The Rise and Fall of a Jewish Kingdom in Arabia
In 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 population.
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.
The Institute for Advanced Study is the perfect
place for research on something that cuts so dramatically across the
traditional boundaries of historical studies, and my own work has been greatly
enriched by Faculty and Members in Classics, Near Eastern studies, Byzantine
history, and early Islam. No one can look at the kingdom of Jewish Arabia without reference to the
Ethiopians at Axum in East Africa , the Byzantines in Constantinople , the Jews in Jerusalem , the Sasanian Persians
in Mesopotamia , or the Arab sheikhs who controlled the great
tribes of the desert. Soon after 523, all these powerful interests had to
confront a savage pogrom that Joseph, the Jewish king of the Arabs, launched
against the Christians in the city of Najran . Joseph himself reported
in excruciating detail to his Arab and Persian allies on the massacres he had
inflicted on all Christians who refused to convert to Judaism. News of his
infamous actions rapidly spread across the Middle East . A Christian who
happened to be present at a meeting of an Arab sheikh at which Joseph had
boasted of the persecution was horrified and immediately sent out letters to
inform Christian communities elsewhere. When word of the pogrom reached Axum in Ethiopia , the king there—Negus, as he was called—seized the
opportunity to rally his troops and cross the Red Sea in aid of the Arabian
Christians. But his motives were less than pure, since he and his predecessor
had long cherished an irredentist ambition to invade southwestern Arabia , where Ethiopians had
themselves once ruled in the third century. At the same time, the Negus was
able to oblige the Byzantine emperor, who had similarly more than religious
motivation for attacking the Jewish Arabs of Himyar. The Persians had been
supporting the Jews, and Persia was the archrival of Constantinople for control of the lands
of the eastern Mediterranean .
Yet religion undoubtedly provided the common denominator
for what proved to be widespread international interference in Arabian affairs.
The Ethiopians used their Christian faith to carry out a mission that not
only favored their own imperialist designs but, at the same time, supported
the Byzantine emperor, for whom a desire to undermine the Persian empire
reinforced his Christian zeal in attacking the Arabian Jews. Both the converts
and Jewish settlers from an earlier era who lived in Yathrib (the future Medina ) profited from Persian
sympathy, as did at least one large tribal confederation in the desert. The
only losers in these diplomatic and military initiatives were the traditional
Arab pagans who had survived outside Joseph’s realm. They could be found
farther north in the peninsula, precisely where, a half-century later, the
prophet Muhammad would be born. What became the Ka‘ba of Islam had begun as the
shrine of the pagan deity Hubal.
The Jewish kingdom of Arabia came to an end in 525,
when the Ethiopians replaced it with a Christian kingdom of their own, but the
legacy of Joseph’s persecution left its traces in the Arabic, Syriac, and Greek
traditions. Persian sympathy for the Jews generally continued undiminished,
particularly when they themselves managed to expel the Ethiopian overlords of
Himyar on the eve of Muhammad’s birth, allegedly in 570 or thereabouts. By the
time the Persians captured Jerusalem , it was their well-known
preference for Jews that explains the enthusiasm with which the Jewish
population welcomed the invaders into the city, even as they drove out and
killed its Christians.
This extraordinary history of Jewish Arabia in
the sixth-century history of the Red Sea region provides an
indispensable and much neglected backdrop for the collapse of the Persian Empire before the Byzantines as
well as, obviously, the rise of Islam.

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