阿拉伯一个犹太王国的兴衰

G. Bowersock
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在中东动荡时期,我发现自己正在研究阿拉伯半岛红海沿岸一个古老的犹太王国的兴衰。当我告诉朋友和同事我一直在研究的历史时,他们的反应都是惊讶和难以置信的。在阿拉伯半岛的西南部,古代称为希米亚尔,相当于今天的也门,当地居民在4世纪末的某个时候皈依了犹太教,到425年左右,一个犹太王国已经形成。在那之后的一个多世纪里,它的国王统治着一个宗教国家,这个国家明确地致力于遵守犹太教,并迫害基督教人口。在阿拉伯历史著作中,以及在希腊和叙利亚对殉道的基督徒的记载中,这些记录保存了许多世纪,但长期以来,持怀疑态度的学者倾向于认为,这不过是一种当地的一神论,上面覆盖着从在该地区定居的犹太人那里借来的语言和特征。直到最近几十年,才发现了足够多的刻有文字的石头,以明确证明这些令人惊讶的说法的真实性。我们现在可以说,阿拉伯西南部的整个阿拉伯民族都皈依了犹太教,并将其作为国教。这个位于希米亚尔的奇怪而好战的王国最终被来自基督教埃塞俄比亚的军队入侵推翻。他们从东非启航,君士坦丁堡的基督教皇帝增援了他们。在希米亚的领土上,他们与犹太国王的军队交战并消灭了他们,最终结束了前伊斯兰阿拉伯历史上最不可能发生的,但也是最不祥的剧变。除了古代南阿拉伯或早期基督教埃塞俄比亚的专家之外,很少有学者意识到这些事件。由巴黎的克里斯蒂安·朱利安·罗宾(Christian Julien Robin)领导的一个充满活力的团队开创了对希米亚尔犹太王国的研究,该研究所的前成员之一安德烈·科罗塔耶夫(Andrei Korotayev),一位曾在也门工作并于2003-04年在该研究所工作的俄罗斯学者,也为恢复这段古老的中东历史的失落篇章做出了贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
THE RISE AND FALL OF A JEWISH KINGDOM IN ARABIA
I these turbulent times in the Middle East, I have found myself working on the rise and fall of a late antique Jewish kingdom along the Red Sea in the Arabian peninsula. Friends and colleagues alike have reacted with amazement and disbelief when I have told them about the history I have been looking at. In the southwestern part of Arabia, known in antiquity as Himyar and corresponding today approximately with Yemen, the local population converted to Judaism at some point in the late fourth century, and by about 425 a Jewish kingdom had already taken shape. For just over a century after that, its kings ruled, with one brief interruption, over a religious state that was explicitly dedicated to the observance of Judaism and the persecution of its Christian populat ion. The record survived over many centuries in Arabic historical writings, as well as in Greek and Syriac accounts of martyred Christians, but incredulous scholars had long been inclined to see little more than a local monotheism overlaid with language and features borrowed from Jews who had settled in the area. It is only within recent decades that enough inscribed stones have turned up to prove definitively the veracity of these surprising accounts. We can now say that an entire nation of ethnic Arabs in southwestern Arabia had converted to Judaism and imposed it as the state religion. This bizarre but militant kingdom in Himyar was eventually overthrown by an invasion of forces from Christian Ethiopia, across the Red Sea. They set sail from East Africa, where they were joined by reinforcements from the Christian emperor in Constantinople. In the territory of Himyar, they engaged and destroyed the armies of the Jewish king and finally brought an end to what was arguably the most improbable, yet portentous, upheaval in the history of pre-Islamic Arabia. Few scholars, apart from specialists in ancient South Arabia or early Christian Ethiopia, have been aware of these events. A vigorous team led by Christian Julien Robin in Paris has pioneered research on the Jewish kingdom in Himyar, and one of the Institute’s former Members, Andrei Korotayev, a Russian scholar who has worked in Yemen and was at the Institute in 2003–04, has also contributed to recovering this lost chapter of late antique Middle Eastern history.
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