounts of sites which are yet to be recorded. And so, there’s a lot of work for future archaeologists.”



‘Inside the Middle East’ learns that the work at Mada’in Saleh is part of a much wider initiative, as the Kingdom embarks on one of the largest archaeological surveys ever conducted in the region.

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Robert Bewley, Project Director, Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East & North Africa, tells the programme: “In terms of Saudi Arabia, they have some of the best-preserved archaeology anywhere in the Middle East and North Africa. It’s fantastic. What they’re trying to do in certain areas is find the best ways of not only preserving the archaeological sites but also then presenting them to the public… They’re now, obviously, thinking the future has to be … as with the whole of the Middle East, opening it up so people could come and visit.”



Abeer AlAkel, Head of Strategy, Royal Commission of Al-`Ula, shares similar insights into the finding, recording and showcasing the historic sites: “Saudi Arabia has multiple and different landscapes with amazing cultures and heritage sites. There is a particular interest in Al-`Ula and it is a key element we’re focusing more on the archaeological understanding, the heritage, the culture of the area. Trying to document, trying to identify the sites in here. It’s an undiscovered area, and we need to make sure that we do preserve and protect the land in here.”

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The Kingdom hopes to attract 30 million visitors a year by 2030 and is hoping to bring a new chapter of history to light by conquering the desert and uncovering sites for the very first time.

American archaeologist Dr. Rebecca Foote has been unearthing ancient treasures in the region for over two decades and is leading the archaeological survey. She discusses the opportunities that are opening up: “Saudi hasn’t been open to that very many Western archaeologists in recent decades. It’s very much a new frontier for archaeologists and Al-`Ula itself is a gem.”



The enthusiasm for the archaeological treasures that are still to be uncovered is described by Jamie Quartermaine, Project Manager, Royal Commission of Al-`Ula Archaeological Survey, “We are some of the first archaeologists ever to see these sites. That both gives us a lot of respect for what is going on, but at the same time, it’s just genuine excitement about the wonderful heritage that we’ve got in this part of the world.”

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Quartermaine continues and speaks about the extent of the survey and the task ahead: “In one sense it’s extremely exciting and another sense terrifying. The sheer scale of how much ground we’ve got to cover, and at the same time how much we’ve actually got to understand and appreciate all that incredible rich archaeology. We don’t know precisely the number of sites, but it could be upwards above 6,000, perhaps even greater than that, 8,000 monuments.”



CNN learns that hi-tech solutions and the latest cutting-edge technology are being used to analyze the vast site including, satellite imagery and 3D scanning.

Jamie Quartermaine discusses how drones and 3D modeling are helping them at Al-‘Ula, and how they’re employing new techniques for the first time in the region: “We’ll be able to pick out every single pebble, every single element of a structure, in three dimensions. This is something that’s never been achievable. Some of the techniques that we’re using are basically never been applied in this part of the world. Even in Western Europe, the techniques have only been applied for the last two or three years, so the techniques are very new. They’re innovative and they’re changing the way archaeology is being undertaken.”

Why Hyperloop and Saudi are a match made in travel heaven

As the Kingdom enters a new era, the conservation and safeguarding of its ancient past are essential, as Abeer AlAkel, Head of Strategy, Royal Commission of Al-`Ula, explains: “Our vision to Al-`Ula is to basically preserve and protect the heritage site, ensure that it’s ready to welcome the visitors and tourists. By then hopefully, it will be the number one destination in the world.”



Robert Bewley, Project Director, Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East & North Africa tells CNN about the prospects for Saudi Arabia with the tourism and preservation of the ancient sites: “I think that they’ve got the opportunity to get it absolutely right. It won’t be easy. I think as a tourist destination, it will become one of the top places in the world if it really is opened up. Equally, they’re gonna have to balance the experience so that it just isn’t completely mobbed, but I’m sure they’ll get it right. Not only that, I think Saudi Arabia can teach a lot of other people about how best to do things.”

https://ameinfo.com/luxury-lifestyl...chaeological-diamond-many-wonders-discovered/
 
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Biggest heritage was the shrines in Makkah and Madina but najdis destroyed them. Other holy sites are also banned to visit by government. These kind of statements are now nothing more than a joke.
no they are very right in destroying those tombs
they were not holy sites,
they had the potential to start idolatry and especially bidah.
wd need to do the same in pakistan where people go to shrines and literally pray to the graves
this problem is most prevalent in sindh and punjab but not more than sindh
 
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Fantastic stuff.

Saudi Arabian Tourism and Heritage Authority registers 43 archaeological sites


ARAB NEWS
July 23, 2018

  • Saudi Arabia’s General Tourism and Heritage Authority has registered 43 archaeological sites across the Kingdom
  • Among the registered sites are 26 locations in the holy city of Makkah
RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s General Tourism and Heritage Authority has registered 43 archaeological sites across the Kingdom during the section quarter of this year.
Among the registered sites are 26 locations in the holy city of Makkah, including Al-Hafaira in the governorate of Al-Taif, and two archaeological sites in the governorate of Al-Jamoom,
It also includes nine in the region of Assir, including a site in the city of Bel Qarn, in south Saudi Arabia, and a location at the Shefa Saad site and several others in Wadi Ne’am in the governorate of Tathleeth.
The Kingdom has announced the registration of 32 archaeological sites during the first quarter of 2018.
The authority has also launched established the national electronic register for the documentation of archaeological and historical sites in the Kingdom.
It allows recording their details electronically so that they can be protected and developed. Through this important national project, the Authority has managed to register 8268 archaeological sites so far in the various regions of the Kingdom.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1343901/saudi-arabia
 
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Saudi tourism authority retrieves more than 53,000 relics

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The Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage (SCTH) has undertaken registration of more than 53,000 historical artifacts and relics. (SPA)

ARAB NEWS
August 14, 2018

JEDDAH: The Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage (SCTH) has undertaken registration of more than 53,000 historical artifacts and relics that it successfully managed to restore from inside and outside the Kingdom as part of the National Project for Digital Recording of Antiquities.
The project follows international standards for archaeological recording and archiving. It aims to document and store all historic sites, artifacts, historical monument and urban heritage buildings in a comprehensive national digital registry linked to a multidimensional digital map, which is compatible with modern GIS technologies and digital databases, maps, images and graphics.
Director-General of Archiving and Protecting Antiquities at the SCTH, Naif Al-Qannour, said: “The new digital recording project stores detailed information and reports about 32,000 artefacts retrieved from outside the Kingdom and 20,000 returned by citizens to the SCTH since Prince Sultan bin Salman, president of SCTH, launched the campaign to retrieve national artefacts in 2011.
“Some artifacts found their way outside Saudi Arabia through foreign travelers who moved them to other countries. One of the most famous artifacts is the Tayma Stone, which was discovered by Charles Huber and later displayed at the Louvre Museum in Paris.”
Al-Qannour also explained that many employees of foreign companies, especially in the oil industry, visited many parts of Saudi Arabia to study their geology and natural manifestations, collected the artifacts they found and took them to national museums in their home countries.
“Robbers of archaeological sites sometimes dig for archaeological treasures and achieve fast financial gains,” Al-Qannour said. “By doing so, they are destroying important archaeological evidence found in these sites, be it on land or in the sea.”
Al-Qannour said the SCTH will continue to work on retrieving and protecting artifacts and has released a red list of artifacts stolen from their sites inside Saudi Arabia and information about them to make them easier to identify. The SCTH has also announced handing financial rewards to those who return artifacts or report their loss or theft.
In 2011, Prince Sultan launched a campaign for retrieving national artifacts, including media and cultural programs and initiatives that aim to enlighten and inform citizens about the value of artifacts and the importance of returning them to the SCTH.
Recently, the commission released a list of 140 names of citizens and 18 Americans who returned artifacts, reported archaeological sites or cooperated with the SCTH in protecting the country’s cultural heritage between 2013 and 2017. This was to honor them during the First Antiquities Forum, which will be launched under the patronage of King Salman on Nov. 7 at the National Museum in Riyadh.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1356471/saudi-arabia

Insane amount.

