(Redirected from \'Ad)A'ad or 'Ad (
Arabic عاد) is an ancient Arab tribe and a district in South Arabia, that was led by 'Ad ibn
Kin'ad.
Location
what is now Eastern Yemen and Western Oman, running from the sea up into the
Dhofar Mountains and thence to the edge of the Rub` al-Khali. In the highlands are to be found scattered groves of the frankincense tree, source of what some regard as the finest of aromatic incenses. The region may also be roughly the locale where camels were first domesticated. 'Ad is known as the tribal Kingdom in which lay the city of
Ubar, a major transshipment point for the frankincense trade in ancient times.
History
The 'Ad tribe established themselves in South Arabia settleing to the East of the
Qahtan tribe. They established the Kingdom of 'Ad around the 10th century BC to the 3rd century AD.
The 'Ad nation were known to the Greeks Claudius Ptolemy's (2nd Cent. AD) Geographos refers to the place by a Hellenized version of the inhabitants of the capital
Ubar
Some Rulers of 'Ad
★ 'Ad ibn Kin'ad' The first leader of 'Ad (lived somewhere between the 23rd to 10th century BC)
★ 'Aldahn Khuljan' Known as 'Ad leader to the Persians and
Hadramites (lived 4th to 3rd century BC)
★ 'Shaddad' Known to the
Himyarites as the last leader of the remains of 'Ad (lived 4th-6th century AD)
The Fall of 'Ad
Sometime between 3rd century AD and 6th century AD the 'Adid state seems to have crumbled, due in large measure to a natural catastrophe which seems to have destroyed much of
Ubar. Also mentioned in the
Qur'an as being the people to whom the
Islamic prophet Hud (هود) was sent by
God to guide them back to the righteous path of faith. The citizens did not heed his warnings and the town was destroyed by God in a great storm.
Other factors that led to the decline of 'Ad:
★ The
Hadramite Qahtani tribes incursions towards Oman 4th to 3rd century BC.
★ The rise of
Christianity (in which burial customs shifted, leaving a far smaller market for frankincense the backbone of 'Adid economy).
★ The
Sabean (
Qahtani) exiled tribe of (Azd Imran) settled Oman around the 3rd century AD.
★ The
Himyarite (
Qahtani) expansion dealt the final blow to 'Ad annexing Dhofar to the Himyarite realm sometime between the 4th-6th century AD.
'Adid Language
The 'Ad tribe shared the land and economic resources of their neighbors the west (Qahtan). And until a recent time historians linked 'Adid language to the South Semitic family. However, the immediate region of 'Ad is still settled by the
Mahra and
Shahra tribes (who still collect frankincense) that speak an ancient language closer to the Eastern Semitic (Akkadian) family than to the South Semitic family (Sabean, Himyarite and Ethiopic variety). The Shara still consider themselves Arabs descended from 'Ad (not
Qahtan).
Today the
Mahra and
Shahra languages are listed among the Eatsern Semitic languages (
Akkadian and
Eblaite) or even as an independent group the
Eastern South Semitic (since Akkadian and Eblaite are extinct).
'Adid origin of Semitic languages?
The Eastern South Semitic languages are known for their extremely archaic nature, especially in their system of phonology -- for example, they preserve the lateral fricatives of Proto-Semitic, which were lost in all other Semitic languages thousands of years ago.
South Arabia in general remains as the only region in the world to remain exlusively Semitic through history. However, its unknown if the
Western South Semitic family (which includes many
Western Semitic and
Eastern Semitic elements), but then most of the Wetsern Semitic languages can be related to the ARamiac Christians and Hebrew speakers presence in ancient Yemen. Also the Western Southern Semitic family spread/evolved in the direction North to South and East to West sequence which indicates a more Eastern/Northern origin perhaps in the Rub' Al Khali just to the North of 'Ad.
The 'Adid language shares many Eastern Semitic elements (which predates any recorded Semitic influence in Western Yemen or Africa) and until this day the
Mahra and
Shahra languages are considered the purest of the Semitic tongues, mainly due to the long isolation in the 'Ad region which might not favor it in this case as the origin of all Semitic tongue, instead a common origin or close relation to the Akkadians who lived with them directly in the Empty Quarter of the Arabian peninsula before they split to
Akkadians who headed to Akkad
[1] and 'Adids who headed to 'Ad. The Magan (Oman) connection with Ancient
Sumer (which will be conquered by the
Akkadians) adds another dimension to this theory.
References
★
The ancient Arab tribe of 'Ad
★
'Ad the people of East Yemen and Oman
★
Timeline of Oman
★
South Semitic - Akkadian connection
★
Arabian origins of the Akkadians