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Assyrian records place the Thamud among Arabia’s earliest named peoples

Around the eighth century B.C.E., a name appeared in cuneiform on the walls of an Assyrian palace — and in that inscription, a people of the Arabian Peninsula entered the written historical record for the first time. The Thamud, a tribal confederation of northwestern Arabia, would go on to be mentioned by Babylonian kings, Greek historians, Roman military commanders, and the Quran itself. Their story spans more than a thousand years of documented history and offers a rare window into the depth and complexity of pre-Islamic Arabian society.

What the evidence shows

  • Thamud Arabian peninsula: The Annals of Assyrian King Sargon II (r. 722–705 B.C.E.), inscribed at Dur-Sharrukin, record the “Ta-mu-di” among desert-dwelling Arabian tribes — the earliest known written reference to the Thamud.
  • Ancient Arabian tribes: Greek historian Diodorus and geographer Ptolemy both placed the Thamud along the Red Sea coastline and in inland northwestern Arabia, confirming their presence across multiple centuries and sources.
  • Ruwafa inscriptions: A bilingual temple built by the Thamud themselves around 165–169 C.E. in what is now Saudi Arabia — inscribed in Ancient Greek and Nabataean Aramaic — offers direct, firsthand testimony of Thamudic identity, religion, and Roman-era political life.

A people attested across empires

The first mention of the Thamud in Sargon II’s Annals is striking for what it reveals — not just about the Thamud, but about the reach of Assyrian imperial attention into the Arabian Peninsula. The inscription groups the Thamud with several other peoples described as “distant desert-dwelling Arabs who knew neither overseers nor officials and had not brought their tribute to any king.”

That framing is the Assyrian perspective. Historian Israel Eph’al has suggested that what Sargon’s scribes recorded as military submission may in fact have been a trade arrangement — that the Thamud and allied groups negotiated access to markets in Samaria, and Assyrian court historians dressed it up as conquest. Either way, the Thamud were significant enough to name.

A surviving letter from Nabonidus, a sixth-century B.C.E. Babylonian king, orders that a “Thamudi Arab” be given several talents of silver — suggesting the Thamud had individuals operating at the level of merchants or officials within the Babylonian court. By the second century B.C.E., Greek geographer Agatharchides was describing Thamud Arabs along the rocky Arabian coastline south of the Gulf of Aqaba. Ptolemy, writing in the second century C.E., mentioned two Thamudic groups — one coastal, one inland.

Builders, warriors, and worshippers

The Ruwafa inscriptions, discovered in northwestern Saudi Arabia, are among the most remarkable artifacts of ancient Arabian history. The temple they describe was built by Thamudic soldiers serving as Roman auxiliary troops, dedicated to their tribal deity ʾlhʾ, and constructed with the explicit support of the Roman provincial governor. The inscriptions name the builders, their priest, and their Roman patron — a document of cultural continuity and political negotiation across imperial boundaries.

This is not the portrait of a people on the margins. The Thamud navigated relationships with Assyria, Babylon, Rome, and Byzantium across roughly a millennium. Two units of Thamud warriors appear in the Notitia Dignitatum, the late Roman administrative record — one stationed in Egypt, one in Palestine.

Pre-Islamic Arabic poetry treated the Thamud as a byword for the passage of time — a great people who had vanished, whose ruins remained. The poet Imru’ al-Qais compared a site of slaughter to the fate of Thamud. Their memory was already ancient by the time Muhammad received the Quranic revelations in the seventh century C.E., in which Thamud appears twenty-six times as a community destroyed for rejecting God’s prophet Salih.

Lasting impact

The Thamud’s place in the historical record had consequences that reached far beyond their own era. Their mention in Assyrian annals helped establish the documentary evidence for pre-Islamic Arabian tribal life that later scholars would use to understand the region’s deep history. The UNESCO World Heritage Site of Hegra — the ancient Nabataean city in northwestern Saudi Arabia, near where Thamudic traditions were centered — draws on this same regional history to illuminate the sophistication of pre-Islamic Arabian culture.

In Islamic tradition, the Thamud became one of the most prominent examples of moral accountability — a narrative about the consequences of rejecting ethical and spiritual responsibility. That story, repeated across the Quran’s chapters, shaped Islamic moral philosophy and continues to be read by over a billion people today.

The Ruwafa temple inscriptions, written in two languages by Arabian soldiers serving a Roman emperor, are a testament to the multilingual, multicultural reality of the ancient world — a reality often flattened by later narratives of civilizational separation. Ancient Arabia was not isolated. It was a crossroads.

Blindspots and limits

The historical record of the Thamud is almost entirely external — written by Assyrian, Babylonian, Greek, Roman, and Islamic observers, not by the Thamud themselves, with the partial exception of the Ruwafa inscriptions. What the Thamud called themselves, how they organized their society, what their oral traditions preserved — most of this is lost. The Thamudic scripts, a family of ancient Arabian writing systems, are not directly connected to the Thamud despite sharing a name, and remain understudied by scholars. It is also possible that the name “Thamud” was applied to several distinct and unrelated groups across centuries, making confident generalizations difficult.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Thamud

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