Treasures revealed: Saudi’s true nature will blow your mind away
April 7, 2018 12:00 pm


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This month on ‘Inside the Middle East’, CNN uncovers the rich and diverse archaeological treasures of Saudi Arabia and how the desert Kingdom is opening itself up to international archaeologists and tourists.

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CNN explores how Saudi Arabia is putting the preservation of culture and heritage at the top of the agenda as it is ready to invest billions of dollars to promote cultural tourism. By 2030, Saudi Arabia hopes to more than double the number of world heritage sites in the country and to do that it is embarking on one of the region’s most expansive archaeological surveys.



The programme visits Mada’in Saleh – the Nabateans southernmost city and one of the Middle East’s major archaeological treasures – which became Saudi Arabia’s first world heritage site in 2008. More than 100 tombs, some over 20 meters tall, dot the landscape. Over 15 years ago, the French archaeologist, Laila Nehme became the first foreign archaeologist allowed to work in Mada’in Saleh but over the years she has uncovered that this area has a lot more secrets to be shared.

Why Hyperloop and Saudi are a match made in travel heaven

Laila Nehme, Co-Director, Mada’in Saleh Archaeological Project explains the possibilities for further excavation and discovery: “There are huge amounts of sites which are yet to be recorded. And so, there’s a lot of work for future archaeologists.”



‘Inside the Middle East’ learns that the work at Mada’in Saleh is part of a much wider initiative, as the Kingdom embarks on one of the largest archaeological surveys ever conducted in the region.

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Robert Bewley, Project Director, Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East & North Africa, tells the programme: “In terms of Saudi Arabia, they have some of the best-preserved archaeology anywhere in the Middle East and North Africa. It’s fantastic.
What they’re trying to do in certain areas is find the best ways of not only preserving the archaeological sites but also then presenting them to the public… They’re now, obviously, thinking the future has to be … as with the whole of the Middle East, opening it up so people could come and visit.”



Abeer AlAkel, Head of Strategy, Royal Commission of Al-`Ula, shares similar insights into the finding, recording and showcasing the historic sites: “Saudi Arabia has multiple and different landscapes with amazing cultures and heritage sites. There is a particular interest in Al-`Ula and it is a key element we’re focusing more on the archaeological understanding, the heritage, the culture of the area. Trying to document, trying to identify the sites in here. It’s an undiscovered area, and we need to make sure that we do preserve and protect the land in here.”

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The Kingdom hopes to attract 30 million visitors a year by 2030 and is hoping to bring a new chapter of history to light by conquering the desert and uncovering sites for the very first time.

American archaeologist Dr. Rebecca Foote has been unearthing ancient treasures in the region for over two decades and is leading the archaeological survey. She discusses the opportunities that are opening up: “Saudi hasn’t been open to that very many Western archaeologists in recent decades. It’s very much a new frontier for archaeologists and Al-`Ula itself is a gem.”




The enthusiasm for the archaeological treasures that are still to be uncovered is described by Jamie Quartermaine, Project Manager, Royal Commission of Al-`Ula Archaeological Survey, “We are some of the first archaeologists ever to see these sites. That both gives us a lot of respect for what is going on, but at the same time, it’s just genuine excitement about the wonderful heritage that we’ve got in this part of the world.”

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Quartermaine continues and speaks about the extent of the survey and the task ahead: “In one sense it’s extremely exciting and another sense terrifying. The sheer scale of how much ground we’ve got to cover, and at the same time how much we’ve actually got to understand and appreciate all that incredible rich archaeology. We don’t know precisely the number of sites, but it could be upwards above 6,000, perhaps even greater than that, 8,000 monuments.”



CNN learns that hi-tech solutions and the latest cutting-edge technology are being used to analyze the vast site including, satellite imagery and 3D scanning.

Jamie Quartermaine discusses how drones and 3D modeling are helping them at Al-‘Ula, and how they’re employing new techniques for the first time in the region: “We’ll be able to pick out every single pebble, every single element of a structure, in three dimensions. This is something that’s never been achievable. Some of the techniques that we’re using are basically never been applied in this part of the world. Even in Western Europe, the techniques have only been applied for the last two or three years, so the techniques are very new. They’re innovative and they’re changing the way archaeology is being undertaken.”

