Page 473 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 473

432 NAKAB EL HAJAR [CH.


                             tian ruins. We have (as in them) the same
                             inclination in the walls, the same form of
                             entrance, and the same flat roof of stones.

                             Its situation, and the mode in which the in­
                             terior is laid out, seem to indicate that it
                             served both as a magazine and a fort. I

                             think, therefore, we may with safety adopt
                             the conclusion that Nakab el Hajar, and the
                             other castle which we have discovered, were

                             erected during a period when the trade from
                             India flowed through Arabia towards Egypt,
                             and from thence to Europe. Thus Arabia

                             Felix, comprehending Yemen, Saba, and Ha-
                                         *
                             dramaut, under  the splendid dominion of the
                             Sabsean or Homerite  dynasty, seems to have
                                           *
                             merited the appellation of which she boasted.
                                The history of these provinces is involved
                             in much obscurity, but Agatharchides, before

                             the Christian era, bears testimony, in glowing
                             colours, to the wealth and luxury of the Sa-
                             bseans, and his account is heightened rather

                             than moderated by succeeding writers. This
                             people, before MArbe j*  became the capital of

                               • The ancient people called Himyari by the modern Arabs
                             were probably called Homei’ri by their ancestors, as their territory
                             corresponds with that of the Homeritse of Ptolemy.—Geogr.vi. 6.
                               'I *  The Mariaba of the Greeks.—Strabo, xvi., p. 778.
   468   469   470   471   472   473   474   475   476   477   478