Abstract:
The archaeological World Heritage Site of Hegra (Mada´in Salih, Al-Hijr), in
Saudi Arabia, is often considered the southern capital of the Nabataean Kingdom.
Positioned just northeast of the AlUla Valley (where ancient Dadan is located), the
Nabataeans recreated several aspects of their northern capital, Petra. They carved
more than 130 tombs into the sandstone outcrops of which nearly a hundred had
a monumental character with ornate façades of exceptional beauty and deep sense
of enduring. In February 2023, our international, multidisciplinary research team
conducted a feld campaign in Hegra. Our objective was to measure the orientation
of Nabataean tombs and sanctuaries in the area, which could ofer new clues to
aspects of Nabataean culture and religion that we had studied in earlier works at
Petra, and elsewhere in Nabataea. This paper includes the analysis and interpretation
of the data on the orientation of 113 tombs, including all monumental ones, the
largest coherent set of Nabataean tombs ever analyzed. The results show that the
tombs were not randomly orientated but followed a series of patterns, most probably
emphasizing the skyscape, within the framework of the Nabataean ...