Why Hyperloop and Saudi are a match made in travel heaven

As the Kingdom enters a new era, the conservation and safeguarding of its ancient past are essential, as Abeer AlAkel, Head of Strategy, Royal Commission of Al-`Ula, explains: “Our vision to Al-`Ula is to basically preserve and protect the heritage site, ensure that it’s ready to welcome the visitors and tourists. By then hopefully, it will be the number one destination in the world.”



Robert Bewley, Project Director, Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East & North Africa tells CNN about the prospects for Saudi Arabia with the tourism and preservation of the ancient sites: “I think that they’ve got the opportunity to get it absolutely right. It won’t be easy. I think as a tourist destination, it will become one of the top places in the world if it really is opened up. Equally, they’re gonna have to balance the experience so that it just isn’t completely mobbed, but I’m sure they’ll get it right. Not only that, I think Saudi Arabia can teach a lot of other people about how best to do things.”

https://ameinfo.com/luxury-lifestyl...chaeological-diamond-many-wonders-discovered/
 
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Joint Saudi-French expedition uncovers new archaeological sites in southern Riyadh

ARAB NEWS
September 17, 2018
  • The expedition was operating under the mandate of the National Authority for Tourism and National Heritage
  • SPA said this was the first time sites from the Paleolithic period were discovered in Al-Kharj province

JEDDAH: A joint Saudi-French expedition has uncovered archaeological sites that date back more than 100 thousand years amid a number of mountains in southern Riyadh, specifically in the Kharj province.
The expedition was operating under the mandate of the National Authority for Tourism and National Heritage.
The field survey covered mountainous territory, where the expeditionary team discovered sites that date back to the Stone Age or Paleolithic period in Al-Kharj province, about 100 thousand years ago.
The Saudi Press Agency report said this was the first time sites from the Paleolithic period were discovered in Al-Kharj province, in addition to sites dating back to the Upper Paleolithic period.

The remains of broken pottery, and bracelets made of stained glass were discovered on site.
Also uncovered at the site of Ain Dalea, in southern Al Kharj, was evidence of early human settlement dating back 5000 years.
The 18-member expedition included scientists and archaeologists from both Saudi Arabia and France.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1373651/saudi-arabia

Saudi-French delegation reveals historical sites dating back to 100,000 years
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Broken clay pots, some plain and some painted in green, and a number of broken bracelets made of glass and colored in yellow, red and blue were found. (SPA)

SPA, Riyadh
Monday, 17 September 2018

A Saudi-French delegation for archaeological exploration supervised by the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage discovered historical sites dating back to about 100,000 years in a number of mountains south of Riyadh in the city of al-Kharj.

The delegation’s field survey included the mountains surrounding al-Kharj overlooking Wadi Nisah and mountains overlooking the town of al-Shadida. The sites date back to the Paleolithic period about 100,000 years ago, and they are the first sites discovered from that period in al-Kharj.

Broken clay pots, some plain and some painted in green, and a number of broken bracelets made of glass and colored in yellow, red and blue were found, as well as pieces of stone bowls and trays.

The delegation, which was made up of 18 scientists and specialists in the field of archaeological excavations, also discovered human remains dating about 5,000 years old. A 56-centimeter long bronze sword was also found from the same period.

The delegation also discovered a number of ancient farms and architectural structures dating back to the fifth century AH, with a number of Arabic inscriptions without punctuation, which is the oldest Islamic writing in the central region of the Arabian Peninsula.

Prince Sultan bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, the chairman of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage, had received the delegation at the commission’s headquarters in Riyadh.

Last Update: Monday, 17 September 2018 KSA 13:46 - GMT 10:46

http://english.alarabiya.net/en/lif...ical-sites-dating-back-to-100-000-years-.html


Great stuff once again. So much more to uncover. Just a drop in the ocean.
 
