Page 474 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 474

XXVI.] NAKAB F.L HAJAR. 433


         their kingdom, possessed dominion along the
         whole of the southern frontier of Arabia. We
          are expressly informed that they planted
          colonies in situations eligible for trade, and

          fortified their establishments.
            The commerce was not confined to any

          particular channel; on the contrary, we learn
          from an early period, of the existence of seve­
          ral flourishing cities, at or near the sea-shore,
          which must have shared in it. We know

          nothing of the interior of this remarkable
          country, but there is every reason to believe,
          as is most certainly the case with Nakab el

          Hajar, that these castles will not only point
          out the tracks which the caravans formerly
          pursued, but also indicate the natural passes

           into central Arabia.
             The inscription which it has been my good
           fortune to discover will create considerable

           interest among the learned.
             Burckhardt, while regretting the absence of
           any information connected with the origin of

           the civil institutions of the Bedowins, re­
           marks, “ that perhaps the discovery of an­
           cient monuments and inscriptions in Nejd

           and Yemen might lead to a disclosure of new
              vol. i. 2 F
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