These three bronze figures were discovered in Yemen’s Al-Jawf region and are now part of the Al-Sabah Collection in Kuwait.

    Although their pleated skirts, tunics, and belts resemble Roman military or civic dress, they are Yemeni creations from the Sabaean/Himyarite cultural sphere, made during a period of intense Red Sea trade with the Roman Empire and Hellenistic world.

    South Arabian artisans blended foreign fashion with local styles note the almond-shaped eyes, distinctive hairstyles/headgear, and regional belt knotting. Wearing Mediterranean-inspired clothing signaled prestige, cosmopolitanism, and connection to the broader trading world, not Roman identity.

    I tried to make sense of the statues, so i involved ChatGPT for clarification, and it wrote the description and title.

    (Bronze, ~40–50 cm high, c. 1st century BCE – 3rd century CE)

    by Shammar-Yahrish

    Share.

    1 Comment

    Leave A Reply