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Saudi Arabia rich with undiscovered archeological sites
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NOOR NUGALI
January 24, 2019

  • “Our discoveries confirm that Farasan Island was inhabited by humans since prehistoric times,” says archaeologist
  • 10,000 sites have only been discovered in recent years
RIYADH: Archaeological digs in Saudi Arabia, according to Dr. Abdullah Al-Zahrani, General Director of Archaeological research Studies at the Saudi commission for Tourism and National Heritage, are increasing at an unprecedented rate.

“We discover new sites every day in Saudi,” he said, adding that there are over 100,000 sites of archaeological interest in the country. “Today we have more than 44 Saudi and international missions working in the Kingdom. Of those, 21 are from Germany, France, Italy, the US, the UK, Japan and China.”


It is a strange scenario, especially given that 10,000 of those sites have only been discovered in recent years. “The largest number of missions are from France,” Al-Zahrani added. “They are very interested in the history of the Arabian Peninsula.”

The Saudi-French archaeological mission in Jazan region, led by Dr. Soline Marion de Bros, an archaeologist from the French National Center for Scientific Research, is one of the most prominent – and successful – teams working in the Kingdom today. Working to uncover the past of the Arabian Peninsula, it has been carrying out archaeological excavations on Farasan Island since 2017.

So far, the team has revealed 30 sites dating back to pre-Islamic periods, including a number of settlements, animal remains including deer, cows, horses and turtles, and various finds including ancient Arabic inscriptions, and sites dating back to the Roman Empire.

“Our discoveries confirm that Farasan Island was inhabited by humans since prehistoric times,” said de Bros. “Since then, Farasan Island has been known for its cultural and commercial activities in the southern regions of the Red Sea, and in the northern part of the Great Farasan.”

The future of archaeology on Farasan Island is exciting. The next steps, according to de Bros, are to map the entirety of the island’s sites, creating a guide to its historical timeline and development. More local archaeologists, from academics to diggers, are also set for specialized training, to help uncover and preserve some of the Kingdom’s most precious new sites.

For Al-Zahrani, the progress is hardly surprising.

“Most of these missions have unanswered questions about our history and they know that the answers can be found here,” he said. “At the beginning of the 19th century, the Arabian Peninsula was a mystery to Orientalists, but they didn’t want to venture into the desert sands. However, in the late 19th century they came and got to know the lands and the people.

“Many sites were registered at that time, especially in the 1970’s, when a comprehensive archaeological survey was done. The results of that time provided a vast list of archeological sites,” he added.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1441401/saudi-arabia
 
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100,000-year-old archeology site discovered in Riyadh
A joint Saudi-French mission has revealed sites dating back to the Paleolithic period in the mountains of Riyadh

Published: September 18, 2018 08:53Mariam M. Al Serkal, Senior Web Reporter


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A joint Saudi-French mission discovered archeological sites back to 100,000 years in the hills surrounding the Al Kharj Mountains of Riyadh.Image Credit: Saudi Press Agency

Dubai: Archaeologists in Saudi Arabia have uncovered a 100,000-year-old site in the mountain range south of Riyadh dating back to the Paleolithic period.

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The joint Saudi-French mission was carried out at archaeological sites under the supervision of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage, which included field surveys at the hills surrounding the Al Kharj Mountains, part of the hills overlooking the Mawan valley, Ein Farzane and the hills overlooking the town of Al Shadidah.

This is the first time that sites from the Paleolithic period were discovered in Al Kharj as well as sites that originated from the Upper Paleolithic period, according to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

The Paleolithic period was also known as the Stone Age that ranged from 2 million to 10,000 years ago, while the Upper Paleolithic period began about 40,000 years ago.

The mission included 18 members of the Saudi and French scientists and specialists in the field of archaeological excavations.

The joint Saudi-French mission was carried out within the framework of an agreement signed between the two parties on September 21, 2011, to explore the archaeological sites at the Al Kharj governorate in Riyadh.

Prince Sultan Bin Salman, president of the tourism commission, appreciated the efforts of the mission and stressed the importance on preparing the site to receive visitors.

https://gulfnews.com/world/gulf/saudi/100000-year-old-archeology-site-discovered-in-riyadh-1.2279644
 
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