Aynuna on the Red Sea
2020, 29, Numer 1
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Aynuna was excavated by a Saudi-Polish team between 2014 and 2018. It is a Nabataean port dated to the 1st century BC, with later occupation in the 4th century AD and with some Islamic presence. It is composed of two sites: a commercial factory and a fortified settlement. It is identified with Leuke Kome mentioned in the Periplus Maris Erythraei and by Strabo in connection with the expedition of Aelius Gallus to Arabia.
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Bibliografia
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Gawlikowski, M. (2019). Looking for Leuke Kome. In A. Manzo, C. Zazzaro, and D.J. de Falco (eds), Stories of globalization: The Red Sea and the Gulf from late prehistory to early modernity. Selected papers of the Red Sea Project VII (pp. 281–291). Leiden–Boston: Brill
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Kirwan, L.P. (1984). Where to search for the ancient port of Leuke Kome. In A.M. Abdallah, S. al-Sakkar, and R. Mortel (eds), Pre-Islamic Arabia: Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on Studies in the History of Arabia, April, 1979 (pp. 55–61). Riyadh: King Saud University Press
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Nappo, D. (2010). On the location of Leuke Kome. Journal of Roman Archaeology, 23, 335–348
Peacock, D. and Blue, L. (eds). (2006). Myos Hormos – Quseir al-Qadim: Roman and Islamic ports on the Red Sea I. Survey and excavations 1999–2003. Oxford: Oxbow Books
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Sidebotham, S.E. (1986). Aelius Gallus and Arabia. Latomus, 45(3), 590–602
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