Misplaced Pages

Laïla Nehmé

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Lebanese-French archaeologist

Laïla Nehmé (born 1966) is a Lebanese-French archaeologist. A specialist in the archaeology and epigraphy of the ancient Near East, she is known for her research on Nabataean writings, the evolution of the Nabataean script into the Arabic, and archaeological excavations at Petra and Mada'in Saleh.

Early life

Laïla Nehmé was born in Beirut, Lebanon, where she attended high school. A meeting with a restorer of ceramics from a dig in northern Lebanon prompted her to seek higher studies in archaeology.

Nehmé attended the Pantheon-Sorbonne University, where Jean-Marie Dentzer guided her research between 1991 and 1994. She wrote her doctoral thesis on Petra in 1994. She began to conduct excavations in Syria and Jordan, and to specialise in the epigraphy of northern Arabic.

Career

Nehmé has been directing excavations at Mada'in Saleh, an ancient Nabataean centre. Her team has discovered several tomb sites, a walled city, comprising mud-brick structures, as well as oases where the granaries and wells supported the local agriculture.

She has studied the transition of scripts from the Nabataean Aramaic to the Nabataean Arabic form that was in use between the third and fifth centuries AD. Nehmé has been credited with categorizing and coining the name of this transitional script.

Awards

Selected works

Articles

Books

See also

References

  1. ^ de Sagazan, Benoît (2011). "À la recherche des Nabatéens et de leurs descendants". Le Monde de la Bible (195). Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  2. Kensington, James (2015). "Ancient Roads of Arabia". Popular Archaeology. 4. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  3. Nehmé 2010b.
  4. Rose, Christopher; al-Jallad, Ahmad (27 April 2016). "Episode 82: What Writing Can Tell Us About the Arabs before Islam". University of Texas, Austin. Retrieved 2 June 2017.
  5. Alhatlani & Al-Manaser 2024, p. 2.
  6. "Palmarès 2007". Clio. Retrieved 30 May 2017.

Additional sources

Categories: